alice: functions alice chapter 6 september 19, 2005
TRANSCRIPT
Alice: Functions
Alice Chapter 6
September 19, 2005
Checkpoint
• 80 point quiz• Abstract article - quick summary (What cool thing
did you read about?) Turn in to Ms. K
• Demos of methods & parameters animation
• Today I am going to have you follow along in Alice as I am presenting the material Make a world with two toyballs (Sports) in it (one
large, one small)
Writing your own functions
• Functions do not change the state of the world Instead, they return a value
• Sometimes there are no built-in functions that do what you want to do
• One example: Let’s say you want to simulate a ball rolling forward It’s more difficult than it seems!
Rolling Ball
• Try: Ball.turn(forward, 1 revolution) The ball simply rotates in place
• Maybe try to move the ball forward at the same time that it turns forward Try: Write a class-level method, realisticRoll:
doTogether{ball.move (forward, 1 meter)ball.turn(forward, 1 revolution)
} The ball still ends up in the same place
Rolling Ball
• The ball is moving relative to itself, but we want it to move relative to the ground, so let’s change our class-level method to:
doTogether{ball.move (forward, 1 meter, asSeenBy ground)ball.turn(forward, 1 revolution)
} This just guesses that 1 revolution looks right, but
what happens if we have a large ball and a small ball rolling forward?
Rolling Ball
• The distance covered in one revolution of the ball is proportional to the diameter
• If we wanted the ball to roll for 10 meters, how many revolutions would a large ball need to make? How about a small ball?
• We want a way to calculate this, depending on the ball’s diameter We need a new function
Create a new function
• Try: Create new function Call it numberOfRevolutions and select
Number for the return type
• You will see a new editor panel for your function with a Return <None> line at the bottom
Returning a value
• Every function must have a Return statement
• In our problem, we are asking the function: “How many revolutions does the ball have to make to move a given distance along the ground?” This depends on the distance traveled by the
circumference of the ball in a single revolutionnumRevolutions = distance / (diameter * pi)
Writing out function
• To calculate numRevolutions = distance / (diameter * pi)we need to know: Distance (a parameter sent in to the function) Diameter (the width of the ball - a built-in function) Pi (a constant value, we will approximate it to 3.14)
• We can use the built-in functions and mathematical operators to put this equation into the return part of this function
Another new function
• Let’s build a fly-space, with a biplane (Vehicle) and a helicopter (Vehicle) flying at approximately the same altitude near the airport (Buildings)
• Let’s build a function that checks for possible collisions when two vehicles are in the same fly-space If they are TooClose, the flight controller can radio the
planes to change their flight paths
isTooClose
• Need to know: aircraft1, aircraft2, minimumAllowedDistance
• We will return a Boolean (true/false) answer
• Here we need an if/else control structure Check if absolute value of
aircraft1.distanceAbove(aircraft2) < minimumAllowedDistance
if so, return true, else return false
avoidCollision
• Then the world.avoidCollision method could be called if the airplanes were too close
• Would need to check which airplane was above the other If airplane1 above, move airplane1 up & move
airplane2 down Else move airplane1 down & airplane2 up
Alice: Events
Alice Chapter 7
September 20, 2005
Yesterday
• We looked at adding new functions Remember, in Alice functions have return values
• We looked at doing a few slightly complicated statements within Alice
• We finished with a function and a method isTooClose - boolean function avoidCollision - method
• Let’s make sure we all “got” those
isTooClose
• Need to know: aircraft1, aircraft2, minimumAllowedDistance
• We will return a Boolean (true/false) answer
• Here we need an if/else control structure Check if absolute value of
aircraft1.distanceAbove(aircraft2) < minimumAllowedDistance
if so, return true, else return false
avoidCollision
• Then the world.avoidCollision method could be called if the airplanes were too close
• Would need to check which airplane was above the other If airplane1 above, move airplane1 up & move
airplane2 down Else move airplane1 down & airplane2 up
Some Cool Things
• RandomNumber (World Function>Random) Returns a fractional value between 0 and 1 More button allows you to choose minimum and maximum for randoms More again allows you to specify only integer values Random Numbers allow you to create random motion in an animation
• OrientTo method - to have two objects move together, first you must synchronize their orientation
• Vehicle property - one object can “ride” on another object More lets you set duration, style, and asSeenBy You can use an object as the vehicle for the camera
• Making Objects Invisible Use the opacity property or the isShowing property to change what is
visible in the world
Checkpoint
• Are we okay with everything thus far?
• In Edit>Preferences, choose the General tab and switch the display to “Java Style in Color” This will get you used to seeing things as they are in Java. You need to restart Alice to make this change take effect.
• How many of you have done Tutorials 2 & 3? If you can (if you have access to a PC), do these tonight if you
haven’t already done them
Interactive Programming
• So far we have been writing sequential, non-interactive events Before run-time we knew the exact sequence of what
was going to happen in the animation
• With events, we no longer know exactly what sequence of events will happen We need to link events to a responding event handling
method
• All events are world-level because the world is listening for any event to happen
Initial Scene
• Let’s start with our airplane world from yesterday and get rid of one of the flying vehicles
• We will make an interactive flying simulation today
Keyboard Control
• We use keyboard commands (instructions) to control what events happen
• Designing a flying game - we may want The spacebar to make the plan spin The up arrow to move the plane forward And so on
What to do1: Create Methods
• First write the methods that will respond to events These can be world-level or class-level methods, depending on
what makes sense in the given situation
• biplane.flyForward Move forward 2 meters for 2.5 seconds abruptly
• Biplane.barrel Roll right 1 revolution abruptly for 2.5 seconds
What to do2: Link Events
• Linking events In the upper right corner is the “Events editor” window You can “create new event” and select event type from popup menu
• “when a key is typed” You will see “any key” and “nothing” as placeholders for what should happen
• Lets create our first event: When up is typed Do biplane --> flyForward
• Our second event” When space is typed Do biplane --> barrel
What to do3: Test
• Run the program and make sure nothing happens until up arrow or spacebar are pressed
• But you should also make sure that the event handling methods work as you expected after you develop them
Events & Parameters
• What if we want the mouse to control what happens - like if the mouse clicks on an object, we want that object to do something Obviously, we need parameters!
• Let’s say we were building a rescue mission with a firetruck and a burning building with a person stuck on each of the three floors We want the user to click on a person and then have the firetruck
rescue that person The save person method would need to know whichFloor the
person was on, whichPerson to save, and howFar to move the ladder up
Burning Buildings
• First we make a method, firetruck.savePerson with 3 parameters whichFloor (so we know where to point the swivel to) howFar (so we know how far to move the ladder forward) whichPerson (so we know which person to move down the ladder)
• So we could create a new mouse event that when a user clicks on randomGirl3 (who lives on the 3rd floor), we would automatically be able to set the other parameters to call savePerson with: firetruck.savePerson(whichFloor = building.thirdFloor, whichPerson =
randomGirl3, howFar = 3)
• Testing - make sure to try all the possible combinations to make sure that the program works as expected
Other Alice Controls
• The While Loop is a conditional loop, which only perform what is inside if a given condition is true
• The Begin-During-End event While: The conditional expression/function Begin: Done once, at the time the condition is true During: Put in the instructions or method that is done repeatedly
as long as condition remains true End: Done once, at the time the condition becomes false
• Dummy Objects - Can be used to mark locations where the camera will be used Could set up a “frontView” camera and a “backView” camera and
change the point of view to these dummy views
The Wrath of Zeus
• Demonstration of an event-driven world
• Was going to be the basis of your project, but several components of the environment were missing in this version of Alice Still it shows the beginning of the scope of the
project you should be doing
Alice Project
• We have learned most of the fundamental concepts available in Alice for programming (Just not: infinite loops, lists, recursion, arrays,
advanced use of variables)
• Now we are going to put it all together to make a big program See handout
• Note: We have a quiz scheduled for this week - it’ll be on the concepts we’ve covered so far and will be on Monday
Project Work
• Wednesday - Ideas due
• Thursday & Friday: Class time on project
• Friday: Brief quiz review