- This wiki is out of date, use the continuation of this wiki instead
Process
From FenixWiki
| Revision as of 13:57, 23 March 2007 (edit) Sandman (Talk | contribs) ← Previous diff |
Revision as of 13:57, 23 March 2007 (edit) (undo) Sandman (Talk | contribs) Next diff → |
||
| Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
| </pre> | </pre> | ||
| This will make a SpaceShip with a cyan coloured block, able to move around the screen. | This will make a SpaceShip with a cyan coloured block, able to move around the screen. | ||
| + | |||
Revision as of 13:57, 23 March 2007
A process is a subroutine to which one or more of the following apply:
- it received parameters
- it acts on the parameters
- it processes data located elsewhere
- it returns a value
In addition to these possibilities, a process always has a frame; statement. The difference between a function and a process is a process is treated as a seperate thread. This means one can't let a process return a value, as the father process continues its code as well. When a process comes to its first frame; statement, the process 'returns' its ProcessID and continues the code (in the next frame).
In earlier Fenix versions (2005 and earlier) there is no difference in syntax, however, a process is treated like a function when there is no frame; statement in the code.
Example
Process SpaceShip( int file , int graph , int x , int y , int angle , int maxspeed , int maxturnspeed )
Private
int speed;
Begin
Loop
speed+=key(_up)*(speed<maxspeed)-key(_down)*(speed>-maxspeed);
angle+=(key(_left)-key(_right))*maxturnspeed;
advance(speed);
frame;
End
End
Now one can call this process for example by doing the following.
Private
int map;
Begin
map = new_map(20,20,8);
map_clear(0,map,rgb(0,255,255));
SpaceShip(0,map,100,100,0,20,5000);
End
This will make a SpaceShip with a cyan coloured block, able to move around the screen.
--Sandman 14:56, 23 March 2007 (CET)
