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- .. _doc_godot_design_philosophy:
- Godot's design philosophy
- =========================
- Now that you've gotten your hands wet, let's talk about Godot's design.
- **Every game engine is different and fits different needs.**
- Not only do they offer a range of features, but the design of each engine
- is unique. This leads to different workflows and different ways to form
- your games' structures. This all stems from their respective design philosophies.
- This page is here to help you understand how Godot works, starting
- with some of its core pillars. It is not a list of available features, nor
- is it an engine comparison. To know if any engine can be a good fit for
- your project, you need to try it out for yourself and
- understand its design and limitations.
- Please watch `Discover Godot 3, the Free game engine <https://youtu.be/4v3qge-3CqQ>`_
- if you're looking for an overview of the engine's features.
- Object-oriented design and composition
- --------------------------------------
- Godot embraces object-oriented design at its core with its flexible
- scene system and Node hierarchy. It tries to stay away from strict
- programming patterns to offer an intuitive way to structure your game.
- For one, Godot lets you **compose or aggregate** scenes.
- It's like nested prefabs: you can create a BlinkingLight scene and
- a BrokenLantern scene that uses the BlinkingLight.
- Then, create a city filled with BrokenLanterns.
- Change the BlinkingLight's color, save, and all the
- BrokenLanterns in the city will update instantly.
- On top of that, you can **inherit** from any scene.
- A Godot scene could be a Weapon, a Character, an Item, a Door, a Level,
- part of a level… anything you'd like. It works like a class in pure code,
- except you're free to design it by using the editor, using only the
- code, or mixing and matching the two.
- It's different from prefabs you find in several 3D engines, as you can
- then inherit from and extend those scenes. You may create a Magician
- that extends your Character. Modify the Character in the editor and the Magician
- will update as well. It helps you build your projects so that their
- structure matches the game's design.
- |image0|
- Also note that Godot offers many different types of objects called
- nodes, each with a specific purpose. Nodes are part of a tree and always
- inherit from their parents up to the Node class. Although the engine
- does feature components like collision shapes, they're the
- exception, not the norm.
- |image1|
- Sprite is a Node2D, a CanvasItem and a Node. It has all the properties
- and features of its three parent classes, like transforms or the ability
- to draw custom shapes and render with a custom shader.
- All-inclusive package
- ---------------------
- Godot tries to provide its own tools to answer most common
- needs. It has a dedicated scripting workspace, an animation editor, a
- tilemap editor, a shader editor, a debugger, a profiler,
- the ability to hot-reload locally and on remote devices, etc.
- |image2|
- The goal is to offer a full package to create games and a continuous
- user experience. You can still work with external programs as long as
- there is an import plugin for it. Or you can create one, like the `Tiled
- Map Importer <https://github.com/vnen/godot-tiled-importer>`__.
- That is also partly why Godot offers its own programming languages
- GDscript and VisualScript, along with C#. They're designed for the needs
- of game developers and game designers, and they're tightly integrated in
- the engine and the editor.
- GDscript lets you write simple code using Python-like syntax,
- yet it detects types and offers a static language's quality of auto-completion.
- It is also optimized for gameplay code with built-in types like Vectors and Colors.
- Note that with GDNative, you can write high-performance code using compiled
- languages like C, C++, Rust, or Python (using the Cython compiler)
- without recompiling the engine.
- |image3|
- *VisualScript is a node-based programming language that integrates well
- in the editor. You can drag and drop nodes or resources into the graph
- to create new code blocks.*
- Note that the 3D workspace doesn't feature as many tools as the 2D workspace.
- You'll need external programs or add-ons to edit terrains, animate complex characters, and so on.
- Godot provides a complete API to extend the editor's functionality using
- game code. See `The Godot editor is a Godot game`_ below.
- |image4|
- *A State Machine editor plugin in Godot 2 by kubecz3k. It lets you
- manage states and transitions visually.*
- Open source
- -----------
- Godot offers a fully open source codebase under the **MIT license**.
- This means all the technologies that ship with it have to be Free
- (as in freedom) as well.
- For the most part, they're developed from the ground up by contributors.
- Anyone can plug in proprietary tools for the needs of their projects —
- they just won't ship with the engine. This may include Google AdMob,
- or FMOD. Any of these can come as
- third-party plugins instead.
- On the other hand, an open codebase means you can **learn from and extend
- the engine** to your heart's content. You can also debug games easily,
- as Godot will print errors with a stack trace, even if they come from the engine itself.
- .. note::
- This **does not affect the work you do with Godot** in any way: there's
- no strings attached to the engine or anything you make with it.
- Community-driven
- ----------------
- **Godot is made by its community, for the community, and for all game
- creators out there.** It's the needs of the users and open discussions
- that drive the core updates. New features from the core developers often
- focus on what will benefit the most users first.
- That said, although a handful of core developers work on it full-time,
- the project has over 600 contributors at the time of writing. Benevolent
- programmers work on features they may need themselves, so you'll see
- improvements in all corners of the engine at the same time in every
- major release.
- The Godot editor is a Godot game
- --------------------------------
- The Godot editor runs on the game engine. It uses the engine's own UI
- system, it can hot-reload code and scenes when you test your projects,
- or run game code in the editor. This means you can **use the same code**
- and scenes for your games, or **build plugins and extend the editor.**
- This leads to a reliable and flexible UI system, as it powers the editor
- itself. With the ``tool`` keyword, you can run any game code in the editor.
- |image5|
- *RPG in a Box is a voxel RPG editor made with Godot 2. It uses Godot's
- UI tools for its node-based programming system and for the rest of the
- interface.*
- Put the ``tool`` keyword at the top of any GDScript file and it will run
- in the editor. This lets you import and export plugins, create plugins
- like custom level editors, or create scripts with the same nodes and API
- you use in your projects.
- Separate 2D and 3D engines
- --------------------------
- Godot offers dedicated 2D and 3D rendering engines. As a result, **the
- base unit for 2D scenes is pixels.** Even though the engines are
- separate, you can render 2D in 3D, 3D in 2D, and overlay 2D sprites and
- interfaces over your 3D world.
- .. |image0| image:: img/engine_design_01.png
- .. |image1| image:: img/engine_design_02.png
- .. |image2| image:: img/engine_design_03.png
- .. |image3| image:: img/engine_design_visual_script.png
- .. |image4| image:: img/engine_design_fsm_plugin.png
- .. |image5| image:: img/engine_design_rpg_in_a_box.png
|