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- .. Intention: introduce only a handful of key concepts and avoid a big cognitive
- load. Readers will then be reminded of the concepts further in the getting
- started series, reinforcing their learning.
- .. _doc_key_concepts_overview:
- Overview of Godot's key concepts
- ================================
- Every game engine revolves around abstractions you use to build your
- applications. In Godot, a game is a **tree** of **nodes** that you group
- together into **scenes**. You can then wire these nodes so they can communicate
- using **signals**.
- These are the four concepts you will learn here. We're going to look at them
- briefly to give you a sense of how the engine works. In the getting started
- series, you will get to use them in practice.
- Scenes
- ------
- In Godot, you break down your game in reusable scenes. A scene can be a character,
- a weapon, a menu in the user interface, a single house, an entire level, or
- anything you can think of. Godot's scenes are flexible; they fill the role of
- both prefabs and scenes in some other game engines.
- .. image:: img/key_concepts_main_menu.webp
- You can also nest scenes. For example, you can put your character in a level,
- and drag and drop a scene as a child of it.
- .. image:: img/key_concepts_scene_example.webp
- Nodes
- -----
- A scene is composed of one or more **nodes**. Nodes are your game's smallest
- building blocks that you arrange into trees. Here's an example of a character's
- nodes.
- .. image:: img/key_concepts_character_nodes.webp
- It is made of a ``CharacterBody2D`` node named "Player", a ``Camera2D``, a
- ``Sprite2D``, and a ``CollisionShape2D``.
- .. note:: The node names end with "2D" because this is a 2D scene. Their 3D
- counterparts have names that end with "3D". Be aware that "Spatial"
- Nodes are now called "Node3D" starting with Godot 4.
- Notice how nodes and scenes look the same in the editor. When you save a tree of
- nodes as a scene, it then shows as a single node, with its internal structure
- hidden in the editor.
- Godot provides an extensive library of base node types you can combine and
- extend to build more powerful ones. 2D, 3D, or user interface, you will do most
- things with these nodes.
- .. image:: img/key_concepts_node_menu.webp
- The scene tree
- --------------
- All your game's scenes come together in the **scene tree**, literally a tree of
- scenes. And as scenes are trees of nodes, the scene tree also is a tree of
- nodes. But it's easier to think of your game in terms of scenes as they can
- represent characters, weapons, doors, or your user interface.
- .. image:: img/key_concepts_scene_tree.webp
- .. _doc_key_concepts_signals:
- Signals
- -------
- Nodes emit signals when some event occurs. This feature allows you to make
- nodes communicate without hard-wiring them in code. It gives you a lot of
- flexibility in how you structure your scenes.
- .. image:: img/key_concepts_signals.webp
- .. note:: Signals are Godot's version of the *observer* pattern. You can read
- more about it here:
- https://gameprogrammingpatterns.com/observer.html
- For example, buttons emit a signal when pressed. You can connect to this signal
- to run code in reaction to this event, like starting the game or opening a menu.
- Other built-in signals can tell you when two objects collided, when a character
- or monster entered a given area, and much more. You can also define new signals
- tailored to your game.
- Summary
- -------
- Nodes, scenes, the scene tree, and signals are four core concepts in Godot that
- you will manipulate all the time.
- Nodes are your game's smallest building blocks. You combine them to create scenes
- that you then combine and nest into the scene tree. You can then use signals to
- make nodes react to events in other nodes or different scene tree branches.
- After this short breakdown, you probably have many questions. Bear with us as
- you will get many answers throughout the getting started series.
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