The code given is for example purposes, not copypasta from my codebase
I'm writing a primitive, cross-platform Snake game in C++ with Boost & SDL, and I'm wondering what the best way to implement collision-handling is (not collision-detection). So far, I've been using a single-dispatch idea, with ugly spaghetti code, like so:
void Snake::CollisionHandler(const WorldObject& obj)
{
// collided with self
if(obj.GetObjectType() == snake)
Die();
...
...
}
Also, I have a "global" collision handler, which does things involved in a collision, which are independent of each object, for example:
void GameWorld::CollisionHandler(WorldObject& obj1, WorldObject& obj2)
{
if(obj1.GetObjectType() == snake && obj2.GetObjectType() == snake)
PlayDeathSound();
...
...
}
To avoid things like sounds being played twice for collisions.
I've also considered double-dispatch, like so:
void Snake::CollisionHandler(WorldObject& obj) const
{
// invoke obj's collision handler with a const Snake& parameter
obj.CollisionHandler(*this);
}
// collided with self
void Snake::CollisionHandler(const Snake& obj)
{
Die();
}
This also includes a similar global collision handler like above.
Then there's the approach of only having a global collision handler (which is a friend function to all game objects), like so:
void GameWorld::CollisionHandler(WorldObject& obj1, WorldObject& obj2)
{
// snake collided with self
if(obj1.GetObjectType() == snake && obj2.GetObjectType() == snake)
{
obj1.Die();
obj2.Die();
PlayDeathSound();
}
...
...
}
Are there any strategies I'm missing? Which of these ends up being the nicest? They all seem to have some ugly code involved, and the single- and double- dispatch ones involve polymorphism, which I personally try to shy away from.
Die()
twice. I suspect that would be A Bad Thing. PS: No need to "friend" anything, just make the functions that it needs public.