8

Say I have developed a game, and placed it in the package structure:

com.dxmio.games.breakout

Where then is the 'best practice' place to put resources like audio and images that the game uses?

2 Answers 2

17

You can always adopt a standard Maven approach to your project and put all application source files in:

{home}/src/main/java/com/dmxio/games/breakout

and then your resources live in:

{home}/src/main/resources/com/dmxio/games/breakout

and your tests then live in:

{home}/src/test/java/com/dmxio/games/breakout

This structure is a standard convention to structuring projects in the Maven world. It brings a lot of advantages with it, which you may want to look at. You can check out the resources section here: Apache Maven Guides - How do I add resources to my JAR

Alternatively :) the other answer's approach here is just fine...

2
  • 3
    +1 I favor using this convention. And it simplifies things if someday you want to build the project with maven. Jun 23, 2009 at 6:35
  • Definitely +1 for sticking to Maven convention. It's a decent standard structure, will help if you ever use Maven, plus other developers will immediately know how to navigate around this as well.
    – mikera
    May 14, 2012 at 10:57
11

I have seen this handled in a number of different ways:

  • Place your resources directly in a subdirectory under com/dmxio/games/breakout (e.g. /com/dmxio/games/breakout/images/foo.gif and /com/dmxio/games/breakout/images/bar.gif)

  • Place your resources in a jar along with your class files (e.g. foo.gif and bar.gif bundled in breakout.jar)

  • Place your resources in a separate 'resources jar' in a subdirectory under com/dmxio/games/breakout (e.g. foo.gif and bar.gif bundled in /com/dmxio/games/breakout/images/images.jar)

I tend to favor the last option.

You can then use the java.lang.Class.getResource() method to retrieve your resources.

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