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I am working on a browser-based web game with a very large 2d, tile-based map. Unlike games like Tribal Wars, the terrain is not generated randomly from a seed or one large image file.

What I currently do is have a hidden canvas element that contains a bmp map where each pixel represents a tile. A green pixel represents land, a blue pixel represents water, and a black pixel represents a region outside of the map.

Currently my algorithm will take a certain rectangular segment of the bitmap in the canvas and then create a bunch of uniformly sized tiles that fit into a much larger div. Tiles are painted left to right, relying on relative positioning and float: left to arrange themselves properly. Each tile is 30px by 30px, which adds up to quite a few tiles on a 1080p monitor.

In order to move the map around, the user presses an arrow key that moves the rectangular selection in the canvas, then painting it all back.

Here is the straight code:

<script>

$("#WorldMapCanvas").hide();

var canvas = document.getElementById('WorldMapCanvas');
var context = canvas.getContext('2d');
var imageObj = new Image();
imageObj.src = '../Images/MapTest3.bmp';

var tileSize = 30;
var maxTilesOnX = $("#WorldMap").width() / tileSize;
var maxTilesOnY = $("#WorldMap").height() / tileSize;

var offsetX = 0;
var offsetY = 0;

function draw() {

    $("#WorldMap").html(""); // clear map div

    context.drawImage(imageObj, 0, 0);

    for (var y = 0 + offsetY; y < maxTilesOnY + offsetY; y++) {
        for (var x = 0 + offsetX; x < maxTilesOnX + offsetX; x++) {

            var pixel = context.getImageData(x, y, 1, 1);
            // alert("x: " + x + " y: " + y + " " + pixel.data[0] + "," + pixel.data[1] + "," + pixel.data[2]);

            if ((pixel.data[0] == 0) && (pixel.data[1] == 255) && (pixel.data[2] == 0)) {
                $("#WorldMap").append("<div class = 'grass'></div>");
            }
            else if ((pixel.data[0] == 0) && (pixel.data[1] == 0) && (pixel.data[2] == 255)) {
                $("#WorldMap").append("<div class = 'ocean'></div>");
            }
            else if ((pixel.data[0] == 0) && (pixel.data[1] == 0) && (pixel.data[2] == 0)) {
                $("#WorldMap").append("<div class = 'null'></div>");
            }
        }

    }



    $(".grass").mouseenter(function () {
        $("#WorldMapMessage").html("grass");
    });
    $(".ocean").mouseenter(function () {
        $("#WorldMapMessage").html("ocean");
    });
    $(".null").mouseenter(function () {
        $("#WorldMapMessage").html("empty");
    });
}

imageObj.onload = draw();

// allows player to draw new portions of the map by using arrow keys
clickhandler = document.addEventListener('keydown', function (event) {
    if (event.keyCode == 37) { offsetX -= 5; draw();}
    else if (event.keyCode == 38) { offsetY += 5; draw(); } // up
    else if (event.keyCode == 39) { offsetX += 5; draw(); }
    else if (event.keyCode == 40) { offsetY -= 5; draw(); }
});

However, a single key press takes the browser about 2.5 seconds to process and paint all that data, and I have a fairly powerful processor which means it'll likely be painfully slow for the average user.

How might I improve algorithm speed? Ideally I'd like scrolling to be realtime so the player can drag the map around, google maps style. I have a few ideas:

  1. Define left and top positions for each tile via jquery rather than loading them all in and relying on relative positioning to cause them to align.
  2. Merge the tiles together into a single image in a canvas. However, I do need to maintain the cursor-hover information so the player can query terrain info (and later on armies/cities that will be drawn on top after pulling that data from the server.)
  3. Preload the entire map. Not ideal since maps will be about 1 million square tiles...
  4. Look into using a Flash plugin, also not ideal since I'd like to minimize outside performance requirements.

Do any of you have suggestions on how I might go about improving my algorithm or have suggestions on entire new ideas to consider?

Thanks!

1 Answer 1

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I'm not an expert, but caching the DOM elements would be the first thing I would do. var $WorldMap = $("#WorldMap")

I am not sure, how fast the .append() Method is. Here is a cool Site to test different JS methods against each other. jsperf.com!

Or have the Map printed like this:
0000111100000
0001111002220
0011100112201

And then simply replace it with your elements.

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  • In the end, I opted for the "one very large image" method in which the world map is quite literally a big 12,000 by 12,000 pixel image. I don't know how this will work when I'm no longer just testing on localhost, but it actually works decently for now. If you're curious about what I did, I describe it more in a couple blog posts at link Jul 7, 2013 at 15:23

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