0

Please bear with me in this rather long question.

I am currently building a voxel engine (nothing like Minecraft, don't worry). I want the engine to be modular. For example, I want the voxel 'engine' to be a seperate component to the 'renderer'.

The engine currently builds up a database of voxel objects that are each composed of a 3-dimensional array. However, the renderer makes use of meshes extracted from this data using the marching cubes algorithm. I need to store both the voxel data and the mesh data for each voxel object. However, since both components are modular they cannot be stored in the same place.

My current solution has been to build a secondary data structure inside the renderer that attempts to mirror the engine. It does this by duplicating the objects in the engine structure, giving each object a pointer to the object they mirror. However, this quickly becomes complex, since modifications to the original data structure have to be updated by the mirrored version.

As you can see, the problem is more theoretical than technical. Could anyone help me in suggesting an OOP structure that my program may take to solve this issue better? I'm open to all suggestions, however radical.

Thanks.

7
  • Possibly something for SE: programmers. Jul 15, 2015 at 20:33
  • Your question is too broad for Stack Overflow. Jul 15, 2015 at 20:33
  • i solved this same problem by keeping the data structures separate, and then building functions that will convert from voxel data to mesh data. But I use functional programming, so no modifications to the data structure are happening. see sivut.koti.soon.fi/~terop/GameApi.html
    – tp1
    Jul 15, 2015 at 20:53
  • @tp1 I would do that, but the problem is this voxel data can't be converted to mesh data in real-time so I need a method by which I can store it in a data structure. Jul 15, 2015 at 20:57
  • there's thing called "flyweight pattern" which is used to draw fonts etc, but also suitable for voxel-like things.
    – tp1
    Jul 15, 2015 at 21:11

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.