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I'm trying to build a game that involves a small red player (rectangle) being controlled by the arrow keys. There's a white grid on top of a black background, 2 different coloured objectives (rectangles), and several random red boxes (rectangles).

The part I need help with is moving the small red player. I can move it, but it seems to draw itself in the new position, but the version of the rectangle that was previously drawn stays there, forming a line. I want the entire rectangle to move and not leave any traces/previous versions of itself.

According to some other posts, I've heard that the only way to do this is to fill the screen with the background colour (in this case, black) and redraw the players on top of it; however, this is really hard in my case as I have the red boxes and objectives placed randomly, so every time I draw them again, they draw in a new random position, not in their old positions. I want the red boxes and objectives to stay in the same position, but have the player rectangles move around (while basically deleting the older versions of themselves).

Here's the code I currently have (I've excluded the basics, like defining colours, imports, and setting the screen height/width):

p1_velocity_x = 0
p1_velocity_y = 0
p2_velocity_x = 0
p2_velocity_y = 0


def grid():
    for col in range(0, screen_width - 100, 10):
        for row in range(0, screen_height, 10):
            screen.set_at((row, col), white)


def red_boxes():
    for i in range(100):
        pygame.draw.rect(screen, red, (randrange(1, 1200), randrange(1, 470), 25, 25))


def blue_score_box():
    pygame.draw.rect(screen, blue, (randrange(1, 1200), randrange(1, 470), 25, 25))


def yellow_score_box():
    pygame.draw.rect(screen, yellow, (randrange(1, 1200), randrange(1, 470), 25, 25))


class Player:
    color = (0, 0, 0)

    def __init__(self, color):
        self.x = 0
        self.y = 0
        self.color = color


p1 = Player(red)
p1.x = randrange(1, 1200, 10)
p1.y = randrange(1, 470, 10)

p2 = Player(yellow)
p2.x = randrange(1, 1200, 10)
p2.y = randrange(1, 470, 10)


while True:
    for event in pygame.event.get():
        if event.type == QUIT:
            pygame.quit()
            sys.exit()
        if event.type == pygame.KEYDOWN:
            if event.key == pygame.K_RIGHT:
                p1.x += 10

    screen.fill(black)
    grid()
    red_boxes()
    yellow_score_box()
    blue_score_box()

    pygame.draw.rect(screen, p1.color, (p1.x, p1.y, 10, 10))
    pygame.draw.rect(screen, p2.color, (p2.x, p2.y, 10, 10))

    pygame.display.update()

The result of the above code is that I'm able to move the red rectangle as I want, but since I call the red_boxes(), yellow_score_box(), and blue_score_box() methods in the while loop, they keep calling indefinitely, drawing random red, blue, and yellow rectangles all over the screen almost every second. I want them to stay in one place while having the functionality of moving the player as I do now.

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  • "How to move a Pygame object and erase it in its previous position?" - That is only possible if you know what was draw in the area, before the red rectangle was drawn there. The area is overwritten by the red rectangle, and the previous color information is lost.
    – Rabbid76
    May 19, 2019 at 19:54
  • I do know what was previously drawn there - black background with a white grid (one white rectangle every 10 px).
    – Rohan
    May 19, 2019 at 19:57
  • And red_boxes?
    – Rabbid76
    May 19, 2019 at 20:00
  • Well since that function draws the boxes randomly, there might have been a red box there.
    – Rohan
    May 19, 2019 at 20:11

1 Answer 1

0

Create a pygame.Surface with the same size than the red player rectangle:

bkP1 = pygame.Surface((10, 10))

Backup the background (pygame.Surface.blit) and store the position of the player, before the player is drawn:

prevPos = (p1.x, p1.y)
bkP1.blit(screen, (0, 0), (*prevPos, 10, 10))

Draw the background on top of the player when the player has to be erased:

screen.blit(bkP1, prevPos)

The process may work as follows:

prevPos = None
bkP1 = pygame.Surface((10, 10))

while True:

    # [...]

    if prevPos:
        screen.blit(bkP1, prevPos)
    prevPos = (p1.x, p1.y)
    bkP1.blit(screen, (0, 0), (*prevPos, 10, 10))
    pygame.draw.rect(screen, p1.color, (p1.x, p1.y, 10, 10))

Of course it is possible to add the mechanism to the class Player:

class Player:

    def __init__(self, color):
        self.x = 0
        self.y = 0
        self.color = color
        self. prevPos = None
        self.bk = pygame.Surface((10, 10))

    def draw(self, screen):
        if self.prevPos:
            screen.blit(self.bk, self.prevPos)
        self.prevPos = (self.x, self.y)
        self.bk.blit(screen, (0, 0), (*self.prevPos, 10, 10))
        pygame.draw.rect(screen, self.color, (self.x, self.y, 10, 10))

while True:

    # [...]

    p1.draw(screen) 

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