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I was wondering if i could use picture maps to create solid walls within my game, an example is below:

enter image description here

How would I go about making a program that generates a map based on the black wall locations on my picture

Iv been looking into doing this for a while although up to now iv rested on simply drawing in the lines using python.draw. Iv also looked into the use of turtles but i dont think thats what I desire for my program at this time.

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  • You could try using Pillow to analyze areas of pixels on an image, but I would personally recommend using PyTMX and Tiled instead for map creation as they are much easier to implement than trying to analyze an image file bit by bit. Apr 5, 2019 at 13:00

1 Answer 1

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You can read the color value of each pixel.

The easiest way is to use the get_at function to the Surface class, but for more features and performance, you can also use a PixelArray or the surfarray module.

Another way would be to create a Mask from the images and use that for collision detection.

Here's a simple, hackish but working example:

import pygame

class Player(pygame.sprite.Sprite):
    def __init__(self, image, pos, background):
        super().__init__()
        self.image = image
        self.pos = pygame.Vector2(pos)
        self.rect = self.image.get_rect(center=self.pos)
        self.background = background

    def update(self, events, dt):
        pressed = pygame.key.get_pressed()
        move = pygame.Vector2((0, 0))
        if pressed[pygame.K_w]: move += (0, -1)
        if pressed[pygame.K_a]: move += (-1, 0)
        if pressed[pygame.K_s]: move += (0, 1)
        if pressed[pygame.K_d]: move += (1, 0)
        if move.length() > 0: move.normalize_ip()

        new_pos = self.pos + move*(dt/5)
        new_rect = self.rect.copy()
        new_rect.center = new_pos
        new_rect.clamp_ip(self.background.get_rect())
        new_pos = new_rect.center

        hit_box = self.background.subsurface(new_rect)
        for x in range(new_rect.width):
            for y in range(new_rect.height):
                if sum(hit_box.get_at((x, y))) < 500:
                    return

        self.pos = new_pos
        self.rect.center = self.pos

def main():
    pygame.init()
    screen = pygame.display.set_mode((284, 384))
    screen_rect = screen.get_rect()

    clock = pygame.time.Clock()
    sprites = pygame.sprite.Group()

    background = pygame.transform.scale2x(pygame.image.load('maze.jpg'))
    pimg = pygame.Surface((10, 10))
    pimg.fill((200, 20, 20))
    sprites.add(Player(pimg, (50, 50), background))

    dt = 0
    while True:
        events = pygame.event.get()
        for e in events:
            if e.type == pygame.QUIT:
                return

        sprites.update(events, dt)
        screen.fill(pygame.Color('grey'))
        screen.blit(background, (0, 0))
        sprites.draw(screen)
        pygame.display.flip()
        dt = clock.tick(60)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()

enter image description here

Of course this can be improved, for example by using an image with alpha values so you could easily create masks; but you'll get the idea: just "look" at the pixels of your Surface...

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  • Is this scalable to adding more mazes? What I was thinking is making the interface get the pos of the sprite and then detect when it goes -15 and +815 when it goes through the gaps leading to a new level
    – Pthyon
    Apr 5, 2019 at 13:35
  • @KallumHancox Sure, why not. You could also remove the new_rect.clamp_ip part and then check if not background.get_rect().contains(new_rect) or something like that. Just read a bit in the pygame docs if you have not already. You'll probably find a lot of useful stuff.
    – sloth
    Apr 5, 2019 at 13:38

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