#!/usr/bin/env python """ pygame.examples.moveit This is the full and final example from the Pygame Tutorial, "How Do I Make It Move". It creates 10 objects and animates them on the screen. Note it's a bit scant on error checking, but it's easy to read. :] Fortunately, this is python, and we needn't wrestle with a pile of error codes. """ import os import pygame as pg main_dir = os.path.split(os.path.abspath(__file__))[0] # our game object class class GameObject: def __init__(self, image, height, speed): self.speed = speed self.image = image self.pos = image.get_rect().move(0, height) def move(self): self.pos = self.pos.move(self.speed, 0) if self.pos.right > 600: self.pos.left = 0 # quick function to load an image def load_image(name): path = os.path.join(main_dir, "data", name) return pg.image.load(path).convert() # here's the full code def main(): pg.init() screen = pg.display.set_mode((640, 480)) player = load_image("player1.gif") background = load_image("liquid.bmp") # scale the background image so that it fills the window and # successfully overwrites the old sprite position. background = pg.transform.scale2x(background) background = pg.transform.scale2x(background) screen.blit(background, (0, 0)) objects = [] for x in range(10): o = GameObject(player, x * 40, x) objects.append(o) while 1: for event in pg.event.get(): if event.type in (pg.QUIT, pg.KEYDOWN): return for o in objects: screen.blit(background, o.pos, o.pos) for o in objects: o.move() screen.blit(o.image, o.pos) pg.display.update() if __name__ == "__main__": main() pg.quit()