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Hands-On Game Development with WebAssembly
Hands-On Game Development with WebAssembly

Hands-On Game Development with WebAssembly: Learn WebAssembly C++ programming by building a retro space game

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Hands-On Game Development with WebAssembly

HTML5 and WebAssembly

In this chapter, we will show you how the C code we write to target WebAssembly comes together with HTML5, JavaScript, and CSS to create a web page. We will teach you how to create a new HTML shell file to be used by Emscripten in the creation of our WebAssembly app. We will discuss the Module object and how Emscripten uses it as an interface between our JavaScript and the WebAssembly module. We will show you how to call WebAssembly functions written in C from within JavaScript on our HTML page. We will also show you how to call JavaScript functions from our C code. We will discuss how to use CSS to improve the look of our web page. We will introduce you to the HTML5 Canvas element and show how it is possible to display images to the canvas from within JavaScript. We will briefly discuss moving those images around the canvas...

The Emscripten minimal shell file

The first build we created with Emscripten used a default HTML shell file. If you have a website, this is probably not the way you would prefer your web page to look. You would probably prefer to design your look and feel using CSS and HTML5 specific to your design or business needs. For instance, the templates I use for my websites typically include advertisements to the left and right of the game's canvas. That is how traffic to these sites is monetized. You may choose to add a logo for your website above your game's canvas. There is also a text area where Emscripten logs output from printf or other standard IO calls. You may choose to remove this textarea element altogether, or you may keep it, but keep it hidden because it is useful for debugging later.

To build the HTML file based on a new shell file that is not the...

Creating a new HTML shell and C file

In this section, we are going to create a new shell.c file that exposes several functions called from our JavaScript. We will also use EM_ASM to call the InitWrappers function that we will define inside the new HTML shell file that we will be creating. This function will create wrappers inside JavaScript that can call functions defined in the WebAssembly module. Before creating the new HTML shell file, we need to create the C code that will be called by the JavaScript wrappers inside the HTML shell:

  1. Create the new shell.c file as follows:
#include <emscripten.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>

int main() {
printf("Hello World\n");
EM_ASM( InitWrappers() );
printf("Initialization Complete\n");
}

void test() {
printf("button test\n");
}

void int_test( int num...

Defining the CSS

Now that we have some basic HTML, we need to create a new shell.css file. Without any CSS styling, our page looks pretty terrible.

A page without styling will be similar to the one shown as follows:

Figure 2.1: The Hello WebAssembly app without a CSS style

Luckily for us, a little bit of CSS goes a long way to make our web page look presentable. Here is what the new shell.css file we are creating looks like:

body {
margin-top: 20px;
}

.input_box {
width: 20%;
display: inline-block;
}
.em_button {
width: 45%;
height: 40px;
background-color: orangered;
color: white;
border: 2px solid white;
font-size: 20px;
border-radius: 8px;
transition-duration: 0.5s;
}

.em_button:hover {
background-color: orange;
color: white;
border: 2px solid white;
}

.em_input {
width: 45%;
height: 20px;
font-size: 20px;
background-color...

HTML5 and game development

Most HTML rendering is done through the HTML Document Object Model (DOM). The DOM is what is known as a retained mode graphical library. Retained mode graphics retain a tree known as a scene graph. This scene graph keeps track of all the graphical elements in our model and how to render them. The nice thing about retained mode graphics is that they are straightforward for a developer to manage. The graphical library does all the heavy lifting and keeps track of our objects for us as well as where they render. The downside is that a retained mode system takes up a lot more memory and provides a lot less control to the developer. When we write HTML5 games, we could take images rendered in the DOM using <IMG> HTML elements and move those elements around using JavaScript or CSS animations to manipulate the positions of those images within the DOM directly...

Adding a canvas to the Emscripten template

In an earlier part of this chapter, we discussed making calls to the Emscripten WebAssembly app from a shell template. Now that you know how to make the interaction work between JavaScript and WebAssembly, we can add a canvas element back into the template and start to manipulate that canvas using the WebAssembly module. We are going to create a new .c file that will call a JavaScript function passing it an x and y coordinate. The JavaScript function will manipulate a spaceship image, moving it around the canvas. We will also create a brand new shell file called canvas_shell.html. 

As we did for the previous version of our shell, we will start by breaking this file down into four sections to discuss it at a high level. We will then discuss the essential parts of this file a piece at a time.

  1. The beginning...

Summary

In this chapter, we discussed the Emscripten minimal shell HTML file, what its various components are, and how they work. We also wrote about what parts of the file we can do without, if we are not using our shell to generate canvas code. You learned about the Module object, and how it is the interface that uses the JavaScript glue code to tie the JavaScript in our HTML and our WebAssembly together. We then created a new WebAssembly module that contained functions we exported to allow JavaScript to use Module.cwrap to create JavaScript functions we could then call from our DOM that executes our WebAssembly functions.

We created a brand new HTML shell file that used some of the Module code from the Emscripten minimal shell, but rewrote the HTML and CSS of the original shell almost entirely. We were then able to compile that new C code and HTML shell file into a...

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Key benefits

  • Create a WebAssembly game that implements sprites, animations, physics, particle systems, and other game development fundamentals
  • Get to grips with advanced game mechanics in WebAssembly
  • Learn to use WebAssembly and WebGL to render to the HTML5 canvas element

Description

Within the next few years, WebAssembly will change the web as we know it. It promises a world where you can write an application for the web in any language, and compile it for native platforms as well as the web. This book is designed to introduce web developers and game developers to the world of WebAssembly by walking through the development of a retro arcade game. You will learn how to build a WebAssembly application using C++, Emscripten, JavaScript, WebGL, SDL, and HTML5. This book covers a lot of ground in both game development and web application development. When creating a game or application that targets WebAssembly, developers need to learn a plethora of skills and tools. This book is a sample platter of those tools and skills. It covers topics including Emscripten, C/C++, WebGL, OpenGL, JavaScript, HTML5, and CSS. The reader will also learn basic techniques for game development, including 2D sprite animation, particle systems, 2D camera design, sound effects, 2D game physics, user interface design, shaders, debugging, and optimization. By the end of the book, you will be able to create simple web games and web applications targeting WebAssembly.

Who is this book for?

Web developers and game developers interested in creating applications for the web using WebAssembly. Game developers interested in deploying their games to the web Web developers interested in creating applications that are potentially orders of magnitude faster than their existing JavaScript web apps C/C++ developers interested in using their existing skills to deploy applications to the web

What you will learn

  • Build web applications with near-native performance using WebAssembly
  • Become familiar with how web applications can be used to create games using HTML5 Canvas, WebGL, and SDL
  • Become well versed with game development concepts such as sprites, animation, particle systems, AI, physics, camera design, sound effects, and shaders
  • Deploy C/C++ applications to the browser using WebAssembly and Emscripten
  • Understand how Emscripten HTML shell templates, JavaScript glue code, and a WebAssembly module interact
  • Debug and performance tune your WebAssembly application

Product Details

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Publication date, Length, Edition, Language, ISBN-13
Publication date : May 31, 2019
Length: 596 pages
Edition : 1st
Language : English
ISBN-13 : 9781838644659
Languages :

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Product Details

Publication date : May 31, 2019
Length: 596 pages
Edition : 1st
Language : English
ISBN-13 : 9781838644659
Languages :

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Table of Contents

16 Chapters
Introduction to WebAssembly and Emscripten Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
HTML5 and WebAssembly Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Introduction to WebGL Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Sprite Animations in WebAssembly with SDL Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Keyboard Input Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Game Objects and the Game Loop Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Collision Detection Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Basic Particle System Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Improved Particle Systems Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
AI and Steering Behaviors Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Designing a 2D Camera Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Sound FX Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Game Physics Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
UI and Mouse Input Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Shaders and 2D Lighting Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Debugging and Optimization Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Customer reviews

Top Reviews
Rating distribution
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Half star icon 4.7
(9 Ratings)
5 star 77.8%
4 star 11.1%
3 star 11.1%
2 star 0%
1 star 0%
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Jason A Tucker Jul 09, 2019
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
I’m primarily a business application developer, so I was not familiar with the technology or the platforms covered in this book. The author’s writing style and methodical approach helped overcome my own knowledge gaps. Kudos to both the author and editor for making a daunting task much less intimidating.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
James Barron Jul 02, 2019
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
This is a good review of both the burgeoning technology of web assembly and some basics of 2D game development. While this book covers a wide array of subjects from writing C++ and Javascript, Web Assembly, game development, and more, it does not assume a lot of prior knowledge of these topics and does a good job of explaining step-by-step and topic-by-topic everything needed for the book. There is also a nice smattering of enriching notes on the history of web technology and game development to give context to what is presented.Since web assembly is so new, this book explains well where it is rapidly changing, where things are still not developed or is buggy, and how to work around some common issues. It covers how C++ and Javascript interact, how to properly compile and run, and how to debug. All of these have their issues and details which are nicely explained so the reader won't need to struggle with it.All in all, it is a clear, methodical guide for both those with little knowledge and those with more experienced.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
L. G. Sep 23, 2021
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
Little slow at the beginning then it started a fire in me like when you mix gasoline and styrofoam, light it and throw it but it ends up on your friends shirt only to burn a massive hole in it. Overall a great read and an awesome amount of knowledge included.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
Tim in Colorado Jul 09, 2019
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
Covers the basics really well, and goes in-depth into how to use the WebAssembly toolchain to write a game.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
Brandon Jul 23, 2019
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
I always want to learn how to develop in WebGL and WebAssembly but never found the right book. This book gave me the foundation to develop games that can be played in a web browser. The book contains great examples you can download and learn from. I am relatively new to this space and the examples were inciteful and very helpful! The book gave me the knowledge and concepts necessary for making my own 2D games I played as a kid!
Amazon Verified review Amazon
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