Main Update Loop

Extending your application from com.jme3.app.SimpleApplication provides you with an update loop. This is where you implement your game logic (game mechanics).

Some usage examples: Here you remote-control NPCs (computer controlled characters), generate game events, and respond to user input.

To let you see the main update loop in context, understand that the SimpleApplication does the following:

  • Initialization – Execute simpleInitApp() method once.

  • Main Update Loop

    1. Input listeners respond to mouse clicks and keyboard presses – Input handling

    2. Update game state:

      1. Update overall game state – Execute Application States

      2. User code update – Execute simpleUpdate() method

      3. Logical update of entities – Execute Custom Controls

    3. Render audio and video

      1. Application States rendering.

      2. Scene rendering.

      3. User code rendering – Execute simpleRender() method.

    4. Repeat loop.

  • Quit – If user requests exit(), execute cleanup() and destroy().
    The jME window closes and the loop ends.

Usage

In a trivial SimpleApplication (such as a Hello World tutorial), all code is either in the simpleInitApp() (initialization) or simpleUpdate() (behaviour) method – or in a helper method/class that is called from one of these two. This trivial approach will make your main class very long, hard to read, and hard to maintain. You don’t need to load the whole scene at once, and you don’t need to run all conditionals tests all the time.

It’s a best practice to modularize your game mechanics and spread out initialization and update loop code over several Java objects:

  • Move modular code blocks from the simpleInitApp() method into AppStates. Attach AppStates to initialize custom subsets of “one” dungeon, and detach it when the player exits this “dungeon”.
    Examples: Weather/sky audio and visuals, physics collision shapes, sub-rootnodes of individual dungeons including dungeon NPCs, etc.

  • Move modular code blocks from the simpleUpdate() method into the update loops of Custom Controls to control individual entity behavior (NPCs), and into the update method of AppStates to control world events.
    Examples: Weather behaviour, light behaviour, physics behaviour, individual NPC behaviour, trap behaviour, etc.