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		25bfa80e60
		
			
		
	
	
	
	
		
			
			# Objective Yet another PR for migrating stuff to required components. This time, cameras! ## Solution As per the [selected proposal](https://hackmd.io/tsYID4CGRiWxzsgawzxG_g#Combined-Proposal-1-Selected), deprecate `Camera2dBundle` and `Camera3dBundle` in favor of `Camera2d` and `Camera3d`. Adding a `Camera` without `Camera2d` or `Camera3d` now logs a warning, as suggested by Cart [on Discord](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1264881140007702558/1291506402832945273). I would personally like cameras to work a bit differently and be split into a few more components, to avoid some footguns and confusing semantics, but that is more controversial, and shouldn't block this core migration. ## Testing I ran a few 2D and 3D examples, and tried cameras with and without render graphs. --- ## Migration Guide `Camera2dBundle` and `Camera3dBundle` have been deprecated in favor of `Camera2d` and `Camera3d`. Inserting them will now also insert the other components required by them automatically.
		
			
				
	
	
		
			252 lines
		
	
	
		
			12 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Rust
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			252 lines
		
	
	
		
			12 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Rust
		
	
	
	
	
	
| //! This example shows how to properly handle player input,
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| //! advance a physics simulation in a fixed timestep, and display the results.
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| //!
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| //! The classic source for how and why this is done is Glenn Fiedler's article
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| //! [Fix Your Timestep!](https://gafferongames.com/post/fix_your_timestep/).
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| //! For a more Bevy-centric source, see
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| //! [this cheatbook entry](https://bevy-cheatbook.github.io/fundamentals/fixed-timestep.html).
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| //!
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| //! ## Motivation
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| //!
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| //! The naive way of moving a player is to just update their position like so:
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| //! ```no_run
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| //! transform.translation += velocity;
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| //! ```
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| //! The issue here is that the player's movement speed will be tied to the frame rate.
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| //! Faster machines will move the player faster, and slower machines will move the player slower.
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| //! In fact, you can observe this today when running some old games that did it this way on modern hardware!
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| //! The player will move at a breakneck pace.
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| //!
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| //! The more sophisticated way is to update the player's position based on the time that has passed:
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| //! ```no_run
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| //! transform.translation += velocity * time.delta_seconds();
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| //! ```
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| //! This way, velocity represents a speed in units per second, and the player will move at the same speed
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| //! regardless of the frame rate.
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| //!
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| //! However, this can still be problematic if the frame rate is very low or very high.
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| //! If the frame rate is very low, the player will move in large jumps. This may lead to
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| //! a player moving in such large jumps that they pass through walls or other obstacles.
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| //! In general, you cannot expect a physics simulation to behave nicely with *any* delta time.
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| //! Ideally, we want to have some stability in what kinds of delta times we feed into our physics simulation.
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| //!
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| //! The solution is using a fixed timestep. This means that we advance the physics simulation by a fixed amount
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| //! at a time. If the real time that passed between two frames is less than the fixed timestep, we simply
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| //! don't advance the physics simulation at all.
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| //! If it is more, we advance the physics simulation multiple times until we catch up.
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| //! You can read more about how Bevy implements this in the documentation for
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| //! [`bevy::time::Fixed`](https://docs.rs/bevy/latest/bevy/time/struct.Fixed.html).
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| //!
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| //! This leaves us with a last problem, however. If our physics simulation may advance zero or multiple times
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| //! per frame, there may be frames in which the player's position did not need to be updated at all,
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| //! and some where it is updated by a large amount that resulted from running the physics simulation multiple times.
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| //! This is physically correct, but visually jarring. Imagine a player moving in a straight line, but depending on the frame rate,
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| //! they may sometimes advance by a large amount and sometimes not at all. Visually, we want the player to move smoothly.
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| //! This is why we need to separate the player's position in the physics simulation from the player's position in the visual representation.
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| //! The visual representation can then be interpolated smoothly based on the previous and current actual player position in the physics simulation.
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| //!
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| //! This is a tradeoff: every visual frame is now slightly lagging behind the actual physical frame,
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| //! but in return, the player's movement will appear smooth.
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| //! There are other ways to compute the visual representation of the player, such as extrapolation.
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| //! See the [documentation of the lightyear crate](https://cbournhonesque.github.io/lightyear/book/concepts/advanced_replication/visual_interpolation.html)
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| //! for a nice overview of the different methods and their respective tradeoffs.
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| //!
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| //! ## Implementation
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| //!
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| //! - The player's inputs since the last physics update are stored in the `AccumulatedInput` component.
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| //! - The player's velocity is stored in a `Velocity` component. This is the speed in units per second.
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| //! - The player's current position in the physics simulation is stored in a `PhysicalTranslation` component.
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| //! - The player's previous position in the physics simulation is stored in a `PreviousPhysicalTranslation` component.
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| //! - The player's visual representation is stored in Bevy's regular `Transform` component.
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| //! - Every frame, we go through the following steps:
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| //!    - Accumulate the player's input and set the current speed in the `handle_input` system.
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| //!        This is run in the `RunFixedMainLoop` schedule, ordered in `RunFixedMainLoopSystem::BeforeFixedMainLoop`,
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| //!        which runs before the fixed timestep loop. This is run every frame.
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| //!    - Advance the physics simulation by one fixed timestep in the `advance_physics` system.
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| //!        Accumulated input is consumed here.
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| //!        This is run in the `FixedUpdate` schedule, which runs zero or multiple times per frame.
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| //!    - Update the player's visual representation in the `interpolate_rendered_transform` system.
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| //!        This interpolates between the player's previous and current position in the physics simulation.
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| //!        It is run in the `RunFixedMainLoop` schedule, ordered in `RunFixedMainLoopSystem::AfterFixedMainLoop`,
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| //!        which runs after the fixed timestep loop. This is run every frame.
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| //!
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| //!
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| //! ## Controls
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| //!
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| //! | Key Binding          | Action        |
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| //! |:---------------------|:--------------|
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| //! | `W`                  | Move up       |
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| //! | `S`                  | Move down     |
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| //! | `A`                  | Move left     |
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| //! | `D`                  | Move right    |
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| 
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| use bevy::prelude::*;
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| 
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| fn main() {
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|     App::new()
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|         .add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
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|         .add_systems(Startup, (spawn_text, spawn_player))
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|         // Advance the physics simulation using a fixed timestep.
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|         .add_systems(FixedUpdate, advance_physics)
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|         .add_systems(
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|             // The `RunFixedMainLoop` schedule allows us to schedule systems to run before and after the fixed timestep loop.
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|             RunFixedMainLoop,
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|             (
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|                 // The physics simulation needs to know the player's input, so we run this before the fixed timestep loop.
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|                 // Note that if we ran it in `Update`, it would be too late, as the physics simulation would already have been advanced.
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|                 // If we ran this in `FixedUpdate`, it would sometimes not register player input, as that schedule may run zero times per frame.
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|                 handle_input.in_set(RunFixedMainLoopSystem::BeforeFixedMainLoop),
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|                 // The player's visual representation needs to be updated after the physics simulation has been advanced.
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|                 // This could be run in `Update`, but if we run it here instead, the systems in `Update`
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|                 // will be working with the `Transform` that will actually be shown on screen.
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|                 interpolate_rendered_transform.in_set(RunFixedMainLoopSystem::AfterFixedMainLoop),
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|             ),
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|         )
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|         .run();
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| }
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| 
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| /// A vector representing the player's input, accumulated over all frames that ran
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| /// since the last time the physics simulation was advanced.
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| #[derive(Debug, Component, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Default, Deref, DerefMut)]
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| struct AccumulatedInput(Vec2);
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| 
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| /// A vector representing the player's velocity in the physics simulation.
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| #[derive(Debug, Component, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Default, Deref, DerefMut)]
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| struct Velocity(Vec3);
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| 
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| /// The actual position of the player in the physics simulation.
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| /// This is separate from the `Transform`, which is merely a visual representation.
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| ///
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| /// If you want to make sure that this component is always initialized
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| /// with the same value as the `Transform`'s translation, you can
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| /// use a [component lifecycle hook](https://docs.rs/bevy/0.14.0/bevy/ecs/component/struct.ComponentHooks.html)
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| #[derive(Debug, Component, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Default, Deref, DerefMut)]
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| struct PhysicalTranslation(Vec3);
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| 
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| /// The value [`PhysicalTranslation`] had in the last fixed timestep.
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| /// Used for interpolation in the `interpolate_rendered_transform` system.
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| #[derive(Debug, Component, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Default, Deref, DerefMut)]
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| struct PreviousPhysicalTranslation(Vec3);
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| 
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| /// Spawn the player sprite and a 2D camera.
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| fn spawn_player(mut commands: Commands, asset_server: Res<AssetServer>) {
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|     commands.spawn(Camera2d);
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|     commands.spawn((
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|         Name::new("Player"),
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|         SpriteBundle {
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|             texture: asset_server.load("branding/icon.png"),
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|             transform: Transform::from_scale(Vec3::splat(0.3)),
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|             ..default()
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|         },
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|         AccumulatedInput::default(),
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|         Velocity::default(),
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|         PhysicalTranslation::default(),
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|         PreviousPhysicalTranslation::default(),
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|     ));
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| }
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| 
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| /// Spawn a bit of UI text to explain how to move the player.
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| fn spawn_text(mut commands: Commands) {
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|     commands
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|         .spawn(NodeBundle {
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|             style: Style {
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|                 position_type: PositionType::Absolute,
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|                 bottom: Val::Px(12.0),
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|                 left: Val::Px(12.0),
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|                 ..default()
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|             },
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|             ..default()
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|         })
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|         .with_children(|parent| {
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|             parent.spawn(TextBundle::from_section(
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|                 "Move the player with WASD",
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|                 TextStyle {
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|                     font_size: 25.0,
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|                     ..default()
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|                 },
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|             ));
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|         });
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| }
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| 
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| /// Handle keyboard input and accumulate it in the `AccumulatedInput` component.
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| ///
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| /// There are many strategies for how to handle all the input that happened since the last fixed timestep.
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| /// This is a very simple one: we just accumulate the input and average it out by normalizing it.
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| fn handle_input(
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|     keyboard_input: Res<ButtonInput<KeyCode>>,
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|     mut query: Query<(&mut AccumulatedInput, &mut Velocity)>,
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| ) {
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|     /// Since Bevy's default 2D camera setup is scaled such that
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|     /// one unit is one pixel, you can think of this as
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|     /// "How many pixels per second should the player move?"
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|     const SPEED: f32 = 210.0;
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|     for (mut input, mut velocity) in query.iter_mut() {
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|         if keyboard_input.pressed(KeyCode::KeyW) {
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|             input.y += 1.0;
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|         }
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|         if keyboard_input.pressed(KeyCode::KeyS) {
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|             input.y -= 1.0;
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|         }
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|         if keyboard_input.pressed(KeyCode::KeyA) {
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|             input.x -= 1.0;
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|         }
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|         if keyboard_input.pressed(KeyCode::KeyD) {
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|             input.x += 1.0;
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|         }
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| 
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|         // Need to normalize and scale because otherwise
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|         // diagonal movement would be faster than horizontal or vertical movement.
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|         // This effectively averages the accumulated input.
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|         velocity.0 = input.extend(0.0).normalize_or_zero() * SPEED;
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|     }
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| }
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| 
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| /// Advance the physics simulation by one fixed timestep. This may run zero or multiple times per frame.
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| ///
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| /// Note that since this runs in `FixedUpdate`, `Res<Time>` would be `Res<Time<Fixed>>` automatically.
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| /// We are being explicit here for clarity.
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| fn advance_physics(
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|     fixed_time: Res<Time<Fixed>>,
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|     mut query: Query<(
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|         &mut PhysicalTranslation,
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|         &mut PreviousPhysicalTranslation,
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|         &mut AccumulatedInput,
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|         &Velocity,
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|     )>,
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| ) {
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|     for (
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|         mut current_physical_translation,
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|         mut previous_physical_translation,
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|         mut input,
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|         velocity,
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|     ) in query.iter_mut()
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|     {
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|         previous_physical_translation.0 = current_physical_translation.0;
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|         current_physical_translation.0 += velocity.0 * fixed_time.delta_seconds();
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| 
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|         // Reset the input accumulator, as we are currently consuming all input that happened since the last fixed timestep.
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|         input.0 = Vec2::ZERO;
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|     }
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| }
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| 
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| fn interpolate_rendered_transform(
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|     fixed_time: Res<Time<Fixed>>,
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|     mut query: Query<(
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|         &mut Transform,
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|         &PhysicalTranslation,
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|         &PreviousPhysicalTranslation,
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|     )>,
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| ) {
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|     for (mut transform, current_physical_translation, previous_physical_translation) in
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|         query.iter_mut()
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|     {
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|         let previous = previous_physical_translation.0;
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|         let current = current_physical_translation.0;
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|         // The overstep fraction is a value between 0 and 1 that tells us how far we are between two fixed timesteps.
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|         let alpha = fixed_time.overstep_fraction();
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| 
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|         let rendered_translation = previous.lerp(current, alpha);
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|         transform.translation = rendered_translation;
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|     }
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| }
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