User:Gsd06/Mon Premier Robot

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Ceci est le classique Tutoriel Mon 1er Robot qui décrit comment créer votre 1er robot.

Créer un Robot

Là est la source d'amusement : voici en quoi Robocode consiste !

Créer un robot est simple. Le rendre vainqueur l'est moins. Vous pouvez dépenser quelques minutes pour le créer, ou des mois et des mois. Je dois vous prévenir qu'élaborer un robot peut devenir une addiction ! Une fois que vous y êtes, vous voudrez suivre l'évolution de votre création à travers des douleurs grandissantes (as it goes through growing pains), faire des erreurs et louper des tirs essentiels. Mais au fur et à mesure que vous apprendrez, vous deviendrez capable d'apprendre à votre robot comment agir, quoi faire, où aller, quoi éviter, où tirer. Doit il se cacher ou sauter dans la bataille ? Picture of the robot named MatBot, which is one Mathew Nelson's robots

Mon Premier Robot

Prêt à créer votre 1er robot ? J'espère que vous allez trouver comme c'est facile, (straightforward), amusant et addictif !

Robocode contient quelques robots types que vous pouvez observer afin d'en tirer des idées, et comprendre comment çà fonctionne. Vous pouvez utiliser 'Robot Editor' pour tous les analyser.

Dans cette section, nous allons utiliser 'Robot Editor' afin de créer votre tout nouveau robot.

The Robot Editor

La première étape consiste à ouvrir 'Robot Editor'. A partir de la fenêtre principale cliquez sur le menu Robot, puis sélectionnez Editor.

When the editor window comes up, click on the File menu, then select New Robot.

In the dialogs that follow, type in a name for your robot, and enter your initials.

Voila! You now see the code for your own robot.

A New Robot

This is what you should be looking at (names have been changed to protect the innocent):

 package man;
 import robocode.*;
  
 public class MyFirstRobot extends Robot {
     public void run() {
         while (true) {
             ahead(100);
             turnGunRight(360);
             back(100);
             turnGunRight(360);
         }
     }
  
     public void onScannedRobot(ScannedRobotEvent e) {
         fire(1);
     }
 }

We're only concerned with the bits in bold here... you won't need to change anything else. Not that much, right?

By the way, if you're REALLY concerned about the rest of it, right now, I describe it here:

 package man;
 import robocode.*;
  
 public class MyFirstRobot extends Robot {
     public void run() {
     }
 }
import robocode.*; Tells Java that you're going to use Robocode objects in your robot.
public class MyFirstRobot extends Robot Tells Java: "The object I'm describing here is a type of Robot, named MyFirstRobot".
public void run() { } The game calls your run() method when the battle begins.
{ } "Curly brackets" ( { } ) group things together. In this case, they're grouping together all the code for the robot.


Let's move somewhere

Let's add a couple lines so that it will do something.

First, we'll examine the run() method:

 while (true) {
     ahead(100);
     turnGunRight(360);
     back(100);
     turnGunRight(360);
 }

while(true) { } means: "While the condition true is true, do everything between the curly brackets { }".

Since true is always true (no kidding? ;-), it means: "Do the stuff inside my curly brackets, forever".

So this robot will:

  1. move ahead 100 pixels
  2. turn the gun right by 360 degrees
  3. move back 100 pixels
  4. turn the gun left/back by 360 degrees

The robot will continue doing this over and over and over, until it dies, due to the while(true) statement.

Not so bad, right?

Fire at Will!

When our radar scans a robot, we want to fire:

 public void onScannedRobot(ScannedRobotEvent e) {
     fire(1);
 }

The game calls your onScannedRobot method whenever you can see another robot. It sends along an event that can tell us lots of information about the robot -- its name, how much life it has, where it is, where it's heading, how fast it's going, etc.

However, since this is a simple robot, we're not going to look at any of that stuff. Let's just fire!

Compile your robot

First, save your robot by selecting the Save in the File menu. Follow the prompts to save your robot.

Now, compile it by selecting Compile in the Compiler menu.

If your robot compiles without any errors, you can start a new battle with your robot. Start a new battle by selecting New in the Battle menu. If you cannot see your robot, you might have to refresh the list of robots by pressing F5. Add your robot to the battle together with at least one other robot as e.g. sample.Target, and press the Start Battle button to let the games begin!

What's next?

You should have a look at all the sample robots to see how certain things are done.

You'll eventually want to look at the Robocode API to see all the other things your robot can do.

Above all, good luck, have fun, and enjoy!