Attention: Here be dragons (unstable version)
This is the latest
(unstable) version of this documentation, which may document features
not available in or compatible with released stable versions of Redot.
Checking the stable version of the documentation...
AnimatedTexture
Deprecated: This class does not work properly in current versions and may be removed in the future. There is currently no equivalent workaround.
Inherits: Texture2D < Texture < Resource < RefCounted < Object
Proxy texture for simple frame-based animations.
Description
AnimatedTexture is a resource format for frame-based animations, where multiple textures can be chained automatically with a predefined delay for each frame. Unlike AnimationPlayer or AnimatedSprite2D, it isn't a Node, but has the advantage of being usable anywhere a Texture2D resource can be used, e.g. in a TileSet.
The playback of the animation is controlled by the speed_scale property, as well as each frame's duration (see set_frame_duration). The animation loops, i.e. it will restart at frame 0 automatically after playing the last frame.
AnimatedTexture currently requires all frame textures to have the same size, otherwise the bigger ones will be cropped to match the smallest one.
Note: AnimatedTexture doesn't support using AtlasTextures. Each frame needs to be a separate Texture2D.
Warning: The current implementation is not efficient for the modern renderers.
Properties
|
||
|
||
|
||
resource_local_to_scene |
|
|
|
Methods
get_frame_duration(frame: int) const |
|
get_frame_texture(frame: int) const |
|
void |
set_frame_duration(frame: int, duration: float) |
void |
set_frame_texture(frame: int, texture: Texture2D) |
Constants
MAX_FRAMES = 256
🔗
The maximum number of frames supported by AnimatedTexture. If you need more frames in your animation, use AnimationPlayer or AnimatedSprite2D.
Property Descriptions
Sets the currently visible frame of the texture. Setting this frame while playing resets the current frame time, so the newly selected frame plays for its whole configured frame duration.
Number of frames to use in the animation. While you can create the frames independently with set_frame_texture, you need to set this value for the animation to take new frames into account. The maximum number of frames is MAX_FRAMES.
If true
, the animation will only play once and will not loop back to the first frame after reaching the end. Note that reaching the end will not set pause to true
.
If true
, the animation will pause where it currently is (i.e. at current_frame). The animation will continue from where it was paused when changing this property to false
.
The animation speed is multiplied by this value. If set to a negative value, the animation is played in reverse.
Method Descriptions
float get_frame_duration(frame: int) const 🔗
Returns the given frame
's duration, in seconds.
Texture2D get_frame_texture(frame: int) const 🔗
Returns the given frame's Texture2D.
void set_frame_duration(frame: int, duration: float) 🔗
Sets the duration of any given frame
. The final duration is affected by the speed_scale. If set to 0
, the frame is skipped during playback.
void set_frame_texture(frame: int, texture: Texture2D) 🔗
Assigns a Texture2D to the given frame. Frame IDs start at 0, so the first frame has ID 0, and the last frame of the animation has ID frames - 1.
You can define any number of textures up to MAX_FRAMES, but keep in mind that only frames from 0 to frames - 1 will be part of the animation.