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Previously, every type of falling object had to have its own class that defined the object type's sprite, weight, and reaction to the cart/floor. This was pretty messy considering how many object types may only be used in one game mode--for instance, the many power ups in Power mode, once it's created, will never be used outside of Power mode. So, to increase customizability and decrease class clutter, game modes now use a FallingObjectFactory to define recipes (basically a sprite filename, a weight and an identifier) that can easily be built throughout the game mode using the identifier. FallingObjectDelegate is now used for all reactions to the cart/floor, rather than defining a standard reaction in the FallingObject subclass and then putting extra stuff in FallingObjectDelegate.
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Also increased the distance between ledges as the game goes on, and changed the sound point multipliers make when you catch them.
Closes #221, #223
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GameLayer was also renamed to ClassicGameMode and its pause functionality and score/lives counters were moved out to GameMode. FallingObjectDelegate was created to allow for custom code to be run when items were caught/missed, something that is used extensively by tutorial mode.
Important: Cart Collect's bundle identifier was changed in this revision from com.fourisland.Cart-Collect to com.apatheticink.Cart-Collect, so ensure that before attempting to compile/run this build, you clear your build directory and remove the old version of Cart Collect from your device.
Closes #193
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In order to prepare for tutorial mode (and eventually, the other game modes), a lot of GameLayer's functionality (reading the accelerometer, moving the cart, moving falling objects, reacting to collisions…) has been abstracted out to FallingObject and subclasses of FallingObject, as well as a new Cart class, and GameMode, a new superclass of GameLayer. The only things that were not abstracted out that probably will be in the future are the pause functionality and the tutorial bubble functionality (which will in fact be moved to the tutorial mode class).
A lot of work was also done to cut down on compiler warnings and a lot of #imports were moved from header files to implementation files because I realized THAT'S HOW YOU'RE SUPPOSED TO DO IT.
Refs #193
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