Marauroa 3.8: Difference between revisions

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; Reason for change : There are many kinds of map like data structures in Stendhal (buddy list, ignore list, quest states, visited zones, ...). The previous way of using an RPSlot with exactly one RPObject was inconvenient.
; Reason for change : There are many kinds of map like data structures in Stendhal (buddy list, ignore list, quest states, visited zones, ...). The previous way of using an RPSlot with exactly one RPObject was inconvenient.
; Impact on Marauroa users : There are new methods in RPObject to work with the maps
; Impact on Marauroa users : There are new methods in RPObject to work with the maps
; Details : To use a map attribute you need to define an attribute with type map in the RPClass. It is done the same way as ''normal'' attributes for Strings or Integers. Here a short example on how to define a map attribute as it is done in Stendhal for the buddy list:
; Details : todo

player.addAttribute("buddies", Type.MAP, Definition.PRIVATE);

Afterwards you can access the map with several methods defined in RPObject to put or get values. To put a key value pair in a certain map you need to call the put method for maps:
rpobject.put(mapname, key, value);

To get a value stored for a key in a map you need to use the get method for maps:
rpobject.get(mapname, key);

The put and get methods provide methods to store/access String, Integer and Boolean values like they are provided for the existing attributes.
public void put(String mapname, String key, String value)
public void put(String mapname, String key, int value)
public void put(String mapname, String key, boolean value)
public String get(String mapname, String key)
public int get(String mapname, String key)
public boolean get(String mapname, String key)

If you need to check if a certain map is present in a RPObject you can to this by calling
rpobject.hasMap(mapname)

It returns true if within the RPObject has a map with mapname and false if not.

To access the map as a whole thing it is possible to obtain a copy via the getMap method.
Map<String, String> theWholeMap = rpobject.getMap(mapname);

As a convenience method RPObject can return all maps put together in one map:
public Map<String, Map<String, String>> maps()

An example usage of the maps can be found in the [http://arianne.cvs.sourceforge.net/viewvc/arianne/stendhal/src/games/stendhal/server/entity/player/Player.java?revision=1.284.2.1&view=markup Player] class of [[Stendhal]]. The buddies and their online statusses of a player are stored as a map within the player object. The class [http://arianne.cvs.sourceforge.net/viewvc/arianne/stendhal/src/games/stendhal/server/entity/player/PlayerRPClass.java?revision=1.164&view=markup PlayerRPClass] shows how to define a map attribute in a RPClass.


== Performance optimization ==
== Performance optimization ==
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; Details : I was wondering why Marauroa is so much faster on Marboard with 100,000 objects and a turn time of 30ms than it is in Stendhal with less objects and a turn time of 300ms. Using a profiler it turned out that a deeply nested inheritance hierarchy slows down calls to RPObject.get() and RPObject.put(). Those calls need to find the attribute definition (get() because of static attributes and put() in order to validate the datatype). And Stendhal does a huge amount of get()s and put()s every turn.
; Details : I was wondering why Marauroa is so much faster on Marboard with 100,000 objects and a turn time of 30ms than it is in Stendhal with less objects and a turn time of 300ms. Using a profiler it turned out that a deeply nested inheritance hierarchy slows down calls to RPObject.get() and RPObject.put(). Those calls need to find the attribute definition (get() because of static attributes and put() in order to validate the datatype). And Stendhal does a huge amount of get()s and put()s every turn.
: Baking a class is similar to baking a cake: After you have thrown in all the ingredients, the cake is baked which causes the ingredients to melt together. In Marauroa: After all the attributes are defined in the inheritance hierarchy, baking means that the attribute of parent classes are melted into the child classes. Just like you cannot take the eggs out of a baked cake, further changes to attributes are not visible in child classes.
: Baking a class is similar to baking a cake: After you have thrown in all the ingredients, the cake is baked which causes the ingredients to melt together. In Marauroa: After all the attributes are defined in the inheritance hierarchy, baking means that the attribute of parent classes are melted into the child classes. Just like you cannot take the eggs out of a baked cake, further changes to attributes are not visible in child classes.

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