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What all forms of animation have in common is that they create some kind of perceived motion by showing successive frames at a relatively high speed. Computer animation usually shows 10-20 frames per second. By comparison, traditional hand-drawn animation uses anywhere from 8 frames per second (for poor quality animation) to 12 frames per second (for standard animation) to 24 frames per second (for short bursts of smooth, realistic motion). The next few pages tell you everything you need to know to write a Java program that performs animation.
Before you start: Check out existing animation tools and applets, such as Animator, to see whether you can use one of them instead of writing your own program.
The most important step in creating a program that animates is to set up the framework correctly. Except for animation performed only in direct response to external events (such as the user dragging an onscreen object), a program that performs animation needs an animation loop.The animation loop is responsible for keeping track of the current frame and for requesting periodic screen updates. For applets and many applications, you need a separate thread to run the animation loop. This section contains an example applet and an example application that both use a
Timer
object to implement the animation loop. You can use these examples as templates for your own animation.
The simplest form of image animation involves moving an unchanging image across the screen. In the traditional animation world, this is known as cutout animation, since it's generally accomplished by cutting a shape out of paper and moving the shape in front of the camera.
This section tells you how to perform classic, cartoon-style animation, given a sequence of images.
This section tells you how to use the MediaTracker
so that you can delay displaying an animation
until all its images are loaded.
You'll also get some hints on improving
applet animation performance by combining image files
and by using a compression scheme.
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