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Offline scarletspider5

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How do you make an animation?
« on: August 25, 2007, 05:28:39 PM »
Okay I'm done adding my sprites. I don't know how to do the animation. could someone tell me how.


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Offline A!

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Re: How do you make an animation?
« Reply #1 on: August 25, 2007, 05:54:17 PM »
go to the animation tab u should see the oic right click it and add air
A guy told me one time, "Don't let yourself get attached to anything you are not willing to walk out on in 30 seconds flat if you feel the heat around the corner."

Offline scarletspider5

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Re: How do you make an animation?
« Reply #2 on: August 25, 2007, 05:55:18 PM »
I did that but it the other sprite doesn't show whem I play it. why?
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Offline A!

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Re: How do you make an animation?
« Reply #3 on: August 25, 2007, 05:56:12 PM »
what do you mean other sprites
A guy told me one time, "Don't let yourself get attached to anything you are not willing to walk out on in 30 seconds flat if you feel the heat around the corner."

Offline scarletspider5

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Re: How do you make an animation?
« Reply #4 on: August 25, 2007, 06:15:17 PM »
the second part of the standing animation.
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Re: How do you make an animation?
« Reply #5 on: August 25, 2007, 06:19:03 PM »
are your sprite all in a group if yes right click it and do add air to group

wene i say group i mean them in rows check other character if you dont know wot i mean
A guy told me one time, "Don't let yourself get attached to anything you are not willing to walk out on in 30 seconds flat if you feel the heat around the corner."

Offline scarletspider5

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Re: How do you make an animation?
« Reply #6 on: August 25, 2007, 06:20:25 PM »
I did that but it won't show up. only the first part.
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Offline Scar

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Re: How do you make an animation?
« Reply #7 on: August 25, 2007, 06:28:22 PM »
The Mugen Docs Are Your Friend

M.U.G.E.N, (c) Elecbyte 2002
Documentation for version 2002.04.14


====================================================================
I. Introduction
====================================================================

AIR is a format that describes a set of animations. You will see the
AIR format used for animating characters, backgrounds, life bars
and more.

An animation (specifically called an animation action in MUGEN)
describes a single sequence of sprites to display. A character's
animation file (.air) can contain as many animation actions as
necessary.



====================================================================
II. The format
====================================================================

Here's a typical entry from an .air file.  We will explain the
format next.

; Standing Animation
[Begin Action 000]
Clsn2Default: 2
 Clsn2[0] = -10,  0, 10,-79
 Clsn2[1] =  -4,-92,  6,-79
0,1, 0,0, 7
0,2, 0,0, 7
0,3, 0,0, 7
0,4, 0,0, 50
0,5, 0,0, 7
0,6, 0,0, 7
0,7, 0,0, 7
0,8, 0,0, 60


Semicolon (;) is used for comments.  They can be used anywhere and
everything after the semicolon on the same line is ignored.

[Begin Action n]
This defines an action.  The number n is called the action number.
Each action must have a unique action number in order to be
distinguishable from other actions.  You can have many actions,
but keep in mind that there are reserved actions numbers.  These
numbers and their associated actions are listed below. 

Clsn2Default: 2
This says that there are two collision boxes being defined and they
will be defined for all the entries below the Clsn definition.  In
this case for every sprite in this action.  If you don't want to
have a default collision box, then change Clsn2Default to Clsn2.
You must put the Clsn definition before a sprite entry.  Each
sprite entry can have its own collision boxes.  Clsn2 refers to a
plain collision box and Clsn1 refers to an "attacking" box.  You
use attacking boxes when making attacking actions such as punching
and kicking or special moves.  To define collision boxes, use
AirEdit, a program included in the MUGEN development toolset.

0,3, 0,0, 7
An entry looking like this is called an "animation element", or
just "element" for short.
1st number is the sprite's group number. 
2nd number is the sprite's image number.
You assign these numbers to your sprites when you make an .sff file.

So group #0 and image #3 were defined with sprmaker with an entry
such as:
work/mypic.pcx
0   (group number)
3   (image number)
40  X axis
40  Y axis

The 3rd and 4th numbers of the element are the X and Y offsets from
this sprite's axis.  If you want the sprite to appear 5 pixels
forwards, put "5" for the 3rd number.  To make the sprite 15 pixels
up, put "-15" for the 4th number, and so on.  In most cases, it is
fine to keep the offset as 0,0.

5th number is the length of time to display the element before moving
onto the next, measured in game-ticks.  There are 60 game-ticks in
one second at normal game speed.
For the 5th number, you can specify "-1" if you want that element
to be displayed indefinitely (or until you switch to a different
action).  If you choose to do this, do it only on the last element
of the action.

The "looptime" of an action is the sum of all the times of each
element.  Basically, it is the total length of the action in
game-ticks.  If the last element has a time of "-1", the looptime
will be considered infinite.  We call that "no loop".  Actions
with a finite loop time will go back to the first element
after it has finished displaying the last element, and keep
looping until the you switch to another action.

In the example action above, the looptime would be:
7 + 7 + 7 + 50 + 7 + 7 + 7 + 60 = 152 ticks

; Standing Animation
[Begin Action 000]
Clsn2Default: 2
 Clsn2[0] = -10,  0, 10,-79
 Clsn2[1] =  -4,-92,  6,-79
0,1, 0,0, 7
0,2, 0,0, 7
Loopstart
0,3, 0,0, 7
0,4, 0,0, 50
0,5, 0,0, 7
0,6, 0,0, 7
0,7, 0,0, 7
0,8, 0,0, 60

Adding a line with the word "Loopstart" will make the animation
begin looping from the element on the following line.  In the
example above, when the element with sprite 0,8 is displayed,
the next element to be shown will be the one with sprite 0,3.

When testing out your animations, you may find the pause and
frame-advance functions useful.  To pause, hit the "Pause" button.
To advance the game by one game-tick, press Scroll Lock.  Frame-
advance only works when the game is paused.

Optional paramters
------------------
Here's an entry:
15,1, 0,0, 5

If you want to flip the sprite horizontally and/or vertically, you
will need to use the "flip" parameters: V for vertical flip, and
H for horizontal flip.  These parameters will be 6th on the line.
For example:

15,1, 0,0, 5, H   ;<-- This flips it horizonally
15,2, 0,0, 5, V   ;<-- This flips it vertically
15,3, 0,0, 5, VH  ;<-- This flips it both ways, ie. rotates 180 deg

Flipping the sprite around is especially useful for making throws.
The opponent who is being thrown will temporarily get the player's
animation data, and enter the "being thrown" animation action.
You'll might have to flip the sprites around to make the "thrown"
action look correct.

For certain things such as hit sparks, you might like to use
color addition to draw the sprite, making it look "transparent".
You won't need to use this to make a character, so you don't have
to worry about this if you choose not to.  The parameters for
color addition and subtraction are "A" and "S" respectively, and
should go as the 7th on the line.
For example:

15,4, 0,0, 5, ,A   ;<-- Color addition (flip parameter omitted)
15,4, 0,0, 5, H, S ;<-- Flips horizontally and does color subtraction

If you wish to specify alpha values for color addition, use the
parameter format "AS???D???", where ??? represents the values of the
source and destination alpha respectively. Values range from 0 (low)
to 256 (high). For example, "AS64D192" stands for "Add Source_64 to
Dest_192". Also, "AS256D256" is equivalent to just "A". A shorthand
for "AS256D128" is "A1".

15,4, 0,0, 5, ,A1  ;<-- Color addition to 50% darkened dest
15,4, 0,0, 5, ,AS128D128 ;<-- Mix 50% source with 50% dest



====================================================================
III. Character Reserved Action Numbers
====================================================================

MUGEN's common state engine (data/common1.cns) requires several
animation actions to be present in your character (a warning will be
logged if not all required animations are present). There are also
some actions that are optional, which will be made use of if present
in your character.

If you are unsure of how any of these actions should look, take a
look at chars/kfm/kfm.air.

All action numbers in the 5000-5999 range not listed below are
reserved for possible future use, so avoid using those numbers for
custom actions.

An "opt" besides the number means the animation is optional.


Number    Description                  Comments
-------   ------------                 --------
0         Standing
5         Stand turning                Must have finite looptime
6         Crouch turning               Must have finite looptime
10        Stand to crouch              Finite looptime
11        Crouching
12        Crouch to stand              Finite looptime
20        Walking forwards
21        Walking backwards
40        Jump start (on ground)       Shown just before player leaves ground
41        Jump neutral (upwards)       Shown when player is going up
42        Jump forwards (upwards)      Shown when player is going up-towards
43        Jump back (upwards)          Shown when player is going up-back
44  opt   Jump neutral (downwards)     Activated when Y-velocity > -2
45  opt   Jump fwd (downwards)         Same as above
46  opt   Jump back (downwards)        Same as above
47        Jump landing                 Shown as player lands on ground
100       Run fwd/hop forward
105       Hop back
120       Start guarding (stand)       Finite looptime
121       Start guarding (crouch)      Finite looptime
122       Start guarding (air)         Finite looptime
130       Guard (stand)
131       Guard (crouch)
132       Guard (air)
140       Stop guarding (stand)        Finite looptime
141       Stop guarding (crouch)       Finite looptime
142       Stop guarding (air)          Finite looptime
150       Guarding a hit (stand)       Finite looptime
151       Guarding a hit (crouch)      Finite looptime
152       Guarding a hit (air)         No loop
170 opt   Lose                         (See Note 1)
175 opt   Time Over drawgame           (See Note 1)
180 opt   Win                          No loop (181-189 for multiple) (See Note 1)
190 opt   Intro                        No loop (See Note 1)
195 opt   Taunt                        Finite looptime (See Note 1)

5000      Stand/Air Hit high (light)   Looptime around 10-20
5001      Stand/Air Hit high (medium)    "     (See Note 2)
5002      Stand/Air Hit high (hard)      "
5005      Stand Recover high (light)   No loop (See Note 3)
5006      Stand Recover high (medium)    "
5007      Stand Recover high (hard)      "
5010      Stand/Air Hit low (light)    Looptime around 10-20
5011      Stand/Air Hit low (medium)     "
5012      Stand/Air Hit low (hard)       "
5015      Stand Recover low (light)    No loop
5016      Stand Recover low (medium)     "
5017      Stand Recover low (hard)       "
5020      Crouch Hit (light)           Looptime around 10-20
5021      Crouch Hit (medium)            "
5022      Crouch Hit (hard)              "
5025      Crouch Recover (light)       No loop
5026      Crouch Recover (medium)        "
5027      Crouch Recover (hard)          "
5030      Stand/Air Hit back           Looptime around 10-20
5035 opt  Stand/Air Hit transition     Looptime around 5-15 (See Note 3)
5040      Air Recover                  No loop
5050      Air Fall                     No loop
5060 opt  Air Fall (coming down)       No loop
5070      Tripped
5080      LieDown Hit (stay down)      (See Note 4)
5090      LieDown Hit (hit up into air)
5100      Hitting ground from fall     Looptime around 3
5160      Bounce into air
5170      Hit ground from bounce       Looptime around 3 or 4
5110      LieDown
5120      Get up from LieDown
5140 opt  LieDead (first rounds)
5150 opt  LieDead (final round)
5200      Fall-recovery near ground
5210      Fall-recovery in mid-air
5300      Dizzy
5500 opt  "Continue?" screen           If omitted, plays dizzy anim
5510 opt  "Yes" to "Continue"          If omitted, plays first win anim (not yet implemented)
5520 opt  "No" to "Continue"           (not yet implemented)

Optional Hit Up animations (see Note 5):
5051 opt  Air fall -- hit up
5061 opt  Coming down from hit up
5081 opt  LieDown Hit (stay down)
5101 opt  Bounce from ground into air  Looptime around 3
5161 opt  Bounce into air
5171 opt  Hit ground from bounce       Looptime around 3 or 4
5111 opt  LieDown
5121 opt  Get up from LieDown
5151 opt  LieDead (first rounds)
5156 opt  LieDead (final round)

Optional Hit Up-Diagonal animations (see Note 6):
5052 opt  Air fall -- hit up
5062 opt  Coming down from hit up
5082 opt  LieDown Hit (stay down)
5102 opt  Bounce from ground into air  Looptime around 3
5162 opt  Bounce into air
5172 opt  Hit ground from bounce       Looptime around 3 or 4
5112 opt  LieDown
5122 opt  Get up from LieDown
5152 opt  LieDead (first rounds)
5157 opt  LieDead (final round)

Note 1: These do not actually have to use only the stated numbers. If is
        more of a recommended number than a reserved one. If necessary,
        feel free to use any other action numbers.
Note 2: If medium and heavy hits are omitted, they default to the light hits
Note 3: "No loop" means last frame has a time of -1.
        For recover animation, the first frame of each recovery should be the
        last frame of the corresponding hit. Eg. If action 5000 has frame
        5000,0 and 5000,1, then action 5005 should start with frame 5000,1.
        This is because the animation will be locked in the first frame of
        the recovery after the hit animation is over, but before the player
        has recovered from the hit.
        If you have a Stand/Air Hit transition animation, then the first
        frame of Air Recover and Air Fall should be the last frame of the
        transition animation.
Note 3: The Stand/Air Hit transition animation is played back after each
        hit animation in (or into) the air, but before the Air Recover
        and Air Fall animations.
Note 4: You can loop the LieDown Hit if you want the player to look like he
        is "twitching" while being hit
Note 5: This set of animations is optional. It is an alternate set of
        falling animations, which is used if hit by a HitDef with "Up" as
        the animtype.
Note 6: This set of animations is optional. It is an alternate set of
        falling animations, which is used if hit by a HitDef with "DiagUp"
        as the animtype.



====================================================================
IV. Recommended Action Numbers
====================================================================

You do not have to follow this exactly, but it should serve as a
guideline. In general, the states in the CNS should have the same
numbers as the animation they use, to reduce confusion.

You might want space out your animation and state numbers. This
gives room for you to add in more actions as necessary (some attacks
can use multiple states and animations). For instance, Standing
Light Kick and Standing Strong Kick could have action numbers 200
and 210 respectively.


Number    Description
-------   ------------
0-199     - reserved -
          Basic attacks:
200-299   Standing attacks
300-399   More standing attacks, running attacks
400-499   Crouch attacks
500-599   More crouch attacks
600-699   Air attacks
700-799   More air attacks
800-999   Unused - use if you need more states
1000-2999 All special attacks
3000-4999 All hyper attacks
5000-5999 - reserved -
!!Unite, Mobilize, Destroy!!

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