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Unreal Engine 5 Game Development with C++ Scripting

You're reading from   Unreal Engine 5 Game Development with C++ Scripting Become a professional game developer and create fully functional, high-quality games

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804613931
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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ZHENYU GEORGE LI ZHENYU GEORGE LI
Author Profile Icon ZHENYU GEORGE LI
ZHENYU GEORGE LI
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Getting Started with Unreal C++ Scripting
2. Chapter 1: Creating Your First Unreal C++ Game FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Editing C++ Code in Visual Studio 4. Chapter 3: Learning C++ and Object-Oriented Programming 5. Chapter 4: Investigating the Shooter Game’s Generated Project and C++ Code 6. Part 2 – C++ Scripting for Unreal Engine
7. Chapter 5: Learning How to Use UE Gameplay Framework Base Classes 8. Chapter 6: Creating Game Actors 9. Chapter 7: Controlling Characters 10. Chapter 8: Handling Collisions 11. Chapter 9: Improving C++ Code Quality 12. Part 3: Making a Complete Multiplayer Game
13. Chapter 10: Making Pangaea a Network Multiplayer Game 14. Chapter 11: Controlling the Game Flow 15. Chapter 12: Polishing and Packaging the Game 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Refactoring code

You probably felt a little uncomfortable with the redundant code blocks we wrote in the previous chapters; for example, the PlayerAvatar and Enemy classes have some identical attribute variables and functions. Can we instead combine them and maintain only one copy of code for those replicated variables and functions? Yes, and this will require us to refactor the code.

Code refactoring helps improve the internal structure of code so that it becomes more readable, maintainable, and efficient. The process includes algorithm optimization, duplicate removal, and code simplification.

For the Pangaea project, we identified two refactoring tasks:

  • Combining the two animation instance classes
  • Adding a parent class for the PlayerAvatar and Enemy classes

Let’s start with the first task.

Combining the PlayerAvatarAnimInstance and EnemyAnimInstance classes

Open and compare the PlayerAvatarAnimInstance.h, PlayerAvatarAnimInstance.cpp, EnemyAnimInstance...

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