Hello all!

Like most people I find myself a recent refugee from the Unity fiasco. I’ve been trying to prototype a project in Godot and I’ve been running into an issue I would think would be pretty easy to find a solution to as it seems to be a pretty fundamental building block of any project in Godot. Perhaps I’m misunderstanding how to accomplish this in Godot, but essentially I’m instantiating a number of tiles to be used for a grid system in my game. I want these tiles to be able to emit their index and transform values and then have other scripts pick this information up as needed. From what I’ve read signals are the way to do this, however whenever I try to send a signal with or without parameters nothing seems to happen. I seem to be able to connect to the signal just fine but the method doesn’t seem to be called.

Here’s an example of me defining the signal and then emitting it:

signal index_transform()

index_transform.emit()

And here’s how I am connecting and attempting to call the method in a secondary script:

func _ready() -> void:
	var hexGrid = get_node("/root/Main/Map/HexGrid")
	hexGrid.index_transform.connect(Callable(self, "_get_hex_index_transform"))

func _get_hex_index_transform():
	print("I'm Connected")

And when I’m passing parameters from what I understand I should only have to include the parameters like so:

signal index_transform(index, transform)

index_transform.emit(tile_index, tile_coordinates)
func _ready() -> void:
	var hexGrid = get_node("/root/Main/Map/HexGrid")
	hexGrid.index_transform.connect(Callable(self, "_get_hex_index_transform"))

func _get_hex_index_transform(index, transform):
	print("I'm Connected")
	print("INDEX: ", index," POS: ", transform)

However neither of these seem to work. What am I doing wrong?

  • jlothamer@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    So, it seems spawn_objects needs a reference to hexgrid? Then you can export a property in the spawn_objects script that takes a reference to hexgrid. And then from the map scene, you set that reference as it has both as children. In Godot 4 you can use “@export var hexgrid: HexGrid” (this assumes you give the hexgrid node script a class_name of HexGrid.) In Godot 3 I think there’s a bit more to it as the export is “export var hexgrid:NodePath” (note no @ symbol in Godot 3) and then later you have to use the NodePath to get the node like this “onready var _hexgrid:HexGrid = get_node(hexgrid)” (note the onready here means the get_node call will happen just before the call to func _ready()) You could do the get_node call in func _ready(), but I like the onready better because it makes any code in the ready function that much simpler.

    That’s just how I would do it given what I think I know. Now that you have these ideas, you can play with them and decide what you like best. Hope it helps!