Variables and Properties

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Revision as of 01:36, 16 February 2012 by imported>Fowl (→‎From Within a Magic Effect Script: fixed code block to make sense and some spelling)
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Description

Variables and Properties are similar things, they both "hold" values and objects. A variable is "private" meaning that only that script is aware of them, can set their contents, and get their contents. A Property is essentially a variable that other scripts can access, their contents can be set and get by a other scripts.

If a variable or property holds a numeric value, like an integer, get/set returns its value. If a variable or property holds an object, you can access that object's properties and functions. (This is analogous to a reference variable from the old scripting system.)

Declaring Variables

 float myFloat
 float myOtherFloat = 13.5

MyFloat starts at 0, myOtherFloat starts at 13.5 and can be set by scripting in its own script, but nothing else.

Declaring Properties

Full Property

To define a property, you first write the type, then "property", then the name of the property. You then define two functions, a get which returns the property's value, and a set which takes a new value for the property. And then you cap it off with "EndProperty"

Example:

int myInt_Var = 0   ; Where the property's value is stored
int property myInt
  int function get()
    return myInt_Var
  endFunction
  function set(int value)
    myInt_Var = value
  endFunction
endProperty

If you leave out the get function, the property is write-only - other people can set the value, but no one can read it. The local script, of course, can read the actual variable the property works with. If you leave out the set function, the property is read-only - other people can see the value, but they can't change it. Again, the local script can always set the variable that the property returns.

You don't have to just have the property return and set the value like you see above - the functions could do anything. You could, for example, put some if statements in the set function to ensure that the value is never outside a certain range. Or you could even play an animation when a certain value is set. Heck, you don't have to actually have a variable at all - it could be a calculated value or a constant.

Example:

bool property Locked
  bool function get()
    return IsLocked()
  endFunction
  function set(bool value)
    Lock(value)
  endFunction
endProperty

The above property hides the Lock and IsLocked ObjectReference functions so that you can lock and unlock this object by simply setting Locked to true or false.

Example:

int myVar = 5
int property ReadOnly
  int function get()
    return myVar
  endFunction
endProperty

The above property is read-only. Scripts outside of this one cannot change the value, but the script itself can change the value of the variable.

Example:

int myVar = 5
int property WriteOnly
  function set(int value)
    if value >= 0
      myVar = value
    else
      myVar = 0
    endIf
  endFunction
endProperty

The above property is write-only. Scripts outside of this one cannot read the value. It also uses an if to make sure the value is never below 0.

Auto Properties

An auto property is one that writes the above get and set functions for you, behind the scenes. There are also some minor optimizations in the VM that speed up auto properties slightly. To make an auto property, simply omit the functions and endProperty and add "auto" to the end of the property definition. You can set the property's initial value using the "= <value>" syntax.

Example:

int property myInt = 5 auto


Auto Read-only Properties

An auto read-only property is an auto property that can never have its value changed. This can be convenient if certain numbers mean different things in your script and you want to use a name instead of a number to represent it. You specify these by using "AutoReadOnly" instead of "Auto". These properties must have their initial value set using "= <value>" syntax.

Example:

int property myReadOnlyInt = 20 autoReadOnly


Conditional Properties

Properties cannot be declared as conditional. Auto properties can be defined as conditional because what they actually do is define the hidden variable they create as conditional. This is why you see mangled auto property names when you select a Papyrus variable in the condition system - you're selecting from a list of hidden variables.

Example:

int property myVar auto conditional

More information on the conditional keyword can be found in the Papyrus Introduction and in the Flag reference


Getting Properties of a Quest Script

From Result Script Owned by the Same Quest

Often you will need to get a property of a quest script, and use it in a result script somewhere else. This is one of the more tricky things, but once you understand what's happening, it makes sense. First look at the example, then we'll describe what's happening.

 ;I have a quest script with this in it:
 scriptName MQ01Script extends Quest
 int property deadCount auto 

 ;I have a result script (OWNED by MQ01) with this in it:
 MQ01Script myQuest                        ;declares a variable "myQuest" which is a TYPE of MQ01Script
 myQuest = GetOwningQuest() as MQ01Script  ;sets the myQuest variable to it's owning quest as the type MQ01Script
 float myDeadCount                         ;declaring the variable "myDeadCount" 
 myDeadCount = myQuest.deadCount           ;setting local variable to be the quest's property value
 ;you can also set the quest property thusly:
 myQuest.deadCount = 10

What's happening here is that we have a property "deadCount" that is in the script "MQ01Script" attached to MQ01. We also have a script that is owned by MQ01 (could be dialogue result, package result, or script attached to an alias).

In the result script, we create a variable that represents the quest script that has the property we want (in this case MQ01Script's "DeadCount" property). Note our variable myQuest is declare as MQ01Script. This is because when we made our quest script "scriptName MQ01Script extends Quest" we've essentially created a new type of object... a MQ01Script object. GetOwningQuest returns a quest object (before we extended it). So we also need to cast the quest returned by GetOwningQuest AS that new object "myQuest = GetOwningQuest() as MQ01Script" so we have access to it's extended properties. If we didn't cast it as a MQ01Script it would only have the functions and properties of a Quest object, which wouldn't contain our deadCount property.

In other words, when we created MQ01Script which extended the Quest script, unless we cast the object returned by GetOwningQuest AS our new script, it won't have our new properties declared in our new script.

With kmyQuest

If the fragment you are using has a "kmyquest" drop down, you can select a script attached to the quest owning that fragment, and then use the kmyQuest "magic variable" to refer to quest script without casting it.

the above would be simplified to just:

 float myDeadCount
 myDeadCount = kmyQuest.deadCount ;getting property
 kmyQuest.deadCount = 5 ;setting property


From Within a Magic Effect Script

If you want to access any of the Functions or Variables within a quest script (or any script for that matter), you must access that script's properties. All scripts can access other scripts, however they can only access the script's properties.


Let's look at an example where a scripted spell accesses a quest's properties:

Scriptname myQuestNameScript extends Quest

Int Property PublicInt Auto		; This value is defined as a property and can be accessed from outside this script

Int PrivateInt = 30			; This value is private to the script and cannot be accessed from outside this script

Function DamageTargBasedOnPublic(Actor akTarget)
	;This code will damage the akTarget for PublicInt damage
	akTarget.DamageAV("Health", PublicInt)
EndFunction

Function DamageTargBasedOnPrivate(Actor akTarget)
	;This code will damage the akTarget for PrivateInt damage
	akTarget.DamageAV("Health", PrivateInt)
EndFunction


Now that we have defined our quest script and created an accessible property, we can control it from the outside.

Scriptname mySpellEffectScript extends activemagiceffect

myQuestNameScript Property myQuestRef auto

Event OnEffectStart(Actor akTarget, Actor akCaster)
	myQuestRef.PublicInt = 20				; This will change the damage for the DamageTargBasedonPublic Function
	myQuestRef.DamageTargBasedOnPublic(akTarget)		; You can manipulate this damage by changing PublicDamage Prior to calling it
	myQuestRef.DamageTargBasedOnPrivate(akTarget)		; This will always do 30 damage unless the quest changes the private variable
EndEvent

Getting Properties From Any Other Script

You can use the above example regarding the Magic Effect script as a basis for your script. You must define a property in your script, with the "Type" of your object you are wishing to access. If your object has a custom script, define the type as your object's script name. Be careful not to declare it as the object's name. All objects can have multiple scripts, so you must specify the script name you want to access. For a list of objects you can use as a type that are already within the game, visit the Script Objects page.


Warnings

Be careful with variables and auto properties on scripts that are extended by other scripts - especially where some script somewhere else may have a property pointing to the base script, or trying to cast to the base script. This is because it would be possible to have two copies of a script attached to the same object, thereby creating two copies of the variable/auto property - and the other scripts that refer to the base script may randomly pick which one to talk to.

This is doubly-true of scripts with native functions, as the game can attach these to in-game objects at any time if it needs to, thereby creating another copy of the variable or auto property.

Notes

  • The list of properties in properties dialog is only updated after adding a new property or after compiling the script with the build-in editor.

See Also