Packer — Libgdx Texture

import com.badlogic.gdx.tools.texturepacker.TexturePacker; public class AssetPacker public static void main(String[] args) TexturePacker.Settings settings = new TexturePacker.Settings(); settings.pot = true; settings.paddingX = 2; settings.paddingY = 2; settings.edgePadding = true; settings.stripWhitespace = true; settings.filterMin = TexturePacker.Settings.TextureFilter.Nearest; settings.filterMag = TexturePacker.Settings.TextureFilter.Nearest;

// (input directory, output directory, atlas file name) TexturePacker.process(settings, "raw-assets/player", "android/assets/", "player");

// 3. Or get an animated region Animation<TextureRegion> walkAnimation = new Animation<>(0.1f, atlas.findRegions("player_walk"), Animation.PlayMode.LOOP); libgdx texture packer

// Don't forget to dispose! atlas.dispose(); The texture packer uses your folder structure to create region names.

Write a simple Java class or Gradle task to run the packer: import com

If you're making a game with libGDX, you will eventually need to draw many images (sprites) on the screen. Loading each image as a separate texture is incredibly inefficient and slow. This is where the Texture Packer comes in. What is the Texture Packer? The Texture Packer is a tool that takes multiple individual image files (PNG, JPG, etc.) and combines them into a single large image, called a Texture Atlas . It also generates a metadata file (usually .atlas ) that tells your game where each original image lives inside that big image.

dependencies // ... your other dependencies compileOnly "com.badlogicgames.gdx:gdx-tools:$gdxVersion" Write a simple Java class or Gradle task

Run this main method every time you change your assets. Once you have player.atlas and player.png in your assets folder, load and use them: