![]() Hence why I want to change the orientation dynamically. I initially started working on the Play Screen and the sizes and positions where set based on orientation="landscape", and now that I am working on the Main Menu it is based on orientation="portrait". ![]() Now I want my Main Menu in portrait but the Play Screen, where the game is on, should be in landscape. The only thing that changes between the two images is orientation="landscape" and orientation="portrait" in my manifest. The position and size of Actors and Sprites are all based on () and (). Here are some images that should make more sense. I've also tried swapping the () and (), respectively, but can't seem to get the position of sprites and actors correct.Īlso, in my manifest I have orientation="landscape". ![]() I use () and () to align Sprites and Actors, so it looks "right" on different devices. But it appears that you can't call startActivity or the like, obviously, as LibGDX is platform independent. And the new Activity would intialize the Play Screen. I thought I could just start another Activity and have the Play Screen extend Game. Is there anyway of changing the orientation dynamically? I want to, say, have the Main Menu screen portrait, then the Play Screen landscape. I have multiple classes that implement Screen.
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![]() ![]() That The Phantom Menace (and by proxy the prequel trilogy) operates differently than the first three Star Wars films does not automatically make them inferior, merely different. Taken as an individual film or the start of a three-film saga, it has eye-popping visuals, some robust action, at least three terrific performances (Liam Neeson, Ian McDiarmid, and Pernilla August), an excellent score by John Williams, and a politically wonky story that was a chilling modern-day parable. Lucas's apparent cave-in Attack of the Clones, making Padme “sexier,” is one reason Episode II is the weakest of the series. Her somewhat cold, Elizabethan portrayal is both her best performance in the prequel trilogy. Natalie Portman was always derided for not playing Queen Padme Amidala as a clone of Carrie Fisher's Princess Lea. The Phantom Menace lacks a rouge-ish Han Solo character, even if the film didn’t need a cynical audience surrogate this time around. |
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