This content originally appeared on flaviocopes.com and was authored by flaviocopes.com
This post is part of a Phaser series. Click here to see the first post of the series.
Phaser games are rendered inside an HTML <canvas>
element.
If you’re new to Canvas, I talk in details about it in the Canvas API tutorial.
We create a canvas, with a specific set of width/height, and we draw into it.
We can’t use CSS to style elements, but we have to use a more low level and difficult API.
Luckily Phaser (and other libraries that use Canvas under the hood) abstract away all the tiny details, so we can focus on the application code.
We initialize a Phaser game by calling the Game static method on the Phaser object:
new Phaser.Game()
We must pass to this function an object literal with a set of configuration options:
new Phaser.Game({
})
In this configuration object we can set various properties.
To start with, we can set the width and height of the canvas:
new Phaser.Game({
width: 450,
height: 600
})
Another property we can pass is backgroundColor
, which accepts an hexadecimal value, like 0x000000
for black.
Colors are similar to CSS colors, but you need to prepend
0x
so JS knows it’s an hexadecimal number.
This content originally appeared on flaviocopes.com and was authored by flaviocopes.com

flaviocopes.com | Sciencx (2021-04-14T05:00:00+00:00) Phaser: The Canvas. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2021/04/14/phaser-the-canvas/
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