Actor states

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An actor's states can be defined within its ZScript or DECORATE definition. State sequences describe all the behavior of the actor as well as its animation.

In ZScript state behavior and data is handled by the State struct.

Usage

Terminology

There are 3 main terms when it comes to states that are sometimes confused or conflated. These terms are:

1. State. A state is a single instruction that can contain a sprite and a sprite frame, the state's duration in tics, and, optionally, a function. When one state ends, it moves to another state.
2. State label. This is the "name" or header of a state sequence. "Spawn", "Death" and similar are state labels.
3. State sequence. This is a series of states that begins at one state label and continues up until a static instruction like stop, wait, goto or (in CustomInventory only) fail.

This is a state sequence with 3 states:

 Death:
   SPRT A 5 A_Explode;
   SPRT BC 7;
   stop;

In the example above "Death" is a state label, followed by 3 states:

1. SPRT (sprite), A (frame letter), 5 (duration of the state in tics), A_Explode (function called as soon as this state is entered)
2. SPRT (sprite), B (frame letter), 7 (duration)
3. SPRT (sprite), C (frame letter), 7 (duration)

Note that SPRT BC 7 is two separate states, but they can be defined within one line because they have the same duration and the same sprite name.

This state sequence ends with stop, which means the actor will be destroyed.

An actor's state definition is started with the States keyword and enclosed by braces: { }

It consists of the following:

State labels

A state label is an identifier followed by a colon (:). State labels give names to state sequences which can then be initiated or checked for using those names.

A state label can be any alphanumeric string (within reason) and is not case sensitive. Some labels (Spawn, See, Death, Ready, Select, Deselect, Fire, etc.) are assumed to exist by the engine for certain actors.

A single state can have several labels, each on a different line. However, most states do not have a label, instead they merely follow other states in sequences.

State definitions

The main elements of any given state are the following:

  1. Its sprite name
  2. Its frame letter
  3. Its duration in tics
  4. Its associated action function
  5. Its successor (the next state in sequence)

It also might have additional properties which are expressed through special keywords detailed below.

These consist of a sprite name, a frame letter, the duration in tics and optionally additional keywords and an action function name (code pointer). For example:

STUF C 5 Bright A_Look

Here, STUF is the sprite name, C is the frame letter, 5 the duration, and A_Look the action function.

The successor is defined implicitly as the next defined state, unless a goto, loop, wait, or stop keyword is used to explicitly change it. For instance:

STUF C 5 Bright A_Look
STUF D 5 Bright

Here, the successor for the first state is the second state. The second state's successor is not defined in this example.

If several states share the same sprite name, duration, keywords, and action functions, and they follow in sequence, the states can be "collapsed" together by stringing the frame letters in a word.

STUF ABCD 5 Bright A_Look

Here, four different states are defined on a single line. Each of A, B, C, and D are different states. And likewise:

STUF VVVVVV 5 Bright A_Look

The six V states are all entirely identical (except for their successor), but they are nonetheless separate states.

When the duration runs out, the actor moves to the next state in the sequence and runs the new state's action function immediately. Note that setting -1 as a duration means infinite duration. The actor, once it enters this state, will never leave it on its own; though it can still be moved to a different state by external actions (e.g., suffering damage might put it in the Pain state).

Random durations are possible with the random(min, max) function. Alternatively, you can use A_SetTics; this allows to use full-fledged DECORATE expressions to set any kind of dynamic duration; but prevents the state from having another action function.

The next state is automatically implied to be the following letter on a frame sequence, or if there aren't any more states on a line, the states defined in the next line. Alternatively, flow control keywords (loop, wait, goto, stop) listed after a state can change it. Jump functions such as A_Jump will ignore normal sequence logic and immediately move to their designated state, without waiting for the duration to run out first.

Variable duration

A state can have a random duration. Instead of defining a frame like this:

POSS A 10 A_Look

You can define it as:

POSS A random(10,20) A_Look

and the state will last a random duration between 10 and 20 tics, inclusive. More control can be obtained by using the A_SetTics function and DECORATE expressions.

POSS A 0 A_Look
POSS A 10 A_SetTics((waterlevel + 10) - (accuracy / 10))

State keywords

The existing keywords can be used in a state between the duration and the action function call.

  • Bright
The sprite will be displayed as fullbright while the actor is in this state. Note that this is ignored in fog.
  • CanRaise
Mark the state as allowing A_VileChase to target the actor provided the other conditions are met. By default, only states with a -1 (infinite) duration are eligible. Also, if a state with this keyword is reached, a monster is eligible for respawning if respawning is enabled.
  • Fast
The state has its duration halved in fast mode (if using a skill with the FastMonsters property, or the -fast command-line parameter) and for actors with the ALWAYSFAST flag. This has no effect on actors with the NEVERFAST flag.
  • Light("lightname")
Adds a dynamic light to the state. See below for further information.
  • NoDelay
Forces the action function associated to the state to be executed during the actor's first tic. This is only useful for the first state in an actor's Spawn sequence.
  • Offset(x, y)
Gives the state a sprite offset, only used for HUD sprites (most relevant for weapons. Note that Offset(0, 0) is interpreted as "keep previous offset", not as "reset offset to 0, 0" for compatibility with Hexen, which is the game from which this feature originates. More control over offsets can be gained by using A_WeaponOffset and A_OverlayOffset functions instead.
  • Slow
The state has its duration doubled in slow mode (if using a skill with the SlowMonsters property).

Example

POSS AABBCCDD 4 A_Chase

This defines 8 states. Each one of them uses the sprite POSS, has a duration of 4 and uses the code pointer A_Chase which is the standard walk function for monsters. Of these 8 states the first 2 will use the sprite frame 'A', the next 2 the frame 'B' and so on. The length of the frame sequence can be up to 256 characters. Valid frames are 'A'-'Z', '[', '\' and ']'. Different sprites can be freely mixed in an actor definition; however, each separate line of a state definition is limited to one sprite only.

Notes

  • If the frames '[', '\' or ']' are used the frame sequence has to be enclosed in quotation marks ('"').
  • Sprite name and frame TNT1 A means no sprite, making the actor invisible for the duration of the state.
  • It is possible for a state to keep the actor's current sprite and/or frame, using special sprite names such as "----" or "####". See the sprite page for more information.

Anonymous functions

You can declare an anonymous function by using braces in place of an action function at the end of a state. This allows you to call multiple action functions from a single state. A semicolon is required after each statement.

POSS A 4
{
   A_Chase(); //Parentheses are required here
   A_SpawnItemEx("BloodyTrail", flags: SXF_NOCHECKPOSITION);
}

Note: Anonymous functions support operators and statements. These are documented separately.

Note on termination and state jumps

To terminate an anonymous function early, use return. It can either return a value or not. The type of value returned is used to infer the return type of the anonymous function, so if you have more than one return statement, they must all return the same type. The types are state (including jumping functions), int, bool and float. To jump to a new state, you can return a state, either by specifying it directly or by calling a jump function.

{ return state("Null"); } // Destroys the actor. All actors have a Null state by default unless overridden.
{ return state("JumpState"); } // Guarantees a jump.
{ return FindState("JumpState"); } // So does this.
{ return ResolveState("JumpState"); } // So does this, but can also be used from weapons
{ return A_Jump(256, "JumpState"); } // So does this
{ return state(""); } //Aborts an anonymous function without jumping and plays the rest of the tics.
{ return state(0); } //Same here.
{ return; }

In ZScript returns require a pointer acquired via FindState() or ResolveState(). The primary difference is that ResolveState() is context-aware and will work properly when called from PSprite, while FindState() won't. As a result, ResolveState() can be used from Weapon states, where self is interpeted as the weapon's owner. For example:

Fire:
	TNT1 A 0
	{
		// Check the weapon has enough ammo to fire:
		if (!invoker.CheckAmmo(invoker.bAltFire, false))
		{
			return ResolveState("Reload"); //go to Reload sequence if not enough
		}
		return ResolveState(null); //otherwise continue to the next state
	}

Note that any function that contains a conditional return in it must end with a null return (such as return ResolveState(null)), so that it knows where to go if the condition isn't met.

Note, A_Jump's ability to perform a jump with randomized chance can NOT be used inside a multi-conditional statement. For example, this will not function as expected:

// This code will not function properly!
SPRT A 1
{
    A_Quake();
    return A_Jump(128, "Death"); //this jumps to "Death" 50% chance or returns null...
    A_Explode(); // This will never be called!
}

The reason is that in the example above A_Jump is always called, and when it's called, it always returns a state. In the example above it'll either return "Death", or the next state after this one, skipping everything defined below (A_Explode in the example). A_Jump cannot return nothing at all, so when its chance fails, it returns null (= next state).

The proper way to structure the above code would be:

SPRT A 1
{
    A_Quake();
    if (random(0,256) >= 128)
    {
        return ResolveState("Death"); //alternatively: return A_Jump(256, "Death")
    }
    A_Explode();
    return ResolveState(null);
}

The difference is that the random roll is handled beforehand, and the return is simply not called at all if the chance fails.

As a result, it's not recommended to use A_Jump* functions in anonymous functions, simply because their conditional parts will always abort the execution of the code block, and thus are not useful for creating function flow.

Dynamic light binding

It is possible to attach a dynamic light directly to an actor state in its DECORATE definition, rather than binding it to the actor in a GLDEFS lump. The dynamic light itself must still be defined in GLDEFS, however. Contrarily to lights attached to actors in GLDEFS, a binding made to a state directly in the state definition will be inherited by derived actors.

This is done by adding the Light keyword, followed by the name of the light within parentheses and quote marks, in this way:

BLAH A 1337 Bright Light("MyLight") A_DoSomething

ZDoom itself does not support dynamic lights and thus will ignore the Light keyword and its parameter, but the actor will otherwise work correctly.

Flow control

There are 5 different instructions that control the execution order of an actor's frames directly:

loop
Jumps to the most recently defined state label. This is used to loop the state sequence.
If the animation should stop at the final frame and no further actions must be taken, use the duration of -1 and put stop after it instead.
stop
Stops animating this actor. Normally this is used at the end of the death sequences. If the last state before stop has a duration of 0 or higher, the actor will be removed. If this is called from a PSprite (for example, on a weapon), the calling layer will be destroyed.
Note, if there are no states in the state sequence, and stop is put directly after the state label, this will remove that state sequence from the actor.
wait
Loops the last defined state (not the whole state sequence, in contrast to loop). This is useful if there's a need to loop the execution of a function attached to the last frame of an animation, for example.
fail
Has only one meaningful use: at the end of the Use state sequence in a CustomInventory. If Use ends with fail, the item will not be consumed on use.
goto label [+offset]
Jumps to an arbitrary state in the current actor.
Note, if this is done in an actor inherited from another actor, and the label only exists in the parent actor, the state execution will move the parent actor's states and will not return to the current actor anymore. This is because goto performs a static jump. If there's a need to perform a jump that respects inheritance, use A_Jump or FindState/ResolveState.
Offset specifies the number of frames to skip after the specified label. That is, using "goto Spawn+2" will jump to this frame:
Spawn:
  TNT1 AAAAAAAA 0
         ^
In addition, if an actor is using inheritance, you can use goto Super::StateLabel to specifically enter the parent actor's state. The keyword "super" always refers to the immediate parent, but any parent class can be referred to by name as well, for example goto Actor::GenericFreezeDeath is a valid instruction.

Important note

This format has been designed for maximum flexibility. As a result no assumptions are made about what the designer wants. States are never implicitly created.

Also, if no flow control is used ZDoom will continue to the state provided directly after. Consecutive state labels can be used to assign the same frames to more than one state.

States

Note: The term "state" is often conflated with the term "state sequence." While common practice, this is incorrect. A state is a single element of a state sequence, with one sprite, one frame letter, and one function (or one anonymous function block). A state sequence is a series of states, beginning with a state label (like "Spawn") and continuing until goto/stop/wait. An expression like "Spawn state" or "Death state" is valid, but it refers only to the first state of the specified sequence, not the whole sequence.


These are the predefined state sequences each actor has access to:

Spawn
Defines the state sequence entered when an actor is spawned. For monsters this is normally also the idle loop.
Also entered by bullet and railgun puffs when hitting a shootable non-bleeding actor.
Note: An actor that has just been spawned does not run the action function attach to the first frame of its Spawn sequence. For example, if a monster calls A_Look in its first frame, it won't look for enemies until the Spawn sequence is looped once. If you need to force an actor to call the function instantly upon entering the Spawn sequence, add NoDelay before the function call.
Idle
Defines an alternate idle state sequence for a monster to return to when it has run out of targets. If this state is not present, the monster will return to the Spawn state instead.
See
Defines the walking animation for a monster. This state sequence is activated by functions like A_Look if they successfully find a target for the calling monster.
Melee
Defines a state sequence for the melee (close-range) attack.
Also entered by melee attack puffs when hitting a shootable non-bleeding enemy.
Missile
Defines the missile (ranged) attack.
Pain
Defines the pain action. Multiple Pain state sequences can be used depending on the type of damage inflicted. See custom damage types.
Death
Defines the normal death sequence. Multiple Death state sequences can be used depending on the type of damage that kills the actor. See custom damage types. Also entered by projectiles when hitting a wall (or an actor as well if the Crash and/or XDeath states are not defined).
Death.Sky
Defines an alternate death sequence for projectiles. This is entered when hitting a sky plane while having the SKYEXPLODE flag set. Does not work on fast projectiles.

Death.Extreme
XDeath (internally, Death.Extreme)

Defines the extreme (splatter) death sequence (if the actor's health is lower than its GibHealth). Multiple XDeath state sequences can be used depending on the type of damage that kills the actor.
Error.gif
Warning: For monsters that disappear in their death animations, always ensure the Death sequence is at least 1 tic long before stop is called. A VM abort can potentially happen otherwise.
Also entered by projectiles when hitting a bleeding actor (if no XDeath sequence is defined, they enter their Death state instead).
Also entered by puffs when they hit a shootable bleeding actor, provided the puff has required flags. (Bullet and melee puffs would require PUFFONACTORS, and railgun puffs require ALWAYSPUFF for this to happen.

Death.Fire
Burn (internally, Death.Fire)

Defines the burn (Fire) death sequence.

Death.Ice
Ice (internally, Death.Ice)

Defines the freeze (Ice) death sequence.

Death.Disintegrate
Disintegrate (internally, Death.Disintegrate)

Defines the disintegration death sequence.
Raise
Defines the resurrection sequence.
note: This is when a monster is being resurrected (ie: by an Arch-Vile), not when its resurrecting another monster.
Heal
Define the healing sequence. This is entered when this monster is resurrecting another one. Note that by the time this monster enters this state sequence, the resurrection process has already started. The process is usually started either by A_Chase, with the CHF_RESURRECT flag passed to it, A_VileChase, or A_CheckForResurrection.
Crash
Defines the crash sequence. Multiple Crash sequences can be used depending on the type of damage that kills the actor. This is entered when the actor is a corpse and hits the floor.
Also entered by projectiles when hitting a non-bleeding actor (if no Crash sequences is defined, they enter their Death sequences instead).
Also entered by any type of puff when hitting a wall/plane. Bullet and melee attack puffs will also enter this when hitting nothing or the sky, provided the puff has ALWAYSPUFF.

Crash.Extreme

Defines the extreme (splatter) crash sequence. Multiple Crash.Extreme sequencess can be used depending on the type of damage that kills the actor. This is entered when the actor is a corpse and hits the floor after being gibbed.
Crush
Defines the crush sequence. This is entered when the actor is crushed by ceiling/door/etc.
Wound
This sequence is entered when the actor is damaged and its health is lower than its WoundHealth but greater than 0. Multiple Wound state sequences can be used depending on what type of damage is inflicted upon the actor. See custom damage types.
Slam
This sequence is entered if an actor with SKULLFLY hits another actor. This takes precedence over entering the Spawn or Idle sequences, or entering the See state sequence if RETARGETAFTERSLAM is on.
Greetings
This is used by the Strife dialog system. It is entered when a conversation is about to start.
Yes
This is used by the Strife dialog system. It is entered when the actor reacts positively to the player's choice.
No
This is used by the Strife dialog system. It is entered when the actor reacts negatively to the player's choice.
Active
This is used by Hexen-style switchable decorations. It is entered when the actor is activated.
Inactive
This is used by Hexen-style switchable decorations. It is entered when the actor is deactivated.
Bounce
This is used by bouncers with the USEBOUNCESTATE flag. It is entered when the actor bounces. Multiple bounce state sequence can be used depending on what the actor bounced off:
  • Bounce
  • Bounce.Floor
  • Bounce.Ceiling
  • Bounce.Wall
  • Bounce.Actor
  • Bounce.Actor.Creature
Partial matches work just like Pain sequences, so if an actor bounces off a floor and you don't have a Bounce.Floor state sequence, but you do have a Bounce state sequence, it will use the Bounce state sequence. Conversely, if you only have a Bounce.Floor state sequence but no Bounce state sequence, then the actor will only enter the Bounce.Floor state sequence when it bounces on a floor; bouncing off anything else will not cause it to change state. The Bounce.Actor.Creature state sequence is used for bouncing over a shootable actor without the NOBLOOD flag.
LightDone
Normally used by weapons and entered at the end of their Flash sequence. All weapons have this built in; it simply calls A_Light0 and destroys the layer. Using it is not obligatory, as long as you remember calling A_Light0 after you've called A_Light2 and/or A_Light1, to reset the lighting of the level.
Held
A built-in sequence for Inventory items. This is called repeatedly while the item is in somebody's inventory. Functions pretty much like the DoEffect virtual.
HoldAndDestroy
A built-in sequence for Inventory items. This is entered when an item is being removed from its owner's inventory.

Weapons and custom inventory items define a few more state sequences to define their animations.

Note that you can also define your own state sequences that can be referred to using A_Jump or other jump instructions.

What constitutes a state sequence

A state is a single instruction that contains a sprite name, a sprite frame, duration and, optionally, a function.

This is a single state with a duration of 1 tic:

POSS A 1

A state sequence is a sequence of states that starts at a state label (like "Spawn", "See" etc.), and ends at a static instruction like stop, goto, wait, loop or fail. Dynamic instructions like the A_Jump* functions or return ResolveState(), as well fall-throughts do not break a state sequence.

This is a state sequence consisting of 4 states, each calling the same function.

Spawn:
  SPRT ABCD 2 A_Look;
  loop;

This is also a state sequence of 4 states; the difference is that they have different durations and only 2 of them call A_Look:

Spawn:
  SPRT A 10;
  SPRT B 5 A_Look;
  SPRT C 10;
  SPRT D 5 A_Look;
  loop;

Each state has data associated with it (sprite, frame, duration, etc.). All of that data is stored in the State struct. The state an actor is currently in is stored in its curState field, which contains a pointer to a currently used State struct. You can check what state sequence an actor is in by calling InStateSequence(<actorpointer>.curState, <actorpointer>.ResolveState("<desired state label>").

As mentioned, dynamic jumps and fall-throughs do not break a state sequence. This means, that for the purposes of the InStateSequence check, an actor can be considered to be in multiple state sequences at the same time. For example:

Spawn:
  SPRT ABCD 5;
  TNT1 A 0 A_Jump(128, "Spawn"); //50% chance to jump back to the start of Spawn
Death:
  SPRT EFG 3
  {
    if (InStateSequence(curstate, ResolveState("Spawn")))
    {
      // This will always be true, because the Spawn sequence
      // ended with a dynamic jump and a fall-through to this
      // sequence, and as such the actor's Spawn sequence is
      // still considered to be checked.
    }
    if (InStateSequence(curstate, ResolveState("Death")))
    {
      // However, this will also be true, because the actor
      // is also in the Death sequence here, which begins
      // with "Death" and ends with stop.
    }
  }
  stop;

Running InStateSequence fron inside an actor's state is, of course, meaningless, because we already know what state and sequence the code is in. However, this function is usually called from outside of states, such as the actor's Tick(), and that's where it becomes relevant. For example:

class Test : Actor
{
  override void Tick()
  {
    super.Tick();
    if (InStateSequence(curstate, ResolveState("Spawn")))
    {
      Console.PrintF("Is in Spawn"); //this will always print
    }
  }
  States
  {
  Spawn:
    SPRT ABCD 5;
    TNT1 A 0 A_Jump(128, "Spawn"); //50% chance to jump back to the start of Spawn
  Death:
    SPRT EFG 3;
    stop;
  }
}

In this example, the print will always happen, because A_Jump and a fall-through do not break the Spawn sequence. As a result, in its EFG frames the actor will still be considered to be in Spawn, since it wasn't broken. If there's a need to check that the actor is in "Death" only, use InStateSequence(curstate, ResolveState("Death")). But if there's a need to check that it's in "Spawn" but not in "Death", you will need two checks:

class Test : Actor
{
  override void Tick()
  {
    super.Tick();
    if (InStateSequence(curstate, ResolveState("Spawn")) && !InStateSequence(curstate, ResolveState("Death")))
    {
      Console.PrintF("Is in Spawn"); // This will print only when actor is in Spawn but not in Death
    }
  }
  States
  {
  Spawn:
    SPRT ABCD 5;
    TNT1 A 0 A_Jump(128, "Spawn"); //50% chance to jump back to the start of Spawn
  Death:
    SPRT EFG 3;
    stop;
  }
}

What's also important, goto that sends the actor into the state sequence directly below itself functions exactly the same way as a fall-through and does not break a state sequence. For example, the two blocks below are functionally identical:

Spawn:
  SPRT ABCD 5;
Death:
  SPRT EFG 3;
  stop;
Spawn:
  SPRT ABCD 5;
  goto Death; //same as fall-through
Death:
  SPRT EFG 3;
  stop;

Calling InStateSequence(curstate, ResolveState("Spawn")) will return true on both examples above.

This knowledge can be manipulated specifically to create nested state sequences. For example, let's say you want an actor to have multiple variations of its Spawn sequence:

Spawn:
  TNT1 A 0 A_Jump(256, "Spawn1", "Spawn2", "Spawn3");
Spawn1:
  SPR1 ABCD 5;
  TNT1 A 0 A_Jump(256, "Spawn"); //guaranteed jump followed by intentional fall-through
Spawn2:
  SPR2 ABCD 5;
  TNT1 A 0 A_Jump(256, "Spawn"); //guaranteed jump followed by intentional fall-through
Spawn3:
  SPR3 ABCD 5;
  TNT1 A 0 A_Jump(256, "Spawn"); //guaranteed jump followed by a state sequence break
  wait; //ends the Spawn sequence

In the example above, if you call InStateSequence(curstate, ResolveState("Spawn")), it will return true for "Spawn", "Spawn1", "Spawn2" and "Spawn3", which may be a desired result if you want to consider all of these states to be a part of "Spawn". "Spawn3" ends with a wait instruction, which, while never actually reached due to A_Jump(256, "Spawn") above it, marks an end of the "Spawn" sequence.

Examples

This is an example of a States block with multiple state sequences. The rest of this actor has been removed for readability:

class ZombieMan : Actor
{
	[...]
	States
	{
	Spawn:
		POSS AB 10 A_Look;
		Loop;
	See:
		POSS AABBCCDD 4 A_Chase;
		Loop;
	Missile:
 		POSS E 10 A_FaceTarget;
		POSS F 8 A_PosAttack;
		POSS E 8;
		Goto See;
 	Pain:
		POSS G 3;
		POSS G 3 A_Pain;
		Goto See;
	Death:
		POSS H 5;
		POSS I 5 A_Scream;
		POSS J 5 A_NoBlocking;
		POSS K 5;
		POSS L -1;
		Stop;
	XDeath:
		POSS M 5;
		POSS N 5 A_XScream;
		POSS O 5 A_NoBlocking;
		POSS PQRST 5;
		POSS U -1;
		Stop;
	Raise:
		POSS K 5;
		POSS JIH 5;
		Goto See;
	}
}

Note: The first state of the Spawn state sequence, POSS A 10, calls A_Look. This function is not called the very first time the zombie is spawned in the map, so it has to wait 10 tics to get into its second frame, POSS B 10. From then on, it will call A_Look every 10 tics. If it runs out of targets, and since it has no Idle state sequence, it will return to its Spawn state sequence where it will call A_Look immediately, even in the A frame.


This example demonstrates using the stop keyword to remove a state. This definition uses inheritance to define a tougher version of the imp that cannot be resurrected by the Arch-Vile:

class SuperImp : DoomImp
{
     Default
     {
         Health 1500;
         Mass 200;
         PainChance 10;
     }
     States 
     {
     // Removes the Raise sequence:
     Raise:
         stop;
     }
}

See also