cs193p – Assignment #1 Task #5

Please note, this blog entry is from a previous course. You might want to check out the current one.

Drag out a switch (UISwitch) or a segmented control (UISegmentedControl) into your View somewhere which controls whether the game matches two cards at a time or three cards at a time (i.e. it sets “2-card-match mode” vs. “3-card-match mode”). Give the user appropriate points depending on how difficult the match is to accomplish.

At the moment (end of lecture #3) the match: method PlayingCard model only supports matches with a single other card. Instead of checking if there is a single card, check if there are other cards (one or more). To adjust the score (3-card matches are more worth then 2-card matches) change the score calculation to add the bonus for each matching card (which might not be accurate concerning the actual odds, …):
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cs193p – Assignment #1 Task #4

Please note, this blog entry is from a previous course. You might want to check out the current one.

Add a button called “Deal” which will re-deal all of the cards (i.e. start a new game). It should reset the score (and anything else in the UI that makes sense). In a real game, we’d probably want to ask the user if he or she is “sure” before aborting the game in process to re-deal, but for this assignment, you can assume the user always knows what he or she is doing when they hit this button.

Create a new button in storyboard:

cs193p - assignment #1 task #4
cs193p – assignment #1 task #4

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cs193p – Assignment #1 Task #3

Please note, this blog entry is from a previous course. You might want to check out the current one.

Add a text label somewhere which desribes the results of the last flip. Examples: “Matched J♥ & J♠ for 4 points” or “6♦ and J♣ don’t match! 2 point penalty!” and simply “Flipped up 8♦” if there is no match or mismatch.

The information needed to display is already inside the model. Analogue to the score create a new property to hold the text string, and set it in flipCardAtIndex:
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cs193p – Assignment #1 Task #2

Please note, this blog entry is from a previous course. You might want to check out the current one.

Add 4 cards to the game (for a total of 16).

Start by selecting one row of cards, copy and place them on your storyboard:

cs193p - assignment #1 task #2
cs193p – assignment #1 task #2

Now connect all four new cards to the outlet connection by control dragging each of them to:

@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutletCollection(UIButton) NSArray *cardButtons;

The complete code is available on github.

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cs193p – Assignment #1 Task #1

Please note, this blog entry is from a previous course. You might want to check out the current one.

Follow the detailed instructions in the lecture slides (separate document) to reproduce the latest version of Matchismo we built in lecture (i.e. the one with multiple cards) and run it in the iPhone (normal, non-Retina, non-iPhone 5) Simulator. Do not proceed to the next steps unless your card matching game functions as expected and builds without warnings or errors.

… actually done during the lecture. The complete code is available on github.

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cs193p – Lecture #3 – Objective-C

Please note, this blog entry is from a previous course. You might want to check out the current one.

Lecture #3 is a demo followed by a little review of what has been learned up to now.

The demo introduces outlet collections – arrays of collections which hold strong pointers to the objects in the view. It also shows how to implement a property which is read-only for the public interface and read-write for private use. … and adds new features to the card game.

The code for the lecture is available on github.

Slides are available on iTunes providing a detailed walk through of the demo.

The lecture is available at iTunes and is named “3. Objective-C (January 15, 2013)”.

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cs193p – Lecture #2 – Xcode 4

Please note, this blog entry is from a previous course. You might want to check out the current one.

Lecture #2 provides a short walk through of the Xcode developing environment. The first half of the lecture discusses the various classes of the model for the playing card game. The second is a life demonstration on how to start a project in Xcodes, placing buttons and labels in Storyboard and connecting them to the view controller.

At the end of the lecture the app called Matchismo displays a playing card and allows to flip it to show both sides of the card.

Assignment #0 is to follow the steps from the demonstration, add the model classes from the first half of the lecture and finally allow to flip through all cards of a deck.

To implement this last step, add a new property to hold the model of the game – the card deck – to the view controller. Don’t forget to include the model class:
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