Tutorial:Pooled Resource Unit Costs

From Total War Modding

Originally written by Pear

๐Ÿ’ฌ Let's Talk Pooled Resources

Pooled Resources are cool. The problem is they're not used for very much. This tutorial aims to fix that by explaining how to use Pooled Resources as costs for units in the main recruitment panel and providing an example mod for reference. The theory used here can be applied to a range of other things such as RoRs, lords, agents, buildings, technologies, or anything really!

This guide and the example mod are also my submission for Mod Jam #7.

๐Ÿง‘โ€๐ŸŽ“ The Theory

Before we get started I'd recommend getting my example mod as a reference, as well as Groove Wizard's Visual Studio development environment for your scripting, and Groove's Modding Development Tools: Lua Console to test the code in game (yes this man is a machine).

Making something have Pooled Resource costs consists of two main parts:

  1. Handling the UI: when UICs are created, enabling and disabling UICs, accounting for refreshes, and setting text, tooltips, and icons.
  2. Handling the Cost: taking away / returning the Pooled Resource to the player in a multiplayer-friendly way.

but before we get into that, here's a little bit of theory which might be useful for those who are less familiar with UI modding.

๐Ÿ‘ท Building the UI

The first step in building the UI is figuring out where you want your Pooled Resource cost to appear. Do you want to keep the vanilla treasury recruitment cost? Do you want several Pooled Resource costs? Do you want it below the unit card like normal treasury costs or on the side of the unit card like the Wood Elves' Amber resource?

If you don't want a recruitment cost and only want one Pooled Resource cost then you can technically skip most of this section and just reuse the vanilla recruitment cost UIC, however I would highly recommend still reading this section to better understand the process.

For the purpose of this guide we will be keeping the vanilla treasury costs and making one new Pooled Resource cost which will go below the unit card.

๐Ÿ” Finding UI Components

Recruitment cost component.png

In order to modify a part of the UI you need to find where it's located. To do this we can use the Context Viewer. To find a UIC, open the Context Viewer, position your mouse on the screen where you want your UIC to go, and click with your mouse wheel. This will take you most, if not all, of the way to the path of your UIC. So click on the unit card then expand the unit card UIC in the Context Viewer until you find the UIC for recruitment cost. Once you've found it, paste CopyFullPathToClipboard() in the expression tester box. This copies the path to that UIC which is how we find it in the script.

When copied it will look like this: ":root:units_panel:main_units_panel:..." and so on.

Referencing my example mod, to find the recruitment cost UIC with a script you write it like this:

local recruitment_uic = find_uicomponent(core:get_ui_root(), "units_panel", "main_units_panel", "recruitment_docker", "recruitment_options", "recruitment_listbox", "local1", "unit_list", "listview", "list_clip", "list_box", "wh_main_emp_inf_swordsmen_recruitable", "unit_icon", "RecruitmentCost") 

It is fine as it is however it can be split into smaller, easier-to-access parts like this:

local recruitment_uic = find_uicomponent(core:get_ui_root(), "units_panel", "main_units_panel", "recruitment_docker", "recruitment_options", "recruitment_listbox", recruitment_type)
local listview_uic = find_uicomponent(recruitment_uic, "unit_list", "listview")
local unit_uic = find_uicomponent(listview_uic, "list_clip", "list_box", "wh_main_emp_inf_swordsmen_recruitable")
local recruitment_cost_uic = find_uicomponent(unit_uic, "unit_icon", "RecruitmentCost")

๐Ÿ“ท Creating / Copying Components

For our purposes we will probably only need to create copies of pre-existing UICs. To do that you need to use uicomponent:CopyComponent() and name the new UIC e.g. "prestige cost" like this:

UIComponent(recruitment_cost_uic:CopyComponent("prestige_cost"))

Using the paths we've previously established, the path for this new "prestige_cost" UIC we've created is therefore:

local prestige_cost_parent_uic = find_uicomponent(unit_uic, "unit_icon", "prestige_cost")

โฌ‡๏ธ Repositioning Components

This part is a bit more tedious. You will need to use the console (shift + f3) from Groove's Modding Dev Tools to test where the new "prestige_cost" UIC we've created should be repositioned. To do that you need to use uicomponent:SetDockOffset() and your own x and y coordinates, e.g. x = 0, y = 5 like this:

local prestige_cost_parent_uic = find_uicomponent(unit_uic, "unit_icon", "prestige_cost")
prestige_cost_parent_uic:SetDockOffset(x, y)

If you really want to make sure it's in the right place take a screenshot and do a bit of pixel peeping in a photo editor and count the pixels between e.g. the recruitment cost UIC and the upkeep cost UIC and that's how many pixels your new component should be below the recruitment cost UIC. The correct coordinates for the normal recruitment panel are:

prestige_cost_parent_uic:SetDockOffset(8, 19)

this may change depending on the faction or panel e.g. RoRs or lords.

โœ‹ Handling the UI

To make the UI components work we need listeners!

IMPORTANT: Make sure you change the listener and saved value names from the examples to avoid incompatibilities.

๐Ÿ Initialising and Finalising UICs

This section controls how the UI appears, the size of UICs their text, tooltips, and icons.

Now we need to set up the table for the units we want to have Pooled Resource costs. It should contain the loc key for the unit's onscreen name, the unit's UIC (which is just the unit's key plus "_recruitable"), and the Pooled Resource cost. Together it should look like this:

local pr_units = {
   {unit_name_loc = "land_units_onscreen_name_wh_main_emp_inf_spearmen_1", unit_uic = "wh_main_emp_inf_spearmen_1_recruitable", prestige_cost = 18},
   {unit_name_loc = "land_units_onscreen_name_wh_main_emp_inf_swordsmen", unit_uic = "wh_main_emp_inf_swordsmen_recruitable", prestige_cost = 19}
}

This table is then used in the functions initialise_uics(recruitment_type) and finalise_uics().

local function initialise_uics(recruitment_type)
   local recruitment_uic = find_uicomponent(core:get_ui_root(), "units_panel", "main_units_panel", "recruitment_docker", "recruitment_options", "recruitment_listbox", recruitment_type)
   if recruitment_uic then
       local recruitment_docker_uic = find_uicomponent(core:get_ui_root(), "units_panel", "main_units_panel", "recruitment_docker")
       local unit_list = find_uicomponent(recruitment_uic, "unit_list")
       local listview_uic = find_uicomponent(unit_list, "listview")
       local list_clip_uic = find_uicomponent(listview_uic, "list_clip")
       local list_box_uic = find_uicomponent(list_clip_uic, "list_box")
       -- gets the reference unit from the table
       local reference_unit
       for i = 1, #pr_units do
           reference_unit = pr_units[i].unit_uic
           local unit_uic = find_uicomponent(list_box_uic, reference_unit)
           if unit_uic then
               break
           elseif unit_uic == false then
               reference_unit = nil
               break
           end
       end
       if reference_unit ~= nil then
           local unit_uic = find_uicomponent(list_box_uic, reference_unit)
           local recruitment_cost_uic = find_uicomponent(unit_uic, "unit_icon", "RecruitmentCost")
           recruitment_docker_uic:SetCanResizeHeight(true)
           recruitment_docker_uic:SetCanResizeWidth(true)
           unit_list:SetCanResizeHeight(true)
           unit_list:SetCanResizeWidth(true)
           list_clip_uic:SetCanResizeHeight(true)
           list_clip_uic:SetCanResizeWidth(true)
           unit_uic:SetCanResizeHeight(true)
           unit_uic:SetCanResizeWidth(true)
           -- dimensions for resizing components
           local width_rcc, height_rcc = recruitment_cost_uic:Dimensions()
           -- resizing recruitment_docker
           local width_rdc, height_rdc = recruitment_docker_uic:Dimensions()
           recruitment_docker_uic:Resize(width_rdc, (height_rdc + (height_rcc * 2)), false) 
           -- resizing unit_list
           local width_lrc, height_lrc = unit_list:Dimensions()
           unit_list:Resize(width_lrc, (height_lrc + height_rcc), false) 
           -- resizing list_clip
           local width_lcc, height_lcc = list_clip_uic:Dimensions()
           list_clip_uic:Resize(width_lcc, (height_lcc + (height_rcc * 2) + 5), false) -- the plus 5 is to make sure there's no clipping at the bottom of the upkeep cost component
           -- handling pr cost components
           finalise_uics()
       end
   end
end

๐ŸŽฎ Triggering UIC Handler Functions

The first listener we need is PanelOpenedCampaign. We can use this to tell when the main recruitment panel "units_recruitment" is open so we can start setting up our UI. To find the name of the panel you're adding Pooled Resource costs to you can check the log produced by Groove's Modding Dev Tools. In the log it will look something like this:

[ui] <97.6s>    Panel opened units_panel
[ui] <98.8s>    Panel opened recruitment_options
[ui] <98.8s>    Panel opened units_recruitment

For this listener to work for both local and global recruitment we need a for loop to run the set up for both types of recruitment which will use this table:

local recruitment_types = {
   {recruitment_type = "local1"},
   {recruitment_type = "global"}
} 

We also need some saved values to make sure the listener doesn't continually resize the parent UI components. Together the listener looks like this:

core:add_listener(
   "EXAMPLE_PANEL_OPENED_LISTENER",
   "PanelOpenedCampaign",
   function(context)
       return context.string == "units_recruitment"
   end,
   function()
       for i = 1, #recruitment_types do
           local recruitment_type = recruitment_types[i].recruitment_type
           if cm:get_saved_value("EXAMPLE_INIT_1") ~= true then
               cm:set_saved_value("EXAMPLE_INIT_1", true)
               initialise_uics(recruitment_type)
           else
               finalise_uics()
               return
           end
       end
   end,
   true
)

A refresh to the UI occurs when switching to the Encamp stance. This messes up the sizing of the parent panels. To account for this we need to use ComponentLClickUp which checks when the Encamp button is pressed like this:

core:add_listener(
   "EXAMPLE_BUTTON_CLICKED",
   "ComponentLClickUp",
   function(context)
       return context.string == "button_MILITARY_FORCE_ACTIVE_STANCE_TYPE_SET_CAMP"
   end,
   function()
       local recruitment_type = "global"
       cm:callback(
           function()
               if cm:get_saved_value("EXAMPLE_ENCAMP_CLICKED_1") ~= true then
                   cm:set_saved_value("EXAMPLE_ENCAMP_CLICKED_1", true)
                   initialise_uics(recruitment_type)
               else
                   finalise_uics()
               end
           end, 
           0.1
       )
   end,
   true
)
  • This listener is used again later and combined with something else.

Lastly we need to use PanelClosedCampaign to reset our saved values when the whole "units_panel" closes.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Handling the Cost

Next we need to use ComponentLClickUp and UITrigger. These listeners act as a pair ComponentLClickUp sends a message which is received by UITrigger. This is required for multiplayer compatibility.

The ComponentLClickUp listener contains 2 parts. The first part is to account for a refresh in the UI when the army's stance is changed.