Accessing Config Vars in a Program

Panda3D uses a configuration file named Config.prc. Panda3D supplies functions to easily read values out of Config.prc, and to alter their values in memory (the modified values are not written back out to disk). The ability to read and alter configuration settings procedurally has two major uses:

  1. Storing your own configuration data.

  2. Tweaking Panda3D’s behavior.

“Storing your own configuration data” means that your game might have its own settings that need to be stored. Rather than writing your own configuration file parser, you might consider adding your configuration data to the panda configuration file instead.

Suppose hypothetically that you are writing an online game, and your online game connects to a server. You need a configuration file to tell you the name of the server. Open up the “Config.prc” file and add the following line at the end of the file.

my-game-server panda3dgame.com

Note that I invented the variable name “my-game-server” out of thin air. This variable is not recognized by Panda3D in any way. Therefore, this line has no effect on the engine whatsoever.

To manipulate this variable procedurally, use code not unlike the following, which creates an object of class ConfigVariableString and then manipulates it using the methods set_value() and get_value().

from panda3d.core import ConfigVariableString

myGameServer = ConfigVariableString('my-game-server', '127.0.0.1')
print('Server specified in config file: ', myGameServer.getValue())

# Allow the user to change servers on the command-line.
if (sys.argv[1] == '--server'):
    myGameServer.setValue(sys.argv[2])
print('Server that we will use: ', myGameServer.getValue())

The second parameter to the ConfigVariableString constructor is the default value that should be returned, in case the line “my-game-server” does not appear in any Config.prc file. There is also an optional third parameter, which is a description of the purpose of the variable.

This string will be displayed when the user executes the command print(cvMgr).

The types of configuration variable are:

ConfigVariableString ConfigVariableInt ConfigVariableBool ConfigVariableColor ConfigVariableDouble ConfigVariableFilename ConfigVariableList ConfigVariableSearchPath

Most of these follow the same form as ConfigVariableString, above, except that the value is of the indicated type, rather than a string. The two exceptions are ConfigVariableList and ConfigVariableSearchPath. These types of variables do not accept a default value to the constructor since the default value in both cases is always the empty list or search path.

To display the current value of a particular variable interactively (for a string-type variable in this example), type the following:

print(ConfigVariableString("my-game-server"))

Panda3D will automatically load any PRC files it finds in its standard config directory at start-up.

You can view a list of the files it has actually loaded with the following command:

print(cpMgr)

It is helpful to do this to ensure that you are editing the correct Config.prc file.

Sometimes, it is desirable to load an additional configuration file from disk, by giving an explicit filename. To do so, use load_prc_file(). Note that Panda Filename Syntax uses a forward slash even under Windows.

from panda3d.core import loadPrcFile

loadPrcFile("config/Config.prc")

The filename you specify is searched for along the model-path, in the same way that an Egg or Bam file is searched for when you use loader.loadModel().

You should load your own PRC file before instantiating ShowBase. Changing certain configuration variables later on may not affect the window/environment that has already been created.

You can also use load_prc_file_data() to load a string that you define in your code, as if it were the contents read from a disk file. The load_prc_file_data() call requires two parameters. The first parameter is an arbitrary string name to assign to this “file” (and it can be the empty string if you don’t care), while the second parameter is the contents of the file itself. This second parameter should contain newlines between variable definitions if you want to set the value of more than one variable.

For example, let’s say that Panda3D’s configuration file contains this line:

fullscreen #f

By default, Panda3D programs will run in a window, not fullscreen. However, if you do this, then by the time you instantiate ShowBase, you will have changed the fullscreen-flag to true, and your program will run in fullscreen.

from panda3d.core import loadPrcFileData

loadPrcFileData('', 'fullscreen true')

There are other ways to go to fullscreen. This is not necessarily the most straightforward approach, but it illustrates the point.

You can get a more complete list of available config variables at runtime, with the list_variables() method:

cvMgr = ConfigVariableManager.getGlobalPtr()
cvMgr.listVariables()

For a more complete documentation about Panda3D’s configuration system, view the original documentation file.