Change SKTextureFilteringMode for all SKTextures - swift

Is there a way to assign the filteringMode attribute to SKTextureFilteringMode.nearest for ALL SKTextures? Other than assigning to each texture individually. The following works fine, but I'd rather that I didn't have to iterate over the textures, but just set a default for the filtering mode. Is this possible?
func walk () -> SKAction {
let walkTexture1 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "walk1.png")
let walkTexture2 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "walk2.png")
let walkTexture3 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "walk3.png")
let walkTexture4 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "walk4.png")
let walkTexture5 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "walk5.png")
let animationTextures: [SKTexture] = [walkTexture1, walkTexture2, walkTexture3, walkTexture4, walkTexture5]
for texture in animationTextures {
texture.filteringMode = SKTextureFilteringMode.nearest
}
let walkAnimation = SKAction.animate(with: animationTextures, timePerFrame: 0.3/5)
return walkAnimation

Create textures and set properties in the same loop
let textures = (1...5).map {
let texture = SKTexture(imageNamed: "walk\($0).png")
texture.filteringMode = SKTextureFilteringMode.nearest
return texture
}
or just set properties using forEach
textures.forEach {
$0.filteringMode = .nearest
}

You could perhaps make an extension to SKTexture, something like this:
extension SKTexture {
class func pixeled(imageNamed imageName: String) -> SKTexture {
let texture = SKTexture(imageNamed: imageName)
texture.filteringMode = .nearest
return texture
}
}
Then you'll simply have
let walkTexture1 = SKTexture.pixeled(imageNamed: "walk1.png")
etc.

Related

Sprite-Kit animations — using SKTextureFilteringMode.nearest

I'm trying to apply SKTextureFilteringMode.nearest to all the frames in my animation.
Previously, when I was using a non-animated sprite, the following worked:
super.init(texture: texture, color: .clear, size: playerSize)
self.texture?.filteringMode = SKTextureFilteringMode.nearest;
Now I've added animation frames (see full code below), this doesn't work — the sprite is blurry. I can't work out how to add this filtering mode to all frames.
class Player: SKSpriteNode {
private var playerAtlas: SKTextureAtlas {
return SKTextureAtlas(named: "Player")
}
private var playerRunTextures: [SKTexture] {
return [
playerAtlas.textureNamed("run1"),
playerAtlas.textureNamed("run2"),
playerAtlas.textureNamed("run3"),
playerAtlas.textureNamed("run4")
]
}
func startRunAnimation() {
let runAnimation = SKAction.animate(with: playerRunTextures, timePerFrame: 0.1)
self.run(SKAction.repeatForever(runAnimation), withKey: "playerRunAnimation")
}
init() {
let texture = SKTexture(imageNamed: "player")
let playerSize = CGSize(width: 30, height: 50)
super.init(texture: texture, color: .clear, size: playerSize)
self.texture?.filteringMode = SKTextureFilteringMode.nearest;
self.position = CGPoint(x: 100, y: 400)
self.startRunAnimation()
}
...
set SKTextureFilteringMode for each texture when you create the sprite animation array:
private var playerRunTextures: [SKTexture] {
let spritesheet = [
"run1",
"run2",
"run3",
"run4"
]
return spritesheet.map { name in
let t1 = playerAtlas.textureNamed(name)
t1.filteringMode = .nearest //<--- for each texture in the atlas
return t1
}
}

Swift: Player Jump Animation

I'm trying to get my player to play the jump animation when the touch begins. The player is in his own swift file and I have the GameScene.swift call his file so everything that deals with his movement is in player.swift file. Any help would be awesome!
import SpriteKit
struct ColliderType {
static let PLAYER: UInt32 = 0
static let GROUND: UInt32 = 1
static let ROCKET_AND_COLLECTABLES: UInt32 = 2
}
class Player: SKSpriteNode {
private var textureAtlas = SKTextureAtlas()
private var playerAnimation = [SKTexture]()
private var animatePlayerAction = SKAction()
let jumpAnimation1 = [SKTexture]()
let jumpAnimation2 = [SKTexture]()
var jumpAnimation = SKAction ()
func initializePlayer() {
name = "Player"
for i in 1...7 {
let name = "Player \(i)"
playerAnimation.append(SKTexture(imageNamed: name))
}
animatePlayerAction = SKAction.animate(with: playerAnimation,
timePerFrame: 0.08, resize: true, restore: false)
//Animate the player forever.
self.run(SKAction.repeatForever(animatePlayerAction))
physicsBody = SKPhysicsBody(rectangleOf: CGSize(width:
self.size.width-60, height: self.size.height-80))
physicsBody?.affectedByGravity = true
physicsBody?.allowsRotation = false
//Restitution is Boucniess
physicsBody?.restitution = 0
physicsBody?.categoryBitMask = ColliderType.PLAYER
physicsBody?.collisionBitMask = ColliderType.GROUND
physicsBody?.contactTestBitMask =
ColliderType.ROCKET_AND_COLLECTABLES
}
func move (){
self.position.x += 10
}
func reversePlayer() {
physicsBody?.velocity = CGVector(dx: 0, dy: 0)
physicsBody?.applyImpulse(CGVector(dx: 0, dy: 300))
playerNode?.removeAction(forKey:"animate") playerNode?.run(attackAnimation,completion:{
self.playerNode?.run(self.animation,withKey: "animate")
}
}
Replace the part where you set textures, create and run the action with the following code snippet. It works perfectly for me and is the simplest way to do it.
let hero = SKSpriteNode(imageNamed: "hero")
hero.size = CGSize(width: 45, height: 125)
let f1 = SKTexture.init(imageNamed: "h1")
let f2 = SKTexture.init(imageNamed: "h2")
let f3 = SKTexture.init(imageNamed: "h3")
let frames: [SKTexture] = [f1, f2, f3]
let hero = SKSpriteNode(imageNamed: "h1")
let animation = SKAction.animate(with: frames, timePerFrame: 0.1)
hero.run(SKAction.repeatForever(animation))
Also, it is possible that your animation action cannot be accessed as it is in another file. Declare the player and animations globally i.e. outside of any class or function. Hope it works for you!

Animation atlas and dynamic physicsBody in Swift 3

I did a small test project using the "Hello World" Sprite-kit template where there is an atlas animation composed by these frames:
-
I want to show this knight and it's animation.
I want to set a DYNAMIC physics body.
So I've used a tool to separated single frames and I did an atlasc folder
so the code should be:
import SpriteKit
class GameScene: SKScene {
var knight: SKSpriteNode!
var textures : [SKTexture] = [SKTexture]()
override func didMove(to view: SKView) {
self.physicsWorld.gravity = CGVector(dx:0, dy:-2)
let plist = "knight.plist"
let genericAtlas = SKTextureAtlas(named:plist)
let filename : String! = NSURL(fileURLWithPath: plist).deletingPathExtension!.lastPathComponent
for i in 0 ..< genericAtlas.textureNames.count
{
let textureName = (String(format:"%#%02d",filename,i))
textures.append(genericAtlas.textureNamed(textureName))
}
if textures.count>0 {
knight = SKSpriteNode(texture:textures.first)
knight.zPosition = 2
addChild(knight)
knight.position = CGPoint(x:self.frame.midX,y:self.frame.midY)
}
//
self.setPhysics()
let animation = SKAction.animate(with: textures, timePerFrame: 0.15, resize: true, restore: false)
knight.run(animation, withKey:"knight")
}
func setPhysics() {
knight.physicsBody = SKPhysicsBody.init(rectangleOf: knight.size)
knight.physicsBody?.isDynamic = false
}
}
The output is:
As you can see, the physicsBody is STATIC, don't respect the animation: this is normal because during the animation the texture change dimension / size and we don't change the physicsBody that remain the same during the action.
Following the sources there aren't methods that , during SKAction.animate, allow to change the physicsBody.
Although we use :
/**
Creates an compound body that is the union of the bodies used to create it.
*/
public /*not inherited*/ init(bodies: [SKPhysicsBody])
to create bodies for each frame of our animation, these bodies remain all together in the scene creating an ugly bizarre situation like this pic:
So, the correct way to do it should be to intercept frames during animation and change physicsBody on the fly.
We can use also the update() method from SKScene, but I was thinking about an extension.
My idea is to combine the animation action with a SKAction.group, making another custom action that check the execution of the first action, intercept frames that match the current knight.texture with the textures array and change the physicsBody launching an external method, in this case setPhysicsBody.
Then, I've write this one:
extension SKAction {
class func animateWithDynamicPhysicsBody(animate:SKAction, key:String, textures:[SKTexture], duration: TimeInterval, launchMethod: #escaping ()->()) ->SKAction {
let interceptor = SKAction.customAction(withDuration: duration) { node, _ in
if node is SKSpriteNode {
let n = node as! SKSpriteNode
guard n.action(forKey: key) != nil else { return }
if textures.contains(n.texture!) {
let frameNum = textures.index(of: n.texture!)
print("frame number: \(frameNum)")
// Launch a method to change physicBody or do other things with frameNum
launchMethod()
}
}
}
return SKAction.group([animate,interceptor])
}
}
Adding this extension, we change the animation part of the code with:
//
self.setPhysics()
let animation = SKAction.animate(with: textures, timePerFrame: 0.15, resize: true, restore: false)
let interceptor = SKAction.animateWithDynamicPhysicsBody(animate: animation, key: "knight", textures: textures, duration: 60.0, launchMethod: self.setPhysics)
knight.run(interceptor,withKey:"knight")
}
func setPhysics() {
knight.physicsBody = SKPhysicsBody.init(rectangleOf: knight.size)
knight.physicsBody?.isDynamic = false
}
This finally works, the output is:
Do you know a better way, or a more elegant method to obtain this result?
Like I mentioned in the comments, since you are doing boxed physics, add a child SKSpriteNode to your knight that will handle the contacts part of the physics, and just scale based on the knight's frame:
(Note: this is for demo purposes only, I am sure you can come up with a more elegant way to handle this across multiple sprites)
import SpriteKit
class GameScene: SKScene {
var knight: SKSpriteNode!
var textures : [SKTexture] = [SKTexture]()
private var child = SKSpriteNode(color:.clear,size:CGSize(width:1,height:1))
override func didMove(to view: SKView) {
self.physicsWorld.gravity = CGVector(dx:0, dy:-2)
let plist = "knight.plist"
let genericAtlas = SKTextureAtlas(named:plist)
let filename : String! = NSURL(fileURLWithPath: plist).deletingPathExtension!.lastPathComponent
for i in 0 ..< genericAtlas.textureNames.count
{
let textureName = (String(format:"%#%02d",filename,i))
textures.append(genericAtlas.textureNamed(textureName))
}
if textures.count>0 {
knight = SKSpriteNode(texture:textures.first)
knight.zPosition = 2
addChild(knight)
knight.position = CGPoint(x:self.frame.midX,y:self.frame.midY)
}
//
self.setPhysics()
let animation = SKAction.repeatForever(SKAction.animate(with: textures, timePerFrame: 0.15, resize: true, restore: false))
knight.run(animation,withKey:"knight")
}
override func didEvaluateActions() {
child.xScale = knight.frame.size.width
child.yScale = knight.frame.size.height
}
func setPhysics() {
child.physicsBody = SKPhysicsBody.init(rectangleOf: child.size)
child.physicsBody?.isDynamic = false
knight.addChild(child)
}
}
To handle texture based bodies. I would write a custom animation to handle it:
extension SKAction
{
static func animate(withPhysicsTextures textures:[(texture:SKTexture,body:SKPhysicsBody)], timePerFrame:TimeInterval ,resize:Bool, restore:Bool) ->SKAction {
var originalTexture : SKTexture!;
let duration = timePerFrame * Double(textures.count);
return SKAction.customAction(withDuration: duration)
{
node,elapsedTime in
guard let sprNode = node as? SKSpriteNode
else
{
assert(false,"animatePhysicsWithTextures only works on members of SKSpriteNode");
return;
}
let index = Int((elapsedTime / CGFloat(duration)) * CGFloat(textures.count))
//If we havent assigned this yet, lets assign it now
if originalTexture == nil
{
originalTexture = sprNode.texture;
}
if(index < textures.count)
{
sprNode.texture = textures[index].texture
sprNode.physicsBody = textures[index].body
}
else if(restore)
{
sprNode.texture = originalTexture;
}
if(resize)
{
sprNode.size = sprNode.texture!.size();
}
}
}
}
import SpriteKit
class GameScene: SKScene {
var knight: SKSpriteNode!
var textures = [texture:SKTexture,body:SKPhysicsBody]()
override func didMove(to view: SKView) {
self.physicsWorld.gravity = CGVector(dx:0, dy:-2)
let plist = "knight.plist"
let genericAtlas = SKTextureAtlas(named:plist)
let filename : String! = NSURL(fileURLWithPath: plist).deletingPathExtension!.lastPathComponent
for i in 0 ..< genericAtlas.textureNames.count
{
let textureName = (String(format:"%#%02d",filename,i))
let texture = genericAtlas.textureNamed(textureName)
let body = SKPhysicsBody(texture:texture)
body.isDynamic = false
textures.append((texture:texture,body:body))
}
if textures.count>0 {
knight = SKSpriteNode(texture:textures.first.texture)
knight.zPosition = 2
addChild(knight)
knight.position = CGPoint(x:self.frame.midX,y:self.frame.midY)
}
//
let animation = SKAction.animate(withPhysicsTextures: textures, timePerFrame: 0.15, resize: true, restore: false)
knight.run(animation, withKey:"knight")
}
}
Solution for isDynamic = false.
*Update to 2017 below
After days of test maded with my answer, Knight0fDragon answer's and some other ideas came from other SO answers (Confused and Whirlwind suggestions..) I've seen that there is a new problem : physicsBody can't propagate their properties to other bodies
adequately and correctly. In other words copy all properties from a body to another body it's not enough. That's because Apple restrict the access to some methods and properties of the physicsBody original class.
It may happen that when you launch a physicsBody.applyImpulse propagating adequately the velocity, the gravity isn't yet respected correctly. That's really orrible to see..and obviusly that's wrong.
So the main goal is: do not change the physicBody recreating it.In other words DON'T RECREATE IT!
I thought that, instead of creating sprite children, you could create a ghost sprites that do the work instead of the main sprite, and the main sprite takes advantage of the ghost changes but ONLY the main sprite have a physicsBody.
This seems to work!
import SpriteKit
class GameScene: SKScene {
var knight: SKSpriteNode!
private var ghostKnight:SKSpriteNode!
var textures : [SKTexture] = [SKTexture]()
var lastKnightTexture : SKTexture!
override func didMove(to view: SKView) {
self.physicsWorld.gravity = CGVector.zero
let plist = "knight.plist"
let genericAtlas = SKTextureAtlas(named:plist)
let filename : String! = NSURL(fileURLWithPath: plist).deletingPathExtension!.lastPathComponent
for i in 0 ..< genericAtlas.textureNames.count
{
let textureName = (String(format:"%#%02d",filename,i))
textures.append(genericAtlas.textureNamed(textureName))
}
if textures.count>0 {
// Prepare the ghost
ghostKnight = SKSpriteNode(texture:textures.first)
addChild(ghostKnight)
ghostKnight.alpha = 0.2
ghostKnight.position = CGPoint(x:self.frame.midX,y:100)
lastKnightTexture = ghostKnight.texture
// Prepare my sprite
knight = SKSpriteNode(texture:textures.first,size:CGSize(width:1,height:1))
knight.zPosition = 2
addChild(knight)
knight.position = CGPoint(x:self.frame.midX,y:self.frame.midY)
}
let ghostAnimation = SKAction.repeatForever(SKAction.animate(with: textures, timePerFrame: 0.15, resize: true, restore: false))
ghostKnight.run(ghostAnimation,withKey:"ghostAnimation")
let animation = SKAction.repeatForever(SKAction.animate(with: textures, timePerFrame: 0.15, resize: false, restore: false))
knight.run(animation,withKey:"knight")
}
override func didEvaluateActions() {
if ghostKnight.action(forKey: "ghostAnimation") != nil {
if ghostKnight.texture != lastKnightTexture {
setPhysics()
lastKnightTexture = ghostKnight.texture
}
}
}
func setPhysics() {
if let _ = knight.physicsBody{
knight.xScale = ghostKnight.frame.size.width
knight.yScale = ghostKnight.frame.size.height
} else {
knight.physicsBody = SKPhysicsBody.init(rectangleOf: knight.frame.size)
knight.physicsBody?.isDynamic = true
knight.physicsBody?.allowsRotation = false
knight.physicsBody?.affectedByGravity = true
}
}
}
Output:
Obviusly you can hide with alpha set to 0.0 and re-positioning the ghost as you wish to make it disappear.
Update 2017:
After hours of testing I've try to improve the code, finally I managed to remove the ghost sprite but, to work well, one condition is very important: you should not use SKAction.animate with resize in true. This because this method resize the sprites and don't respect the scale (I really don't understand why, hope to some future Apple improvements..). This is the best I've obtain for now:
NO CHILDS
NO OTHER GHOST SPRITES
NO EXTENSION
NO ANIMATE METHOD RECREATED
Code:
import SpriteKit
class GameScene: SKScene {
var knight: SKSpriteNode!
var textures : [SKTexture] = [SKTexture]()
var lastKnightSize: CGSize!
override func didMove(to view: SKView) {
self.physicsWorld.gravity = CGVector.zero
let plist = "knight.plist"
let genericAtlas = SKTextureAtlas(named:plist)
let filename : String! = NSURL(fileURLWithPath: plist).deletingPathExtension!.lastPathComponent
for i in 0 ..< genericAtlas.textureNames.count
{
let textureName = (String(format:"%#%02d",filename,i))
textures.append(genericAtlas.textureNamed(textureName))
}
if textures.count>0 {
// Prepare my sprite
knight = SKSpriteNode(texture:textures.first,size:CGSize(width:1,height:1))
knight.zPosition = 2
addChild(knight)
knight.position = CGPoint(x:self.frame.midX,y:self.frame.midY)
lastKnightSize = knight.texture?.size()
setPhysics()
}
let animation = SKAction.repeatForever(SKAction.animate(with: textures, timePerFrame: 0.15, resize: false, restore: false))
knight.run(animation,withKey:"knight")
}
override func didEvaluateActions() {
lastKnightSize = knight.texture?.size()
knight.xScale = lastKnightSize.width
knight.yScale = lastKnightSize.height
}
func setPhysics() {
knight.physicsBody = SKPhysicsBody.init(rectangleOf: knight.frame.size)
knight.physicsBody?.isDynamic = true
knight.physicsBody?.allowsRotation = false
knight.physicsBody?.affectedByGravity = true
}
}
Important detail:
About isDynamic = true that's not possible simply because , during the frequently changes of size, Apple reset also frequently the knight physicsBody but don't apply the inherit of the latest physicsBody properties to the new resetted physicsBody, this is a real shame, you can test it in update printing the knight.physicsBody?.velocity (is always zero but should change due to gravity...). This is probably the reason why Apple recommended to don't scale sprites during physics. To my point of view is a Sprite-kit limitation.
Another idea could be the suggestion about didEvaluateActions() to search a more general method to have a "variable" physicsBody that follow the real current knight texture OR physics settings as a rectangle body like this case:
Update: (thanks to Knight0fDragon and 0x141E interventions)
import SpriteKit
class GameScene: SKScene {
var knight: SKSpriteNode!
var textures : [SKTexture] = [SKTexture]()
var lastKnightTexture : SKTexture!
override func didMove(to view: SKView) {
self.physicsWorld.gravity = CGVector(dx:0, dy:-2)
let plist = "knight.plist"
let genericAtlas = SKTextureAtlas(named:plist)
let filename : String! = NSURL(fileURLWithPath: plist).deletingPathExtension!.lastPathComponent
for i in 0 ..< genericAtlas.textureNames.count
{
let textureName = (String(format:"%#%02d",filename,i))
textures.append(genericAtlas.textureNamed(textureName))
}
if textures.count>0 {
knight = SKSpriteNode(texture:textures.first)
lastKnightTexture = knight.texture
knight.zPosition = 2
addChild(knight)
knight.position = CGPoint(x:self.frame.midX,y:self.frame.midY)
}
let animation = SKAction.repeatForever(SKAction.animate(with: textures, timePerFrame: 0.15, resize: true, restore: false))
knight.run(animation,withKey:"knight")
}
override func didEvaluateActions() {
if knight.action(forKey: "knight") != nil {
if knight.texture != lastKnightTexture {
setPhysics()
lastKnightTexture = knight.texture
}
}
}
func setPhysics() {
knight.physicsBody = SKPhysicsBody.init(rectangleOf: knight.size)
knight.physicsBody?.isDynamic = false
}
}
I am getting ready to dive into some texture physics bodies and ran into this problem a while back.
After reading this I am thinking of an approach like so:
When animating, why not have a base node (center node), and then children that are are each the frames of animation. Then patterns of hiding and unhiding the child nodes, where each child node (which I will be doing) is using the alpha of the texture (all loaded) for their PBs. But just HIDE / UNHIDE (my answer).
I mean how much of a penalty would we incure having 12 nodes per se, of a base node that are the animation frames, versus loading and unloading images for animation.
Any penalty in my mind would be well worth being able to have the variety of various physics bodies.

SpriteNode animation is failing

I have been trying to have a sprite with more than one texture so that it looks as if it was moving. I was looking at other questions and nothing they have done has fixed my issue, this is my code:
var textures = [SKTexture]()
for x in 0...2 {
let texture = SKTexture(imageNamed: "peng_" + String(x))
textures.append(texture)
print("pen_" + String(x))
}
let pen = SKSpriteNode(imageNamed: "peng_0")
self.addChild(pen)
let action = SKAction.animate(withNormalTextures: textures, timePerFrame: 0.1, resize: false, restore: true)
pen.run(SKAction.repeatForever(action))
When I run the simulation, the sprite stays still with the "peng_0" texture, but I want it to iterate the other textures every 0.1s
Does anyone know what am I doing wrong, thanks.
Here you go set your code like this
var array = ["R1", "R2", "R3", "R4", "R5", "R6", "R7", "R8"]
var textures:[SKTexture] = []
for i in 0 ..< array.count{
let texture: SKTexture = SKTexture(imageNamed: array[i])
textures.insert(texture, at:i)
}
let pen = SKSpriteNode(imageNamed: "R1")
self.addChild(pen)
let animation = SKAction.animate(with: textures, timePerFrame: 8/60, resize: true , restore:false )
pen.run = SKAction.repeatForever(animation)

Make explosion animation SKaction and remove

I want to make a animation to my game when two sprite nodes have a collision. So i create this function :
func contactEntreMeteorites(Meteorites : SKSpriteNode , Meteorites2 : SKSpriteNode){
Meteorites.removeFromParent()
Meteorites2.removeFromParent()
let ExplosionTexture1 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion1.png")
let ExplosionTexture2 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion2.png")
let ExplosionTexture3 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion3.png")
let ExplosionTexture4 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion4.png")
let ExplosionTexture5 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion5.png")
let ExplosionTexture6 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion6.png")
let ExplosionTexture7 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion7.png")
let ExplosionTexture8 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion8.png")
let ExplosionTexture9 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion9.png")
let ExplosionTexture10 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion10.png")
let ExplosionTexture11 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion11.png")
let ExplosionTexture12 = SKTexture(imageNamed: "Explosion12.png")
let animateExplosion = SKAction.sequence([
SKAction.waitForDuration(0, withRange: 0),
SKAction.animateWithTextures([ExplosionTexture1,ExplosionTexture2,ExplosionTexture3,ExplosionTexture4,ExplosionTexture5,ExplosionTexture6,ExplosionTexture7,ExplosionTexture8,ExplosionTexture9,ExplosionTexture10,ExplosionTexture11,ExplosionTexture12 ], timePerFrame: 0.1)
])
Explosion = SKSpriteNode(texture: ExplosionTexture1)
Explosion.position = CGPointMake(Meteorites.position.x, Meteorites.position.y)
Explosion.runAction(animateExplosion)
self.addChild(Explosion)
}
This code works perfectly but I don't know how can I delete the SpriteNode "Explosion" when my SKAction sequence animateExplosion is finished.
Thanks for helping :) And sorry for my english i'm french ;)
You've implemented the wrong method. Instead of runAction:, implement runAction:completion:. The completion method will be called on completion! So that is the place to remove the explosion node.
So this is the solution :
Explosion = SKSpriteNode(texture: ExplosionTexture1)
Explosion.position = CGPointMake(Meteorites.position.x, Meteorites.position.y)
self.addChild(Explosion)
Explosion.runAction(animateExplosion, completion : {self.Explosion.removeFromParent()})