I had thought the on_key_press one was to check when a key was pressed and
the update function checked whether a key was held down. Is that right? :/

On Fri, Oct 12, 2012 at 4:10 AM, Nathan <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 9:34 PM, Wallace Davidson <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Is it possible to have both of these in a program? I have:
>>
>> @window.event
>> def on_key_press(symbol, modifiers):
>>     if symbol == key.ESCAPE:
>>     return pyglet.event.EVENT_HANDLED
>>
>> def update(dt):
>>     if keys[key.W]:
>>         print "hi"
>>         code....
>>
>> But only the on_key_press function is recognised. Would it be better to
>> have one or the other?
>>
>
> That is certainly possible, you just need to schedule the update(dt)
> function to be called -- it's not an event handler that's automatically
> handling some event like on_key_press(...) is.
>
> Though as Adam already alluded to, just because it's possible doesn't mean
> it's necessarily the best way to do it.
>
> ~ Nathan
>
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