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The inherited property contains a reference to an object of the class GraphicsDevice , which is apparently populated in conjunction with the instantiation of the GraphicsDeviceManager object in the constructor of Listing 5 . However it gets populated, it is a reference to the graphicsDevice on the current platform. This causes the new SpriteBatch object to be aware of the graphicsDevice on the current platform. It will be used in the Draw method later to draw the sprite.
The last statement in Listing 6 is the new code that I wrote into the overridden LoadContent method. The Game1 class inherits a property of the Game class named Content . This property contains a reference to the current ContentManager object.
Therefore, the new code in Listing 6 calls the Load method on the current ContentManager object.
Some methods in C# are known as generic methods , and the Load method of the ContentManager class is one of them. The documentation describes the Load method as follows:
Figure 8 shows the syntax required for calling the Load method. This syntax was taken from the documentation.
Figure 8 . The Load method of the ContentManager class.
public virtual T Load<T>(string assetName)
To call this method, you must replace the T between the angle brackets in Figure 8 with the type of asset to be loaded. According to the documentation ,
Listing 6 calls the Load method, specifying an asset type of Texture2D , for the purpose of loading the content identified in Figure 7 with an Asset Name property value of gorightarrow .
You will recall that this is the value given to the Asset Name property of the image file named gorightarrow.png when it was added to the Content folder earlier inthis module.
The value returned from the Load method is assigned to the variable named myTexture in Listing 6 . It will be used later in the Draw method to draw the sprite in the game window as shown in Figure 3 and Figure 4 .
That completes the definition of the overridden LoadContent method.
Returning to the variable declarations in Listing 6 , Vector2 is a structure (similar to a class with no inheritance capability) containing two components of type float named X and Y .
In this program, the structure referred to by spritePosition in Listing 6 is used to encapsulate the coordinates of the upper-left corner of the sprite (10.0f,15.0f) when the sprite is drawn in the game window as shown in Figure 3 and more obviously in Figure 4 .
This variable will also be used later in the overridden Draw method.
That brings us to the Draw method inherited from the Game class, shown near the bottom of Listing 3 . According to the documentation , this method is
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