I have had this happen with two scenes by now. These scenes consist of a large tilemap with multiple layers, a player and thats it. The scenes inherit from a LevelBase class I wrote, but that is so simple. that it can’t be the problem. LevelBase just has a open_pause_menu() function and nothing else. Does anyone know why this might be happening?

EDIT: Forgot to translate the message. It says “scene file ‘office.tscn’ seems to be invalid or faulty.”

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    9 months ago

    Version 4.1.2 just dropped, see if the problem persists there (as I’m assuming you’re on 4.1.1) - https://godotengine.org/article/maintenance-release-godot-4-1-2/

    If the problem persists, make a copy of your project, open that office.tscn in a text editor and try to manually remove references to other objects/nodes, saving and trying to open it in Godot, in case the culprit isn’t a circular reference as Zarr pointed out.

  • Zarr@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I’d been having issues with this myself recently. I assume you’re in Godot 4.1? I tracked the issue down to being cyclic references in GDScript. As an example from what you’ve provided, you may have LevelBase referring to the Player script, and then the Player script referring to LevelBase. This only seems to be a problem with the type hinting in GDScript like the following:

    var player:PlayerClass

    Removing the hinting may fix it. As for the bug, you can read some more on it here: https://github.com/godotengine/godot/issues/80877

    As a side note, I’ve noticed that 4.1 has this issue worse than 4.0. In 4.0 it just unbinds the script from the scene, and allows you to rebind it again. But in 4.1 it causes the error message, making you unable to open the scene.

  • bbuez@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    As Zarr mentioned, this seems like a cyclical dependency, I got around this issue in my project by avoiding the use of preload, specifically in scripts that would attach to an object I would also then have instanced by that script. load() seems to avoid the problem

  • MJBrune@beehaw.org
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    9 months ago

    I’ve seen this a number of times for a lot of different reasons. How I’ve fixed it every time is to open the tscn file in a text editor and start messing around. Look at the references in the files, ensure the file paths are accurate, ensure the formatting of the tscn looks correct, and lastly look at the things it references and inherits also aren’t corrupt.

    Absolute last resort, delete references and nodes out of your scene using the text editor until it works. If you remove everything and it still doesn’t work then something is wrong with the parent. You can test this quicker by recreating your scene as well and simply just inheriting from the same parent and reloading your editor.

    I’ve had this happen because of OS whitespace differences (with git, always commit as UNIX, checkout as OS specific.), general formatting issues, case sensitivity in the path (always keep every part of your path lowercase. Never use camel case for files.), or a corrupt parent.

  • TsarVul@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I use Godot with .NET and this issue arises with me exclusively when I move tscn files around. I fix it by opening the broken tscn file in a text editor and I see whether it is referencing a scene that has been moved or otherwise doesn’t exist.