How to reset the scene?
You just have to present a new, same scene again whenever you want. So, you are doing it fine.
Possible leaking problems?
Also, if you don't have leaks in your game, means no strong reference cycles, you don't even need self.removeAllChildren()
and self.removeAllActions()
... Of course if you explicitly want to stop actions before transition animation starts, the using this method make sense. The point is, when scene deallocates, all objects that depends on it should / will deallocate as well.
Still, if you don't know from the beginning what you are doing and how to prevent from leaks, eg. you are using strong self in block which is a part of an action sequence, which repeats forever, then you certainly have a leak, and self.removeAllActions()
might help (in many cases, but it is not an ultimate solution). I would recommend to read about capture lists and ARC in general because it can be useful to know how all that work just because of these situations.
Scene is a root node
Calling removeFromParent()
on a scene itself has no effect. Scene is a root node, so it can't be removed in your current context. If you check scene's parent property you will notice that it is nil. Of course it is possible to add a scene to another scene, but in that case, the scene which is added as a child, will act as an ordinary node.
And finally, how to present the new scene ? Easy, like this:
override func touchesBegan(_ touches: Set<UITouch>, with event: UIEvent?) {
let newScene = GameScene(size: self.size)
newScene.scaleMode = self.scaleMode
let animation = SKTransition.fade(withDuration: 1.0)
self.view?.presentScene(newScene, transition: animation)
}
If something doesn't work for you, it is likely that you have leaks (means your scene isn't deallocated). To check this, somewhere in your GameScene override deinit method, like this:
deinit{print("GameScene deinited")}
To explain you this a bit further... What should happen is that you should present a new scene, a transition should occur, an old scene should be deallocated, and you should see a new scene with an initial state.
Also overriding deinit will just tell you if the scene is deallocated properly or not. But it will not tell you why. It is up to you to find what in your code retaining the scene.