/rubygem-tagf

TAGF — Text Adventure Game Framework

Primary LanguageRubyOtherNOASSERTION

TAGF - Single-Player Text Adventure Framework

**N.B.: This project is still in early development, and is not ready for actual use. **

The TAGF (Text Adventure Game Framework) gem is an attempt to provide a structure which can be used to build text adventure games without lots and lots of coding and special-case processing. The approach is to make as much as possible data-driven from YAML definitions, such as describing rooms and items, linking locations together, and handling inventories.

The initial test-case is to have a TAGF game that reproduces the classic Colossal Cave (ADVENT) game experience as much as possible. Other enhancements have been added as ideas have occurred, such as less-than-perfect visibility, illuminated locations, &c.

Two advantages of the data-driven nature of TAGF:

  1. Locations and routes between them are recognised internally as a digraph, which means you can generate a graphic map of the adventure. A tool is provided to do so: bin/tagf help render
  2. The data can be validated, doing things such as identifying unreachable locations, or ones that can be entered but not exited, or locked items that cannot be unlocked because no key has been defined.

Usage

There are two points of view for the use of the TAGF package:

  1. Users playing an already-developed game.
  2. Game developers using TAGF to create games.

The next two sections deal with the former, and the third gives an example of the latter.

Playing a Game from a Prepared Definition File

If you already have a YAML file defining a game, you will be able to play it from within Ruby with something like the following:

require('tagf')
include(TAGF)
game = Game.load('mytextgame.yaml')
game.start

Alternatively, you should be able to do much the same from the command line with something like:

% tagf run mytextgame.yaml

Building a Game with the Ruby DSL

However, it is also possible to build a game with Ruby statements (e.g.,

Example: Building a TAGF Game in Ruby:

gmanual     = Game.new(
  eid:      'gameloctest01',
  name:     'LocTest01',
  author:   'theRoUS',
  copyright_year: '2019-2024',
  licence:  'Apache 2.0',
  desc:     'Test 01 of game location connexions.',
  settings: {
    NearbyDistance: 12,
    EnforceCapacities: true,
    EnforceVolume: false,
    EnableHitpoints: true,
  })

kw_up       = Keyword.new(
  eid:      'kw-up',
  game:     gmanual,
  owned_by: gmanual,
  root:     'up',
  alii:     [
    'upward',
  ],
  flags:    [
    :motion,
  ])

loc0        = Location.new(
  eid:      'Loc0',
  game:     gmanual,
  owned_by: gmanual,
  name:     'Location 0 - Entrance',
  shortdesc: 'entrance room.',
  desc:     ("You're in Location 0, the starting location " +
             "for players in new games."))

Contributing to tagf

  • Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet.
  • Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it.
  • Fork the project.
  • Start a feature/bugfix branch.
  • Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution. Don't forget to keep up to date with the master branch.
  • Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
  • Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.

Copyright

TAGF is copyright (c) 2022 by Ken Coar, and is made available under the terms of the Apache Licence 2.0. See the LICENCE file for further details.