Zed A. Shaw
0a9fa59365
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3 months ago | |
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assets | 4 months ago | |
patches | 5 months ago | |
scratchpad | 3 months ago | |
scripts | 4 months ago | |
tests | 3 months ago | |
.gitignore | 4 months ago | |
.vimrc_proj | 4 months ago | |
LICENSE | 5 months ago | |
Makefile | 3 months ago | |
README.md | 3 months ago | |
builder.cpp | 3 months ago | |
builder.hpp | 3 months ago | |
coro.hpp | 4 months ago | |
dbc.hpp | 4 months ago | |
efsw.wrap | 4 months ago | |
escape_turings_tarpit.cpp | 3 months ago | |
fsm.hpp | 3 months ago | |
game_engine.cpp | 3 months ago | |
game_engine.hpp | 3 months ago | |
gui.cpp | 3 months ago | |
gui.hpp | 3 months ago | |
libgit2.wrap | 4 months ago | |
meson.build | 3 months ago | |
sfmlbackend.cpp | 3 months ago | |
sfmlbackend.hpp | 3 months ago | |
status.txt | 3 months ago | |
tarpit_sample.json | 3 months ago | |
watcher.cpp | 4 months ago | |
watcher.hpp | 4 months ago |
README.md
About Turing's Tarpit
This is a game for programmers. The eventual goal is to make a small game that makes programmer development live streams more exciting, but also makes it fun to try to keep your code bug free.
How It Works
- You start with 100 Hit Points (HP).
- Turing's Tarpit (TT) watches your git repo.
- If you save any files in your git then TT will run your build.
- It then uses a regex to detect errors, warnings, and notes from your compiler.
- Every error is 4 HP of damage. Warnings and Notes are 1 HP.
- If you successfully build with no errors then you get 10% HP back (healed).
- It keeps track of your rounds, and your longest streak. A streak is how many builds have run without producing an error.
Eventually this will become more complex as I add in a few more mechanics, but this is the general game loop. Some of the ideas for future mechanics:
- I have a real trash Brainfuck compiler. I want to have that in there somewhere.
- I like the way Shotgun Roulette works where you get some items per round and can use them to gain an advantage.
- I want streaks to be some kind of reward, either you just get some healing after a certain number, or you can "cash them in" for a special item.
- It needs to detect when you don't make enough changes to be worth it, but I might try to punish you if you just change a file's timestamp.
- Running your unit tests as well to analyze the TAP output and punish you for test failures.
Platforms
Currently this only works on Windows but there's nothing in this that will stop it from working anywhere else. It uses FTXUI to make a TUI so that means it's very portable. I just haven't spent the time to try to port it yet.
It's also only been test with GCC and C++. I'm betting the regex will be crazy wrong for any other language. BTW, where's the TAP output for compilers?
Compiling Setup
WARNING These instructions are off the top of my head right now so they're probably wrong. I need to do a clean build in a fresh VM.
To build this you'll need to install winlibs and meson but I believe my build process downloads everything else.
If you want to get setup quickly with a C/C++ build environment then you can use my installer scripts. Start a NORMAL user PowerShell to run this. If you're walking around the internet as a raw Administrator user then you might as well just inject ebola infected blood straight into your eye you idiot. No, UAC will not save you. Listen to Zed.
Now, in your NORMAL user PowerShell do this:
irm https://learncodethehardway.com/setup/base.ps1 -outfile base.ps1
powershell -executionpolicy bypass .\base.ps1
Do not go anywhere. You have to enter in passwords for your Administrator user. You do have a second user that's an administrator right? Seriously, what's your problem. Do you just like having your neighbor install a RAT tool to spy on you? Make two accounts already.
Now that you have this you can install the compiler tools:
irm https://learncodethehardway.com/setup/cpp.ps1 -outfile cpp.ps1
powershell -executionpolicy bypass .\cpp.ps1
For a bit of extra nice things, run my extras.ps1
too:
irm https://learncodethehardway.com/setup/extras.ps1 -outfile extras.ps1
powershell -executionpolicy bypass .\extras.ps1
Building
Once you have all of that you should be able to check out the code from this git:
git clone https://git.learnjsthehardway.com/learn-code-the-hard-way/turings-tarpit.git
Then change into the directory and run my setup script:
make reset
That should setup your meson build with everything you need, so now you run it:
make
This will build it assuming you used my setup scripts and have make
. If you don't then look in the Makefile
for the commands to run.
The next dumb as hell thing is even though I've told meson
to build a static binary it refuses.
You have to copy a couple .dll files to your local directory for the easiest way to play with it:
make install
You should then see the libefsw.dll
and liblibgit2package.dll
files in the local directory which
will let you run the escape_turings_tarpit.exe
game locally.
WARNING The reason you're copying all these files to the local directory is so you can run the game and the DLLs but also run the build on the code. Windows locks executables when they're active, so when you build
builddir/escape_turings_tarpit.exe
it'll fail if you're also running it. Copy it all up and then you can run builds in the game while you work on the game.
Then hang out for a while and it should build. You can then do your first run. First, run the tests:
make test
Configuration
There's a file tarpit_sample.json
that configures everything for the game. You can set your own
sounds, the build directory, and the build command to use. Just open it and you'll see. If you
don't want to hear me laughing at you then set the sounds to nothing.mp3
and it'll be silent.
I have an example file tarpit_example.json
which you can copy to .tarpit.json
to get started:
make config
You can edit the .tarpit.json
file to change the build command and sounds used during building,
just in case my silky smooth radio quality voice is not to your liking.
Running
If those run then try to run the game on its own code:
make run
Now it's playing, so all you have to do is open one of the .cpp files, make a mistake, save it, and watch the game play.