By introducing a second callback between the client of hat.c and the
maybe_report_hat function, I enable the test main() to provide a
different version of that callback, so that instead of enumerating
each kite, it can directly generate a Postscript path per actual hat.
This should make it more useful to people wanting to generate hat
patterns for any other purpose.
The internal callback gets more details than the external one; in
particular, it receives a HatCoords, so that it can colour hats based
on their position in the hierarchical structure.
This tweak improves the uniformity of the generated patches of hat
tiling, by selecting from (the closest 32-bit approximation I can get
to) the limiting probability distribution of finite patches in the
whole plane.
This shouldn't invalidate any grid description that contains enough
coordinates to uniquely specify a piece of tiling - in particular, any
generated by the game itself. But if anyone's been brave enough to
hand-type a grid description in the last two days and left off some of
the coordinates, then those might be invalidated.
I renamed it in a hurry this morning after the first report of a git
error message on Windows. Now I realise that several source files
referred to the old name, and also need fixing.
The big mathematical news this month is that a polygon has been
discovered that will tile the plane but only aperiodically. Penrose
tiles achieve this with two tile types; it's been an open question for
decades whether you could do it with only one tile. Now someone has
announced the discovery of such a thing, so _obviously_ this
mathematically exciting tiling ought to be one of the Loopy grid
options!
The polygon, named a 'hat' by its discoverers, consists of the union
of eight cells of the 'Kites' periodic tiling that Loopy already
implements. So all the vertex coordinates of the whole tiling are
vertices of the Kites grid, which makes handling the coordinates in an
exact manner a lot easier than Penrose tilings.
What's _harder_ than Penrose tilings is that, although this tiling can
be generated by a vaguely similar system of recursive expansion, the
expansion is geometrically distorting, which means you can't easily
figure out which tiles can be discarded early to save CPU. Instead
I've come up with a completely different system for generating a patch
of tiling, by using a hierarchical coordinate system to track a
location within many levels of the expansion process without ever
simulating the process as a whole. I'm really quite pleased with that
technique, and am tempted to try switching the Penrose generator over
to it too - except that we'd have to keep the old generator around to
stop old game ids being invalidated, and also, I think it would be
slightly trickier without an underlying fixed grid and without
overlaps in the tile expansion system.
However, before coming up with that, I got most of the way through
implementing the more obvious system of actually doing the expansions.
The result worked, but was very slow (because I changed approach
rather than try to implement tree-pruning under distortion). But the
code was reusable for two other useful purposes: it generated the
lookup tables needed for the production code, and it also generated a
lot of useful diagrams. So I've committed it anyway as a supporting
program, in a new 'aux' source subdirectory, and in aux/doc is a
writeup of the coordinate system's concepts, with all those diagrams.
(That's the kind of thing I'd normally put in a huge comment at the
top of the file, but doing all those diagrams in ASCII art would be
beyond miserable.)
From a gameplay perspective: the hat polygon has 13 edges, but one of
them has a vertex of the Kites tiling in the middle, and sometimes two
other tile boundaries meet at that vertex. I've chosen to represent
every hat as having degree 14 for Loopy purposes, because if you only
included that extra vertex when it was needed, then people would be
forever having to check whether this was a 13-hat or a 14-hat and it
would be nightmarish to play.
Even so, there's a lot of clicking involved to turn all those fiddly
individual edges on or off. This grid is noticeably nicer to play in
'autofollow' mode, by setting LOOPY_AUTOFOLLOW in the environment to
either 'fixed' or 'adaptive'. I'm tempted to make 'fixed' the default,
except that I think it would confuse players of ordinary square Loopy!