81 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
2534ec5d69 The game IDs for Net (and Netslide) have always been random seeds
rather than literal grid descriptions, which has always faintly
annoyed me because it makes it impossible to type in a grid from
another source. However, Gareth pointed out that short random-seed
game descriptions are useful, because you can read one out to
someone else without having to master the technology of cross-
machine cut and paste, or you can have two people enter the same
random seed simultaneously in order to race against each other to
complete the same puzzle. So both types of game ID seem to have
their uses.

Therefore, here's a reorganisation of the whole game ID concept.
There are now two types of game ID: one has a parameter string then
a hash then a piece of arbitrary random seed text, and the other has
a parameter string then a colon then a literal game description. For
most games, the latter is identical to the game IDs that were
previously valid; for Net and Netslide, old game IDs must be
translated into new ones by turning the colon into a hash, and
there's a new descriptive game ID format.

Random seed IDs are not guaranteed to be portable between software
versions (this is a major reason why I added version reporting
yesterday). Descriptive game IDs have a longer lifespan.

As an added bonus, I've removed the sections of documentation
dealing with game parameter encodings not shown in the game ID
(Rectangles expansion factor, Solo symmetry and difficulty settings
etc), because _all_ parameters must be specified in a random seed ID
and therefore users can easily find out the appropriate parameter
string for any settings they have configured.

[originally from svn r5788]
2005-05-16 18:57:09 +00:00
68d27f0526 I've had two complaints that Solo ought to recognise the numeric
keypad. The reason it doesn't is because front ends were carefully
translating the numeric keypad into 8-way directional keys for the
benefit of Cube. Therefore, a policy change:
 - front ends process the numeric keypad by sending MOD_NUM_KEYPAD |
   '3' and similar
 - front ends running on a platform with Num Lock SHOULD do this
   _irrespective_ of the state of Num Lock
 - back ends do whatever they see fit with numeric keypad keys.
Result: the numeric keypad now works in Solo, and also works in OS X
Cube (which it previously didn't because I forgot to implement that
bit of the front end!).

[originally from svn r5774]
2005-05-12 18:25:57 +00:00
d8cc157c55 Silly (but harmless) typo.
[originally from svn r5732]
2005-05-02 13:18:24 +00:00
4f7b65de2e Added an automatic `Solve' feature to most games. This is useful for
various things:
 - if you haven't fully understood what a game is about, it gives
   you an immediate example of a puzzle plus its solution so you can
   understand it
 - in some games it's useful to compare your solution with the real
   one and see where you made a mistake
 - in the rearrangement games (Fifteen, Sixteen, Twiddle) it's handy
   to be able to get your hands on a pristine grid quickly so you
   can practise or experiment with manoeuvres on it
 - it provides a good way of debugging the games if you think you've
   encountered an unsolvable grid!

[originally from svn r5731]
2005-05-02 13:17:10 +00:00
9e240e45df Introduce the concept of a `game_aux_info' structure. This is
constructed at the same time as an internally generated game seed,
so that it can preserve any interesting information known by the
program at generation time but not physically contained within the
text of the game seed itself. (Such as, for example, the solution.)
Currently not used for anything yet, but it will be.

[originally from svn r5729]
2005-05-02 10:12:26 +00:00
791940b043 Introduced a new function in every game which formats a game_state
as text. This is used by front ends to implement copy-to-clipboard.
Currently the function does nothing (and is disabled) in every game
except Solo, but it's a start.

[originally from svn r5724]
2005-05-01 12:53:41 +00:00
e72931bfe2 I can never remember what that `TRUE' means in the game structure
definitions, so let's move it so that it's just next to the
functions it relates to. This also opens the way for me to add more
booleans next to other functions without getting confused as to
which is which.

[originally from svn r5723]
2005-05-01 11:07:13 +00:00
a99de1be8f Arrange that we really _can_ compile all the puzzles into a single
binary if we choose: fix bugs in cube.c and sixteen.c that manifest
when compiled that way, and introduce list.c which provides a global
list of all the available puzzles.

[originally from svn r5169]
2005-01-22 15:29:01 +00:00
cc54553226 Rather than each game backend file exporting a whole load of
functions and a couple of variables, now each one exports a single
structure containing a load of function pointers and said variables.
This should make it easy to support platforms on which it's sensible
to compile all the puzzles into a single monolithic application. The
two existing platforms are still one-binary-per-game.

[originally from svn r5126]
2005-01-17 13:48:57 +00:00
a7b1697b1c Now we have the `dir' parameter, we should use it where it makes
sense to do so.

[originally from svn r4477]
2004-08-17 19:59:14 +00:00
daac529a9e After discussion with Simon, the game redraw functions are now passed a new
argument `dir' which tells them whether this redraw is due to an undo, rather
than have them second-guess it from game state.
Note that none of the actual games yet take advantage of this; so it hasn't
been tested in anger (although it has been inspected by debugging).

[originally from svn r4469]
2004-08-16 16:29:54 +00:00
137c1d7bbd Added a help file, mostly thanks to Jacob.
[originally from svn r4460]
2004-08-16 12:23:56 +00:00
350683b253 Introduce routines in each game module to encode a set of game
parameters as a string, and decode it again. This is used in
midend.c to prepend the game parameters to the game seed, so that
copying out of the Specific box is sufficient to completely specify
the game you were playing.
Throughout development of these games I have referred to `seed'
internally, and `game ID' externally. Now there's a measurable
difference between them! :-)

[originally from svn r4231]
2004-05-19 11:57:09 +00:00
180802b362 Framework alteration: we now support a `game_ui' structure in
addition to the `game_state'. The new structure is intended to
contain ephemeral data pertaining to the game's user interface
rather than the actual game: things stored in the UI structure are
not restored in an Undo, for example.
make_move() is passed the UI to modify as it wishes; it is now
allowed to return the _same_ game_state it was passed, to indicate
that although no move has been made there has been a UI operation
requiring a redraw.

[originally from svn r4207]
2004-05-11 17:44:30 +00:00
ccbf3ca6f1 GTK and Windows appear to handle timers very differently:
specifically, the elapsed time between calls varies much more with
GTK than it does under Windows. Therefore, I now take my own time
readings on every timer call, and this appears to have made the
animations run at closer to the same speed between platforms. Having
done that, I decided some of them were at the _wrong_ speed, and
fiddled with each game's timings as well.

[originally from svn r4189]
2004-05-03 09:43:08 +00:00
aa9a8e8c7e The Windows RNG turns out to only give about 16 bits at a time. This
is (a) pretty feeble, and (b) means that although Net seeds transfer
between platforms and still generate the same game, there's a
suspicious discrepancy in the typical seed _generated_ by each
platform.
I have a better RNG kicking around in this code base already, so
I'll just use it. Each midend has its own random_state, which it
passes to new_game_seed() as required. A handy consequence of this
is that initial seed data is now passed to midend_new(), which means
that new platform implementors are unlikely to forget to seed the
RNG because failure to do so causes a compile error!

[originally from svn r4187]
2004-05-03 09:10:52 +00:00
6e42ddd31b Implement selection of game seeds, by reusing the config box
mechanism I've just invented (the midend handles the standard game
selection configuration). Each game is now required to validate its
own seed data before attempting to base a game on it and potentially
confusing itself.

[originally from svn r4186]
2004-05-03 08:51:31 +00:00
ee17149822 `BOOLEAN' is a term already used by Win32. Bah. Change terminology.
[originally from svn r4183]
2004-05-02 10:43:46 +00:00
44ff00665b Configuration dialog box, on the GTK front end only as yet.
[originally from svn r4182]
2004-05-01 11:32:12 +00:00
2206a1aa25 The cube was being drawn slightly differently on the top and left
rows, because the coordinates were crossing one or other axis at
that point and so the lower coordinate was being rounded up while
the upper one was rounded down. Judicious use of floor() fixes it.

[originally from svn r4179]
2004-05-01 07:32:09 +00:00
17f261018a We were forgetting to count the final move.
[originally from svn r4176]
2004-04-30 10:14:55 +00:00
3cc2c00e69 Incorrect placing of the polyhedron sometimes left it on a blue
square. Oops.

[originally from svn r4175]
2004-04-30 10:11:53 +00:00
a8c8237bd0 Added a status bar.
[originally from svn r4174]
2004-04-29 19:23:08 +00:00
fa7ef572c7 Implemented text and clipping primitives in the frontend, and added
two new simple games `fifteen' and `sixteen'.

[originally from svn r4173]
2004-04-29 18:10:22 +00:00
d396382abd Add a new game concept called a `flash'. This is a graphical effect
taking non-zero time, which is triggered by the making of a move and
is _not_ hurried to its conclusion by the start of the next move (so
the game redraw function is expected to be able to draw it in
parallel with continuing moves). The only thing that prematurely
terminates a flash is the start of a fresh flash. In particular,
this concept is used to display the completion flash in Net, because
at least _my_ playing instincts make me lock every piece I've
unambiguously placed, and hence the last turn move is instantly
followed by a lock move which was previously suppressing the
completion flash.

[originally from svn r4168]
2004-04-28 18:43:50 +00:00
64e6afdeed Have each game declare a name which is used for window titles etc.
[originally from svn r4167]
2004-04-28 17:46:04 +00:00
3b1ec74d73 Fix zillions of MSVC compiler warnings. Sigh.
[originally from svn r4165]
2004-04-28 17:37:13 +00:00
56a59e2e51 Introduce diagonal movement keys on the numeric keypad, and use them
as an alternative control method in Cube. (This was a bit of hassle
in the Windows front end; I also introduced a debugging framework
and made TranslateMessage conditional.)

[originally from svn r4162]
2004-04-28 17:21:57 +00:00
3d8e7585b7 Add a menu bar, in both Windows and GTK. In particular, game modules
are now expected to provide a list of `presets' (game_params plus a
name) which are selectable from the menu. This means I can play
both Octahedron and Cube without recompiling in between :-)
While I'm here, also enabled a Cygwin makefile, which Just Worked.

[originally from svn r4158]
2004-04-28 12:07:15 +00:00
d99e217cfb Implemented Cube, in a sufficiently general way that it also handles
the tetrahedron, octahedron and icosahedron.

[originally from svn r4151]
2004-04-27 17:44:30 +00:00
96dbb537ee Initial checkin of a portable framework for writing small GUI puzzle
games.

[originally from svn r4138]
2004-04-25 14:27:58 +00:00