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Fix an injectivity issue with JSON-encoding the entity map that was
causing the game saving to not properly round-trip. As part of this,
there's a refactor to the internals of the entity map to use sets
instead of vectors, which should also get us a nice perf boost.
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Refactor a bunch of stuff around to allow for polymorphically surfacing
an EntityChar for all entities, and use this to write a generic
`entityMenu` function, which generates a menu from the chars of a list
of entities - and use that to fully implement (removing `undefined`)
menus for both attacking and picking things up when there are multiple
entities on the relevant tile.
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Implement ToJSON and FromJSON for all of the various pieces of the game
state, and add a pair of functions saveGame/loadGame implementing a
prism to save the game as zlib-compressed JSON. To test this, there's
now Arbitrary, CoArbitrary, and Function instances for all the parts of
the game state - to get around circular imports with the concrete
entities this unfortunately is happening via orphan instances, plus an
hs-boot file to break a circular import that was just a little too hard
to remove by moving things around. Ugh.
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Add menu support to the prompt system, and an "Eat" command that prompts
for an item to eat and eats the item the character specifies, restoring
an amount of hitpoints configurable via the item raw type.
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- Don't let gormlaks run into things like walls or each other
- Add a small element of randomness to gormlaks' motion
- Increase gormlaks' vision by a large amount
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Add a Brain class, which determines for an entity the set of moves it
makes every step of the game, and begin to implement that for gormlaks.
The idea here is that every step of the game, a gormlak will move
towards the furthest-away wall it can see.
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Every step the character takes, describe the entities at that position
excluding the character.
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Add the beginnings of a generic prompt system, with exclusive support
atm for string prompts, and test it out by asking the character for
their name at startup
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Add a new "Item" entity, which pulls from the previously-existent
ItemType raw, and add a "PickUp" command which takes the (currently
*only*) item off the ground and puts it into the inventory.
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As the character walks around the map, progressively reveal the entities
on the map to them, using an algorithm based on well known
circle-rasterizing and line-rasterizing algorithms to calculate lines of
sight that are potentially obscured by walls.
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Randomly select a position in the largest contiguous region of the
generated level in which to place the character at startup time.
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Add support for converting generated levels to walls, and merge one into
the entity map at the beginning of the game.
There's nothing here that guarantees the character ends up *inside* the
level though (they almost always don't) so that'll have to be slotted
into the level generation process.
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Add a cellular-automata-based cave level generator, plus an
optparse-applicative-based CLI for invoking level generators in general.
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Implement a concrete "Creature" entity, and place one on the screen at
the game startup for testing.
This revealed a bug with drawing when getting the maximum entity
position, but that appears to be fixed now (yay)
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Add raw types with support for both creatures and items, loaded
statically from a "raws" folder just like in the Rust version.
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Add a "say" function for saying messages within an app monad to the
user, and link everything up to display them and track their history
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Implement messages almost the same as in the Rust version, only with
YAML instead of TOML this time, and a regular old mustache template
instead of something handrolled. Besides that, pretty much everything
here is the same.
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Add support for entities via a port of the EntityMap type, and implement
command support starting at basic hjkl.
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Initial commit of a Haskell version of Xanthous, written using Brick and
built with Nix.
This is so much nicer and so much easier
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