7. William Tell: the early years

M was a miser, and hoarded up gold;
N was a nobleman, gallant and bold.
../_images/picM.png

oving along swiftly, we’ll define the first two rooms and populate them with assorted townspeople and street furniture, we’ll equip Wilhelm with his trusty bow and quiver of arrows, and we’ll introduce Helga the friendly stallholder.

Defining the street

This is the street room, the location where the game starts:

--- T Y P E ---

Room     street "A street in Altdorf"
  with   description [;
              print "The narrow street runs north towards the town square.
                  Local folk are pouring into the town through the gate to the
                  south, shouting greetings, offering produce for sale,
                  exchanging news, enquiring with exaggerated disbelief about
                  the prices of the goods displayed by merchants whose stalls
                  make progress even more difficult.^";
              if (self hasnt visited)
                  print "^~Stay close to me, son,~ you say,
                      ~or you'll get lost among all these people.~^";
         ],
         n_to below_square,
         s_to
              "The crowd, pressing north towards the square,
               makes that impossible.";

We’re using our new Room class, so there’s no need for a light attribute. The n_to and s_to properties, whose values are an internal ID and a string respectively, are techniques we’ve used before. The only innovation is that the description property has an embedded routine as its value.

The first thing in that routine is a print statement, displaying details of the street surroundings. If that was all that we wanted to do, we could have supplied those details by making the description value a string; that is, these two examples behave identically:

description [;
    print "The narrow street runs north towards the town square.
        Local folk are pouring into the town through the gate to the
        south, shouting greetings, offering produce for sale,
        exchanging news, enquiring with exaggerated disbelief about
        the prices of the goods displayed by merchants whose stalls
        make progress even more difficult.^";
],

description
    "The narrow street runs north towards the town square.
     Local folk are pouring into the town through the gate to the
     south, shouting greetings, offering produce for sale,
     exchanging news, enquiring with exaggerated disbelief about
     the prices of the goods displayed by merchants whose stalls
     make progress even more difficult.",

However, that isn’t all that we want to do. Having presented the basic description, we’re going to display that little line of dialogue, where Wilhelm tells his son to be careful. And we want to do that only once, the very first time that the street’s description is displayed. If the player types LOOK a few times, or moves north and then returns south to the street, we’re happy to see the surroundings described – but we don’t want that dialogue again. This is the pair of statements that makes it happen:

if (self hasnt visited)
    print "^~Stay close to me, son,~ you say,
        ~or you'll get lost among all these people.~^";

The line of dialogue is produced by the print statement, the print statement is controlled by the if statement, and the if statement is performing the test self hasnt visited. In detail:

  • visited is an attribute, but not one that you’d normally give to an object yourself. It’s automatically applied to a room object by the interpreter, but only after that room has been visited for the first time by the player.
  • hasnt (and has) are available for testing whether a given attribute is currently set for a given object. X has Y is true if object X currently has attribute Y, false if it doesn’t. To make the test in reverse, X hasnt Y is true if object X currently does not have attribute Y, false if it does.
  • self, which we met in the previous chapter, is that useful variable which, within an object, always refers to that object. Since we’re using it in the middle of the street object, that’s what it refers to.

So, putting it all together, self hasnt visited is true (and therefore the print statement is executed) only while the street object has not got a visited attribute. Because the interpreter automatically gives rooms a visited attribute as soon as the player has been there once, this test will be true only for one turn. Therefore, the line of dialogue will be displayed only once: the first time the player visits the street, at the very start of the game.

Although the primary importance of self is within class definitions, it can also be convenient to use it simply within an object. Why didn’t we just write this?

if (street hasnt visited)
    print "^~Stay close to me, son,~ you say,
        ~or you'll get lost among all these people.~^";

It’s true that the effect is identical, but there are a couple of good reasons for using self. One: it’s an aid to understanding your code days or weeks after writing it.

If you read the line if (street hasnt visited), you need to think for a moment about which object is being tested; oh, it’s this one. When you read if (self hasnt visited), you immediately know which object we’re talking about.

Another reason is auto-plagiarism. Many times you’ll find that a chunk of code is useful in different situations (say, you want to repeat the mechanics of the street description in another room). Rather than writing everything from scratch, you’ll typically use copy-and-paste to repeat the routine, and then all you have to do is compose the appropriate descriptive strings for the new room. If you’ve used self, the line if (self hasnt visited) is still good; if you’ve written instead if (street hasnt visited), you’ll have to change that as well. Worse, if you forget to change it, the game will still work – but not in the way you’d intended, and the resulting bug will be quite difficult to track down.

Adding some props

The street’s description mentions various items – the gate, the people, etc. – which ought to exist within the game (albeit only in minimal form) to sustain the illusion of hustle and bustle. Our Prop class is ideal for this:

--- T Y P E ---

Prop     "south gate" street
  with   name 'south' 'southern' 'wooden' 'gate',
         description "The large wooden gate in the town walls is wide open.";

Prop     "assorted stalls"
  with   name 'assorted' 'stalls',
         description "Food, clothing, mountain gear; the usual stuff.",
         found_in street below_square,
  has    pluralname;

Prop     "produce"
  with   name 'goods' 'produce' 'food' 'clothing' 'mountain' 'gear' 'stuff',
         description "Nothing special catches your eye.",
         found_in street below_square,
  has    pluralname;

Prop     "merchants"
  with   name 'merchant' 'merchants' 'trader' 'traders',
         description
             "A few crooks, but mostly decent traders touting their wares
              with raucous overstatement.",
         found_in street below_square,
  has    animate pluralname;

Prop     "local people"
  with   name 'people' 'folk' 'local' 'crowd',
         description "Mountain folk, just like yourself.",
         found_in [; return true; ],
  has    animate pluralname;

Note

Because these objects are not referenced by other objects, we haven’t bothered to given them internal obj_ids (though we could have; it wouldn’t make any difference). However, we have provided external_names, because these are used by the Prop class’s print_ret ... (the) self statement.

You’ll see a couple of new attributes: animate marks an object as being “alive”, while pluralname specifies that its external name is plural rather than singular. The interpreter uses these attributes to ensure that messages about such objects are grammatical and appropriate (for example, it will now refer to “some merchants” rather than “a merchants”). Because the library handles so many situations automatically, it’s hard to be sure exactly what messages players may trigger; the best approach is to play safe and always give an object the relevant set of attributes, even when, as here, they probably won’t be needed.

You’ll also see a new found_in property, which specifies the rooms – and only the rooms; found_in shouldn’t be used to place objects inside containers or supporters – where this object is to appear. The stalls, for example, can be EXAMINEd both in the street and below the square, so we could have created a Prop object in each room:

Prop       "assorted stalls" street
  with     name 'assorted' 'stalls',
           description "Food, clothing, mountain gear; the usual stuff.",
   has     pluralname;

Prop       "assorted stalls" below_square
  with     name 'assorted' 'stalls',
           description "Food, clothing, mountain gear; the usual stuff.",
   has     pluralname;

but found_in does the same job more neatly – there’s only one object, but it appears in both the street and below_square rooms while the player’s there. The local people are even more ubiquitous. In this case the found_in value is an embedded routine rather than a list of rooms; such a routine would generally test the value of the current location and return true if it wants to be present here, or false if not. Since we’d like the local people always to be present, in every room, we return true without bothering to examine location. It’s as though we’d written any of these, but simpler and less error prone:

Prop       "local people"
  with     name 'people' 'folk' 'local' 'crowd',
           description "Mountain folk, just like yourself.",
           found_in street below_square south_square mid_square north_square
               marketplace,
   has     animate pluralname;

Prop       "local people"
  with     name 'people' 'folk' 'local' 'crowd',
           description "Mountain folk, just like yourself.",
           found_in [;
               if (location == street       || location == below_square ||
                   location == south_square || location == mid_square ||
                   location == north_square || location == marketplace)
                   return true;
               return false;
           ],
   has     animate pluralname;

Prop     "local people"
  with   name 'people' 'folk' 'local' 'crowd',
         description "Mountain folk, just like yourself.",
         found_in [;
             if (location == street or below_square or south_square or
                 mid_square or north_square or marketplace) return true;
             return false;
         ],
  has    animate pluralname;

In the second example, you’ll see the || operator, to be read as “or”, which we mentioned near the end of “Heidi”; it combines the various location == some_room comparisons so that the if statement is true if any of those individual tests is true. And in the third example we introduce the or keyword, which is a more succinct way of achieving exactly the same result.

The player’s possessions

Since our Initialise routine has already mentioned them, we might as well define Wilhelm’s bow and arrows:

--- T Y P E ---

Object   bow "bow"
  with   name 'bow',
         description "Your trusty yew bow, strung with flax.",
         before [;
            Drop,Give,ThrowAt:
              print_ret "You're never without your trusty bow.";
         ],
  has    clothing;

Object   quiver "quiver"
  with   name 'quiver',
         description
              "Made of goatskin, it usually hangs over your left shoulder.",
         before [;
            Drop,Give,ThrowAt:
              print_ret "But it was a present from Hedwig, your wife.";
         ],
  has    container open clothing;

Both of these are straightforward objects, with the Drop, Give and ThrowAt actions being intercepted to ensure that Wilhelm is never without them. The clothing attribute makes its first appearance, marking both the quiver and the bow as capable of being worn (as the result of a WEAR BOW command, for instance); you’ll remember that our Initialise routine goes on to add a worn attribute to the quiver.

An empty quiver is pretty useless, so here’s the class used to define Wilhelm’s stock of arrows. This class has some unusual features:

--- T Y P E ---

Class    Arrow
  with   name 'arrow' 'arrows//p',
         article "an",
         plural "arrows",
         description "Just like all your other arrows -- sharp and true.",
         before [;
            Drop,Give,ThrowAt:
              print_ret "Your arrows are sharp, and you guard them carefully.";
         ];

The classes we’ve created so far – Room, Prop and Furniture – are intended for objects which behave the same but are otherwise clearly separate. For example, a table, a bed and a wardrobe would generally have their own individual characteristics – a name, a description, maybe some specialised properties – while still inheriting the general behaviour of Furniture objects. The arrows aren’t like this: not only do they behave the same, but also they are indistinguishable one from another. We’re trying for this effect:

>INVENTORY
You are carrying:
  a quiver (being worn)
    three arrows
  a bow

where the interpreter lumps together our stock of three arrows, rather than listing them individually in this clumsy fashion:

>INVENTORY
You are carrying:
  a quiver (being worn)
    an arrow
    an arrow
    an arrow
  a bow

The interpreter will do this for us if our objects are “indistinguishable”, best achieved by making them members of a class which includes both name and plural properties. We define the actual arrows very simply, like this:

--- T Y P E ---

Arrow "arrow" quiver;
Arrow "arrow" quiver;
Arrow "arrow" quiver;

and you can see that we provide only two pieces of information for each Arrow object: an external name in double quotes (“arrow” in each case) which the interpreter uses when referring to the object, and an initial location (in the quiver). That’s all: no block of properties, no set of attributes, and no internal identifier, because we never need to refer to the individual Arrow objects within the game.

The name property of the class definition has an odd-looking dictionary word:

name 'arrow' 'arrows//p',

The word 'arrow' refers to a single arrow. So also would the word 'arrows', unless we specifically tell the interpreter that it’s a plural reference. That //p marks 'arrows' as being a potential reference to more than one object at once, thus enabling players to type TAKE ARROWS and thereby pick up as many arrows as happened to be available (without it, TAKE ARROWS would have picked up one at random).

There are two other properties not seen previously:

article "an",
plural "arrows",

The article property lets you define the object’s indefinite article – usually something like “a”, “an” or “some” – instead of letting the library assign one automatically. It’s a belt-and-braces (OK, belt-and-suspenders) precaution: because “arrow” starts with a vowel, we need to display “an arrow” not “a arrow”. Most interpreters automatically get this right, but just to be on the safe side, we explicitly define the appropriate word. And the plural property defines the word to be used when lumping several of these objects together, as in the “three arrows” inventory listing. The interpreter can’t just automatically slap an “s” on the end; the plural of “slice of cake”, for example, isn’t “slice of cakes”.

Moving further along the street

As Wilhelm moves north towards the square, he comes to this room:

--- T Y P E ---

Room     below_square "Further along the street"
  with   description
             "People are still pushing and shoving their way from the southern
              gate towards the town square, just a little further north.
              You recognise the owner of a fruit and vegetable stall.",
         n_to south_square,
         s_to street;

No surprises there, nor in most of the supporting scenery objects.

--- T Y P E ---

Furniture   stall "fruit and vegetable stall" below_square
  with name 'fruit' 'veg' 'vegetable' 'stall' 'table',
        description
            "It's really only a small table, with a big heap of potatoes,
             some carrots and turnips, and a few apples.",
        before [; Search: <<Examine self>>; ],
  has   scenery;

Prop     "potatoes" below_square
  with   name 'potato' 'potatoes' 'spuds',
         description
             "Must be a particularly early variety... by some 300 years!",
  has    pluralname;

Prop     "fruit and vegetables" below_square
  with   name 'carrot' 'carrots' 'turnip' 'turnips' 'apples' 'vegetables',
         description "Fine locally grown produce.",
  has    pluralname;

The only new thing here is the before property of the fruit’n’veg stall. The stall’s description – lots of items on a table – may suggest to players that they can SEARCH through the produce, maybe finding a lucky beetroot or something else interesting. No such luck – and we might as well trap the attempt.

Having intercepted a Search action, our plan is to respond with the stall’s description, as though the player has typed EXAMINE THE STALL. There isn’t an easy way for us to stealthily slide those literal words into the interpreter, but we can simulate the effect which they’d cause: an action of Examine applied to the object stall. This rather cryptic statement does the job:

<Examine stall>;

Having diverted the Search action into an Examine action, we must tell the interpreter that it doesn’t need to do anything else, because we’ve handled the action ourselves. We’ve done that before – using return true – and so a first stab at the before action looks like this:

before [; Search: <Examine stall>; return true; ],

The two-statement sequence <...>; return true is so common that there’s a single statement shortcut: <<...>>. Also, for exactly the same reason as before, our code is clearer if we use self instead of stall. So this is how the property finally stands:

before [; Search: <<Examine self>>; ],

A couple of final observations before we leave this topic. The example here is of an action (Examine) applied to an object (self, though stall or noun would also work at this point). You can also use the <...> and <<...>> statements for actions which affect no objects:

<<Look>>;

(representing the command LOOK), or which affect two. For example, the command PUT THE BIRD IN THE NEST can be simulated with this statement:

<<Insert bird nest>>;

Introducing Helga

One of the trickiest aspects of designing a good game is to provide satisfying interaction with other characters. It’s hard enough to code inanimate objects which provoke appropriate responses to whatever actions the player character (PC) might attempt. That all gets much worse once those “other objects” are living creatures – non-player characters (NPCs) – with, supposedly, minds of their own. A good NPC might move around independently, perform actions with a purpose, initiate conversations, respond to what you say and do (and even to what you don’t say or do); it can be a real nightmare.

But not here: we’ve kept our three NPCs – Helga, Walter and the vogt – as simple as possible. Nevertheless, we can establish some fundamental principles; here’s the class upon which we base our NPCs:

--- T Y P E ---

Class    NPC
  with   life [;
            Answer,Ask,Order,Tell:
              print_ret "Just use T[ALK] [TO ", (the) self, "].";
         ],
  has    animate;

The most important thing here is the animate attribute – that’s what defines an object as an NPC, and causes the interpreter to treat it a little differently – for example, TAKE HELGA results in “I don’t suppose Helga would care for that”.

The animate attribute also brings into play nine extra actions which can be applied only to animate objects: Answer, Ask, Order and Tell are all associated with speech, and Attack, Kiss, Show, ThrowAt and WakeOther are associated with non-verbal interaction. Additionally, a new life property – very similar to before – can be defined to intercept them. Here we use it to trap speech-related commands such as ASK HELGA ABOUT APPLE and TELL WALTER ABOUT BABIES, telling players that in this game we’ve implemented only a simpler TALK verb (which we describe in Verbs, verbs, verbs).

Based on the NPC class we’ve created, here’s Helga:

--- T Y P E ---

NPC      stallholder "Helga" below_square
  with   name 'stallholder' 'greengrocer' 'monger' 'shopkeeper' 'merchant'
              'owner' 'Helga' 'dress' 'scarf' 'headscarf',
         description
              "Helga is a plump, cheerful woman,
                concealed beneath a shapeless dress and a spotted headscarf.",
         initial [;
              print "Helga pauses from sorting potatoes
                   to give you a cheery wave.^";
              if (location hasnt visited) {
                   move apple to player;
                   print "^~Hello, Wilhelm, it's a fine day for trade! Is this
                       young Walter? My, how he's grown. Here's an apple for him
                       -- tell him to mind that scabby part, but the rest's good
                       enough. How's Frau Tell? Give her my best wishes.~^";
              }
         ],
         times_spoken_to 0,         ! for counting the conversation topics
         life [;
            Talk:
              self.times_spoken_to = self.times_spoken_to + 1;
              switch (self.times_spoken_to) {
                1: score = score + 1;
                   print_ret "You warmly thank Helga for the apple.";
                2: print_ret "~See you again soon.~";
                default:
                   return false;
              }
         ],
  has    female proper;

The new attributes are female – because we want the interpreter to refer to Helga with the appropriate pronouns – and proper. The latter signifies that this object’s external name is a proper noun, and so references to it should not be preceded by “a” or “the”: you wouldn’t want to display “You can see a Helga here” or “I don’t suppose the Helga would care for that”. You may notice the library variable score being incremented. This variable holds the number of points that the player has scored; when it changes like this, the interpreter tells the player that “Your score has just gone up by one point”.

There are also life and times_spoken_to properties (which we’ll talk about in William Tell: the end is nigh) and an initial property.

initial is used when the interpreter is describing a room and listing the objects initial you can see there. If we didn’t define it, you’d get this:

Further along the street
People are still pushing and shoving their way from the southern gate towards
the town square, just a little further north.  You recognise the owner of a fruit
and vegetable stall.

You can see Helga here.

>

but we want to introduce Helga in a more interactive manner, and that’s what the initial property is for: it replaces the standard “You can see object here” with a tailored message of your own design. The value of an initial property can be either a string which is to be displayed or, as here, an embedded routine. This one is pretty similar to the description property that we defined for the street: something that’s always printed (Helga pauses...) and something that’s printed only on the first occasion (“Hello, Wilhelm, it’s a fine day... ”):

Further along the street
People are still pushing and shoving their way from the southern gate towards
the town square, just a little further north. You recognise the owner of a fruit
and vegetable stall.

Helga pauses from sorting potatoes to give you a cheery wave.

"Hello, Wilhelm, it's a fine day for trade! Is this young Walter? My, how he's
grown. Here's an apple for him -- tell him to mind that scabby part, but the
rest's good enough. How's Frau Tell? Give her my best wishes."

>

But it’s not quite the same as the street’s description routine. First, we need a slightly different if test: self hasnt visited works fine for a room object, but this routine is part of an object in a room; instead we could use either below_square hasnt visited or (better) location hasnt visited – since location is the library variable that refers to the room where the player currently is. And second, some curly braces {...} have appeared: why?

On Wilhelm’s first visit to this room, we need to do two things:

  • ensure that Wilhelm is in possession of an apple, because that’s mentioned when we...
  • display Helga’s cheery greeting.

The move statement does the first of those, and the print statement does the second. And both statements need to be controlled by the if statement. So far, we’ve used an if statement twice, in both cases to control a single following statement.

if (nest in branch) deadflag = 2;

if (self hasnt visited)
    print "^~Stay close to me, son,~ you say,
        ~or you'll get lost among all these people.~^";

That’s what an if does – it controls whether the following statement is executed or not. So how can we control two statements at once? Well, we could write two if statements:

if (location hasnt visited)
    move apple to player;
if (location hasnt visited)
    print "^~Hello, Wilhelm, it's a fine day for trade! Is this
        young Walter? My, how he's grown. Here's an apple for him
        -- tell him to mind that scabby part, but the rest's good
        enough. How's Frau Tell? Give her my best wishes.~^";

but that’s unbearably clumsy; instead, we use the braces to group the move and print statement into a statement block (sometimes known as a code block) which counts as a single statement for the purposes of control by the if statement.

if (location hasnt visited) {
    move apple to player;
    print "^~Hello, Wilhelm, it's a fine day for trade! Is this
        young Walter? My, how he's grown. Here's an apple for him
        -- tell him to mind that scabby part, but the rest's good
        enough. How's Frau Tell? Give her my best wishes.~^";
}

A statement block can contain one, two, ten, a hundred statements; it doesn’t matter – they’re all treated as one unit by if (and by objectloop, which we meet later, and by do, for and while, all of them loop statements that we don’t encounter in this guide).

Note

The exact positioning of the braces is a matter of personal choice. We use this style:

if (condition) {
    statement;
    statement;
    ...
}

but other designers have their own preferences, including:

if (condition) {
    statement;
    statement;
    ...
    }

if (condition)
{   statement;
    statement;
    ...
}

if (condition)
    {
    statement;
    statement;
    ...
    }

Although we’ve not yet needed to use it, now would probably be a good time to mention the else extension to the if statement. Sometimes we want to execute one statement block if a certain condition is true, and a different statement block if it’s not true. Again, we could write two if statements:

if (location has visited) {
    statement;
    statement;
    ...
}
if (location hasnt visited) {
    statement;
    statement;
    ...
};

but that’s hardly an elegant approach; an else clause does the job more neatly:

if (location has visited) {
    statement;
    statement;
    ...
}
else {
    statement;
    statement;
    ...
};

We’ve done a lot of scene-setting, but the real action is still to come. Next, it’s time to define the town square, and create a confrontation between Wilhelm and the vogt’s soldiers. (But first, see again Compile-as-you-go if you’re typing in the game as you read through the guide.)