Prog Section 2
From Immwiki
Variables
"Moods are for cattle and loveplay, not for fighting!"
- -- Gurney Halleck, Dune
More often than not, you will want to reference the persons, mobs, or things associated with progs. Furthermore, you will not, a priori, know the names of the persons, mobs, or items which trigger or are acted on by the progs. The solution to this is a system of variables.
Variable Syntax:
1. The $ symbol
- The $ symbol prefaces every variable. It is equivalent to saying "the value which is
- stored in". So, let’s suppose we have a variable called n. n’s current value is 'Jolinn'
- (it’s a character value). Every time the prog sees $n, the prog engine interprets that as
- 'the value stored in n', which means that every time the prog sees $n, it reads it as 'Jolinn'.
- Additionally, it is possible to have multiple '$' characters iterated, defined recursively.
- I.e., suppose we have two variables, 3 and 4.
- If
- $4 == 3
- and
- $3 == 5000
- then $$4 == $(3) == $3 == 5000
==2. List of variables ==
- The following table provides a summary of the most basic variables.
a: A: b: short desc. of obj carrier B: his/her of obj carrier c: C: d: D: e: he/she of actor E: he/she of focus f: name of focused on F: short desc. of focused on f0: name of focus 0. F0: short desc. of focus 0. f1: name of focus 1. F1: short desc. of focus 1. g: G: h: Amount of damage done by a hit H: (see hit prog) i: name of mob I: short desc. of mob j: he/she of mob J: he/she of random k: him/her of mob K: him/her of random l: his/her of mob L: his/her of random m: him/her of actor M: him/her of focus M0: him/her of focus slot 0 M1: him/her of focus slot 1 n: name of actor N: short desc. of actor o: if on mob: name of obj O: if on a mob: short desc. of obj if on on an object: name of owner O: if on an object: short desc. of owner p: P: q: Q: r: name of random R: short desc. of random s: his/her of actor S: his/her of focus slot S0: his/her of focus slot 0 S1: his/her of focus slot 1 t: name of vict T: short desc. of vict u: U: v: loop value check: V: v1: loop value, depth 1 v2: loop value, depth 2 vn: loop value, depth n, n a positive integer >= 1 w: W: x: text of command (if appli.) X: $x, with the first word excluded y: argument lookup (punc.) Y: argument lookup (punc. sensitive) y1: First word of argument Y1: First word of argument y2: Second word of argument Y2: Second word of argument yn: nth word of argument Yn: nth word of argument z: value from mpremember Z: Long desc. of actor
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9: Value stored in corresponding mobile integer memory value
- Now, this is all a bit much to digest at once, but let’s define what some of
- these terms mean:
- The actor of a prog is the entity which triggers the prog.
Ex: greet_prog 100 say Hello, $n
- And Jolinn enters the room, the room will see:
The mob says, ‘Hello, Jolinn’
- This is because Jolinn is the person who triggers the prog.
- The mobile of the prog is the entity which has the prog, be it a mob or
- object.
Ex: greet_prog 100 say This prog is on $I.
- Let’s suppose this mob were on ‘a hen’. Whenever someone entered the room, they
- would see:
A hen says, ‘This prog is on a hen.’Notice that here we use the capital version of the variable, $I, since the name of a mob is not really what we want to say to the room (its name might be hen yellow feathered loud demon -- not something you want to echo to the room!).
- The random prog variable selects a random target in the room. The random variable,
- once invoked within a given prog, remains the same for the duration of the prog. (So, if
- you have two instances of $r in a prog, they will both refer to the same (random) entity.)
- The random variable will also never reference the mobile or object on which the prog exists.
Ex: greet_prog 100 say $r is a random person in the room.
- Suppose that this prog is on a mob in a room with Jolinn, Iandir, and Aeolis. If Arkhural
- enters the room, the mob might do any one of the following.
The mob says, ‘Jolinn is a random person in the room.’ The mob says, ‘Iandir is a random person in the room.’ The mob says, ‘Aeolis is a random person in the room.’ The mob says, ‘Arkhural is a random person in the room.’
- Each of these has an equal probability of occurring.
- The victim variable refers to the object of the actor's action. This variable is
- less frequently used, but denotes the subject of the actor's ($n) action. Since it is not
- valid in every prog type, you should research whether your prog trigger even allows the
- use of this variable.
- The object variable refers to EITHER:
- (i) The object which triggers the prog (if the prog is on a mob)
- (ii) The owner of the object (if the prog is on an object)
- The focus variable refers to a pc stored in a mobile focus slot. We’ll learn more about
- focus slots when we cover mobile memory, but for right now, the key fact is that the
- variables which are listed above are how we reference focus slots from within a prog.
- The loop variable is a variable used in loops to identify what iteration, or "step" a
- loop is currently on. We will discuss this variable more in the section on control structures.
- The command text variable is used to reference the text of a given prog’s argument.
- Essentially, whenever there is an argument to a prog_trigger which is a player input, $x,
- the command text variable, can be used to reference this value.
Ex: speech_prog p tell $n You just said $x.
- This prog is a prog which triggers on anything spoken, and when it does, it invokes $x.
- $x, here, represents the entire line that trigged the prog. So, if this prog were on a mob,
- and someone in the room were to say "I hear Jolinn has quite the taste for ethron trollops."
- the prog would trigger, and you would see:
Mob tells you, ‘You just said I hear Jolinn has quite the taste for ethron trollops.’
- $x has other, more interesting uses, as we will see later. $X is identical to $x, except that
- the first word is stripped. [This functionality is rarely used.]
- The argument lookup variable is a variable that allows us to reference the content
- of a prog’s argument. Essentially, an argument lookup variable works like this: Suppose we
- have the prog trigger speech_prog, which triggers when a certain key word or phrase is said.
- So, maybe we’d like the mob to respond to:
"I want you to threaten <person>"
- with a tell to <person>, telling them, "You’d better watch yourself, <person>!"
- Now, we want a speech_prog for this, so we might use:
speech_prog p I want you to threaten
- But then we’re left with being unable to pass the information about the word after
- "threaten", since it’s going to going to be something variable, and therefore not
- something you can put in a speech_prog (unless you had a speech prog for every n
- letter player name!).
- The $y variable is what allows us to reference the arguments of a prog directly.
- In general, any place where $yn (where "n" is an integer n >= 1) occurs, the prog
- interprets this as "the value of the nth word in the prog argument". As an example,
- suppose we had the speech_prog:
speech_prog p I want you to threaten tell $y6 You’d better watch yourself, $y6!
- Now, if you were to say aloud, in this room: "I want you to threaten Jolinn", the
- mob would tell Jolinn: "You’d better watch yourself, Jolinn!" The reason being:
- Jolinn is the sixth entry in the argument, and hence it is referenced by $y6.
- By default, $y will strip any punctuation from its argument target. The capital
- version, $Y will preserve punctuation (this is rarely needed). The argument lookup
- variable has many more uses, as we will see in later sections.
Local Variables
- Local variables, unlike the normal $0-$9 mobvalues, persist only for the duration
- of the prog in which they're created. They can hold numeric or string values.
- They are prefixed with a % (as opposed to $ for mobvalues) and can be given any
- alphanumeric name that is not a number.
- They are otherwise used just like mobvalues, and work with:
- mpvalueset mpvaluerand
- mpvalueup (*) mpmath
- mpvaluedown (*) mpgetroomvnum
- and with
- if (mob/obj/room)value
- NOTE! You no longer (as of June 2003) need to use "mobvalue/objvalue/roomvalue" for
- any of your if checks. Just "value" should suffice.
- Here is an example of the local variables in action:
mpvalueset gstr Hello, I am a local variable. mpecho %gstr mpvaluerand apples 1 3 mpecho I have %apples apples. if value(apples) == 3 mpecho Wow, that's a lot of apples! endif mpmath apples %apples * 2 mpecho I now have %apples apples. That's twice as many as before!
- I'm sure you can figure out what the above would do.