/* Copyright (c) 2023 : Ognjen 'xolatile' Milan Robovic Xhartae is free software! You will redistribute it or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License by Free Software Foundation. And when you do redistribute it or modify it, it will use either version 3 of the License, or (at yours truly opinion) any later version. It is distributed in the hope that it will be useful or harmful, it really depends... But no warranty what so ever, seriously. See GNU/GPLv3. */ #ifndef CHAPTER_5_HEADER #define CHAPTER_5_HEADER #include "chapter_0.h" #include "chapter_1.h" #include "chapter_2.h" #include "chapter_3.h" /* Okay, we're finally on chapter five, and now we'll write something fun, not serious and boring. Before the Great Flood, when our ancestors were riding dinosaurs, building pyramids, killing African men and mating with Asian women, people didn't have dedicated nor integrated graphical processing units, called GPUs. They only had their terminals, built inside some of their spaceships. And what did they do with them? They played terminal rogue-like games, similar to those that archeologists discovered in ancient Egypt, Syria, Sumeria, Greece and Atlantis. They were reconstructed around 50 years ago by some guy that made the game Rogue. So, all those myths, sagas and legends about Anubis, Gilgamesh, Achilles, Inana, Gaea, they were just playable characters or main characters in those games, with different statistics, skills, attributes and back-story. Now, lets make a simple terminal rogue-like game using what we wrote in previous chapters. First of all, lets talk briefly about keyword 'typedef' and why I hate to use it. */ typedef enum action_t { GAME_ACTION_IDLE, GAME_ACTION_WALK, GAME_ACTION_REST, GAME_ACTION_CAMP, GAME_ACTION_SWING_BLADE, GAME_ACTION_SWING_AXE, GAME_ACTION_SHOOT_ARROW, GAME_ACTION_THROW_SPEAR, GAME_ACTION_SUMMON_PUPPET, GAME_ACTION_CALL_NATURE, GAME_ACTION_CITE_RUNE, GAME_ACTION_CAST_CHARM, GAME_ACTION_COUNT } action_t; typedef int number_t; typedef char * string_t; typedef void * memory_t; typedef struct game_t { number_t active, screen_width, screen_height; } game_t; typedef struct bundle_t { number_t minimum, maximum, current, boosted; } bundle_t; /* typedef struct skill_t { string_t name; bundle_t stat; action_t positive [4]; } skill_t; typedef struct attribute_t { string_t name; bundle_t stat; action_t positive [4], negative [4]; } attribute_t; */ typedef struct player_t { string_t name; number_t x, y; bundle_t * health, * armour, * mana, * stamina; /*attribute_t strength, edurance, intelligence, agility; skill_t blades, axes, bows, spears; skill_t puppet_magic, nature_magic, rune_magic, charm_magic;*/ } player_t; extern void play_game (void); #endif