Mercurial > traipse_dev
view orpg/dieroller/shadowrun.py @ 29:72f7c5904fbf traipse_dev
Update Manager moves into Beta 0.2 as the code is cleaned up some.
The Update Manager is nearly ready to be placed into Grumpy Goblin, though
it is not functioning 100%. It will provide users an opportunity to skip
the update process, grab new repos, and update by choice.
author | sirebral |
---|---|
date | Sun, 02 Aug 2009 00:37:23 -0500 |
parents | 4385a7d0efd1 |
children | 449a8900f9ac |
line wrap: on
line source
## a vs die roller as used by WOD games #!/usr/bin/env python # Copyright (C) 2000-2001 The OpenRPG Project # # openrpg-dev@lists.sourceforge.net # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. # -- # # File: shadowrun.py # Author: Michael Edwards (AKA akoman) # Maintainer: # Version: 1.0 # # Description: A modified form of the World of Darkness die roller to # conform to ShadowRun rules-sets. Thanks to the ORPG team # for the original die rollers. # Thanks to tdb30_ for letting me think out loud with him. # I take my hint from the HERO dieroller: It creates for wildly variant options # Further, .vs and .open do not work together in any logical way. One method of # chaining them results in a [Bad Dice Format] and the other results in a standard # output from calling .open() # vs is a classic 'comparison' method function, with one difference. It uses a # c&p'ed .open(int) from die.py but makes sure that once the target has been exceeded # then it stops rerolling. The overhead from additional boolean checking is probably # greater than the gains from not over-rolling. The behaviour is in-line with # Shadowrun Third Edition which recommends not rolling once you've exceeded the target # open is an override of .open(int) in die.py. The reason is pretty simple. In die.py open # refers to 'open-ended rolling' whereas in Shadowrun it refers to an 'Open Test' where # the objective is to find the highest die total out of rolled dice. This is then generally # used as the target in a 'Success Test' (for which .vs functions) from die import * __version__ = "1.0" class shadowrun(std): def __init__(self,source=[],target=2): std.__init__(self,source) def vs(self,target): return srVs(self, target) def open(self): return srOpen(self) class srVs(std): def __init__(self,source=[], target=2): std.__init__(self, source) # In Shadowrun, not target number may be below 2. All defaults are set to two and any # thing lower is scaled up. if target < 2: self.target = 2 else: self.target = target # Shadowrun was built to use the d6 but in the interests of experimentation I have # made the dieroller generic enough to use any die type self.openended(self[0].sides) def openended(self,num): if num <= 1: self done = 1 for i in range(len(self.data)): if (self.data[i].lastroll() >= num) and (self.data[i] < self.target): self.data[i].extraroll() done = 0 if done: return self else: return self.openended(num) def __sum__(self): s = 0 for r in self.data: if r >= self.target: s += 1 return s def __str__(self): if len(self.data) > 0: myStr = "[" + str(self.data[0]) for a in self.data[1:]: myStr += "," myStr += str(a) myStr += "] vs " + str(self.target) + " for a result of (" + str(self.sum()) + ")" else: myStr = "[] = (0)" return myStr class srOpen(std): def __init__(self,source=[]): std.__init__(self,source) self.openended(self[0].sides) def openended(self,num): if num <= 1: self done = 1 for i in range(len(self.data)): if self.data[i].lastroll() == num: self.data[i].extraroll() done = 0 if done: return self else: return self.openended(num) def __sum__(self): s = 0 for r in self.data: if r > s: s = r return s def __str__(self): if len(self.data) > 0: myStr = "[" + str(self.data[0]) for a in self.data[1:]: myStr += "," myStr += str(a) self.takeHighest(1) myStr += "] for a result of (" + str(self.__sum__().__int__()) + ")" else: myStr = "[] = (0)" return myStr