Skip to content

brit228/Intro-Python-II

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

10 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Intro to Python II

Up to this point, you've gotten your feet wet by working on a bunch of small Python programs. In this module, we're going to continue to solidify your Python chops by implementing a full-featured project according to a provided specification.

What We're Building

What's an Adventure Game? vid

Goals

  • Put your Python basics into practice by implementing a text adventure game

  • Practice writing code that conforms to a specification

MVP

Day 1 MVP

  • Create the REPL command parser in adv.py which allows the player to move to rooms in the four cardinal directions.
  • Fill out Player and Room classes in player.py and room.py

Day 2 MVP

  • Make rooms able to hold multiple items
  • Make the player able to carry multiple items
  • Add items to the game that the user can carry around
  • Add get [ITEM_NAME] and drop [ITEM_NAME] commands to the parser

Specification

The /src directory contains the files adv.py, which is where the main logic for the game should live, room.py, which will contain the definition of the Room class, and player.py, which will contain the definition of the Player class.

  • Add a REPL parser to adv.py that accepts directional commands to move the player

    • After each move, the REPL should print the name and description of the player's current room
    • Valid commands are n, s, e and w which move the player North, South, East or West
    • The parser should print an error if the player tries to move where there is no room.
  • Put the Room class in room.py based on what you see in adv.py.

    • The room should have name and description attributes.

    • The room should also have n_to, s_to, e_to, and w_to attributes which point to the room in that respective direction.

  • Put the Player class in player.py.

    • Players should have a name and current_room attributes
  • Create a file called item.py and add an Item class in there.

    • The item should have name and description attributes.

      • Hint: the name should be one word for ease in parsing later.
    • This will be the base class for specialized item types to be declared later.

  • Add the ability to add items to rooms.

    • The Room class should be extended with a list that holds the Items that are currently in that room.

    • Add functionality to the main loop that prints out all the items that are visible to the player when they are in that room.

  • Add capability to add Items to the player's inventory. The inventory can also be a list of items "in" the player, similar to how Items can be in a Room.

  • Add a new type of sentence the parser can understand: two words.

    • Until now, the parser could just understand one sentence form:

      verb

      such as "n" or "q".

    • But now we want to add the form:

      verb object

      such as "take coins" or "drop sword".

    • Split the entered command and see if it has 1 or 2 words in it to determine if it's the first or second form.

  • Implement support for the verb get followed by an Item name. This will be used to pick up Items.

    • If the user enters get or take followed by an Item name, look at the contents of the current Room to see if the item is there.

      • If it is there, remove it from the Room contents, and add it to the Player contents.

      • If it's not there, print an error message telling the user so.

      • Add an on_take method to Item.

        • Call this method when the Item is picked up by the player.

        • on_take should print out "You have picked up [NAME]" when you pick up an item.

        • The Item can use this to run additional code when it is picked up.

      • Add an on_drop method to Item. Implement it similar to on_take.

  • Implement support for the verb drop followed by an Item name. This is the opposite of get/take.

  • Add the i and inventory commands that both show a list of items currently carried by the player.

Stretch Goals

In arbitrary order:

  • Add more rooms

  • Add scoring

  • Subclass items into treasures

  • Add a subclass to Item called LightSource.

    • During world creation, add a lamp LightSource to a convenient Room.

    • Override on_drop in LightSource that tells the player "It's not wise to drop your source of light!" if the player drops it. (But still lets them drop it.)

    • Add an attribute to Room called is_light that is True if the Room is naturally illuminated, or False if a LightSource is required to see what is in the room.

    • Modify the main loop to test if there is light in the Room (i.e. if is_light is True or there is a LightSource item in the Room's contents or if there is a LightSource item in the Player's contents).

    • If there is light in the room, display name, description, and contents as normal.

    • If there isn't, print out "It's pitch black!" instead.

    • Hint: isinstance might help you figure out if there's a LightSource among all the nearby Items.

    • Modify the get/take code to print "Good luck finding that in the dark!" if the user tries to pick up an Item in the dark.

  • Add methods to notify items when they are picked up or dropped

  • Add light and darkness to the game

  • Add more items to the game.

  • Add a way to win.

  • Add more to the parser.

    • Remember the last Item mentioned and substitute that if the user types "it" later, e.g.

      take sword
      drop it
      
    • Add Items with adjectives, like "rusty sword" and "silver sword".

      • Modify the parser to handle commands like "take rusty sword" as well as "take sword".

        • If the user is in a room that contains both the rusty sword and silver sword, and they type "take sword", the parser should say, "I don't know which you mean: rusty sword or silver sword."
  • Modify the code that calls on_take to check the return value. If on_take returns False, then don't continue picking up the object. (I.e. prevent the user from picking it up.)

    • This enables you to add logic to on_take to code things like "don't allow the user to pick up the dirt unless they're holding the shovel.
  • Add monsters.

  • Add the attack verb that allows you to specify a monster to attack.

  • Add an on_attack method to the monster class.

  • Similar to the on_take return value modification, above, have on_attack prevent the attack from succeeding unless the user possesses a sword item.

  • Come up with more stretch goals! The sky's the limit!

About

Second part of introduction to Python basics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 100.0%