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hrmulator

Human Resource Machine

Tomorrow Corporation makes a game called Human Resource Machine. It's a game that teaches you a tiny drag-and-drop assembly language; and guides you to solving programming problems with that knowledge. If you don't yet have this game, you should go buy it immediately :-). It's adorable and really fun.

hrmulator

As I was playing Human Resource Machine, and the problems started getting larger: I started craving my source code control tools. Why can't I use Git on my little HRM programs? I want to branch and experiment and try things without fear of not being able to get back to my old state.

hrmulator is simply a tool to help you play with Human Resource Machine programs in textual form, so you can apply source code control tools. It's no good to you if you're not playing this game. Go buy the game. Tomorrow Corporation, please don't sue me.

These tools are really rough, but improving with time. A simple program to copy from the inbox to the outbox looks like this:

START:
    move_from_inbox
    move_to_outbox
    jump_to START

If you saved that to a file named simple_copy.hrm you could then

from hrmulator import Computer

computer = Computer()
computer.print_run_program('simple_copy.hrm', inbox=[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7])

The output would be:

simple_copy.hrm

START:
  001: move_from_inbox
  002: move_to_outbox
  003: jump_to START

Inbox:
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
Outbox:
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]

Program size: 3; Total steps executed: 21

You can simplify the world a little by putting simple_copy's code right in your Python file:

from hrmulator import Computer

simple_copy = """
START:
    move_from_inbox
    move_to_outbox
    jump_to START
"""

computer = Computer()
computer.print_run_program(program_text=simple_copy, inbox=[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7])

Installing hrmulator

hrmulator is packaged in the standard Python scheme (but not available on PyPI --- and probably never will be). Just download it or clone it, as you like; and

cd hrmulator
python setup.py install

...from that point forward, hrmulator is available for import wherever you are working, including into IPython. If you're thinking of working on hrmulator itself, consider saying python setup.py develop instead as that installs symlinks that lead back to your clone.

The Instruction Set

no_op
move_from_inbox
move_to_outbox
copy_from tile
copy_to tile
add tile
subtract tile
bump_up tile
bump_down tile
jump_to place
jump_if_zero_to place
jump_if_negative_to place

tile may be a number (like 5) or a label (like hello) you applied to one of the numbered tiles. place may be a step number (like 12) or a label you inserted into the program (like START). Here's an example using both memory and place labels:

from hrmulator import Computer, Memory


program_text = """
START:
    copy_from zero
    copy_to sum
ADD:
    move_from_inbox
    jump_if_zero_to DONE
    add sum
    copy_to sum
    jump_to ADD
DONE:
    copy_from sum
    move_to_outbox
    jump_to START
"""


c = Computer()
c.print_run_program(
    program_text=program_text,
    inbox=[2, 4, 0, 0, 4, 0],
    memory=Memory(labels={'sum':0, 'zero':5}, values={'zero':0})
)
assert c.outbox == [6, 0, 4]

You can actually do it all within the print_run_program call:

import hrmulator


c = hrmulator.Computer()
c.print_run_program(
    memory=hrmulator.Memory(
        labels={'sum':0, 'zero':5},
        values={'zero':0}
    ),

    inbox=[2, 4, 0, 0, 4, 0],

    program_text="""
        START:
            copy_from zero
            copy_to sum
        ADD:
            move_from_inbox
            jump_if_zero_to DONE
            add sum
            copy_to sum
            jump_to ADD
        DONE:
            copy_from sum
            move_to_outbox
            jump_to START"""
)
assert c.outbox == [6, 0, 4]

For some fun, replace the instantiation of Computer() with Debugger(). That will load up the program in the debugger, stop at address 0, and give you a debug> prompt. From there you can single-step, print the contents of memory, look at the accumulator, set and clear breakpoints, etc.

The most powerful feature of the debugger is the x command: execute arbitrary Python. So for instance, you can dynamically set or label memory, or push new values onto the inbox. Within the Python, self is the underlying Computer instance.

debug> m

24(zero):0

START:
  @001: copy_from zero

debug> x self.memory[5] = 74; self.memory.label_tile(5, 'age')

START:
  @001: copy_from zero

debug> m

 5(age):74
24(zero):0

START:
  @001: copy_from zero

debug>

Here's the help from the debugger:

debug> ?

Commands:
  a - print the accumulator: the value you are currently holding
  b <number> - set or clear a breakpoint at step <number>
  c - continue running until the next breakpoint (if any)
  e - print everything: inbox, accumulator, and outbox
  i - print the inbox
  l - print a complete listing of the program
  l <number> print the next <number> lines of the program
  m - print every value in memory
  m <place> - print a specific value from memory
  o - print the outbox
  q - stop executing the program, and leave the debugger
  r - restart the program from the beginning, resetting the inbox and outbox
  s - step
  x <python> - execute some python, e.g., to label or set memory, or change the inbox
  ? - this help message

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