description | A Minetest mod which provides an API to register and request treasures from various mods. |
owner | Wuzzy@disroot.org |
last change | Sun, 13 Nov 2016 17:11:44 +0000 (13 18:11 +0100) |
URL | git://repo.or.cz/minetest_treasurer.git |
https://repo.or.cz/minetest_treasurer.git | |
push URL | ssh://repo.or.cz/minetest_treasurer.git |
https://repo.or.cz/minetest_treasurer.git (learn more) | |
bundle info | minetest_treasurer.git downloadable bundles |
content tags |
= Treasurer’s README file for Treasurer version 0.2.0 = == Overview ==
treasurer
== Introduction == Problem: There are a bunch of mods which have cool items but they won’t appear in the world by themselves. There are some mods which randomly distribute treasures into the world. Sadly, these only distribute the items they know—which are just the items of the mod “default” most of the time. The items of the other mods are completely missed.
The reason for this is that the distributing mods can’t know what sort of items are available unless they explicitly depend on the mods that defines these. Viewed the other way round, the item-defining mods that also distribute these items into the world are limited in the sense that they only know one means of distributing items.
There is a gap between defining items and distributing them. Every time a mod does both, flexibility is limited and expansion becomes difficult.
To bridge this gap, Treasurer has been written. Treasurer makes it possible a) for mods to define treasures without bothering how these are distributed into the world and b) for mods to distribute treasures around the world without knowledge about what treasures exactly are distributed.
== Technical side of Treasurer == === technical overview === To get a working Treasurer architecture and actually get some treasures into the world, you need:
=== treasurer registration mod === Firstly, there are the treasure registration mods (TRMs). The task of TRMs is to tell Treasurer which items does it have to offer, which relative appearance probabilities these treasures should have, how “precious” the treasure is considered (on a scale from 0 to 10) , optionally how big the stack of items should be and optionally how much worn out it is. TRMs must depend on at least two mods: On treasurer and on the mod or mods where the items are defined. Technically, a TRM consists of nothing more than a long list of “registration” function calls. While this seems trivial, the task of balancing out probabilties and balancing out preciousness levels of treasures is not trivial and it may take a long time to get right.
It is strongly recommended that a TRM really does nothing more than registering treasures (and not defining items, for example). If you want to make your mod compatible to Treasurer, don’t change your mod, write a TRM for it instead.
There is an example TRM, called “trm_default_example
”. It registers some items
of the default as treasures. Unsurprisingly, it depends on treasurer
and default
.
=== treasurer spawning mods === Secondly, there are the treasure spawning mods (TSMs). The task of a TSM is to somehow distribute the available treasures into the world. This is also called “treasure spawning”. How exactly the TSM spawns the treasures is completely up the TSM. But a TSM has to request Treasurer to get some random treasures to distribute. A TSM may optionally request to filter out treasures outside certain preciousness levels and groups, so the result is a bit controllable and not completely random. Treasurer can not guarantee to return the requestet amount of treasures, it may return an empty table, for two reasons:
A TSM has to at least depend on Treasurer. Unlike for TRMs, it may not be a problem to also do some other stuff than just spawning treasures if it seems feasible. You may choose to make your TSM fully dependant on Treasure, then it won’t work without Treasurer. You may also choose to only add an optional dependency on Treasurer. For this to work, your mod must now select its own treasures, which of course will only come from a rather limited pool.
To check if the Treasurer mod is installed, you can use something like this in your code:
if(minetest.get_modpath("treasurer")~=nil) then
-- Treasurer is installed.
-- You can call Treasurer’s functions here.
else
-- Treasurer is not installed.
-- You may write your replacement code here.
-- You can not call Treasurer’s funcitons here.
end
There are two example TSMs. The first one is a very basic one and called “tsm_gift_example
”.
It gives a “welcome gift” (1 random treasure) to players who just joined the server
or who respawn. The preciousness and group filters are not used. It does only depend on
Treasurer. The second one is called “tsm_chests_example
” and pretty advanced for an example.
It places chests of the mod “default” between 20 and 200 node lenghts below the water
surface and puts 1-6 random treasures into these. The lower the chest, the higher
the preciousness. It depends on treasurer and default (for the chests, of course).
=== Recap === TRMs define treasures, TSMs spawn them. Treasurer manages the pool of available treasures. TRMs and TSMs do not have to know anything from each other. TRMs and TSMs do not neccessarily have to change any line of code of other mods to function. Treasurer depends on nothing.
Important: It should always only be neccessary for TRMs and TSMs to depend on Treasurer. All other mods do NOT HAVE TO and SHOULD NOT depend on Treasurer.
=== Treasure attributes === This section explains the various attributes a treasure can have.
==== Rarity ==== Rarity in Treasurer works in a pretty primitive way: The relative rarities of all treasures from the treasure pool are simply all added up. The probabilitiy of one certain treasure is then simply the rarity value divided by the sum.
==== Preciousness ====
How “precious” an item is, is highly subjective and also not always easy to categorize.
Preciousness in Treasurer’s terms should be therefore viewed as “utility” or as
“reward level” or “strength” or even “beauty” or whatever positive attributes you can
think of for items. See the text file GROUPS_AND_PRECIOUSNESS
for a rough
guideline.
So, if you create a TRM and your treasure is something you want the player work
hard for, assign it a high preciousness. Everyday items that are already easy to
obtain in normal gameplay certainly deserve a lower precious than items that are
expensive to craft.
If your treasure consists of a powerful
item, assign it a high preciousness. When in doubt, try to value gameplay over
personal taste. Remember that TSMs can (and will!) filter out treasures based
on their preciousness.
For TSM authors, consider preciousness this way: If the trouble the player has
to get through to in order to obtain the treasure is high, better filter
out unprecious treasures. If your TSM distributes many treasures all over the world and these
are easy to obtain, filter out precious treasures.
TSMs also can just completely ignore preciousness, then the given treasures base on sheer luck.
==== Treasurer groups ==== Every treasure can be assigned to a group. These groups are specific to Treasurer only. The idea is that treasures which share a common property are member of the same group. All groups have a name by which they are identified. For example, if there are apples, plums, pears and oranges and those items can be eaten for health, all those treasures would be members of the group “food”.
The group system can be used to further narrow down the treasure pool from which you want Treasurer to return treasures. This makes it more interesting than just using an one-dimensional preciousness scale.
Using the groups system is entirely optional. If your TRM does not specify any group, your treasure will be assigned to the group “default”. It is not possible for a treasure to not belong to any group. If your TSM does not specify a group parameter, Treasurer will use all groups. While not using groups as a TSM may be perfectly okay, not using groups as a TRM is not recommended, because TSM which filter by groups may “overlook” your treasure, even if it would actually fit, simply because you didn’t assign it to a specific group.
Note that Treasurer groups are completely distinct from Minetest’s group system.
You can basically invent your own groups on the fly, but it is strongly recommended that you
use the groups suggested in the text file GROUPS_AND_PRECIOUSNESS
whenever possible, for
maximum portability of your TSM. The text file also has a rough guideline for finding
appropriate values for the preciousness.
==== Recap ==== Rarity determines the chance of a treasure, whereas preciousness determines the difficulty to obtain it. Group
== Overview of examples ==
trm_default_example
- registers items of default modtsm_chests_example
- spawns chests (from the default mod)tsm_gift_example
- gives one treasure as a “welcome gift” to joined or respawned players== Treasurer API documentation ==
=== API documentation for treasure registration mods ===
The API consists of one function, which is called “treasurer.register_treasure
”.
==== treasurer.register_treasure
====
Registers a new treasure (this means the treasure will be ready to be spawned by treasure spawning mods).
This function does some basic parameter checking to catch the most obvious mistakes. If invalid parameters have been passed, the input is rejected and the function returns false. However, it does not cover every possible mistake, so some invalid treasures may slip through.
Rarity does not imply preciousness. A rare treasure may not neccessarily a very precious one. A treasure chest with scorched stuff inside may be very rare, but it’s certainly also very unprecious.
===== Parameters =====
name
: name of resulting ItemStack
, e.g. “mymod:item
”rarity
: rarity of treasure on a scale from 0 to 1 (inclusive). lower = rarerpreciousness
: subjective preciousness on a scale from 0 to 10 (inclusive). higher = more precious.count
: optional value which specifies the multiplicity of the item. Default is 1. See count
syntax help in this file.wear
: optional value which specifies the wear of the item. Default is 0, which disables the wear. See wear
syntax help in this file.treasurer_groups
: an optional table of group names to assign this treasure to. If omitted, the treasure is added to the default group.===== Return value =====
true
on success, false
on failure.
=== data formats ===
format of count type:
==== count
====
A count
can be a number or a table
number
: it’s always so many times{min, max}
: it’s pseudorandomly between min
and max
times, math.random
will be used to chose the value{min, max, prob_func}
: it’s between min
and max
times, and the value is given by prob_func
(see below)==== wear
====
Completely analogous to count
.
==== Format of prob_func
function ====
There are no parameters.
It returns a random or pseudorandom number between 0 (inclusive) and 1 (exclusive).
prob_func
is entirely optional, if it’s not used, treasurer will
default to using math.random
. You can use prob_func
to define your own
“randomness” function, in case you don’t wish your values to be evenly
distributed.
=== API documentation for treasure spawning mods ===
The API consists of one function, called “treasurer.select_random_treasures
”.
==== treasurer.select_random_treasures
====
Request some treasures from treasurer.
===== Parameters =====
count
: (optional) amount of treasures. If this value is nil
, Treasurer assumes a default of 1.minimal_preciousness
: (optional) don’t consider treasures with a lower preciousness. If nil
, there’s no lower bound.maximum_preciousness
: (optional) don’t consider treasures with a higher preciousness. If nil
, there’s no upper bound.treasurer_group
: (optional): Only consider treasures which are members of at least one of the members of the provided Treasurer group table. nil
= consider all groups===== Return value =====
A table of ItemStacks
(the requested treasures). It may be empty.
2016-11-13 | Wuzzy | Add mod.confmaster | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
2016-11-05 | Wuzzy | Fix description file name | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
2016-08-11 | Wuzzy | Fix typo: tosting instead of tostring | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
2014-10-04 | Wuzzy | Change version to 0.2.0 | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
2014-10-04 | Wuzzy | Update README.md with some factids, finish unfinished... | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
2014-10-04 | Wuzzy | Add documentation for Treasurer’s group system | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
2014-07-25 | Wuzzy | Delete old README | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
2014-07-25 | Wuzzy | Convert README file to Markdown format | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
2014-06-18 | Wuzzy | Initial 0.2 release candidate | commitcommitdifftreesnapshot (tar.gz zip) |
8 years ago | master | logtree |