Liquorice
Liquorice is a system for constructing maps for the computer game Doom by writing algorithms to describe the geometry. A Liquorice program is a series of instructions to move a virtual "turtle" or "pen", which define the walls, floors, rooms and monsters as it goes.
More specifically, Liquorice is an embedded domain-specific language (eDSL) within the pure functional programming language Haskell.
Quick example
-- simple example, triangle (for orientation); unique texture per line
import Liquorice.Monad
import Liquorice.Render
main = buildWad "example1.wad" $ runWadL $ do
mid "ZZWOLF1"
draw 128 0
mid "ZZWOLF2"
draw 0 128
turnaround
mid "ZZWOLF3"
draw 128 128
rightsector 0 128 160
turnaround
step 64 32
thing
More detailed example
See examples/birds.hs, for an example program
that generates a complete playable map. The map targets Doom 1 / The
Ultimate Doom (map slot E2M8), and requires a doom engine with raised
engine limits, such as Crispy Doom.
The generated PWAD, with nodes, ready to play: birds.zip
birds.hs is a re-implementation/transformation of "Bird Cage"
for WadC.
Getting Started
For Doom novices
Doom's engine source code was open-sourced in 1996, but you need a copy of
the game's data files to use them. You can buy The Ultimate Doom and Doom II at Gog, amongst other places. Failing that, you could try FreeDoom, a free-content game for Doom engines.
Examples of powerful open source engines include Crispy Doom, Eternity Engine and GZDoom.
For Haskell novices
…
Evaluation
The commands that a typical Liquorice program will use are predominantly
monadic, and so make use of Haskell's "do-notation" for ordering. Internally,
the majority of these monadic functions are wrappers around pure equivalents
which transform an input Context
type into an output, e.g.:
xoff :: Int -> Context -> Context
xoff x c = c { paletteXoff = x }
place :: Int -> Int -> (Context -> Context) -> Context -> Context
place x y fn c = c & step x y
& fn
& step (-1 * x) (-1 * y)
The pure functions can be combined using the infix operator &
(from
Data.Function
), or the more usual composition operator (which reads
back-to-front). However, the monadic versions are probably more user-
friendly, and so the separate pure implementations might go away or
stop being explicitly exported at some point. We also probably need to
use the monadic versions if we want to introduce randomness or debug IO
in the middle of a program.
A series of monadic Liquorice statements are converted into a final Context
via runWadL
. A Context
is written to an output PWAD file via
buildWad :: FilePath -> Context -> IO ()
Internally, buildWad
first converts a Context
into an intermediate data
structure WadMap
, which closely resembles the binary structure of a PWAD.
(WadMap
itself is a specialisation of Wad
, imposing the presence of map
specific lumps)
Pros/Cons
Pros:
- Unlike WadC, you have full access to the Context at any point in your
program, which you can inspect or transform as you wish.
- You also have the full power of the Haskell programming language.
- In particular simply infix numeric operators are hugely useful.
Cons:
- There's no GUI.
- The Pure-versus-Monadic functions are a bit awkward and I might get rid of the
pure versions altogether in the future
- There are some slow parts (line splitting in particular)
- If you don't know Haskell, this will be very hard to use and most error messages
will make little sense.
- You need a Haskell development environment installed to use Liquorice.
Code overview
The following three source files are the ones that you will want to import
as modules to your Liquorice program:
Liquorice.hs
— The main Context
definition and most basic pure operations
Liquorice/Monad.hs
— monadic wrappers around the above, + some more
Liquorice/Render.hs
— exports buildWad
for exporting a PWAD
These are back-end implementation details:
Liquorice/Pure.hs
— most of the "standard library", in pure functions
Liquorice/Line.hs
— Line
type, line splitting and tests
Liquorice/Wad.hs
— Wad and WadMap definitions and binary serialisation
TestMain.hs
— HTF test harness
Author
Liquorice was created by Jonathan Dowland and is
distributed under the terms of the GNU Public License, version 3 (see
COPYING).
The design of Liquorice is heavily
influenced by Wad Language (WadC), which in turn owes
a debt to LOGO.
See also