Difference between revisions of "Modding"

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== Screens ==
 
== Screens ==
  
{{AlertInfo|This code is not yet implemented.}}
+
{{AlertWarn|This code is not yet implemented.}}
  
 
Create your '''screens''' with the following convention : <code>modname</code> + <code>_</code> + <code>in‐game screen name</code> (the Ren'Py definition name). Screens are being included into the main game screens with the use statement. If you wish to add new locations, you have to define a screen for it, in which case, you can inspire yourself with the existing screens in the game.<br>
 
Create your '''screens''' with the following convention : <code>modname</code> + <code>_</code> + <code>in‐game screen name</code> (the Ren'Py definition name). Screens are being included into the main game screens with the use statement. If you wish to add new locations, you have to define a screen for it, in which case, you can inspire yourself with the existing screens in the game.<br>

Revision as of 18:32, 14 May 2019

This page was last updated as of Summertime Saga v0.18.0.

Summertime Saga API

The API for Summertime Saga is currently under development and this page is subject to changes.

FSMs (Finite State Machines)

Finite State Machines control the flow of the game for a particular character. They are basically linked chains of events (which are called States). The progress is achieved via a Trigger.

A basic example of a FSM

Creating a FSM

Creating a FSM is done in 3 steps:

  1. Create the states, triggers and a machine instance, providing the necessary arguments to each constructor. Triggers should be created in an init python block of priority 0 or later.
  2. Link the states together with State.add(Trigger t, State next_state) method.
  3. Add all the states to the machine with Machine.add(*State states) method.

State and machine definition and state linking should be done in a label named character_fsm_init, with character being the character's name. Additionally, further edits to the machine (such as adding the states) should be done in a label named character_machine_init, with character being the name of the character.

Machine specific

The machine constructor has plenty of arguments, here is the detail and what is expected:

name 
A name for the machine used as a unique identifier for the machine. It's also used to find the button dialogue for that machine.
default_loc 
A 4x7 matrix of locations to be used as the schedule for where a given machine should be at any point during the week. A 4x1 or 2x4 matrix may be passed as well, and internally will be converted to a 4x7 matrix. If a 1x4 matrix is passed, it's assumed that the location only varies by time of day, and the day of the week doesn't matter. A 2x4 matrix will split the two, the first 4-list is for weekdays, and the second for weekend days.
description, states 
(to be deprecated) An alternate ways to add states to the machine, and a description that is never used anywhere.
vars 
A dictionary containing variables (as strings, the keys of that dictionary), and init values for those variables. These variables are used with the state actions and the get(string variable) and set(string variable, object value) methods of the machine class. When a specific state doesn't apply, or you need a variable to change based on the progress with a given path. The sex speed variable is assumed to be used only for setting the speed of the animation for sex scenes.

The machine class defines a lot of useful methods:

set_priority(int priority) 
Set the priority of the machine. Currently used to display the hints on the phone. A machine with a priority of 1 or more will show up in the phone. Later, this may be used to sort quests into main quests and side quests.
property button_dialogue 
Return the button dialogue for that machine (machine name + _button_dialogue), used in the TalkTo screen action.
image, show, say, and hide 
Now defunct methods.
property progress 
Return an integer that is the progress out of a 100%.
add_action(*actions) 
Add a machine action to this machine.
set_state(State state, bool null_delay=False) 
Revert the machine to init, then advance the machine until it is in the state state. If null_delay is True, set the delay of the state reached to 0.
machine_trigger 
Trigger for machine actions.
trigger(Trigger trigger, bool noactions=False) 
Trigger the machine to pass onto the next state. If noactions is True, don't process the actions.
add(State* states) 
Add the states to the machine.
get(string var) 
Get the machine variable var.
set(string var, object value) 
Set the machine variable var.
get_state() 
Return the state the machine is in.
property where 
Compute where the machine should be based on her default location, time of day, day of the week, forced location and if it's forced or not for that time of day. Return a location.
is_state(State* states) 
Return boolean if the machine is in any of the provided states.
between_states(State stateBegin, State* statesEnd) 
Return boolean if the machine is between stateBegin and any of the statesEnd (non‐inclusive).
finished_state(State* states) 
Return boolean if the machine has finished any of the states provided.

State specific

You may want to add a delay to state creation by using the delay optional argument. That delay is the number of days until that state is effectively reached once the trigger has been "pulled".

When linking states together, you may want to add state actions to be executed when the state is triggered. Those actions are:

['set','flag_1'] 
Set the value of flag_1 to True.
['clear','flag_1'] 
Set the value of flag_1 to False.
['toggle','flag_1'] 
Toggle the value of flag_1 between True and False.
['assign',['v1',100]] 
Set the value of v1 to 100.
['inc','v1'] 
Increase the value of v1 by 1.
['dec','v1'] 
Decrease the value of v1 by 1.
['triggeronzero':['v1',T_a_trigger]] 
Set v1 -= 1, and fire the trigger T_a_trigger if v1 is less than or equal to 0.
['trigger',T_a_trigger] 
Fire the trigger T_a_trigger.
['call','label'] 
Make a Ren'Py call to label. Label MUST return.
['location', [machine, {"tod":tod, "place":place}]] 
Set the forced location for the machine to place (moves the non‐player character).
tod is 1‐indexed (1 is morning, 2 is afternoon, 3 is evening, 4 is late night).
['force', [machine, {"tod": list or int, "flag": 4-list or bool}]] 
Say if the location is forced at tod or sets force flags according to the 4-list provided.
['unforce', None/machine] 
Reset the locations for machine or the machine specified forced.
['exec', callable] 
Call the callable function or method.
['exec', [callable, *args]] 
Call the callable function or method and pass in the arguments args specified.
['condition', [condition_string, actions_list_true, actions_list_false, (optional) machine]] 
Execute the actions in actions_list_true if condition_string evaluates to True, otherwise executes actions_list_false. Conditions lists are assumed to be state actions.
['action', [target_machine, action, target]] 
Execute the state action on another machine.
['setdefaultloc', [[Location, Location, Location, Location]]] 
Set the default locations for the current machine.
The argument is in the same format as the default_loc argument in the machine constructor (1x4, 2x4 or 7x4 matrices).
['setoutfit', [location, outfit]] 
Set the outfit for that location. outfit may be either a string, or a 1x4, 2x4, 7x4 array of strings (similar to the locations).
['setnaked', True/False] 
Set is_naked attribute of the outfit manager to True/False for the current machine.
['setdefaultoutfit', [outfit, {'tod':tod, 'dow':dow}]] 
Set the default outfit for the current machine.
tod and dow can be omitted. outfit is a required argument, can be a string or a 1x4, 2x4, 7x4 matrix.
If tod and dow are omitted, outfit cannot be a matrix, but only a string. A workaround solution exists by passing the {"tod":None, "dow":None} dictionary.

Editing an FSM

Editing an existing Finite State Machine is as simple as calling the clear() method of the state you want to clear. It takes one argument, cleardelay, which defaults to False. If cleardelay is True, then the delay of the state is cleared. If you don't want to edit the state, but just want to clear the delay, you can just set the State.delay attribute to 0 instead.

Once cleared, the state is unlinked to the FSM, which means that story will block at that state. It's up to you to link that state to the rest of the machine, with additional states in the middle for your code.

Using FSMs

Using FSMs is easy. In the location labels, the machine state can be tested with is_state(State* states) method. Multiple states may be passed in that method, as well as a list of states. If the machine is in any of the provided states, then the method returns True, and False otherwise. For convenience, similar methods can be used: between_states(State state1, State state2) returns True if the machine is in any state between state1 and state2 but is not in state state2; finished_state(State* states) returns True if the machine has finished any of the provided states.

To advance to the next state, trigger(Trigger t) method of the machine class is used. It moves the machine to the next state associated with that trigger if the provided trigger is in the current state table, and doesn't do anything otherwise.

Example of FSM

init python:
    T_cassie_ban_mc = Trigger("ban mc")
    T_cassie_lift_ban = Trigger("lift ban")
    T_cassie_drowning = Trigger("drowning")
    T_cassie_end = Trigger("end")

label cassie_fsm_init:
    python:
        # Cassie's States
        S_cassie_start = State("start")
        S_cassie_ban_from_pool = State("ban from pool", "You should go to the pool at night...")
        S_cassie_caught_skinny_dipping = State("caught skinny dipping", "Cassie lifted your ban! Go for a swim!")
        S_cassie_medic_room = State("medic room", "Have fun in the medic room...")
        S_cassie_end = State("end")
        
        # Build out Cassie's FSM
        S_cassie_start.add(T_cassie_ban_mc, S_cassie_ban_from_pool)
        S_cassie_ban_from_pool.add(T_cassie_lift_ban, S_cassie_caught_skinny_dipping)
        S_cassie_caught_skinny_dipping.add(T_cassie_drowning, S_cassie_medic_room)
        S_cassie_medic_room.add(T_cassie_end, S_cassie_end, actions=["exec", A_drowning_in_pussy.unlock])
        
        M_cassie.add(S_cassie_start, S_cassie_ban_from_pool,
                     S_cassie_caught_skinny_dipping,
                     S_cassie_medic_room, S_cassie_end)
    return

label cassie_machine_init:
    python:
        M_cassie = Machine("cassie", default_loc=[[L_pool, L_pool, L_pool, L_NULL]],
                         vars={'sex speed': .3,
                               'had sex': False},
        )
    return

At init time, all the triggers are created. It's important that triggers be created at an init time of 0 or later, since the Trigger class is defined in an init -2 python block, and other parts of FSMs in an init -1 python block.

On starting the game, and on loading a save file or reloading the game, the states are created and linked together, but after the machine itself is initialized. Here is the order applies to the previous example:

init (triggers) > call (after_load/start) > call cassie_machine_init > call cassie_fsm_init

Explication: the machine is named M_cassie and is given the name cassie. This name is used in several places throughout the code to refer to that object. Furthermore, Cassie's default location (default_loc argument) specifies that the character is at the pool from morning to evening, and nowhere in the night. A dictionary is initialized as well to keep track of some other variables, like the sex animations speed, the previous sexual interactions with that character, the variables to trigger repeatable dialogues, counters, etc.
In the same label, you can set up the outfit system of that character, as seen in the next section, or add machine actions to the FSM. This is also the place to set the priority of the Finite State Machine.

The states are created and linked in the label cassie_fsm_init. In the given example, the last link has a state action attached to it, which means that on reaching the S_cassie_end state, the machine automatically calls the unlock method of the A_drowning_in_pussy achievement. In the same way, other state actions may be defined.

More examples:

S_diane_drunken_splur.add(T_diane_help_carry_to_bed, S_diane_get_cold_towel,
                                  actions = ["location", {"place": L_diane_bedroom},
                                             "force", {"tod": [0,1]},
                                             ]
                                  )
        S_diane_milking_help.add(T_diane_milking_malfunction_help, S_diane_debbie_evening_visit,
                                 actions = ["location", {"place": L_home_kitchen,
                                                         "condition": "not M_diane.is_set('first cucumber')",
                                                         },
                                            "force", {"tod": 2},
                                            ]
                                 )
S_diane_look_in_kitchen.add(T_diane_search_kitchen, S_diane_seen_cucumber,
                                    actions = ["action", [M_player, "set", "jerk diane"]
                                               ]
                                    )
S_diane_fetch_pump.add(T_diane_found_pump, S_diane_delivery_2_task,
                               actions = ["setdefaultloc", [[L_diane_shed, L_diane_shed, L_diane_shed, L_diane_bedroom]]]
                               )

Outfit manager

Every FSM has an outfit manager instance attached to it. This system is designed a bit like the Location system: each outfit has a specific time of day/day of week schedule for which the character is wearing that outfit. The manager also considers the current location and handles whether the character is naked or not, with the is_naked attribute.

To bind the schedule of an outfit to a specific location, use the method bind_outfit_to_location, with the location as first argument, and the outfit string/schedule as second argument.

An outfit schedule is very similar to a location schedule, it's a 1x4/2x4/7x4 matrix of strings, each of those strings being the outfit of a given pair of time of day/day of week.

Init arguments:

default_outfit 
Defaults to [["dressed", "dressed", "dressed", "dressed"]].
is_naked 
Defaults to False.

Methods and attributes:

default_outfit 
The outfit schedule used if the character is in a location that doesn't have a table of outfits for that character.
is_naked 
Boolean that tells if the machine is naked or not.
bind_outfit_to_location(Location location, object outfit_schedule) 
Bind the given outfit schedule to the given location. The outfit schedule may be a string, a 1x4 matrix, a 2x4 matrix or a 7x4 matrix of strings.
format_outfit_schedule(object outfit_schedule) 
Format the outfit schedule to a 7x4 matrix of strings. Used internally.
property get() 
Return the proper outfit given the current time of day, day of week, whether the machine is naked or not, and current location.
Below is a copy‐paste from Discord that will be rewritten later. It gets the point across though.

So basically how the new outfit system works you have to setup the outfit manager. The outfit manager has one method called bind_outfit_to_location that takes 2 arguments : location, a location object, and outfit, which can be an outfit string or an outfit schedule, i.e. a matrix just like the locations) so what you do is use that method to create basically a map of outfits to use in certain conditions moreover, outfits can be set with a simple state action, which takes care of calling the bind_outfit_to_location method also, now, to get the outfit, it's as simple as calling M_diane.outfit.get (without any parentheses, get is a property of the outfit manager) the is_naked variable has also been moved to the outfit manager, because it's cleaner

instead of M_diane.get_naked_str, you use M_diane.outfit.get instead of doing M_diane.outfit = "whatever" you must configure the outfit manager M_diane.outfit.bind_outfit_to_location(L_home_livingroom, "casual") if you want more granularity, you can do this M_diane.outfit.bind_outfit_to_location(L_home_livingroom, [["dressed", "dressed", "casual", "casual"]]) you can even set that matrix to bean individual outfit for each time of day, each day of the week as for the state action, there is setnaked and setoutfit setnaked will set the machine to be naked or not, thing you can also do with M_diane.outfit.is_naked = True / False True /False not True over False, it's not a division and setoutfit just calls bind_outfit_to_location method with the two arguments you specify, like so actions=["setoutfit", [L_home_livingroom, "casual"]] the Machine.outfit.get property works like that:

if the machine is naked
    return "naked"
otherwise if the player is in a location the outfit manager is not bound to
    if the outfit to be returned is "naked", set the is_naked attribute to True, and False otherwise
    return default_outfit for that day of week and time of day
otherwise
    if the outfit to be returned is "naked", set the is_naked attribute to True, and False otherwise
    return outfit for that location at that day of week and time of day

Use del M_diane.outfit.outfits[L_home_livingroom] to revert back to the default if needed.

Pregnancy manager

Locations

Locations handle all the locations in the game. They are represented as a tree, with the possibility of multiple parents (like Smith's Bedroom, which has the front yard and the hallway as its parents). A required attribute is the location name.

Creating a location

Locations are easy to create. It's as simple as instantiating the Location class, and providing a name for that location to the constructor (which is the only required argument). Locations are mutable, so they should be instantiated in a modname_locations_init label.

Furthermore, a locations has several optional arguments:

name 
The name for that location, as can be seen in the top‐left corner of the screen. It's also the way to find and call the relevant location screen, as well as the location label.
unlock_popup 
The name of a Ren'Py‐defined displayable for the popup that should show up when the location is unlocked.
background 
The name of the background used for that location. The background name must follow several conventions to properly work:
  • Must be in the folder images/backgrounds/
  • Name must start with location_
  • Name must end with _day.jpg, _evening.jpg or _night.jpg, respectively for day, evening or night background.
  • For Halloween or Christmas backgrounds, the strings _halloween and _christmas must be added before the time of day code. This will allow the game to find relevant backgrounds for the time period.
Whatever is leftover should be provided in the background argument of the constructor. The full file path will be constructed by the background (resp. background_blur) properties.
parents 
Either a list of location or a single location instance. Provide the parents of that location. If left empty, the location is assumed to be the root of the tree. The root should always be L_map (or L_NULL, but L_NULL should not have children).
locked 
Defaults to False. Whether that location should be initially locked, and inaccessible at the beginning of the game.
label 
(to be deprecated) The label name for that location. formatted_name property will be used later on.

Example:

L_diane_barn = Location("Diane's Barn", unlock_popup="popup_diane_barn", background="barn_frontyard", parents=L_map, locked=True)

This code defines a location named "Diane's Barn" (formatted name: dianes_barn), child of L_map, that shows popup_diane_barn on unlock, and that is initially locked. The background is set as barn_frontyard, which means the game looks for files named backgrounds/location_barn_frontyard_day.jpg or backgrounds/location_barn_frontyard_night.jpg for instance.

User‐defined screen actions

The screen actions are specific to Summertime Saga and should be used to keep the flow consistent.

MoveTo

This action expects a location to be passed. It hides the current screen, moves the player to that location, and calls the corresponding screen as well as jumps to the location label.

BuyItem

This action expects an item, or item identifier string to be passed to it. When activated, buys the item, and shows the appropriate failing popups should the transaction fail. Optionally, you may add a callback label with the callback_label optional argument. If the transaction succeeds, the game then calls that label. Useful if you want some story element to trigger after buying an item.

TalkTo

This action is used to talk to the character. It hides the screen and start the conversation with the given character. It expects a machine instance, or a string to identify it, in which case it attempts to find the machine in the store.machines dictionary.

ClearPersistent

This action resets all persistent data (cookie jar, time spent playing, achievements etc). No arguments expected.

GetItem

Ths action gets the item, and attempts to show the corresponding popup. No arguments required.

JSON Data

Items and inventory management

The inventory manager is fully automatic, but you may want to add some items to the game. Items are stored in items.json file located in scripts/data/folder.

Example:

"birth_control_pills": {
    "id": "173",
    "name": "{b}Birth Control Pills:{/b}",
    "cost": "0",
    "image": "objects/item_pills3.png",
    "description": "Makes you temporarily sterile.",
    "closeup": "",
    "dialogue_label": "birth_control_pills",
    "popup_image": ""
}

In order:

  • birth_control_pills: the item identifier.
  • id: a numeric id. Unused at this moment.
  • name: the item name, as seen in the inventory.
  • cost: the item cost. It's cast as an integer, and prevents the player from picking up the item if he doesn't have sufficient money.
  • image: the item miniature image, as seen in the inventory.
  • description: the item description, as seen in the inventory.
  • closeup: the item close‐up image, if there is one.
  • dialogue_label: the item dialogue label. It's triggered if it exists, on clicking the item. The label should always return, and take an item argument.
  • popup_image: the item popup image. It's displayed when first acquiring the item, leave the string empty if there is none.

Text messages

Text messages are stored in this format in text_messages.json file. Once defined there, you can use player.receive_message(message_id) for the player to receive the message.

Example:

"mia02": {
    "sender": "mia",
    "content_preview": "We can't find {b}my dad{/b}...",
    "content": "We can't find {b}my dad{/b}...\nCan you come help us please?",
    "image": "cellphone/cellphone_text_mia01.png"
}

In order:

  • mia02: the message identifier. Must be unique. Message identifiers ending in _pregnancy or _pregnancy_labor are reserved for the pregnancy system messages.
  • sender: the name of the machine that sent this message.
  • content_preview: the preview text displayed on the phone main screen.
  • content: the actual message displayed when clicking the message in the phone.
  • image: the image used as a "profile picture on the phone.

Achievements

Achievements are defined in achievements.json file.

Example:

"angler": {
    "id": 1,
    "name": "The Angler",
    "description": "Catch one of every type of fish.",
    "hidden": false,
    "enabled": true,
    "image": "achievements/cellphone_achieve_01.png"
}

In order:

  • angler: the achievement identifier. Must be unique. The identifier is used to name the achievement variable. Dashes are replaced with underscores. All achievements are prefixed with "A_".
  • id: a numeric id. Unused.
  • name: the achievement's name.
  • description: the achievement's description. New lines are inserted every 30 characters, words are not split in the middle.
  • hidden: whether it's a secret achievement or not.
  • enabled: if the achievement can be achieved.
  • image: the icon for this achievement.

Dialogues

The dialogues.json file is used for the dialogue lines written by the higher tier contributors of DarkCookie's Patreon.

Key binding

This code is not yet implemented.

This file lists the default key bindings used by the minigames.

Furnishings

This code is not yet implemented.

This file will be similar to items.json. At the moment, no furnishings have been implemented. Thet will be available for the beach house location and will include an upgrade system.

Game manager class

The game manager class handles everything that is related to the gameplay itself, but is not planned to be extendable by mods. Its methods and attributes are still usable and should be used for your mod.

language 
Set the language of the game which is used for translations. Defaults to "en" for English with other languages in the game untranslated.
cheat_mode 
Return True if the game is currently in cheat mode (thus allowing minigames to be skipped).
CA_FILE 
Path to a certification file used to enable requests to websites. Used only if the player has checked the option "allow internet connection".
lock_ui() 
Lock the user interface.
unlock_ui() 
Unlock the user interface.
ui_locked() 
Return whether the user interface is locked or not (i.e. grayed‐out).
dialog_select(string label_name) 
Classmethod that chooses a label based on its name and the language class attribute. To be used to split dialogues and logic, and also allows your mod to be easily translated.
choose_label(string template) 
Classmethod that chooses a label at random that matches the template passed in the arguments.
main() 
Method that is to be called at the end of every label the player jumps to (and not called to). It calls the player's location screen, and checks for achievements and other stuff. This would be the only method expandable upon. It also clears the return stack, so that traceback are not indigestible. It may take two arguments, clear_return_stack to enable or not return stack clearing, and location, to call the screen of another location than the player's currently in.
is_christmas() 
Classmethods that checks if the system clock matches Christmas.
is_halloween() 
Classmethods that checks if the system clock matches Halloween.

Player class

The player class handles everything related to the player: the inventory, grades, vehicle level and stats. Notable methods:

receive_message(string message_id) 
Check if the player has received the given text message on the phone. Also sets up the alert icon on the user interface.
has_item(string* items) 
Check if the player has any of the items provided at this moment.
has_picked_up_item(string* items) 
Check if the player has ever picked up any of the items provided.
get_item(string item) 
Get the item if the price of the item doesn't exceed the amount of the player's money.
remove_item(string item) 
Remove an item by its string id.
get_money(int money) 
Add money to the player.
spend_money(int money) 
Subtract money from the player.
has_required_str(int min_str) 
Check if the player has the required strength. Similar method exist for int, chr and dex.
go_to(Location location) 
Go to the given location.
go_to_previous() 
Go to the first parent location of the current location.
increase_str(int amount) 
Increase the strength by amount. Defaults to 1. Similar method exist for int, chr and dex.

Miscellaneous functions and classes

KeepRefs 
A class used everywhere to make sure to keep a reference to any object instantiated, making sure is checks are kept correct.
get_instances() 
Classmethod to get a generator of all the instances of this class subclass.
LastUpdatedOrderedDict 
A dictionary‐like structure that keeps its order, and store its items in the order the keys were last added (and not updated). This is a subclass of Python's OrderedDict from the collections package.
listvalues 
Return a list of all the values of this dictionary.
listkeys 
Return a list of all the keys of this dictionary.
lastkey 
Return the last key added to this dictionary.
lastvalue 
Return the value of the last key added to this dictionary.
isempty 
Return whether the dictionary is empty.
format_seconds_to_dhm(int seconds) 
Return a formatted string in the form (x)d (y)h (z)m from the number of seconds passed in the arguments.
insert_newlines(string string_to_format, int every) 
Return a new string based on the passed in string, with newlines inserted every every character. every defaults to 30. Differs from splice_string() in that it is not cut a word in the middle if possible. splice_string() inserts a newline every every characters without question. insert_newline() is much safer as it will not cut a variable substitution, but is much slower than splice_string().
text_identity(string text) 
Return unmodified text, useful for config.say_menu_text_filter if it is None.
replace_bracket(string text) 
Return text without the [ and ] characters (Ren'Py variable formatting syntax).
gauss(float mean, float deviation, float lower, float upper) 
Return a random integer number in a normal distribution, clamped between lower and upper.
get_angle_speeds(int angle_width, Iterator angle_range, Iterator speed_range) 
Return two lists – true angles and false angles – which are lists of tuples (initial_angle, initial_speed) for which the result land in or out of the angle_width. Used in Pregnancy minigame and Spin the Bottle minigame.
safe_parse_dict(dict dct, object* keys, object default=None, list list_to_append=None) 
Return the content of the dictionary at keys keys, subscribed in order. If a KeyError exception is raised, and a default is provided, then will return that default object. Any number of keys can be passed up to 253 (hard limit in CPython). Additionally, you can pass in a list to append the name of the missing keys of the dictionary to.

Examples:

safe_parse_dict({"a":{"b":2}}, "a", "c", default="default return value")
# returns "default return value"
safe_parse_dict({"a":{"b":2}}, "a", "b", default="default return value")
# returns 2
safe_parse_dict({"a":{"b":2}}, "a", "b", "default return value")
# prints "Extra positional argument passed, is default properly named in the arguments?" and returns 2
safe_parse_dict({"a":{"b":2}}, "a", "c", list_to_append=missing_keys)
# appends "c" to list missing keys and returns None. If a default argument is passed, will return default

Hooking into the game

This feature is incomplete as of version 0.18.0, the ModManager class is present, but no hooking of any kind can be done at the moment.

Registration and enabling of the mod

In an init -9 python or later, use the class method "register" of the ModManager class to register your mod to the game. This registration makes the mod show up in the (upcoming) Mods menu on the main menu so the players have the choice to enable or disable the mod for the game.

init python:
    ModManager.register("ikarumod")

A manifest file named modname_manifest.json must be added in the scripts/data folder.

Manifest file

The manifest file details in which labels the mod should hook into the game, and which screens. It also defines the name of the main function you wish to use to hook into the game.main() function, if any.

Preferred mod load order

Adding a key named load_order to the manifest will allow your mod to be loaded after a specific amount of mods, or before.
The value of this key must be a string leading with either >, < or = followed by an integer. Additionally, the values inf and -inf can be used to set the load order as last, and absolutely first. If several mods are defined with -inf in load_order, then a random order is chosen. The default value is inf, which means the mods are added last to the list in no particular order.

Main function name

This key should be a string containing the name of the main function of your mod. The function is searched for ini the globals() of the game (global namespace)

Init label name

This key should give the name of a label your mod uses at init time, which means after the game is fully initialized, either at the start of the game or after the load of the game.
This label is called in a new context, and it must return, otherwise other mods won't be loaded

Adding to the game's json files

Keys in the manifest named items, achievements and text_messages can be used to add data to the game's json files. Each of these keys expects a full json dictionary formatted in the same way as their respective models.

Example of a manifest

{
    "name":"ikarumod",
    "version": "0.1.0",
    "load_order": ">3",
    "main_function_name": "ikarumod_main",
    "init_label_name":"ikarumod_init_label",
    "text_filter":"ikarumod_text_filter",
    "items": {
        "item1":{
            ...
        },
        "item2":{
            ...
        }
    },
    "text_messages":{
        "text_message1":{
            ...
        }
    },
    "screen_hooks":{
        "upstairs_bedroom":"upstairs_bedroom_ikarumod",
        "bedroom":"bedroom_ikarumod"
    },
    "label_hooks":{
        "bedroom":"bedroom_ikarumod"
    },
    "achievements":{
        "angler-2"{
            ...
        }
    }
}

Mod init order

Mods are assumed to be in an initial random order.

For every mod that is enabled, create a Mod instance with that mod's name, parse the load order from the manifest, then insert that mod in the ModManager.mods list in the proper position. Then, for every mod in the ModManager.mods list, call their init label, if defined. Finally, update the game's stores (ie achievements, items and text_messages) with every mod's data. Updates overwrite the keys, so the load order can be used to overwrite the game's (although ill‐advised) or another mod's items/text_messages/achievements.

Text filter

The text filter key in the manifest allows you to create your own filter function without overwriting other mods. If undefined, this defaults to lambda text:text, otherwise the value of this key should be a string of the name of the function you wish to pass in as a text filter. If the function cannot be found in the global namespace (i.e. the globals() dictionary), then a ModLoaderError("No Function named {text_filter} found in the global namespace. Is it defined properly?") exception will be raised.

Screens

This code is not yet implemented.

Create your screens with the following convention : modname + _ + in‐game screen name (the Ren'Py definition name). Screens are being included into the main game screens with the use statement. If you wish to add new locations, you have to define a screen for it, in which case, you can inspire yourself with the existing screens in the game.
To add the proper background, start with the statement add player.location.background, which automatically shows the proper background according to the time of day/period of the year. You can then add imagebuttons. Please refer to the user‐defined screen actions for more information on which screen actions the game defines.

Labels

This code is not yet implemented.

Only "main" labels can be hooked into. Those are labels that end in $ game.main().

Main function

This code is not yet implemented.

To hook into the main function, you must register your main function to the ModManager.

init python:
    ModManager.register_main(ikarumod_main)

In this example, ikarumod_main is assumed to be a callable, which should be a python function. The function is called with no arguments at the end of game.main() method.

Hooking into the main function is usually useful for code you want executed every time the game returns to a main screen, i.e. at the end of location labels for instance. This is where you can repeatedly check if the condition for an achievement has been fulfilled. If the provided function is not a callable, a ModLoaderError exception will be raised.

Imported modules and directory structure

Third‐party modules

Platform agnostic

  • os
  • pygame
  • sys
  • from time : time, clock
  • from copy : copy, deepcopy
  • datetime
  • re
  • random
  • math
  • from collections : defaultdict, OrderedDict and Counter
  • weakref
  • codecs
  • hashlib
  • json
  • itertools
  • operator
  • textwrap
  • deuces

Desktop builds

  • certifi
  • requests

Mobile builds

  • android
  • pyjnius

Directory structure

  • game
    • audio: SFX and musics
    • fonts: fonts for the game.
    • images
      • achievements: achievement‐related images.
      • cookie_jar: cookie jar buttons, popups and thumbnails.
      • backgrounds: backgrounds and close‐ups.
      • boxes: popups and general purpose buttons (like the go back button).
      • buttons: most minigame assets, and menu buttons.
      • cellphone: cellphone images assets.
      • characters: character poses. One folder per character.
      • map: map locations and map background.
      • objects: character buttons, item buttons, doors, etc.
      • vfx: special visual effects (like the rain in roxxy's trailing scene).
    • python-packages: third party python modules.
    • scripts
      • characters: one folder for each character, containing an fsm file, a character.rpy file for miscellaneous stuff, and a layeredimage definition file. May contain a file for the character's button and the according dialogues.
      • core: core files are put there, mostly what has been documented in the Modding API section of this manifesto.
      • data: JSON files that contain data about the game. Items, achievements, keymap or text messages are defined here.
      • defines: general image definitions, transforms, etc.
      • locations: one folder for every location, sorted in a tree‐like structure. Each location has a main file, a screen file and a dialogues file.
      • minigames: one folder for every minigame, the minigame dialogues and screen files are in that folder.
      • script.rpy
      • pregnancy_announcements.rpy
    • changelog.txt
    • pledge_list.txt

Translating the game

Label calling in the game

The game offers a function in the Game class to select different dialogues based on the language class attribute defined there. To change that attribute, it's just a matter of writing this piece of code in a separate ".rpy" file.

init 1 python:
    Game.language = "es" # for Spanish for instance, "fr" for French, etc

Every time a dialogue is called, the game looks for the label name and the language string at the end. For instance, the label bank_liu_account_info has the English version in; and to overwrite that dialogue, you'd have bank_liu_account_info_fr or bank_liu_account_info_es depending on the value of the language string.

Any dialogue can be translated with this method. Keeping a consistent directory structure is recommended, because of the large number of dialogues in the game. You also have to copy over the posing. For your convenience, every dialogue label is stored in a dialogues.rpy file for that location. Just copy the file and edit the dialogue and the label name.

Cutscenes and minigame instructions

You can't edit the cutscenes directly. Well, you could, but you shouldn't! Using the config.say_menu_text_filter variable is the best way. Just register a function to that variable with one argument, text, which contains the text of the displayable. Then edit the text how you see fit.

Example of translation:

init 10 python:
    fr_translations = {"Using the key and stool, I was able to get into our attic.\nI had never been up there before.\nI was filled with excitement wondering what treasures {b}[deb_name]{/b} and dad had stashed away.": "En utilisant la clé et le tabouret, je pus aller dans le grenier.\nJe n'y avais jamais été auparavant.\nUn sentiment d'excitation m'envahissait alors que je me demandais quels trésors {b}[deb_name]{/b} et papa avaient caché là-haut."}

    def fr_text_filter(text):
        if text in fr_translations.keys():
            return fr_translations[text]
        else:
            return text
    
    config.say_menu_text_filter = fr_text_filter

Keep in mind however that Ren'Py engine doesn't handle large dictionaries. elif statements can be used to split the content into several dictionaries if necessary.

Example:

def fr_text_filter(text):
    if text in fr_translations_1.keys():
        return fr_translations_1[text]
    elif text in fr_translations_2.keys():
        return fr_translations_2[text]
    else:
        return text

In the future, registering to config.say_menu_text_filter variable will be done with the += assignment, to allow several mods to subscribe to it. Mod load order will apply.

Location names

In an init 1 python (or later) block, you can set the display name of any location object in the game. This allows renaming and translation of any game location, thus displaying that name in relevant parts of the user interface.

Example:

init -1 python:
    L_map.display_name = "New Map Name"