Talk:Print

From Kolmafia
Revision as of 17:18, 16 July 2010 by imported>Heeheehee
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Re: "How does color selection work when the specified color name / entity is invalid?"
It returns with the default, black. That is, unless '> ash print("Hello world!","apple-orange");' returns a color that looks really close to black. (No, I'm not color-blind. It returns black. Even for faulty entities, like "42".)
Edit: Apparently it doesn't recognize somewhat uncommon colors, like "lavender". --Heeheehee 06:47, 10 March 2010 (UTC)

That's true for named colors, but for numbers it appears to interpret some part of the number and chop the rest off; it was just a bit more than I wanted to look up in the moment. For instance, if you supply "#ff00000" (which is red with an extra 0), it used red; the "#" appears to make it choose the first 6 digits. However, you can leave off the "#" and it still works as expected with a 6-digit or 3-digit number; but anything else seems to be a weird substring match for which I can't find the logic.--StDoodle 13:26, 10 March 2010 (UTC)


Okay. I think I've fully worked out the logic for the numbers.

  1. If there's a # in front, take the first 6 digits that follow.
  2. If length = 6, skip to the last step.
  3. Remove all zeroes in the front of the string (e.g. "#00 00 F0 00 00" becomes "F0 00 00").
  4. If length > 7, replace the whole thing with "#00 00 00" (i.e. black).
  5. If length = 7, remove the first character (e.g. the red displayed from "#ff0 00 00" is actually "#f0 00 00").
  6. If length < 6, add zeroes to the front until length = 6 (e.g. "#42" becomes "#00 00 42", which looks pretty close to black -- hence my earlier misunderstanding).
  7. Pass the resultant value as your color.
Perhaps KoLmafia uses some variant of the color parsing/interpreting scheme used in CSS, as it apparently supports the syntax "rgb(148, 0, 211)" and "rgb(148 0 211)". We would need to look at the source code to confirm this... --PhilmASTErpLus 17:00, 16 July 2010 (UTC)
IIRC, it passes it directly to HTML -- print(a,b) is functionally equivalent to print_html("<font color='"+b+"'>"+a+"</font>"). --Heeheehee 17:18, 16 July 2010 (UTC)

This ASH function might help with understanding:

 string color (string input) {
    if(index_of(input, "#" && length(input)>6) == 0) return substring(input, 0, 6);
    if(length(input) == 6) return input;
    while(index_of(input, "0") == 0) input = substring(input, 1);
    if(length(input)>7) return "000000";
    if(length(input)==7) return substring(input, 1);
    while(length<6) input = "0" + input;
    return input;
 }

(is that too much string manipulation?) --Heeheehee 02:44, 14 March 2010 (UTC)

Re: the former RFI (echoing print statements to the adventuring status line)

I was referring to the version of such that is also shown on the login / logout screen, which I feel is relevant as there isn't a good way to give feedback on a logout script otherwise (currently, I have a logout script that uses a user_confirm() for the clunky purpose of getting around this). If there's a way I'm unaware of to deal with this, that would be fine; but otherwise I'd like to know if print() could once again place text there, or if I'm mis-remembering. --StDoodle (#1059825) 00:53, 30 April 2010 (UTC)

Ah. I can see why you'd want that. Post it in a feature request on the mafia forums. That's the proper place for it. Then if your desire is granted we can update this page. :D --Bale 02:07, 30 April 2010 (UTC)