ifmapper 0.9.8 → 0.9.9

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- <title>P�gina nueva 0</title>
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-
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- <p align="center"><b><font color="#000080"><u><font size="5">Interactive</font><font size="5">
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- Fiction Mapper (IFMapper)<br>
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- </font></u><font size="5">by Gonzalo Garramu�o</font></font></b></p>
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- <p align="center"><b><u><font size="4" color="#000080">User's</font><font size="4" color="#000080">
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- Manual</font></u></b></p>
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- <ol>
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- <li><a href="#Introduction">Introduction </a>
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- <ul>
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- <li><a href="#What are Interactive Fiction Games">What are Interactive
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- Fiction Games?</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#What is IFMapper">What is IFMapper?</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Features of IFMapper">Features of IFMapper</a><br>
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- &nbsp;</li>
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- </ul>
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- </li>
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- <li><a href="#Installation">Installation</a><ul>
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- <li><a href="#What youll need">What you'll need</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Where to get the stuff">Where to get the stuff</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Installing from a zip file">Installing from a zip file</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Installing or Upgrading using rubygems">Installing or
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- Upgrading using rubygems</a><br>
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- &nbsp;</li>
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- </ul>
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- </li>
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- <li><a href="#Starting IFMapper">Starting IFMapper</a><br>
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- &nbsp;</li>
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- <li><a href="#Using IFMapper">Using IFMapper</a><ul>
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- <li><a href="#The Interface">The Interface</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Navigation">Navigation</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Creating Locations">Creating Locations</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Creating Connections">Creating Connections</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Deleting Rooms or Connections">Deleting Rooms and Connections</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Complex Connections">Creating Complex Connections</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Moving Rooms in Map">Moving Rooms Around</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Dealing with Multiple Sections">Dealing with Multiple Sections</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Searching">Searching </a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Preferences">Preferences </a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Saving and Loading Maps">Saving and Loading Maps</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Saving and Loading Maps">Locking Maps</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Mapping Games from Transcripts (Automapping)">Automatically
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- Creating Maps from Transcripts (Automapping)</a><ul>
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- <li><a href="#How does the automapper distinguish locations">How does
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- Automapping work</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Limitations on Automapping">Limitations on Automapping</a><br>
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- &nbsp;</li>
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- </ul>
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- </li>
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- </ul>
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- </li>
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- <li><a href="#Creating a new Inform/TADS3 game">Creating a new game for TADS3
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- or Inform</a><br>
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- &nbsp;</li>
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- <li><a href="#Appendix">Appendix</a><ul>
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- <li>
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- <a href="#I am new to Interactive Fiction. What games would you recommend">I
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- am new to Interactive Fiction.&nbsp; What games would you recommend?</a></li>
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- <li><a href="#Contacting the Author">Contacting the Author</a></li>
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- </ul>
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- </li>
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- </ol>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><font size="5" color="#000080"><a name="Introduction">Introduction</a></font></b></p>
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- <p><b><a name="What are Interactive Fiction Games"></a>What are Interactive
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- Fiction Games?</b></p>
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- <p>These are adventure games, which usually contain little or no graphics but
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- use prose to describe locations, events and, hopefully, a good story.&nbsp; The
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- first interactive fiction game was created in the late 1970s and was known as
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- Adventure (or. Colossal Cave), albeit the genre became widely popular and
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- developed most of its conventions with the creation of Infocom in the 1980s.<br>
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- If you have never played an interactive fiction game, perhaps the best
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- comparison is that they are a grown-up version of &quot;Dungeons and Dragons&quot; or the
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- &quot;Choose Your Own Adventure&quot; series of children's books.&nbsp; <br>
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- Still, just like any good novel, interactive fiction has evolved into all sorts
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- of different styles, genres, and level of interactivity.&nbsp; And you can find
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- adventures being developed today in a lot of languages like English, Spanish,
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- Italian, German, etc.&nbsp; See the section:&nbsp; &quot;I am new to Interactive
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- Fiction.&nbsp; What games would you recommend?&quot;</p>
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- <p><b><a name="What is IFMapper"></a>What is IFMapper?</b><br>
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- <br>
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- IFMapper is a tool for easily mapping these interactive fiction games.&nbsp; As
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- these games rely mainly on text descriptions and often use compass directions
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- for navigation around the game world, it is relatively easy to get lost.&nbsp;
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- In the old days, players would use grid paper to draw their maps, using boxes
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- and lines to show each location and its exits.&nbsp; IFMapper is basically, the
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- 21st century version of that old practice.<br>
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- Albeit IFMapper is mainly a mapping tool, it can also be used as a design tool
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- in the early stages of development of new games (for either Inform6 or TADS3).</p>
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- <p><b><a name="Features of IFMapper">Features of IFMapper</a></b></p>
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- <ul>
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- <li>Multiplatform</li>
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- <li>Very simple click interface</li>
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- <li>Complex paths supported (paths that loop on themselves or connect two
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- remote nodes)</li>
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- <li>Automatic connection of rooms thru complex paths using an A* algorithm</li>
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- <li>Mousewheel support for zooming in/out</li>
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- <li>Middle mouse scrolling</li>
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- <li>Rooms can have objects and tasks listed</li>
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- <li>Automatic numbering of rooms</li>
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- <li>Multiple map editing</li>
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- <li>Ability to easily move rooms in map with arrow keys</li>
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- <li>Written in a simple and great scripting language (Ruby)</li>
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- <li>Acrobat PDF output</li>
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- <li>Can read and save IFM files</li>
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- <li>Can read and save Inform/TADS3 source code files</li>
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- <li>Locking of maps</li>
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- <li>Search for keywords in room names, objects or tasks</li>
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- <li>Can automap games from Infocom-like transcripts, even while you play them</li>
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- <li>Free<br>
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- &nbsp;</li>
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- </ul>
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- <p><b><font size="5" color="#000080"><a name="Installation">Installation</a></font></b></p>
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- <p><b><a name="What youll need">What you'll need</a></b></p>
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- <p>In order to use IFMapper, you need to have the Ruby scripting language
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- installed and FXRuby.&nbsp; IFMapper was originally developed to run under
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- ruby1.8 and FXRuby1.2, but it will probably be compatible with later versions,
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- too.<br>
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- To print PDF documents, you will also need Austin Ziegler's PDF::Writer module.</p>
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- <p><b><a name="Where to get the stuff">Where to get the stuff</a></b></p>
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- <p>If your platform is Windows, your best bet is to download the One-Click Ruby
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- Installer from:<br>
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- <a href="http://rubyforge.org/projects/rubyinstaller/">
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- http://rubyforge.org/projects/rubyinstaller/</a></p>
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- <p>This installer comes with the latest stable ruby version and also with the
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- latest fxruby.&nbsp; It also comes with rubygems (see rubygems later).</p>
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- <p>If your platform is Linux or OSX, you may need to compile ruby from source
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- (note that OSX currently comes with ruby pre-installed, but a pretty old version),
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- albeit you might want to surf the web or do a search for some binaries first, so
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- you save yourself the hassle.&nbsp; For details on compiling ruby, see:</p>
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- <p><a href="http://www.rubygarden.org/ruby?RubyOnMacintosh">
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- http://www.rubygarden.org/ruby?RubyOnMacintosh</a><br>
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- <a href="http://www.rubygarden.org/ruby?RubyOnLinux">
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- http://www.rubygarden.org/ruby?RubyOnLinux</a></p>
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- <p>After you have ruby up and running, you should then proceed to install fxruby.&nbsp;
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- You can do this by first installing rubygems (what I'd recomment) or by not
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- using it.&nbsp; If you want to use rubygems, proceed to the &quot;Using Rubygems&quot;
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- section.</p>
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- <p>FXRuby can be found at:<br>
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- <a href="http://www.fxruby.org">http://www.fxruby.org</a></p>
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- <p>After you have fxruby installed, you should then be able to install ifmapper.</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><a name="Installing from a zip file">Installing from a zip file</a></b></p>
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- <p>After you have ruby and fxruby properly installed, download the ifmapper zip
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- file from:</p>
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- <p><a href="http://rubyforge.org/projects/ifmapper">
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- http://rubyforge.org/projects/ifmapper</a></p>
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- <p>Use unzip, winzip or some other zip decompression tool to open the archive.&nbsp;
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- All files will be placed inside an IFmapper directory.&nbsp;&nbsp; You should be
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- ready to start IFMapper.</p>
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- <p>If you want to output PDF files from IFMapper, you will also need to install
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- the PDF::Writer library.&nbsp; You can do so using rubygems or by downloading
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- the PDF::Writer library from:</p>
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- <p><a href="http://rubyforge.org/projects/ruby-pdf/">
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- http://rubyforge.org/projects/ruby-pdf/</a></p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><a name="Installing or Upgrading using rubygems">Installing or Upgrading
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- using rubygems</a></b></p>
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- <p>Rubygems is a manager of ruby libraries that should help with automatically
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- installing any library dependencies that ifmapper may need.&nbsp; Rubygems comes
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- pre-installed with the One-Click Installer for Windows.&nbsp; For other
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- platforms, you can obtain it from:</p>
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- <p><a href="http://rubyforge.org/projects/rubygems/">
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- http://rubyforge.org/projects/rubygems/</a></p>
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- <p>Once rubygems is installed, you can then open a windows console or a shell
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- window and do:</p>
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- <p><font face="Courier New">&gt; gem install -r ifmapper</font></p>
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- <p>This will download the latest version of ifmapper, as well as all the
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- libraries needed for ifmapper to run (in case they are not installed on your
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- system).&nbsp; If you don't have fxruby installed, it will get installed for you.&nbsp;
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- On Unix systems, you will probably still need to compile it yourself.</p>
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- <p>IFmapper (and other libraries) will then be placed inside your ruby install
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- directory, like:<br>
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- <font face="Courier New">C:/ruby/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/ifmapper-{VERSION}</font></p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><font size="5" color="#000080"><a name="Starting IFMapper">Starting
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- IFMapper</a></font></b></p>
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- <p>Once installed, you can then run IFMapper by either clicking on the
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- IFMapper.rbw file inside the ifmapper directory or, invoking IFMapper.rbw from
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- any shell or console.</p>
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- <p>Assuming everything is installed properly, you should then see the IFMapper
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- window popup with an empty map.</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><font size="5" color="#000080"><a name="Using IFMapper">Using IFMapper</a></font></b></p>
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- <p><font size="4"><a name="The Interface">The Interface</a></font></p>
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- <p><img border="0" src="images/IFMapper_main.gif" width="800" height="600"></p>
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- <p>The IFMapper interface consists of a menu that allows you to access common
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- operations (open/save maps, change settings, etc), a toolbar with a similar
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- functionality, and one or more windows displaying a map canvas.</p>
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- <p>IFMapper allows you to edit multiple maps simultaneously.<br>
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- Each map can have multiple &quot;sections&quot;, so as to keep different parts of the
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- games organized. Note that these sections have nothing to do with how printing
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- is done and two or more sections could end up being printed <br>
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- together in a page or a single section may end up getting split into a multiple
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- page document once printed.</p>
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- <p>When you start IFMapper for the first time, you should be placed in an empty
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- map that shows a grid of where rooms and straight connections can be placed.<br>
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- &nbsp;</p>
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- <p><font size="4"><b><a name="Navigation">Navigation</a></b></font></p>
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- <p>Use your mouse for navigation. If your mouse supports a mousewheel, this can
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- be used for zooming in or out of the map easily.<br>
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- To pan around the map, use the <b>Middle Mouse Button</b> or, alternatively, <b>
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- ALT + Left Mouse Button</b> (These hotkeys mimic the behavior of Maya and 3dmax,
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- both popular 3d packages).&nbsp; You can also scroll the map using the
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- scrollbars around the canvas.<b><font size="4"><br>
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- &nbsp;</font></b></p>
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- <p><b><font size="4"><br>
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- <a name="Creating Locations">Creating Locations</a><br>
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- </font></b>
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- <img border="0" src="images/room_small.gif" align="right" width="342" height="377"><b><font size="4"><br>
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- </font></b>You create new Locations or Rooms in the map by just clicking on any
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- of those template boxes. The new location will then be given a default name and
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- settings ('New Location').<br>
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- Each room added will automatically receive a number, based on creation order.<br>
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- To modify the name and settings of a location, you can then double click on it
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- and a requester will pop up allowing you to do so.<br>
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- If you want the requester to pop up as soon as a new room is created, you can
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- turn on <b>Map-&gt;Options-&gt;Edit on Creation.</b><br>
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- This requester also has options to allow you to mark the room as in darkness and
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- to add a list of objects present in the room.<br>
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- As you play the game, you can also choose to list the tasks that you need to do
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- in the room to progress further (providing you some with a rudimentary walkthru/hint
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- functionality).<br>
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- This requester can be left open so as to quickly change from room to room.</p>
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- <p>Besides using the mouse, you can also use the numeric keypad with Num Lock on
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- and use the numbers from <b>1 to 9</b> to create a new room in the appropiate
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- direction.<br>
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- &nbsp;</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><font size="4"><br>
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- <a name="Creating Connections">Creating Connections</a></font></b></p>
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- <p>You can then create connections among rooms by clicking on the non-boxed
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- areas of the map. Depending on where exactly you click, a simple connection will
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- be made between two rooms.<br>
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- <br>
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- In its default configuration, you can also click to create a connection on an
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- area where no rooms yet exist. IFMapper will then create the missing rooms
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- automatically for you, in addition to the connection.<br>
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- <br>
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- Note that you can change the behavior of how nodes and connections are created
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- from the <b>Map-&gt;Options</b> menu:<br>
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- <b>Automatic Connection - </b>will create a connection to the previous room for
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- each new room you create.<b><br>
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- Create on Connection - </b>will allow you to add both the connection and the
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- missing rooms when you click on some connection area in the map.<br>
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- <img border="0" src="images/connection.gif" align="right" width="332" height="118"><br>
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- Connections can also be modified similarly to rooms, by clicking twice on them.
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- The connection requester allows you to specify the connection as a free, door,
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- locked or special connection.&nbsp; It also allows you to make the connection
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- travel in a single direction or in both directions.&nbsp; Finally, you can also
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- add text to the connections to indicate that connection takes you Up/Down or In/Out.</p>
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- <p>Changing the connection to<img border="5" src="images/connection_menu.gif" align="right" width="342" height="241">
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- be one way can also be done by just <br>
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- clicking on them several times, without opening the requester.<br>
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- <br>
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- Finally, selecting a connection and using the right mouse button gives&nbsp; you
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- access to a context-sensitive menu that allows you to flip the direction of a
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- connection or to shift the connection to some other exit in the room.</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><font size="4"><br>
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- <a name="Deleting Rooms or Connections">Deleting Rooms or Connections</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- To remove a room or connection, just select it by clicking on it with<br>
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- the left mouse button. Then, press the Delete or Backspace key.<br>
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- Note that there is currently no Undo, so deleted nodes or connections<br>
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- cannot be restored.<br>
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- <br>
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- <font size="4"><br>
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- <b><a name="Complex Connections">Complex Connections<img border="5" src="images/complex_connection.gif" align="right" width="338" height="308"></a></b></font><br>
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- <br>
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- A lot of text adventures have mazes with exits that lead nowhere and exits that
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- change direction from one room to the next. We refer to these as complex
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- connections.<br>
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- To create a complex connection, type the letter <b>'x'</b> or use the <b>Edit-&gt;Add
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- Complex Connection </b>menu option. Afterwards, click on the exit next to the
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- first room you want to connect and then click on<br>
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- the exit of the second room.<br>
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- If you want to get out of the add complex connection mode, just hit Esc at any
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- time.<br>
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- IFMapper will then try to calculate a path along the map to take you from your
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- first room to the second one. <br>
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- For a complex connection to happen, the path between those nodes has to be
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- 'free' of other rooms. IFMapper will also try to avoid inter-crossing
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- connections as much as it can, but will still allow them.<br>
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- To create exits that just loop onto themselves, you can do a complex connection
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- by clicking twice on the same exit or, you can just use<b> CTRL + Left Mouse
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- Button </b>without needing to go into the Complex Connection mode.<br>
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- <br>
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- <b><font size="4"><br>
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- <a name="Moving Rooms in Map">Moving Rooms in Map</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- When building large maps on complex games, you will probably run into the need
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- to shift nodes around. To do so, select on the nodes you want to move by <b>CTRL-LMB
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- </b>on them, and then use the arrow keys to shift the nodes one grid unit at a
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- time.<br>
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- You can also use <b>SHIFT-LMB</b> to drag a box around the rooms to select. <br>
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- If there are any simple or complex connections, IFMapper will keep recalculating
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- those connections on the fly as you move the nodes.<br>
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- Note that complex connections can sometimes 'fail'. In those cases, you will see
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- the complex connection become taut and tinted red.<br>
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- &nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><font size="4"><a name="Dealing with Multiple Sections">Dealing with
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- Multiple Sections</a></font></b></p>
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- <p>Some adventure games can be rather large and might be split into chapters.&nbsp;
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- In those cases, you may want to take advantage of using multiple sections in
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- your map.&nbsp; This will keep your map organized and may help you with printing
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- them also later on.</p>
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- <p>You can create and delete sections from the menu, in <b>Map-&gt;Sections-&gt;Create
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- Section</b> and <b>Map-&gt;Sections-&gt;Delete Section.</b></p>
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- <p>To move from one section to another, you can use the Arrows located in the
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- right section of the toolbar or <b>Map-&gt;Sections-&gt;Next/Previous Section.</b></p>
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- <p><br>
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- <br>
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- <b><font size="4"><a name="Searching">Searching</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- You can search for words in locations, objects, tasks or descriptions in the
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- current section or in the whole map, using regular expressions.<br>
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- The search is interactive, a la Emacs, meaning that as you type, the rooms that
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- match the search get hilited.<br>
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- The number of matches for the map and the section is display in the status bar.<br>
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- You can use the Next/Previous button to keep centering your view on each match (and
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- automatically moving thru sections if you are matching stuff in the whole map)<br>
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- <br>
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- <br>
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- <b><font size="4"><a name="Preferences">Preferences</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- IFMapper allows you to change and set preferences on a per map basis (colors,
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- editing options, etc). You can also save your preferences so that IFMapper will
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- boot with those settings in place for creating new maps.<br>
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- <br>
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- <br>
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- <font size="4"><b><a name="Saving and Loading Maps">Saving and Loading Maps</a></b></font></p>
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- <p>To save a map you are editing, you can go to <b>File-&gt;Save</b> or <b>File-&gt;Save
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- As</b>.&nbsp; The internal format of IFMapper's maps is the .map format, which
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- is binary format.&nbsp; This format saves all your map preferences as well as
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- all the connections and descriptions.<br>
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- To load a map, you can then use <b>File-&gt;Open</b>.&nbsp; Besides IFMapper's own
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- .map format, IFMapper also supports other popular formats within the IF
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- community.&nbsp; IFMapper can read:<br>
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- - .ifm files (Dave Chapeski's IFM, a popular free Unix mapping/walkthru tool)<br>
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- - .gmp file (GUEmap's maps, a commercial mapping tool for Windows)<br>
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- - .inf files (Inform6 source code files)<br>
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- - .t3m or .t files ( TADS3 makefiles or source code files )</p>
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- <p><br>
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- <b><font size="4"><a name="Locking Maps">Locking Maps</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- Once you finish an adventure game, you can then lock the map for distribution.<br>
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- You can do so by going into <b>Map-&gt;Map Information</b> and click on the Read-Only
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- switch and making sure you save the map as .map file (IFMapper's native format).<br>
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- Making the map read-only will not allow you to modify the map anymore (and thus
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- will prevent accidentally moving or changing room descriptions by<br>
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- mistake).<br>
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- When reading any IFM file, Read-Only mode is entered automatically, as it is
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- assumed these maps were created and finished elsewhere. If you need<br>
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- to modify them, just untick the Read-Only switch in the Map Information box
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- again.<br>
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- <br>
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- <b><font size="4"><br>
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- <a name="Mapping Games from Transcripts (Automapping)">Mapping Games from
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- Transcripts (Automapping)</a><br>
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- </font></b><br>
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- New to v0.8, the feature of automapping was added. The way automapping works is
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- that it will read a transcript or log of your game, and will attempt to parse it
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- to generate rooms and connections (even while you are playing it!).<br>
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- <br>
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- To use automapping, go to your game and start a transcript. Usually this is done
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- by doing:</p>
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- <p><b>&gt; verbose<br>
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- &gt; script</b></p>
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- <p>and then specifying the name of the file.<br>
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- <br>
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- Then, go to IFMapper and go to a map (usually an empty one) and do:<img border="0" src="images/automap.gif" align="right" width="413" height="428"><br>
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- <b>Map-&gt;Automap-&gt;Start</b>. This will pop up a file requester for you to feed
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- IFMapper the name of the transcript.<br>
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- Then, you will be asked thru a requester to select some options.<br>
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- The options include how will the automapper identify locations as being unique.
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- The automapper can determine whether you are in a new location by comparing the
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- room description (the default) or by comparing just the short name of the room.
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- Games that have rooms with the same short names (usually, mazes) will benefit
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- from being identified by the room description while games that often change the
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- room description on several visits to it might be mapped better using just short
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- names.&nbsp; Note that you can also switch from one method to another at any
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- time later on.<br>
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- Another option allows you to specify what type of transcript you are dealing
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- with. Most games use the &quot;Classic&quot; format, albeit some old Infocom games (mainly
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- Witness and Moonmist) used a tad different format.<br>
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- And voila. Immediately, you should see IFMapper get to work and start creating
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- locations and connections. <br>
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- If you continue playing your game and the 'script' command is still in operation,
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- IFMapper will try to interactively map your game. This works very well for games
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- running under WinFrotz, for example, albeit some other interpreters might not
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- append text to transcripts as soon as you run a command, leading to a less
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- interactive automapping (you'll probably have to type several commands before
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- the interpreter will update the transcript file).<br>
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- Besides trying to parse for locations and movements, automapper will also try to
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- parse for objects in the room, by monitoring your 'get' or 'take' commands and
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- remembering where each object was first found, so as to add it to the appropiate
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- room.<br>
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- Note that, at any point during your mapping, you can pop up the automapper
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- properties again to switch from automapping using descriptions to using short
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- names.<br>
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- <br>
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- <br>
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- <b><font size="4"><a name="How does the automapper distinguish locations">How
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- does the automapper distinguish locations?</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- As we said before, the automapper will parse all the game text, looking for room
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- descriptions.&nbsp; Not just the replies to moving commands.<br>
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- This is done so that teleporting commands (such as magical words) or special
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- events that take you other places will work.<br>
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- Room locations are determined by finding the room's short name: a string of text
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- where all of its words of 4 or more letters are capitalized (or where the string
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- follows the format specified, in case of Witness/Moonmist format). <br>
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- The paragraph following that is assumed to be a room description.<br>
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- Depending on your automapper settings, the automapper will give preference to
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- the room description or to the room's short name to determine whether a certain
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- room has already been visited.<br>
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- <br>
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- <br>
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- <b><font size="4"><a name="Limitations on Automapping">Limitations on
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- Automapping</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- Albeit automapping is very cool and powerful, there are some limitations on it
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- you should be aware of.<br>
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- First, it only works with games written in English.<br>
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- Second, you should try to use automapping with verbose mode. Automapping will
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- try to rely on the room description to distinguish one room from the next,
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- instead of just the room's short name.<br>
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- If your game is in brief or normal mode, automapping could end up getting
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- confused about interpreting a previously visited location as a new location, as
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- it could interpret an object or a character description as part of the<br>
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- room description.<br>
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- Even with full verbose mode, automapping may get confused if the&nbsp;
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- description changes dramatically (like the demolished house in Hitchhiker's
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- Guide to the Galaxy).<br>
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- Automapping also may not help much when it comes to mazes, where all their
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- descriptions are identical or in cases where exits are chosen at random (Adventure/Colossal
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- Cave).<br>
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- Some games don't follow the Infocom standard of labelling locations using a
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- short capitalized description (for example, FailSafe). These games cannot be
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- automapped.<br>
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- Finally, the layout algorithm used in the automapper is not exceptional and it
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- can lead to maps with intercrossings or with rooms placed too far apart.<br>
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- Remember, thou, that you can still help the automapper by manually moving or
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- removing rooms at any time if you are interactively automapping a transcript.<br>
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- If for some reason the automapper does not detect a room automatically, you can
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- also at any time create that room yourself and from then on, the automapper will
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- be aware of it.<br>
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- <br>
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- <b><br>
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- <font size="4"><a name="Creating a new Inform/TADS3 game">Creating a new
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- Inform/TADS3 game</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- IFMapper now allows you to also spit out Inform or TADS3 source code for a map.<br>
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- This means you can now use IFMapper to easily create the basic skeleton for a
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- new game from scratch. <br>
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- With IFMapper, you can place your objects, your NPCs and locations with their
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- doors/exits in your game.&nbsp; You can also type in your descriptions for each
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- location.<br>
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- To do this, make sure to activate the display of room descriptions:</p>
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- <p><b>Map-&gt;Display-&gt;Location Description</b></p>
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- <p>You can then type in all your room descriptions and objects manually and then,
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- once your map is finished, use:<b><br>
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- <br>
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- File-&gt;Export-&gt;Export to Inform<br>
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- File-&gt;Export-&gt;Export to TADS3<br>
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- </b><br>
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- These option will create a set of Inform or TADS3 source files (one per map
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- section), which you can then immediately compile and play with.<br>
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- Obviously, for a real game, the .inf or .t files you get out of IFMapper are
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- just a skeleton, as you will still have to code manually all the logic in your<br>
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- game.</p>
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- <p>&nbsp;</p>
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- <p><b><font size="5" color="#000080"><a name="Appendix">Appendix</a></font></b></p>
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- <p><b><font size="4">
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- <a name="I am new to Interactive Fiction. What games would you recommend">I am
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- new to Interactive Fiction. What games would you recommend?</a></font></b><br>
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- <br>
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- If you can get a copy of it (Lost Treasures of Infocom or similar), I think
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- Wishbringer from Infocom is probably one of the nicest introductory games. <br>
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- Its puzzles are not that tricky and are also pretty logical.<br>
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- Once you master it, you could then try Planetfall, which has one of the most
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- lovable characters in any adventure game.<br>
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- Assuming you cannot get hold of those Infocom games, Emily Short's City of
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- Secrets is a very nice introductory game and probably one of the most polished
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- adventures I have seen.<br>
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- Andrew Plotkin's Dreamholder is also somewhat a nice introductory game as the
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- game will help you with your commands a little as you begin. Note, however, that
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- the game's puzzles are anything but easy. <br>
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- <font size="5"><br>
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- </font><b><font size="4"><a name="Contacting the Author">Contacting the Author</a></font><br>
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- </b><br>
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- Currently, I can be reached at:</p>
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- <p>ggarra AT domain</p>
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- <p>(Where &quot;domain&quot; is advancedsl.com.ar )<br>
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- <br>
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- &nbsp;</p>
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-
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- </body>
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-
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- </html>