Animals exhibit a wide range of behaviour: much of the chapter on Other Characters applies just as well to animals as to human beings, with the exception of the material on conversation. But two examples here, both fairly simple, show how a fairly convincing domestic pet can be achieved simply by reacting to certain events going on nearby: Feline Behavior (a cat) and Today Tomorrow (a dog).
Fido provides a dog which the player can re-name at will.
For animals that we can sit on and ride - a camel or a horse, say - we may want to use the Rideable Vehicles extension by Graham Nelson, which also provides a rideable animal kind.
See Liveliness for pets that change what they're doing every time the player looks
See Bags, Bottles, Boxes and Safes for a cat that eats food put in its container
| Example Feline Behavior A cat which reacts to whatever items it has handy, returning the result of a rulebook for further processing. | |
Suppose we have a cat which is supposed to react to (and destroy) the most interesting thing in its environment. There are several ways we could approach this problem, but for the sake of demonstration, let's have it follow a rulebook to figure out which thing it most wants to interact with. We will then return the chosen object as "the object produced by the cat behavior rules".
"Feline Behavior"
The Kitchen is a room. The cat is an animal in the Kitchen. In the Kitchen is a bowl, a ball of wool, a newspaper. The bowl contains a quantity of cream.
The cat is wearing a silver collar. The description of the cat is "It is wearing [a list of things worn by the cat]."
The player carries a closed openable container called a bag. The bag contains catnip.
The cat behavior rules is a rulebook producing an object.
A cat behavior rule when the cat can touch the catnip:
say "The cat frolics with the catnip until nothing remains of it.";
rule succeeds with result catnip.
A cat behavior rule when the cat can touch the cream:
say "The cat laps up the cream.";
rule succeeds with result cream.
A cat behavior rule when the cat can touch the ball of wool:
say "The cat makes the ball of wool into a useless tangle which must be discarded.";
rule succeeds with result ball.
A cat behavior rule when the cat can touch the newspaper:
say "The cat bats playfully at the newspaper until all the nasty boring articles are destroyed.";
rule succeeds with result newspaper.
A cat behavior rule:
say "The cat looks miffed at the lack of ready entertainment, and glares at you with yellow eyes as though wondering whether your pants leg is good for claw-sharpening.";
rule fails.
Every turn:
let the destroyed object be the object produced by the cat behavior rules;
if the destroyed object is not nothing:
remove the destroyed object from play;
say "[line break]Good thing you have no use for [the destroyed object] yourself.[paragraph break]".
Test me with "z / z / open bag / z / z".
We include the if rule succeeded... condition here because nothing will be returned if the cat's search failed (as for instance in the result of the final rule).
Naturally, if we wanted we could equally well ask "if rule failed...".
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