![]() | Chapter 9: Time | ![]() ![]() |
9.7. Telling the time |
Now that we have the time of day, we can of course use this value in room descriptions and the like:
The Clock Chamber is a room. "The dark chamber behind the clock face, a mill-room of gears which grind down the seconds. Through the glass you can see the reversed hands reading [the time of day]."
It seems odd, though, to read a precise numerical description of the time here: after all, it isn't a digital clock. A friendlier version would use:
say "[time in words]"
This text substitution produces the given time written out in English sentence form. For example:
"Through the glass you can see the reversed hands reading [the time of day in words]."
might produce
Through the glass you can see the reversed hands reading twenty to nine.
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To reiterate an example which came up earlier, we could even work the time of day into the command prompt, which would lend the proper sense of urgency to a game played out against the clock:
When play begins: now the command prompt is "[time of day] >".
| ![]() Printing the time of day in 24-hour time, as in military situations. |
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