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Lantern

Lantern is an exploration of Zork: The Great Underground Empire, or at least as it existed in the original Muddle code from 1979.

The Game

Here's the game intro -


ZORK I: The Great Underground Empire
Copyright (c) 1980 Infocom, Inc. All rights reserved.
ZORK is a registered trademark of Infocom, Inc.
Revision 15 / Serial number 40726

West of House
You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door.
There is a small mailbox here.

> open mailbox
Opening the small mailbox reveals a leaflet.

> read leaflet
(Taken)

"WELCOME TO ZORK!
ZORK is a game of adventure, danger, and low cunning. In it you will explore
some of the most amazing territory ever seen by mortals. No computer should be
without one!"

The parser was fairly sophisticated - you could say things like drop all but lantern and sword, put all but lamp in boat, and it would ask for clarification where needed - e.g. take pill -> Which pill do you mean, the red one or the blue one?.

Exploring the Map

We can parse the original source code to JSON and use d3 to visualize and wander around the map - click on a room to add its neighboring rooms, and zoom in/out with the mouse wheel.

Muddle Source Code

Zork was written in MDL (MIT Design Language) (aka Muddle), a dialect of Lisp from the 1970's. The original code looks like this -

<ROOM "WHOUS"
"This is an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door."
       "West of House"
       <EXIT "NORTH" "NHOUS" "SOUTH" "SHOUS" "WEST" "FORE1"
	      "EAST" #NEXIT "The door is locked, and there is evidently no key.">
       (<GET-OBJ "FDOOR"> <GET-OBJ "MAILB"> <GET-OBJ "MAT">)
       <>
       <+ ,RLANDBIT ,RLIGHTBIT ,RNWALLBIT ,RSACREDBIT>
       (RGLOBAL ,HOUSEBIT)>

<ROOM "LROOM"
       ""
       "Living Room"
       <EXIT "EAST" "KITCH"
	      "WEST" <CEXIT "MAGIC-FLAG" "BLROO" "The door is nailed shut.">
	      "DOWN" <DOOR "DOOR" "LROOM" "CELLA">>
       (<GET-OBJ "WDOOR"> <GET-OBJ "DOOR"> <GET-OBJ "TCASE">
	<GET-OBJ "LAMP"> <GET-OBJ "RUG"> <GET-OBJ "PAPER">
	<GET-OBJ "SWORD">)
       LIVING-ROOM
       <+ ,RLANDBIT ,RLIGHTBIT ,RHOUSEBIT ,RSACREDBIT>>

<DEFINE CLEARING ("AUX" (GRATE <SFIND-OBJ "GRATE">) (LEAVES <SFIND-OBJ "LEAVE">))
  #DECL ((LEAVES GRATE) OBJECT)
  <COND (<VERB? "LOOK">
    <TELL
"You are in a clearing, with a forest surrounding you on the west
and south.">
    <COND (<TRNN .GRATE ,OPENBIT>
     <TELL "There is an open grating, descending into darkness." 1>)
          (,GRATE-REVEALED!-FLAG
     <TELL "There is a grating securely fastened into the ground." 1>)>)>>

The room definitions are stored in the dung.mud file starting at line 1582 - you can browse through them here.

ZIL Source Code

Later the MDL code was cleaned up and rewritten in ZIL (Zork Implementation Language), a domain-specific language in MDL -

<ROOM LIVING-ROOM
    (LOC ROOMS)
    (DESC "Living Room")
    (EAST TO KITCHEN)
    (WEST TO STRANGE-PASSAGE IF CYCLOPS-FLED ELSE
        "The wooden door is nailed shut.")
    (DOWN PER TRAP-DOOR-EXIT)
    (ACTION LIVING ROOM-F)
    (FLAGS RLANDBIT ONBIT SACREDBIT)
    (GLOBAL STAIRS)
    (THINGS <> NAILS NAILS-PSEUDO)>

I'd love to see the more organized ZIL code, but Activision holds the rights, and the full source code has never been released - this and other snippets were released in the ZIL manual. So, we'll have to make do with the MDL code.

Goals

The goals for Lantern are:

  • Explore the map interactively with d3
  • Make a static map with Graphviz
  • View the room structures with a cleaner Lisp syntax

so the main tasks are:

  • Make a Muddle compiler/interpreter in Python to parse the ROOM objects
  • Parse the original source code to output JSON, Lisp, Graphviz
  • Make a web page to interact with the JSON data using JavaScript and d3

Muddle Compiler/Interpreter

A Muddle compiler, extending Peter Norvig's simple Lispy interpreter, parses the dung.mud file and handles conditional exits and doors.

The Muddle compiler is in mud.py - the lexer breaks the text into tokens, and is extended from lispy to handle strings - the parser assembles the tokens into an abstract syntax tree, and the eval function evalutes the tree and returns Lisp objects.

Compiler Output

The compiler can output simpler Lisp data structures, like so -

(room "WHOUS"
    (name "West of House")
    (desc "This is an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door.")
    (exit "NORTH" "NHOUS" "SOUTH" "SHOUS" "WEST" "FORE1" "EAST" #NEXIT))

(room "LROOM"
    (name "Living Room")
    (desc "")
    (exit "EAST" "KITCH" "WEST" "BLROO" "DOWN" "CELLA"))

It can also output JSON data structures, like so -

{
  "rooms": [
    {
      "name": "West of House",
      "key": "WHOUS",
      "desc": "This is an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door."
    },

  ],
  "exits": [
    {
      "source": "WHOUS",
      "target": "NHOUS",
      "dir": "NORTH"
    },
    {
      "source": "WHOUS",
      "target": "SHOUS",
      "dir": "SOUTH"
    },
  ]
}

or a Graphviz dot file -

digraph zork {
WHOUS [label="West of House"];
NHOUS [label="North of House"];
SHOUS [label="South of House"];
...
"WHOUS" -> "NHOUS";
"WHOUS" -> "SHOUS";
"WHOUS" -> "FORE1";
"NHOUS" -> "WHOUS";
"NHOUS" -> "EHOUS";
"NHOUS" -> "FORE3";
}

A Graphviz Map

We can use Graphviz to get a look at the whole thing - there are 149 rooms. Note that the locations of the exit arrows do not correspond to the actual exit directions.

The overview, using the default Graphviz dot layout engine:

The full map is located here.

Original Map

Here are my original maps for the above ground section and the maze for Zork I (the original game was expanded and cut up into a trilogy) -

Usage

To see the ROOM structures in Lisp form, run the lantern.bat file, which runs python src\lantern.py - this parses the dung.mud file which contains the ROOM structures:

$ lantern
(room "WHOUS"
    (name "West of House")
    (desc "This is an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door.")
    (exit "NORTH" "NHOUS" "SOUTH" "SHOUS" "WEST" "FORE1" "EAST" NoExit))

To see the JSON and Graphviz files, pass -json or -graphviz, and to have the output saved to the appropriate data files, add the -save parameter:

$ lantern -json -save
$ lantern -graphviz -save

Status

This is a low-priority project that I'll work on from time to time.

I've been interested in Zork since I was 12 - I read through the assembly code but didn't understand that what I was looking at was a byte-code interpreter and machine language compiled down from Lisp, though I was able to decipher the text, which was encoded with 3 characters in 2 bytes to save space.

Contributing

Want to work on this project? Feel free to pitch in on any part you find interesting!

The Source of the Source

The original Muddle Zork source code is available at an archive of old programs, located here.

License

GPL

About

Exploring the original Zork source code with Graphviz and an interactive d3 map, using JavaScript and an extension of Peter Norvig's Python Lisp parser to handle MDL

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