tweego
tengo
tweego | tengo | |
---|---|---|
11 | 5 | |
112 | 3,454 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 5.4 | |
6 months ago | 12 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
tweego
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HTML text based game, how to ?
This game was made originally with Tweego for the Twine interactive fiction engine (which is where you should start).
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How do you keep things organized in your story?
Anyway, I eventually tried using TweeGo instead of the web editor, and I have found it to be a huge boon to my workflow!
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Sugarcube devs, what’s your usual development process looks like? Any tips to streamworking faster/smarter?
Second, (and this one probably IS relevant), I moved out of the Twine editor and into the waiting arms of Tweego And oh my word, it has helped so much.
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history of twine?
There are a number of modern TWEE (Notation) command line "compilers" that are in use today, TweeGo being the most popular of them in my opinion.
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How to create a story game with Javascript
You'll need to install Tweego, a tool that can parse stories as files in any preferred text editor. Be aware of its limitations, though:
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Can Emacs display html character representation as the actual characters?
I have to edit an archive that is full of HTML character representations such as '. It is not an actual HTML file, though, but rather a file generated by Tweego. The HTML representations are not pleasant to read, but I wouldn't change the file. Would it be possible to simply make they appear rendered, for my own sake?
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Twine is an open-source tool for telling interactive, nonlinear stories
There's a text-based representation called twee. You can use tweego (https://github.com/tmedwards/tweego) to convert between twee and html/twine.
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Twine 2.5 layout is very clicky and mouse-hunty (Helpful suggestions after the whining)
Good set of feedback. The Twine UI could definitely use some improvements, but you may want to consider looking into a Twee-based workflow for better control over your experience. Tools like Tweego let you write Twine stories in raw text files, which you can lay out and edit however you want in an editor of your choice. You can find past discussions about how to get started on this subreddit.
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A simple, near unimportant question
In general, though, standard workflow is to use Tweego as your compiler and VS Code as your editor with the Twee3 Language Tools extension. There are plenty of other extensions for spellcheck or JS/CSS linting, but T3LT is the essential one. All of those are available for free, though there's resources online and elsewhere on the sub that'll explain how to get them running better than I can.
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Is there some kind of dialogue\graph editor similar to Twine or Articy:Draft that I can actually export into a JSON to use from inside my engine?
While not JSON specifically, twine index.html files can be parsed into (or natively written in) Twee with tools like Tweego, which is a fairly easy-to-parse file format. Certainly an option if you have existing Twine stories you'd like to transfer.
tengo
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Making Games in Go for Absolute Beginners
> It also has a bunch of libraries for embedding scripting languages https://awesome-go.com/embeddable-scripting-languages, with Tengo _probably_ being the quickest https://github.com/d5/tengo
Yes, I noticed those packages recently. The problem is that there is little data about how reliable and maintainable goloader is going to be on the long term.
As I care about performance and security, I don't want a scripting language, but WASM seems to be a very promising possibility. I have made benchmarks with 2~3 WASM engines in Go, and so far I am not completely convinced about the quality and performance of the available APIs. Also, when compiling Golang to WASM, the native compiler is still abysmally bad and does not have full support for imports, so Tinygo is a must-have.
Anyway, modding is still a long term idea at this point, so hopefully the ecosystem will get more mature within a couple of years.
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Looking for programming languages created with Go
- https://github.com/d5/tengo
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Change go code behaviour at runtime
There are totally different things like https://github.com/d5/tengo but I don't know much about the docs, communities, or viability of them. Some like this one look very active and healthy. It might be worth considering.
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Asking for advice to get deeper understanding of golang internals.
I started doing this a few years ago when I wanted to add programmability to another system I was working on, and didn't want Lua or anything else like that. I set it aside when other priorities arose, and didn't return to it when I saw that others had already done the same thing (yaegi, tengo).
What are some alternatives?
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
otto - A JavaScript interpreter in Go (golang)
twine-specs - Specs related to Twine
gopher-lua - GopherLua: VM and compiler for Lua in Go
sublime-twee2 - Twee2 SugarCube syntax highlighting for Sublime Text.
goja - ECMAScript/JavaScript engine in pure Go
twine - Utilities for interacting with PyPI
expr - Expression language and expression evaluation for Go [Moved to: https://github.com/expr-lang/expr]
PE - PE Development Project
go-php - PHP bindings for the Go programming language (Golang)
dialogger - A simple cross-platform dialogue graph editor.
go-lua - A Lua VM in Go