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adventure-map

1.0.5
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    Simple exercise loader & generators for substack/adventure.

    Package Exports

    • adventure-map

    This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (adventure-map) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

    Readme

    adventure-map

    Tools with sensible defaults for guiding the creation of adventures.

    • Adds syntax highlighting and colour when printing problem description.
    • Prints syntax highlighted solution on completion of an exercise.
    • Adds support for setting up exercise boilerplate.
    • Generates a bootstrapped directory for user's solution in cwd on exercise start.
    • Includes copy of problem description in generated solution directory for user.

    Also includes optional code generators:

    • Minimal bootstrap code for starting to build a new adventure (~20 LOC).
    • Bootstrap an exercise with a few default files for an exercise (Readme.md, bootstrap.js, solution.js & verify.js)

    I normally hate code generators so I've tried to make the code generation spit out the most unopinionated code that you probably would have written anyway. All generated code is extremely simple and makes minimal assumptions. You can safely and easily modify the generated code to work however you wish.

    CLI Usage

    > adventure-map --help
      Usage:
        adventure-map init         Bootstrap current directory.
        adventure-map new [name]   Bootstrap new exercise with [name].

    Generating Adventures

    You can use adventure-map to generate the minimal boilerplate for an entire adventure. It includes a bootstrap file to load all the exercises and an example exercise to use as a guide.

    > mkdir test-adventure
    > cd test-adventure
    > npm init -f
    > npm install --save adventure-map
    > adventure-map init
    exercises/example/Readme.md
    exercises/example/boilerplate.js
    exercises/example/index.js
    exercises/example/solution.js
    index.js

    By default, exercises are loaded as "name": "relative/path/to/exercise" pairs from your package.json. You need to add exercises to the package.json manually.

    {
      "name": "test-adventure",
      "version": "1.0.0",
      "main": "index.js",
      "dependencies": {
        "adventure-map": "1.0.0"
      },
      "exercises": {
        "Getting Started": "exercises/example"
      }
    }

    If you don't like this convention of loading from the package.json, just change where the exercises load from, it's one line of code in the bootstrap code (see below).

    After you've configured at least one exercise, can start your adventure:

    > node index.js

    image

    Adventure Bootstrap Code

    The adventure bootstrap simply finds the exercises defined in your package.json and loads them into adventure.

    #!/usr/bin/env node
    
    var path = require('path')
    var adventureMap = require('adventure-map')
    var pkg = require('./package.json')
    
    // resolve all package.json exercises relative
    // to this directory.
    Object.keys(pkg.exercises).forEach(function(name) {
      pkg.exercises[name] = path.resolve(__dirname, pkg.exercises[name])
    })
    
    var adventure = adventureMap(pkg)
    
    // auto-execute if run from commandline
    if (!module.parent) adventure.execute(process.argv.slice(2))
    
    // export for manual execution
    module.exports = adventure

    Important

    The boilerplate is just provided as a starting point, don't feel bad about changing any of the generated code.

    Generating Exercises

    You can use adventure-map to generate the required boilerplate for an exercise:

    > adventure-map new getting-started
    exercises/getting-started/Readme.md
    exercises/getting-started/boilerplate.js
    exercises/getting-started/index.js
    exercises/getting-started/solution.js

    The exercise's script will load up the Readme, boilerplate and solution text for you, and provide a verify stub.

    Exercise Bootstrap Code

    "use strict"
    
    var fs = require('fs')
    var path = require('path')
    
    exports.problem = fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/Readme.md', 'utf8')
    exports.solution = fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/solution.js', 'utf8')
    exports.boilerplate = fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/boilerplate.js', 'utf8')
    
    var solution = require('./solution')
    
    exports.verify = function(args, cb) {
      var submission = require(path.resolve(process.cwd(), args[0]))
      // insert validation logic
      cb(false) // true if submission good
    }
    
    exports.run = function() {
      // TODO
    }

    API Usage

    You don't need to use the generated boilerplate in order to use adventure-map! Just pass it the adventure name and a mapping of exercise names and corresponding exercise paths.

    You'll be passed back a substack/adventure instance.

    var r = require('path').resolve
    var adventureMap = require('adventure-map')
    
    var adventure = adventureMap({
      name: 'test-adventure',
      exercises: {
        'Getting Started': r(__dirname, 'exercises/getting-started'),
        'Learning Things': r(__dirname, 'exercises/learning-things')
      }
    })
    
    adventure.execute(process.argv.slice(2))

    Exercise Format

    adventure-map exercises follow the same format as adventure exercises, with an additional boilerplate property:

    module.exports = {
      problem: 'problem text',
      solution: 'solution code',
      boilerplate: 'boilerplate code' // optional
      verify: function(args, cb) {
        // insert validation logic
        cb(false) // true if submission good
      },
      run: function() {
        // optional 'run' logic
      }
    }

    Credit

    License

    MIT