Difference between revisions of "Frag"
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== Download == |
== Download == |
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+ | The code can be downloaded from |
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− | The code is distributed via a darcs repository: ''darcs get http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~pls/repos/frag'' |
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+ | [http://hackage.haskell.org/cgi-bin/hackage-scripts/package/frag-1.1 Hackage] |
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− | [http://darcs.net darcs] is the standard rcs of the Haskell community. |
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== Contributions == |
== Contributions == |
Revision as of 22:32, 23 February 2008
Frag
Frag is a 3D first person shooting game written in Haskell, by Mun Hon Cheong. It is licensed under the GPL. The design and implementation of Frag is described in Mun's undergraduate thesis, Functional Programming and 3D Games.
Features
- Yampa, a domain-specific embedded language for the programming of hybrid systems that using the concepts of Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) was used to program the game entities.
- The Quake 3 BSP level format, Q3Map2, and the MD3 format for models and animations are used in this game.
- Sven Panne's OpenGL binding, HOpenGL is used to render graphics.
Requirements
- GHC 6.4 or greater, providing HOpenGL-2.0.
- OpenGL drivers that support the vertex array and multitexture OpenGL extensions
- Frag has portability problems. It is known to work on i386 and AMD64, and known not to work on big-endian systems.
Download
The code can be downloaded from Hackage
Contributions
Frag needs contributions from the community! Darcs send patches to Don Stewart.
Update: The problematic areas of the code seem to be BSP.hs, Curves.hs and MD3.hs: lots of explicit pointer manipulation, and non-endian-safe I/O.
Screenshots
BibTeX Entry
@mastersthesis{Frag, author = {Mun Hon Cheong}, title = {Functional Programming and 3D Games}, year = {2005}, month = {November}, school = {University of New South Wales}, address = {Sydney, Australia}, abstract = {Games are commonly programmed in imperative languages. Functional languages have been known to have benefits but have rarely been used to program games. In this thesis we implement a first person shooting game in Haskell and Yampa. The merits of this approach are examined.} }