README for Games::Alak Games::Alak [Partially excerpted from the POD.] NAME Games::Alak -- simple game-tree implementation of a gomoku-like game DESCRIPTION This module implements a simple game-tree system for the computer to play against the user in a game of Alak. You can just play the game for fun; or you can use this module as a starting point for understanding game trees (and implementing smarter strategy -- the module's current logic is fairly simple-minded), particularly after reading my Perl Journal #18 article on trees, which discusses this module's implementation of game trees as an example of general tree- shaped data structures. RULES Alak was invented by the mathematician A. K. Dewdney, and described in his 1984 book Planiverse. The rules of Alak are simple -- at least as I've (mis?)understood them and implemented them here: * Alak is a two-player game played on a one-dimensional board with eleven slots on it. Each slot can hold at most one piece at a time. There's two kinds of pieces, which I represent here as "x" and "o" -- x's belong to one player (called X -- that's the computer), o's to the other (called O -- that's you). * The initial configuration of the board is: xxxx___oooo For sake of reference, the slots are numbered from 1 (on the left) to 11 (on the right), and X always has the first move. * The players take turns moving. At each turn, each player can move only one piece, once. (This is unlike checkers, where you move one piece per move but get to keep moving it if you jump an your opponent's piece.) A player cannot pass up on his turn. A player can move any one of his pieces to the next unoccupied slot to its right or left, which may involve jumping over occupied slots. A player cannot move a piece off the side of the board. * If a move creates a pattern where the opponent's pieces are surrounded, on both sides, by two pieces of the mover's color (with no intervening unoccupied blank slot), then those surrounded pieces are removed from the board. * The goal of the game is to remove all of your opponent's pieces, at which point the game ends. Removing all-but-one ends the game as well, since the opponent can't surround you with one piece, and so will always lose within a few moves anyway. SAMPLE GAME A game between X (computer) and a particularly dim O (human): xxxx___oooo ^ Move 1: X moves from 3 (shown with caret) to 5 (Note that any of X's pieces could move, but that the only place they could move to is 5.) xx_xx__oooo ^ Move 2: O moves from 9 to 7. xx_xx_oo_oo ^ Move 3: X moves from 4 to 6. xx__xxoo_oo ^ Move 4: O (stupidly) moves from 10 to 9. xx__xxooo_o ^ Move 5: X moves from 5 to 10, making the board "xx___xoooxo". The three o's that X just surrounded are removed. xx___x___xo O has only one piece, so has lost. PREREQUISITES This suite requires Perl 5; I've only used it under Perl 5.004, so for anything lower, you're on your own. Games::Alak uses the module Term::ReadLine, which I understand is a standard Perl module these days. INTERFACE This module uses Term::ReadLine to give you a prompt at which you can type commands. Entering "h" for help at that prompt will give instructions on how to interact with the game. When in doubt, consult the source -- it's made to be fairly clear. REFERENCES Burke, Sean M. 2000. "Trees". (In submission: actual article title may differ.) Article in The Perl Journal #18. http://www.tpj.com/ [Portions of this POD are excerpted from that article.] Dewdney, A[lexander] K[eewatin]. 1984. Planiverse: Computer Contact with a Two-Dimensional World. Poseidon Press, New York. INSTALLATION You install Games::Alak, as you would install any Perl module library, by running these commands: perl Makefile.PL make make test make install If you want to install a private copy of Games::Alak in your home directory, then you should try to produce the initial Makefile with something like this command: perl Makefile.PL LIB=~/perl DOCUMENTATION POD-format documentation is included in Alak.pm. POD is readable with the 'perldoc' utility. See ChangeLog for recent changes. MACPERL INSTALLATION NOTES Don't bother with the makefiles. Just make a Games directory in your MacPerl site_lib or lib directory, and move Alak.pm into there. AVAILABILITY The latest version of Games::Alak is available from the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). Visit to find a CPAN site near you. AUTHOR Current maintainer Avi Finkel, avi@finkel.org; Original author Sean M. Burke, sburke@cpan.org Thanks to A. K. Dewdney (http://www.dewdney.com/) for his encouragement in writing my (abovementioned) TPJ article, as well as for having written the enjoyable book where he briefly describes it.