Provided by: frotz_2.54+dfsg-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       frotz - interpreter for Infocom and other Z-Machine games

SYNOPSIS

       frotz [options] file [blorb_file]

       At  least  one  file must be specified on the command line.  This can be either a plain Z-
       code file or a Blorb file.  A Z-code file is a compiled executable for the  Z-Machine.   A
       Blorb  file  contains audio, graphics, and other things in addition to the game wrapped up
       into a single file.  It can also optionally contain the Z-Machine executable.  If a  plain
       Z-code  file  is  supplied, then Frotz will check for a Blorb file with the same base name
       but an extension of .blb, .blorb, or .zblorb and load it if found.

       If the file supplied on the command line is a Blorb file, then Frotz will check to see  if
       a Z-code file is contained within.  If not found, then Frotz will complain and exit.

       An  alternatively-named Blorb file can be supplied as the optional second parameter to the
       command line invocation.

DESCRIPTION

       Frotz is a Z-Machine interpreter.  The Z-machine is a virtual machine designed by  Infocom
       to  run  all  of  their  text  adventures.   It went through multiple revisions during the
       lifetime of the company, and two further revisions (V7 and  V8)  were  created  by  Graham
       Nelson  after  the company's demise.  The specification is now quite well documented; this
       version of Frotz supports version 1.0.

       This version of Frotz fully supports all  these  versions  of  the  Z-Machine  except  for
       version 6.  Version 6 is semi-supported by displaying the outlines of V6 graphics with the
       picture number in the bottom-right corner.

OPTIONS

       -a     Watch attribute setting.  Setting and clearing of attributes  on  objects  will  be
              noted in debugging messages.

       -A     Watch  attribute  testing.   Every time the Z-machine tests an attribute value, the
              test and the result will be reported.

       -b <colorname>
              Sets the default background color.  <colorname> corresponds to one of the Z-machine
              colors, which are as follows:
              black red green yellow blue magenta cyan white
              If  color  support  is disabled or not available on your terminal, this option does
              nothing.

       -c N   Sets the number of context lines used.  By default, after a ``[MORE]'' prompt,  and
              assuming there is enough output pending, Frotz will allow all the currently visible
              lines to scroll off the screen before prompting again.  This switch  specifies  how
              many lines of text Frotz will hold over and display at the top of the next screen.

       -d     Disable color.

       -e     Enable  sound.   If  you've  disabled sound in a config file and want to hear sound
              effects, use this.

       -E <mode>
              Emphasis mode.  <mode>  corresponds  to  one  of  three  possible  ways  to  render
              emphasized text.  Possible choices are as follows:
              italic underline none
              Infocom created an EMPHASIS_STYLE for the Z-machine, which was supposed to make the
              text be underlined or be  italicized.  Exactly  what  to  do  is  left  up  to  the
              interpreter.   Some  platforms/terminals  could  support  either, both of these, or
              neither.  Underlining was more common than italic. This option allows you to choose
              how EMPHASIS_STYLE is displayed.

       -f <colorname>
              Sets the default foreground color.  <colorname> corresponds to one of the Z-machine
              colors, which are as follows:
              black red green yellow blue magenta cyan white
              If color support is disabled or is not available on your terminal, this option does
              nothing.

       -F     Force  color  mode.  If you've disabled color in a config file and want to Frotz to
              display colors, use this.

       -h N   Manually sets the text height.  Though most curses libraries are intelligent enough
              to  determine the current width from the terminal, it may sometimes be necessary to
              use this option to override the default.

       -i     Ignore fatal errors.  If a Z-Machine interpreter encounters a zcode error  such  as
              division-by-zero  or  addressing an illegal object, the proper response is to abort
              execution.  This is done because the zcode program doesn't have  a  clear  idea  of
              what  is  going on.  There are some games out there that cause fatal errors because
              the authors were careless and used an interpreter that didn't  properly  check  for
              errors.   This  option  is  intended  to  get  around such bugs, but be warned that
              Strange Things may happen if fatal errors are not caught.

       -I N   Set the interpreter number.  Infocom designed the Z-machine such that a game  could
              tell  on  what kind of machine the interpreter was running.  See INTERPRETER NUMBER
              below.

       -l N   Sets the left margin, for those who might have specific formatting needs.

       -L <filename>
              When the game starts, load this saved game file.

       -m     Enable mouse support.  Naturally, this is quite limited,  but  it's  available  for
              anyone  who  wants  to experiment with it. When active, the mouse cannot be used to
              copy text from the terminal.

       -o     Watch object movement.  This option enables debugging messages from the interpreter
              which describe the moving of objects in the object tree.

       -O     Watch object location.  These debugging messages detail the locations of objects in
              the object tree.

       -p     Plain ASCII output only.  This inhibits the output of accented  letters  and  other
              characters   from  the  Latin-1  character  set,  replacing  them  with  reasonable
              alternatives.  This may be necessary on  devices  lacking  these  characters.   The
              OE/oe dipthongs are missing from the Latin-1 set.  These are handled as well.

       -P     Alter the piracy opcode.  The piracy opcode was never used by Infocom.  This switch
              is really only useful for those who like to toy around with Z-code.

       -q     Quiet.  Turns off sound effects.  Useful when running Frotz on a remote machine and
              you don't want to bother whoever's near the console with weird noises.

       -r N   Sets the right margin.

       -R <path>
              Restricted  read/write.   Reading  and writing files will be restricted only to the
              provided path. Ordinarily Frotz will write or read its saves, transcripts, and move
              recordings  in  whatever path or directory the user provides when the SAVE, SCRIPT,
              or RECORDING commands are given.  This can be undesirable if  Frotz  is  run  in  a
              restricted  environment,  by  a front end, or by a chatbot.  This option will cause
              Frotz to write or read only to the  provided  path  and  nowhere  else.   Then  the
              controlling  process  can  then watch that directory for changes and need not worry
              about someone scribbling or snooping who-knows-where.

       -s N   Set the random number seed value.  The given seed value is used as the initial seed
              value  on  every  restart. This is helpful for testing games like Curses which make
              random decisions before the first input (such that  the  hot  key  Alt-S  does  not
              really help).

       -S N   Set  the  transcript  width.   By  default your transcript files are formatted to a
              width of 80 columns per line, regardless of the current text  width.   This  switch
              allows  you to change this setting. In particular, use -S 0 to deactivate automatic
              line splitting in transcript files.

       -t     Sets the Z-machine's Tandy bit, which may affect the behavior  of  certain  Infocom
              games.   For  example,  Zork  I  pretends  not to have sequels, and Witness has its
              language toned down.

       -u N   Sets the number of slots available for Frotz's multiple undo  hotkey  (see  below).
              This defaults to twenty, which should be sufficient for most purposes.  Setting too
              high a number here may be dangerous on machines with limited memory.

       -w N   Manually sets the text width.

       -x     Expand the abbreviations "g", "x", and "z" to "again", "examine", and "wait".  This
              switch is for use with old Infocom games that lack these common abbreviations which
              were introduced in later games.  Use it with caution: A few games  might  use  "g",
              "x" or "z" for different purposes.

       -v     Show  version  information  and exit.  This will display the version of Frotz, some
              information about what's enabled and what's not, the  commit  date  of  the  source
              code, and a git(1) hash of that commit.

       -Z N   Error checking mode.
              0 = don't report errors.
              1 = report first instance of an error.
              2 = report all errors.
              3 = exit after any error.
              Default is 1 (report first instance of an error).

HOT KEYS

       These  hot  keys  are  enabled  only  when the Z-machine is waiting for line input (for Z-
       machine experts: the @read opcode).

       Alt-D  Set debugging options.

       Alt-H  Help (print the list of hot keys).

       Alt-N  New game (restart).

       Alt-P  Playback on.

       Alt-R  Recording on/off.

       Alt-S  Set random number seed.

       Alt-U  Undo one turn.

       Alt-X  Exit game (after confirmation).

INTERPRETER NUMBER

       The interpreter number is a setting in the Z-machine header which is used to tell the game
       on  what  sort  of machine the interpreter is running. Frotz will automatically choose the
       most appropriate number for a given Infocom-produced game.  Should you  want  to  override
       the number, the -I option is available.

       An  interpreter should choose the interpreter number most suitable for the machine it will
       run on.  In Versions up to 5, the main consideration is  that  the  behaviour  of  'Beyond
       Zork'  depends  on the interpreter number (in terms of its usage of the character graphics
       font). In Version 6, the decision is more serious, as existing Infocom story files  depend
       on  interpreter  number  in many ways: moreover, some story files expect to be run only on
       the interpreters for a particular machine.  There are, for  instance,  specifically  Amiga
       versions.  The DECSystem-20 was Infocom's own in-house mainframe.

       For  Infocom's four V6 games, the interpreter number will be automatically chosen based on
       the title and release number.  Of course, this can be overridden at the command line.

       Infocom used the following interpreter numbers:

       1   DECSystem 20

       2   Apple IIe

       3   Macintosh

       4   Amiga

       5   Atari ST

       6   IBM PC

       7   Commodore128

       8   Commodore64

       9   Apple IIc

       10   Apple IIgs

       11   Tandy Color

CONFIGURATION FILES

       On startup, frotz will  first  check  the  system's  frotz.conf  then  $HOME/.frotzrc  for
       configuration information.  The configuration file uses a simple syntax of
       <variable> <whitespace> <value>

       Color names may be any of the following:
       black | red | green | blue | magenta | cyan | white

       ascii   on | off
       Use plain ASCII only.  Default is "off".

       background   <colorname>
       Set background color.  Default is terminal's default background color.

       color   yes | no
       Use color text.  Default is "yes" if supported.

       errormode   never | once | always | fatal
       Set error reporting mode.
       never Don't report any errors except for fatal ones.
       once Report only the first instance of an error.
       always Report every instance of an error.
       fatal Abort on any error, even non-fatal ones.
       Default is "once".

       expand_abb   on | off
       Expand  abbreviations.   Default  is  off.   Expand the abbreviations "g", "x", and "z" to
       "again", "examine", and "wait".  This switch is for use with old Infocom games  that  lack
       these  common abbreviations which were introduced in later games.  Use it with caution.  A
       few games might use the "g", "x", or "z" for different purposes.

       foreground   <colorname>
       Set foreground color.  Default is terminal's default foreground color.

       ignore_fatal   on | off
       Ignore fatal errors.  If  a  Z-Machine  interpreter  encounters  a  zcode  error  such  as
       division-by-zero  or  addressing  an  illegal  object,  the  proper  response  is to abort
       execution.  This is done because the zcode program doesn't have a clear idea  of  what  is
       going on.  There are some games out there that cause fatal errors because the authors were
       careless and used an interpreter that didn't properly check for errors.   This  option  is
       intended  to  get  around such bugs, but be warned that Strange Things may happen if fatal
       errors are not caught.
       Default is "off"

       piracy   on | off
       Alter the piracy opcode.  Default is off.  The piracy opcode was never  used  by  Infocom.
       This option is only useful for those who like to toy around with Z-code.

       randseed   <integer>
       Set random number seed.  Default comes from the Unix epoch.

       sound   on | off
       Turn sound effects on or off.  Default is "on".

       tandy   on | off
       Set  the machine's Tandy bit.  This may affect the behavior of certain Infocom games.  For
       example, Zork I pretends not to have sequels, and Witness has  its  language  toned  down.
       Default is "off".

       undo_slots   <integer>
       Set number of undo slots.  Default is 500.

       zcode_path   /path/to/zcode/files:/another/path
       Set  path  to  search  for  zcode  game  files.  This is just like the $PATH environmental
       variable except that you can't put environmental  variables  in  the  path  or  use  other
       shortcuts.   For example, "$HOME/games/zcode" is illegal because the shell can't interpret
       that $HOME variable.

       The following options are really only useful for weird terminals, weird  curses  libraries
       or if you want to force a certain look (like play in 40-column mode).

       context_lines   <integer>
       Set the number of context lines used.  By default, after a ``[MORE]'' prompt, and assuming
       there is enough output pending, frotz will allow all the currently visible lines to scroll
       off the screen before prompting again.  This switch specifies how many lines of text frotz
       will hold over and display at the top of the next screen.  Default is "0".

       left_margin   <integer>
       Set the left margin.  This is for those who might have special formatting needs.

       right_margin   <integer>
       Set the right margin.  This is for those who might have special formatting needs.

       text_height   <integer>
       Manually set text height.  Most curses libraries are intelligent enough to  determine  the
       current width of the terminal.  You may need to use this option to override the default.

       text_width   <integer>
       Manually  set  text  width.   Again,  this  should  not  be  necessary  except  in special
       circumstances.

       script_width   <integer>
       Set the transcript width.  Default is 80 columns per line, regardless of the current  text
       width.   This  switch  allows  you  to  change  this  setting.  You may set this to "0" to
       deactivate automatic line-splitting in transcript files.

       The following options are mainly useful for debugging or cheating.

       attrib_set   on | off
       Watch attribute setting.  Setting and clearing of attributes on objects will be  noted  in
       debugging messages.  Default is "off"

       attrib_test   on | off
       Watch  attribute testing.  Every time the Z-machine tests an attribute value, the test and
       the result will be reported.  Default is "off".

       obj_loc   on | off
       Watch object location.  These debugging messages detail the locations of  objects  in  the
       object tree.  Default is "off".

       obj_move   on | off
       Watch  object movement.  This option enables debugging messages from the interpreter which
       describe the movement of objects in the object tree.  Default is "off".

COLOR

       Whether or not Frotz will display color depends upon the curses library and the  terminal.
       In  general,  an xterm or other X11-based terminal emulator will support color.  Sometimes
       the value of $TERM will need to be set to something like "xterm-color" or "rxvt-256color".
       For a Linux console, $TERM is almost always set to "linux".  This will support color.  For
       a NetBSD or OpenBSD console on an x86 or amd64, the default value of $TERM is "vt100".  To
       get  color  supported there, you need to set $TERM to "pc3".  A FreeBSD console's $TERM is
       "xterm" and will support color.  Color on text consoles on  machines  other  than  x86  or
       amd64 is untested.

       On  some  operating  systems,  Xterm will not change the cursor color to match that of the
       text.  To fix this, add the following line to your .Xresources file and type  xrdb  -merge
       $HOME/.Xresources

       xterm*cursorColor:      *XtDefaultForeground

       This  can  also  be  added  to a systemwide file such as /etc/X11/Xresources/x11-common or
       /etc/X11/app-defaults/XTerm.  The names and locations of the system-wide  files  can  vary
       from OS to OS.

UNICODE

       Frotz supports Unicode glyphs by way of UTF-8 if the terminal used supports UTF-8.  If you
       prefer using xterm, start it as uxterm.  This is a wrapper script that sets up xterm  with
       UTF-8  locale.   You  can also manually tell an xterm to switch into UTF-8 mode by holding
       CTRL and the right mouse button to bring up the VT FONTS menu.  Depending on how xterm was
       installed, you may see an option for "UTF-8 Fonts" which will allow Unicode to be properly
       displayed.

       Getting normal xterm to behave like this all the time can  vary  from  system  to  system.
       Other terminal emulators have their own ways of being set to use UTF-8 character encoding.

NON ASCII CHARACTERS

       Non-ASCII  glyphs  can  be  displayed without the use of UTF-8 by way of the ISO-8859-1 or
       ISO-8859-15 (Latin-1 or Latin-9) character sets.  ISO-8859-15 is more or less identical to
       ISO-8859-1  except  that  the OE/oe dipthongs are supported, replacing the seldom-used 1/2
       and 1/4 glyphs.  See also luit(1) charsets(7) iso_8859-1(7) and  iso_8859-15(7)  for  more
       information.

   LOCALE
       An important means of ensuring the system knows to use UTF-8 is to make sure the locale is
       set appropriately.  This is valid only when Dumb Frotz runs under Unix-ish systems.

       Using the command locale will tell you what is currently in use.  Using locale -a

       will show you what's available.  Then set your LANG  evironmental  variable  to  something
       appropriate by using one of these commands:

           export LANG=C.UTF-8
           export LANG=en_US.utf8

       This  can  be put in your shell configuration file, be it .profile, .bash_profile, .login,
       .bashrc, or whatever.

       It can also be set system-wide in the equivalent files in /etc.

   SEE ALSO
       ash(1) bash(1) csh(1) ksh(1) sh(1) zsh(1)

ENVIRONMENT

       If the ZCODE_PATH environmental variable is defined, frotz will search that path for  game
       files.  If that doesn't exist, INFOCOM_PATH will be searched.

       For  the  Alt  key to be read correctly in an Xterm, the following lines should be in your
       .Xresources file:

       XTerm*metaSendsEscape: true
       XTerm*eightBitInput: false

FURTHER INFORMATION

       The Frotz homepage is at https://661.org/proj/if/frotz/.

       A git(1) repository of all versions of Unix Frotz back to 2.32  is  available  for  public
       perusal here:
       https://gitlab.com/DavidGriffith/frotz/.

       The bleeding edge of Frotz development may be followed there.

       The Interactive Fiction Archive is a good place to find games to play with Frotz.  Various
       ports and builds for Frotz may also be found here.  Here is its URL:
       http://www.ifarchive.org/

       Most distributions of Linux and BSD include Frotz in their package repositories.

       It is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 2 or (at your  option)  any
       later version.
       https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.en.html

       This  software is offered as-is with no warranty or liability.  If you find a bug or would
       like Frotz to do something it doesn't currently do, please visit the above Gitlab  website
       and report your concerns.

CAVEATS

       The Z Machine itself has trouble with the concept of resizing a terminal.  It assumes that
       once the text height and width are set, they will never change; even across  saves.   This
       made  sense  when  24x80 terminals were the norm and graphical user interfaces were mostly
       unknown.  I'm fairly sure there's a way around this problem, but for now, don't resize  an
       xterm  in which frotz is running.  Also, you should try to make sure the terminal on which
       you restore a saved game has the same dimensions as the one on which you saved the game.

       Audio latency might be unreasonably long depending  on  the  settings  of  your  operating
       system.   Linux  generally  has  things  right.  The BSDs may need some sysctl(8) settings
       adjusted.  See the sound(4) or audio(4) manpages for more information.

       You  can  use  a  path  like  "/usr/local/games/zcode:$HOME/zcode"  with  $ZCODE_PATH   or
       $INFOCOM_PATH  because  the  shell  will digest that $HOME variable for you before setting
       $ZCODE_PATH. While  processing  frotz.conf  and  $HOME/.frotzrc,  a  shell  is  not  used.
       Therefore  you  cannot  use  environmental  variables in the "zcodepath" option within the
       config files.

       This manpage is not intended to tell users HOW to play interactive fiction.  Refer to  the
       file  HOW_TO_PLAY  included  in the Unix Frotz documentation or visit one of the following
       sites:
       http://www.microheaven.com/ifguide/
       http://www.brasslantern.org/beginners/
       http://www.musicwords.net/if/how_to_play.htm
       http://ifarchive.org/

BUGS

       This program has no bugs.  no bugs.  no bugs.  no *WHAP* thank  you.   If  you  find  one,
       please report it to the Gitlab site referenced above in FURTHER INFORMATION.

AUTHORS

       Frotz was written by Stefan Jokisch for MSDOS in 1995-7.
       The Unix port was done by Galen Hazelwood.
       The Unix port is currently maintained by David Griffith <dave@661.org>.

CONTRIBUTORS

       In 2019, a Kickstarter campaign was run to raise funds to pay Mark McCurry to overhaul the
       audio subsystem for the curses port of  Frotz.   The  following  people  contributed  $100
       towards that effort:
       Simon Martin
       Dan Sanderson
       Justin de Vesine
       Daniel Sharpe

SEE ALSO

       sfrotz(6) dfrotz(6) nitfol(6) rezrov(6) jzip(6) xzip(6) inform(1)