Provided by: fizmo-ncursesw_0.7.10-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       fizmo-ncursesw - wide-character-ncurses implementation of the fizmo Z-Machine Interpreter.

SYNOPSIS

       fizmo-ncursesw [ options ] [ storyfile [ blorbfile ] | storytitle | quetzal-save-file ]

DESCRIPTION

       fizmo-ncursesw  is  a  frontend  for  the fizmo Z-Machine interpreter—“Fimzo interprets Z-
       machine opcodes”—based on the ncurses library, and supporting  wide  characters.  It  runs
       most  of  the  interactive  fiction  games aka text adventures written by Infocom or other
       games which are based on the Z-Machine.  Currently  all  versions  except  version  6  are
       supported.  It  also  supports  sound  via  the  SDL  media  library—see subsection “Sound
       Support”—and implements basic Blorb support.

   Starting a new game by providing a filename
       This is the most direct way to get a game running. Just give the  filename  of  the  story
       file at the end of the command line.

   Starting a new game by providing its title
       If the game you want to play is stored in the list of known games, you can simply start it
       by providing the title instead of the full filename.  Example: "fizmo sorcerer"  will  run
       the game “Sorcerer”, no matter if it is stored in the current directory or somewhere else.

   Starting a game from the list of story files
       Without any filename given, fizmo will display the list of the currently known story files
       it has indexed so far. Everytime fizmo is started and no  story-name  is  provided,  fizmo
       will  update  the  list  of  stories  by  indexing the directories listed in ZCODE_PATH or
       INFOCOM_PATH.

   Restoring a game from the command line
       If you give the name of a quetzal save-game file at the end of  the  command  line,  fizmo
       will  use  its  story file list to locate the story file the saved game originates from to
       directly restore the game.

   Sound Support
       fizmo-ncursesw supports sound via the SDL multimedia library which is available  for  most
       unix  flavors and Windows. Sound files are either read from a blorb file, or, old-infocom-
       style-wise, from separate *.snd files which have to be stored in the same directory as the
       game  file.  At the moment, only AIFF sounds can be read from a blorb file.  When the game
       requests a sound, fizmo uses the sound from the current blorb file. If no  blorb  file  is
       given  or  the  sound  cannot be found in it, fizmo tries to locate a file with the format
       “GAMFIL00.SND” where GAMEFIL symbolizes the game filename shortened to a  maximum  of  six
       characters, the sound number—eventually padded by a leading zero so it has always a length
       of two characters—and a “.SND” suffix. Both upper- and lowercase filenames are  attempted.
       That   means   you   can   directly   use   the   sounds  from  the  IF-archive  at  “/if-
       archive/infocom/media/sound”.

   Story-Metadata / IF Bibliography
       fizmo-ncursesw is able to read metadata-files as defined in the “Treaty of Babel”. It will
       try  to  read  the  metadata  from  all  files  ending in .iFiction which are found in the
       $HOME/.config/fizmo directory.  Fizmo will re-build the story list once the metadata files
       have  been changed.  For this purpose, the timestamps for the metadata-files are stored in
       the file $HOME/.config/fizmo/babel-timestamps.  For more information about the treaty, see
       http://babel.ifarchive.org/.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Show help message and exit.

       -b, --background-color <color-name>
              Set  background  color.  Valid  color  names  are  black, red, green, yellow, blue,
              magenta, cyan and white.

       -dh, --disable-hyphenation
              Disable word hyphenation. Useful for languages other than the supported ones.

       -ds, --disable-sound
              Disable sound alltogether. May be useful when playing on remote machines.

       -ec, --enable-colors
              Enable colors.

       -f, --foreground-color <color-name>
              Set foreground color. Valid color  names  are  black,  red,  green,  yellow,  blue,
              magenta, cyan and white.

       -fi, --start-file-input
              Start game with input from file.

       -if, --input-file
              Filename to read commands from.

       -l, --set-locale <locale-code>
              Set  locale  name for interpreter messages. Currently valid locale codes are en_US,
              de_DE and fr_FR.

       -lm, --left-margin <width>
              Set left margin width, requires a numeric argument.

       -nc, --dont-use-colors
              Don't use colors.

       -nu, --dont-update-story-list
              Don't update story-list on startup. Useful in case you've got  a  large  number  of
              story files in your repository.

       -nx, --disable-x11-graphics
              Disable X11 graphics.

       -pr, --predictable
              Start with random generator in predictable mode.

       -ra, --random
              Start with random generator in standard random mode.

       -rc, --record-commands
              Activate recording of commands as soon as the game starts.

       -rf, --record-filename
              Filename to record input to.

       -rm, --right-margin <width>
              Set right margin width, requires a numeric argument.

       -rs, --recursively-search <directory-name>
              Search  a  directory  recursively,  meaning including subdirectories, for Z-Machine
              files.

       -s, --search <directory-name>
              Search a single directory for Z-Machine files.

       -s8, --force-8bit-sound
              Never use 16-bit resolution, always convert  to  8bit  (some  systems  may  not  be
              capable of 16-bit sound output).

       -st, --start-transcript
              Start game with scripting already enabled.

       -sy, --sync-transcript
              When a transcript is active, write data directly into the file as soon as possible.

       -t, --set-tandy-flag
              Sets  the  tandy  flag,  which  emulates  a  game sold by the Tandy Corporation and
              slightly   alters   the   game    behaviour.    See    http://www.ifarchive.org/if-
              archive/infocom/info/tandy_bits.html  for  detailed  information  on what the tandy
              flag does.

       -tf, --transcript-filename
              Set transcript filename for the current session.

       -u, --update-story-list
              In case you have disabled automatic updates for your story list, this  option  will
              allow you to run the re-indexing manually.

       -um, --umem
              Use UMem instead of CMem for saving.

       -mu, --maximum-undo-steps
              Set number of maximum undo steps.

       -xi, -enable-x11-inline-graphics
              Enable  XTerm  graphics.  This  will  make  fizmo try to display graphics into a X-
              Terminal. Since this represents a rather ugly hack—and may not work at all for some
              installations—it is not enabled by default.

       -xt, --enable-xterm-title
              Use the XTerminal title bar to display the game name.

IN-GAME COMMANDS

       /help  Displays the list of available in-game commands.

       /info  Displays  general version about the interpreter and its status, such as the version
              number, story release and serial number, stack, memory and random generator status.

       /config
              Displays current configuration values.

       /predictable
              Switches the random generator from “random” in “predictable” state and vice-versa.

       /recstart
              Records all user input in a command-file.

       /recstop
              Stop recording user input.

       /fileinput
              Start reading commands from a file.

ENVIRONMENT

        ZCODE_PATH
              Default list of path names—separated by colons—to search for Z-Machine games.

        INFOCOM_PATH
              Alternate list of pathnames which is used when ZCODE_PATH is not set.

        ZCODE_ROOT_PATH
              List of colon-separated path names which are  recursively  searched  for  Z-Machine
              games.

FILES

   List of files
       $HOME/.config/fizmo/config
              May  contain user configuration parameters. In case $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is defined and
              contains an absolute path, $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fizmo/config is  used,  in  case  of  a
              relative path $HOME/$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fizmo/confg is read.

       ($XDG_CONFIG_DIRS)/fizmo/config
              $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS  may  contain  a  colon  separated  list  of config directories to
              search. In case $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS is not set or  empty  /etc/xdg  is  used  instead.
              Every  directory  is  searched  for  a  subdirectory  named fizmo containing a file
              config, which will be searched for configuration parameters.

       /etc/fizmo.conf
              Global configuration parameters.

       $HOME/.config/fizmo/story-list.txt
              Contains the current list of story files known. In case $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is set the
              path is altered as described above.

       $HOME/.config/fizmo/*.iFiction
              Fizmo  treats  all  files  with  a  suffix  of .iFiction in the $HOME/.config/fizmo
              directory as sources for story metadata. For more info, see section “Story-Metadata
              / IF Bibliography” above. In case $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is defined, see above.

       $HOME/.config/fizmo/babel-timestamps
              A  list  of .iFiction-files and their respective timestamps as they were found when
              the story list was last built (knowing if the babel info has changed speeds up  the
              update process). $XDG_CONFIG_HOME will alter the directory as described before.

   Option names for config files
       The  following  section lists the config-file's equivalents for the command lines options.
       For a detailed description of these options, see the “Options” section.  Options  have  to
       start  at  the beginning of the line without any leading whitespace. Comments start with a
       '#' at the beginning of the line.

       background-color = <color-name>
       foreground-color = <color-name>
       transcript-filename = <filename>
       command-filename = <filename>
       i18n-search-path = <colon-separated-directory-names>
       locale = <language-code>
       savegame-path = <directory-name>
       random-mode = <random or predictable>
       save-text-history-paragraphs = <number of paragraphs to store in savegames>
       z-code-path = <colon-separated-directory-names>
       z-code-root-path = <colon-separated-directory-names>
       disable-sound = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       quetzal-umem = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       set-tandy-flag = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       start-command-recording-when-story-starts = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       start-file-input-when-story-starts = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       start-script-when-story-starts = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       disable-stream-2-hyphenation = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       disable-stream-2-wrap = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       stream-2-line-width = <line-width>
       stream-2-left-margin = <margin-size>
       sync-transcript = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       left-margin = <number-of-columns>
       right-margin = <number-of-columns>
       disable-hyphenation = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       disable-color = <any value means yes, empty no>
       force-8bit-sound = <any value means yes, empty no>
       enable-xterm-title = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       dont-udpate-story-list = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       max-undo-steps = <maximum number of stored undo steps as numerical value>
       enable-xterm-graphics = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>
       display-x11-inline-image = <no value or “true” means yes, otherwise no>

MISCELLANEOUS

   Scrolling back
       You can use the PageUp and PageDown keys (some terminals may require holding  down  shift)
       anytime to review text which was scrolled above the current window border.

   Refreshing the screen
       CTRL-L will refresh the current display.

   Redrawing the screen
       CTRL-R  will  redraw  the  current display. Contrary to CTRL-L, which refreshes the screen
       based on the current layout, CTRL-R will reconstruct the latest output based on the output
       history.  This  will  help  to  display  output  which is hidden in case a game clears the
       screen, writes some text into the top line and then turns on the  score  line  which  then
       overlays the topmost line.

   Resizing the screen
       In  general,  resizing  the  screen  works  best  for game versions 3 and before, which is
       unfortunate since this encompasses only a part of the old Infocom games and  none  of  the
       modern  ones. For all others—including Seastalker—the upper window (which means mostly the
       status bar) cannot be resized and will remain fixed.

   Undocumented Infocom commands
       Here is a list of commands that some of Infocom's games seem to support, although I  never
       saw them menitioned in a manual or reference card.

       $verify, $ve, $ver
              Verifies  if  the  game file is correct (essentially executes the “verify” opcode).
              “$ve” works in almost all original Infocom games,  “$ver”  works  in  AMFV,  Beyond
              Zork, Bureaucracy, Nord and Bert, Sherlock, Trinity and Zork Zero.

       $refre Refreshes  the screen. Works in AMFV, Arthur, Bureaucracy, Nord and Bert, Sherlock,
              Shogun, Trinity and Zork Zero.

       $id    The “$id” command gives information about the interpreter. Works  in  Border  Zone,
              Bureaucracy and Trinity.

       $credi Shows a credit screen in Trinity and Beyond Zork.

       #comm, #command
              This  will  read  your  input  from  a  file. Works in AMFV, Ballyhoo, Bureaucracy,
              Enchanter, Hollywood Hjinx, Leather Goddesses, Lurking  Horror,  Plundered  Hearts,
              Shogun, Sorcerer, Spellbreaker, Stationfall, Trinity and Zork Zero.

       #rand <int>
              Seeds  the  random  generator  with the given value. May be used in AMFV, Ballyhoo,
              Border Zone, Bureaucracy, Enchanter, Hollywood Hijinx, Leather  Goddesses,  Lurking
              Horror,  Plundered  Hearts,  Shogun,  Sorcerer,  Spellbreaker, Stationfall and Zork
              Zero.

       #reco, #record
              This will record your commands into a file. Works in AMFV,  Ballyhoo,  Bureaucracy,
              Enchanter,  Hollywood  Hjinx,  Leather Goddesses, Lurking Horror, Plundered Hearts,
              Shogun, Sorcerer, Spellbreaker, Stationfall and Zork Zero.

       #unre, #unrecord
              Stops recording  commands  into  a  file.  Used  in  AMFV,  Ballyhoo,  Bureaucracy,
              Enchanter,  Hollywood  Hijinx, Leather Goddesses, Lurking Horror, Plundered Hearts,
              Shogun, Sorcerer, Spellbreaker, Stationfall and Zork Zero.

CREDITS

   ITF  The InfoTaskForce
       All the people who drew up the Z-Machine Specification, in alphabetical order: Chris Tham,
       David  Beazley,  George  Janczuk,  Graham  Nelson,  Mark  Howell,  Matthias  Pfaller, Mike
       Threepoint, Paul David Doherty, Peter  Lisle,  Russell  Hoare  and  Stefan  Jokisch.   See
       http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InfoTaskForce for more information.

   The Frotz authors
       When I got stuck I peeked into the frotz source. Thanks to Stefan Jokisch, Galen Hazelwood
       and David Griffith.

   Mark Howell
       For the pix2gif code which is used in libdrilbo to parse the infocom .mg1 image files.

   People helping with bug fixes, extensions, packaging, translations and more
       in alphabetical order: Andrew Plotkin, B. Watson, David Batchelder, David  Leverton,  Eric
       Forgeot,  irb,  Lewis  Gentry,  Michael Dunlap, Mikko Torvinen, Nikos Chantziaras, Patrick
       Matthäi, Samuel Verschelde, Zachary Kline and the people at MacPorts.

SEE ALSO

       fizmo-console(6), frotz(6), xzip(6), jzip(6), inform(1)

AUTHOR

       Fizmo was written in 2005–2015 by Christoph Ender.

BUGS

       Fizmo is in beta stage and will probably still have some bugs.  If you stumble  upon  one,
       please send an e-mail to fizmo@spellbreaker.org.