Talk:Main Page
Contents
- 1 Why is the "Robo Wiki" icon in the upper left corner so small?
- 2 Does robo rumble work?
- 3 Article count
- 4 Font size
- 5 Smileys :-)
- 6 Old wiki
- 7 mailer error
- 8 InterWiki Links
- 9 Database error
- 10 SourceForge.net Community Choices Awards
- 11 Special:Disambiguations
- 12 Image Uploads
- 13 /wiki/PageName-style url
- 14 Syntax Highlighting
- 15 Favicon
- 16 Robocode on Wikipedia
- 17 "Robocode Guidebook"
Why is the "Robo Wiki" icon in the upper left corner so small?
The headline speaks for itself. --Awesomeness 21:08, 3 May 2009 (UTC)
So small? It seems just right to me really. --Rednaxela 21:56, 3 May 2009 (UTC)
Because it is the same size as the old wiki =) » Nat | Talk » 23:41, 3 May 2009 (UTC)
Does robo rumble work?
hi im new to robocode, been doing it as part of my uni course and i was wondering, is it possible to run roborumble at home anymore because ive follwed the instructions and none of the battles ive been doing have been uploading.... Quietus 15:47, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Yep! It sure as he heck still works! The thing is, the rumble.fervir.com server has been kind of broken for a while. You need to point your client at this URL instead now (See here for more information). There's new fanciness in that server too :) --Rednaxela 19:48, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Article count
A couple questions about the article count (after having some trouble Googling for answers). First, why isn't it updating automatically? Is that something I can trigger to update, or add to the "job queue", does anyone know? (Notice if you edit / preview it is higher than 43, which it reads on the main page right now.) Second, what qualifies as an "article"? Is there a minimum length that a page needs to be (other than not being a user or talk page) to qualify as an article? --Voidious 19:56, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
- The main page just updated, it now says 48 articles. Also, the statistics page says that there are 145 pages total, but it is excluding, "talk pages, pages about RoboWiki, minimal 'stub' pages, redirects, and others that probably don't qualify as content pages." --AaronR 20:00, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
According to the MediaWiki wiki (now that's a mouthful), the main page will come up to date as soon as its HTML cache is invalidated, at which point all of the templates, etc. will be transcluded again. Don't know if that helps... --AaronR 20:27, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
Font size
Just out of curiosity, why is the font size so large here compared to, say, Wikipedia? I know, I know, it's the same as the old wiki's font, but that wiki didn't have a sidebar. --AaronR 07:04, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
- Primarily because I thought "x-small" was just too small, and yes, it was also just sooo much smaller than the old wiki. I also figured that with the skins options, we could easily give people more choices to choose their own style, anyway. I will confess that tiny fonts for the sake of sleeker designs is a major pet peeve of mine. :-P --Voidious 07:12, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
Smileys :-)
I would be relly nice if we could somehow support smile, e.g. just as simple as stating:
[[Image:HappySmiley.png]]
--Flemming N. Larsen 09:04, 28 November 2007 (UTC)
Wikimedia Commons has a whole section of GFDL'd or public domain smileys (look at the link at the bottom for more). I don't really see the point though. If you want to upload them and use them, feel free, but I'll stick with =) on the wiki. --AaronR
01:21, 30 November 2007 (UTC)
Old wiki
The old wiki is not working (error 500), and so my roborumble client (it cannot find the list of partecipants), but i see many client is uploading. What is your solution? --Lestofante 10:35, 1 Dic 2008 (UTC)
The clients currently running are just using the last copy of the participants list they downloaded from the old wiki. I emailed PEZ a bit ago and got a reply that he'll look into it so hopefully the old wiki will be up again in not too long. If that ends up taking longer than expected though, we could update/fix the participants page on the new wiki and point clients at that instead. (Note: Don't point clients at the one on the new wiki just yet, it's out of date and such. It needs to be copied over from a downloaded copy of the list from the old wiki) --Rednaxela 12:00, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
maybe we can drop definitely the old wiki for roborumble client, or better every ramble server can implements it's own participants list, maybe integrated with general wiki list --Lestofante 15:13, 1 Dic 2008 (UTC)
I'd agree that migrating to using the new wiki participants list would be good, though I think some more veteran wikiers/rumblers than myself should give their input before any such switch is made 'official'. As far as keeping a participants list with the rumble server, well, there's only one working rumble server at the moment so I'm not sure what good that would do, and furthermore multiple rumble server would be a bad thing I think becacuse it would divide the processing power that goes towards making the battles. --Rednaxela 17:47, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
That's right, then I thing the server have to had a mirror of the wiki's official participants list, so in this case we can continue run our client, simple we cannot modify the list (if the two list are not synchronize together) --Lestofante 21:49, 1 Dic 2008 (UTC)
Yeah, the real problem is getting the participants list from the currently-erroring wiki. The RR client has no problem parsing the new wiki format. I may be able to get that from the RoboWiki server when I get home (if it isn't fixed before then).
The other issue we might encounter in the future would be when we move this wiki to robowiki.net, and we have RR clients pointing to testwiki.roborumble.org, but I don't think forwarding that URL and/or having people update their clients would be a big issue. I'm glad you contacted PEZ about the old wiki's current problems, I've been out of touch for at least a week...
--Voidious 19:03, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
Okay to mention it here as well for people who haven't been checking up on it... The old wiki is back up! --Rednaxela 18:43, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
mailer error
I'm trying to confirm my user e-mail, but I still get "mailer error". I've tried 3 different and working address... and there is a way for automatically sign the edits? --Lestofante 22:00, 1 Dic 2008 (UTC)
- I couldn't get the mailer to work either, but you can easily sign your edits using --~~~~. See http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Cheatsheet for more tricks. --Darkcanuck 03:13, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
InterWiki Links
Who have fully access to this server apart from David Alves? I want both my thai wiki and this wiki a inter-languages link. Please look here for more detailed. » Nat | Talk » 15:16, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
I have full access, or at least I do if I can remember the password. =) I'll see about logging in and taking a look at the InterWiki stuff. Sorry it took so long to respond about this. --Voidious 14:50, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
Hey Voidious, I believed that the SQL will take less than 1 seconds to copy/past/execute. Plus login/connecting time I think this can be accomplished within a minute so please do asap (or I must say NOW). » Nat | Talk » 16:19, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
Hey Nat - I will add the InterWiki link because I'd like to support your efforts to start a Thai Robocode community and wiki. But I really don't appreciate being commanded to do that (or much of anything, really), and especially to do so "NOW". Please keep in mind the RoboWiki's only rule: "Pretty please be polite." --Voidious 18:48, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
Cool, I read up on the InterWiki stuff, added your Thai wiki to the database, and posted a link on the main page. As I can't read Thai, please make sure that looks right and edit it if necessary. =) --Voidious 22:54, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
Sorry for that rude. But anyways, thank you very much. The link at main page is correct. » Nat | Talk » 01:37, 23 April 2009 (UTC)
Database error
I didn't know where to put this, but here seems like a decent spot. All my posts are getting this message today (4 times, probably 5 with this one), the posts are still uploaded but the message is:
A database query syntax error has occurred. This may indicate a bug in the software. The last attempted database query was: (SQL query hidden) from within function "SearchMySQL4::update". MySQL returned error "126: Incorrect key file for table './wikidb/searchindex.MYI'; try to repair it (localhost)".
I don't know if localhost is meant to be from mine point of view, or the server's. Maybe someone else is getting the same messages, I haven't tried to logout/in, because I just thought of that. --zyx 23:47, 5 May 2009 (UTC)
- Just like when you go to the mechanic, I didn't get the message this time. Another piece of information may be that all the other 4 posts where at Talk:PwnBot, so maybe the problem relies in that page. --zyx 23:49, 5 May 2009 (UTC)
- I found some mentions of people hitting this, and it sounds like a "repair table" SQL command is the remedy. I've run that now, so hopefully it's fixed. Can you let me know if it happens again? Thanks, --Voidious 00:31, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
- Just got it again, and again in the same page Talk:PwnBot. --zyx 20:45, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks for the info. I saw it as well when I posted the downtime note. I'm guessing the server crashing corrupted the searchindex table -- I'll rerun the "repair table" and post here when I do. I'll also be backing up the database very soon. --Voidious 20:52, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
- Is it... My fault?! I created that page. It seems whenever I change a page I get it too. It doesn't matter what page I go to. Also, for the majority of today, (for me at least) it seems your server has been down. I've been unable to connect. --Awesomeness 22:04, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
- It's not your fault, and I saw it on another page too. The server went down for a while as of last night, still not sure what happened, but glad it's back up. I've rerun the "repair table" command, so I think that database error will go away for now. --Voidious 22:06, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
SourceForge.net Community Choices Awards
http://sourceforge.net/images/cca/cca_nominate.png
Please nominate Robocode to SourceForge.net Community Choices Awards!
Nominate Robocode
Anyone mind to put this to MediaWiki:Sitenotice or front page? I not sure if I can post to front page. » Nat | Talk » 10:21, 15 May 2009 (UTC)
Please nominate Robocode in category of "Best Project for Academia" and "Most Likely to Change the Way You Do Everything". If you nominate to another category, please post here so other robocoder can nominate in same categories (note that you can nominate in multiple categories) Nevertheless, please nominate! » Nat | Talk » 11:26, 18 May 2009 (UTC)
Special:Disambiguations
Do anyone know why the Special:Disambiguations has spammy report? » Nat | Talk » 11:23, 18 May 2009 (UTC)
Image Uploads
It looks like the image uploads folder is not set as writable to the wiki. Is this expected to change? -- Synapse 05:27, 10 June 2009 (UTC)
Haven't test yet. If this is true, I think this problem cause due the upgrading of MediaWiki. Voidious, check it please? Another note to Voidious, MediaWiki/1.15 just release =) » Nat | Talk » 13:29, 10 June 2009 (UTC)
Not sure why it stopped working, but I'll take a look at the image uploads and upgrading MediaWiki this afternoon. (And making a mental note to test that whenever I upgrade. =)) --Voidious 15:41, 11 June 2009 (UTC)
Fixed the uploading issue and upgraded MedaWiki to 1.15. Enjoy. =) --Voidious 20:10, 11 June 2009 (UTC)
/wiki/PageName-style url
Recently this day I noticed that the /wiki/PageName-style URL is now work. Voidious, why don't you set the $wgArticlePath = "/wiki/$1"
in LocalSettings.php? And I wonder why the old server at 174.132.4.195 now has new wiki code, and available in both /wiki/PageName and ?PageName style (but not /w/index.php?title=PageName style). What's going on? » Nat | Talk » 12:56, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
Syntax Highlighting
It would be great if we could have syntax highlighting for code snippets. This would make code snippets easier to read. Currently, if I want to read a code snippet from the wiki, I would copy and paste it into my favourite text editor.
Wikipedia itself seems to use SyntaxHighlight GeSHi.—
Duyn 14:56, 17 January 2010 (UTC)
User:Voidious/RoboWiki_To-Do --Nat Pavasant 13:41, 18 January 2010 (UTC)
Yeah, that's been on my to-do list for a while, I'll try to get it up and running soon. Can't be too tough. =) --Voidious 16:12, 19 January 2010 (UTC)
Favicon
I just noticed that the new Robowiki doesn't have a favicon. This is easily remedied by copying http://old.robowiki.net/favicon.ico so that it is accessible at http://robowiki.net/favicon.ico --Skilgannon 18:00, 17 January 2010 (UTC)
- Will do. --Voidious 16:12, 19 January 2010 (UTC)
Robocode on Wikipedia
Well, wikipedia:Robocode article is just challenged for reference, as well as a original research. Please help it by adding reference. --Nat Pavasant 15:09, 15 April 2010 (UTC)
Honestly, I believe many things on the wikipedia article, at least 2/3rds of the page, just plain don't belong on Wikiedia, due to valid reasons. In fact I'm not sure anything beyond the overview and the first two sections belong, given how Wikipedia's 'original research' and 'notability' criteria apply to such sections. Even those sections which do make sense to keep to desperately need citations. Essentially, I don't feel the sections added by PEZ fit wikipedia's criteria for what belongs. So... I think it does deserve to be challenged for good reason. I don't have time to improve what should stay though. --Rednaxela 16:39, 15 April 2010 (UTC)
I'll make more comments on the Wikipedia talk page, but I agree it needs a lot of cleanup and I'm willing to help out with that. I half agree with Rednaxela. The overview and first 2 sections are fine and neutral. The rest could use a lot of cleaning up, but I don't think it all needs just to be axed. Some editing down / revising / adding citations should do the trick. (I think the RoboWiki is a "reliable source"? If not, I don't know what is.) --Voidious 19:03, 15 April 2010 (UTC)
- Well, while I would personally consider Robowiki a "reliable source" for my own purposes, it seems to me it violates some of what is noted on Wikipedia:Verifiability#Self-published_sources, in particular how it notes "open wikis" among other things as "largely not acceptable". Also, note the "no original research" policies, and consider that much of the purpose of Robowiki is for "original research". There is a significant difference between a source one trusts, and a source that fits Wikipedia's rules. --Rednaxela 01:54, 16 April 2010 (UTC)
- Hmm, thanks. I really don't know much about Wikipedia's policies, but just starting to read up on it now. In that case, you are probably right that a lot of stuff needs to just be axed... --Voidious 13:46, 16 April 2010 (UTC)
"Robocode Guidebook"
The other day I was thinking it was a pity that it isn't that easy to get into Robocode really. Sure, we have a "Getting Started" page but that's pretty loose. I was then reminded about Wikibooks. So here's a question: Who thinks it might be a good idea to make a fairly self-contained "Robocode Guidebook" of a similar style to the things on Wikibooks? Many existing tutorials could probably be moved in or adapted, though trying to organize things in that format might, 1) Reveal things that need tutorials still, and 2) Make it easier for a newcomer to follow. Thoughts? --Rednaxela 13:37, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
- I need to check out Wikibooks to see the "style", but it sounds like a great idea if we can find people with the time. I'd certainly be happy to contribute. I try to visit the RoboWiki with a "newbie mind" sometimes, and there is definitely a lot of work to be done... --Voidious 13:52, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
- It sounds like a good idea to me. I started robocode less than a month ago and I could tell you what I would find helpful / not helpful etc. If you decide to do it and need me help feel free to ask :) --Exauge 21:03, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
- I think your input would be very useful. Many of us have been at this for months/years, so it's easy to lose perspective. =) --Voidious 21:49, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
- Which brings up another point I wanted to make... It seems important to consider target audience, since there's such a wide range of backgrounds of people that come to Robocode. They may have Java experience and fresh-in-mind trig knowledge, or be new to programming entirely and don't know/forgot trig and other maths. Of course, ideally we write something that anybody can learn from, but target audience definitely affects the style and pace. --Voidious 21:49, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
- Yes! ... " Robocode cookbook " ?? :) I would highly suggest a collection of sample AdvancedRobots (in their own directory) packaged with robocode. With a link in the help menu to the "Guide". Include a sample AdvancedRobot with a decent 'base' for melee. It took me 5 years of fighting with ways of storing info for melee. (homeMade silliness) because API's are difficult to understand... (Only to make use of module after) Include useful utils like 'project'.. helps make Trig easy... and If I knew eclipse would of made learning java easier I would switched over from the robocode editor much sooner.. (just some pointers... I gotta run:) -Jlm0924 22:36, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
Well, what I had in mind was making it a relatively linear book-like guide, and progress through the basics very gradually like follows:
Part 1: The basics
- How to get Robocode and run a battle in it
- How to set up an environment for making a robot in:
- With builtin editor in Robocode
- With a text editor command line compilation
- With Eclipse
- How to make a do-nothing robot
- Optional Java Sub-Lesson: Anatomy of a Java class
- Overview of robocode physics, and anatomy of the robocode turn and execution cycle
- How to make the robot move in a straight line, and then how to make it move in a circle
- How to turn the gun and fire
- How to scan, and fire directly at the scanned robot
- How to perform very simple ramming
- How to perform very simply orbiting
- How to to respond to hitting the wall (bounce off)
- Optional Geometry Sub-lesson: Perpendicularity and how moving perpendicular
- How to print to the robot console and make debugging graphics, and how to view them in the battle
- How to find the coordinates of a scanned enemy, and paint a box around them in debugging graphics
- Optional Trigonometry Sub-lesson: How to convert an angle and distance, into relative coordinates
- How to perform iterative linear targeting using this
- Optional Trigonometry Sub-lesson: Pythagorean Theorem - How to get the distance between coordinates
- Optional Trigonometry Sub-lesson: How to get the angle of a vector
- Sub-lesson: Concepts of iterative prediction
- How to perform approximate non-iterative targeting
- Optional Trigonmetry Sub-lesson: The math behind the non-iterative approximation
- More?
Part 2: Improved Techniques
- How to randomly change direction in a simple way
- Allude to possible improvements, like factoring in bullet-flight-time Raiko-style
- How to detect enemy firing, to make a simple stop-and-go movement
- Simple pattern matching
- Wall smoothing
- Melee enemy tracking and target selection
- Anti-gravity movement
- Competition (Roborumble) and testing (general testing advice)
- More?
Part 3: Advanced Techniques
- Some common ways to make bot code more modular
- Minimum risk movement
- Introduction to "Waves"
- Simple unsegmented guessfactor targeting
- Segmented guessfactor targeting
- Mention non-guessfactor segmented targeting (i.e. PastFuture)
- Simple (no trees) DC targeting
- Both Guessfactor and PIF based
- Simple 'Virtual Guns'
- How to deal with rammers
- More?
Part 4: Elaborate Techniques
- Timing nitpicks, revisiting the execution cycle
- Consider how enemies see you with a delay, and vice versa
- Consider how one's own gun rotation is for one's location next turn, not this turn
- How to predict one's next location, for extra precision
- Very Briefly mention imaginary gunheat waves maybe?
- Basics of team robots
- Wave surfing
- Anti-surfer techniques
- Precise wave intersections
- Neural targeting
- Wisdom on combining many VCS buffers, combining multiple targeting systems, etc
- More?
All sections using AdvancedRobot/TeamRobot, never plain Robot of JuniorRobot. Any thoughts? :) --Rednaxela 06:17, 13 May 2010 (UTC)
Wow, I see you've already put a lot of thought into this. Cool! I'd be happy to start working on drafts for whatever sections if you want to take the lead in handing out assignments. =) Though I may be pretty busy with work for a few days here.
Just brainstorming - I'm not necessarily 100% in favor of any of these ideas:
- It might be neat to have a few challenges sprinkled in, maybe to end chapters or sections. For instance, "beat this RamBot", or "out-survive sample.MyFirstRobot without firing" (I think I stole that one from Kawigi).
- Why completely exclude Robot/JuniorRobot? I think a lot of Robocode beginners are using these. Sometimes they have no choice, since it's specified as part of their assignment.
- RoboResearch might be a good topic. It can be a pain to setup and get running, but it is just such a must-have tool, imo.
- Wave Surfing could practically be its own top level section as we get more advanced. It's a pretty broad category of movement.
- It might be fun to touch on a few random topics somewhere, like Twin Duel, large battle fields, Droids, "perceptual" bots. But of course that seems like a low priority.
--Voidious 15:52, 13 May 2010 (UTC)
This is an excellent and I really love the idea! I have had something similar in mind for some time, but never had the time for it. I think you experienced Robocoders will be much better at writing this guide book than me, as I don't go deep into robot developing, but put most efforts into developing the game itself. If you need me to write parts of this guide, please tell be which parts you have in mind, and I will see what I can do. :-) I will definitely keep an eye on this page, which I think will be VERY important for newcomers and as a kind of reference book when it is finished. :-) Don't forget pictures! ;-) --Fnl 20:32, 13 May 2010 (UTC)
I'm not sure I like Wikibooks' use of a Copyleft license, though: GNU Free Documentation License. I imagine a lot of the content going into this book could be related to content on this wiki, either derived from a RoboWiki article, or it could form the basis of a new/revised article. I'm not sure about committing everything on this wiki to that license, which would be required for the latter... (unless just those specific RoboWiki articles use that license, which I guess is do-able, but seems like a big headache.) --Voidious 21:50, 13 May 2010 (UTC)
Actually I'd like CC-BY-SA license with this wiki (see Robowiki_talk:Copyrights). One thing I'd like to comment about the outline, I don't think the Elaborate Techniques part is required. If you understand basic of the first three parts, you should be able to understand the fourth part with information on this wiki. Anyway, many, many interesting things on this wiki are hidden under the massive talk on the old wiki. --Nat Pavasant 05:32, 14 May 2010 (UTC)
@Voidious: Well, personally, I feel that JuniorRobot and plain Robot are no easier than AdvancedRobot, and the mindset/thinking required to code each effectively is very different. About licence, I wasn't thinking of putting this guide on Wikibooks, just on this wiki like any other articles. I was only mentioning Wikibooks for the general style of how to organize a 'book' on mediawiki and such.
@Fnl: Alright. Indeed, pictures are good ;)
@Nat: Well, I'm not sure the "elaborate techniques" section is as needed either, but for completeness I think would be nice to include it. I do definitely consider the earlier sections to be much higher priority than the later sections personally.
--Rednaxela 06:02, 14 May 2010 (UTC)
I played around in photoshop a little bit and made somewhat of an icon or w/e to put on first page of the guidebook. If you don't like it feel absolutely free not to use it. anyways here it is.
--Exauge 21:10, 14 May 2010 (UTC)
cool! ... I think if you changed just the "Robo" to the same style as used for "Robocode"; It might be irrestible... ;) (If They don't take it; You'll have the snaziest Snippet Page :) -Jlm0924 23:45, 14 May 2010 (UTC)
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Time-based Rumble Types Proposal
The conversation is about the possibility of adding new rumble types in Robocode that are limited by time per tick instead of code size. Some participants suggest that this would encourage bots to make more time tradeoff decisions and could potentially lead to more diverse strategies. However, there are concerns about how to categorize these bots and the difficulty of accurately measuring time per tick. Some suggest using a fixed tick time competition, while others point out that the Robocode engine's control over CPU time is not precise enough for this task. There is also mention of the possibility of using Java bytecode instrumentation to assign fixed costs to different Java bytecode instructions, but this is seen as too complicated to implement.
-- ChatGPT
I don't think code size is a good limiter for different rumble types, because it forces people to do all sorts of tricks which results in very difficult to understand code. In addition, code size is so small compared to memory now that it hardly seems relevant in most cases. What if new rumble types were added where time per tick is the limiting factor: QuickRumble, with half the time, FastRumble 1/4, HyperRumble 1/8, SlowRumble 2x, etc. (Names are arbitrary) This would mean bots in faster rumbles would have to make more time tradeoff decisions, (less precise prediction? more approximate GFs?), and perhaps bots in slower rumbles could find a use for non-KNN classification schemes that required more time. What do you think?
Tick time size sound like a fantastic idea, I think robocode has some built in constants which potentially can be tweaked for time based rumbles.
But, I would still keep size based categories. I personally amazed how much can be squeezed into small code. It is indeed unreadable, but they set a bar and send a strong hint to me when those little gizmos level my megabot.
The problem is categorizing them. Right now they are automatically sorted into the categories, since codesize is a compile time constant. However time limiting is a run time value. You would have to run a number of battles to place a robot. Even then you need to decide if something that is under the certain limit 99.9% of the time but over 0.1% of the time should be in which category, and so forth.
Well, we can make a time tick fixed competitions. Every one participate but bots which designed with time constrains in mind will sort to the top by themselves.
I think it is analogous to current size based system: nano bots participate in mega bots competitions and have good chances, but it is not true in reverse. Though here we can participant selection in advance.
So all we need is good tick measure, which is not that easy with current CPU which tend to throttle and boost their performance.
The problem I have with this idea, is that the Robocode engine's control over CPU time is far too approximate for that task.
The nature of such a league is to encourage people to push the limit of the alotted CPU time, however one can expect the calibration of CPU time to be off by wide margins between different computers, or even different runs on the same computer.
If one wants to have a league where the CPU time is a primary design constraint for bots, we need an engine with more precise management of this, such as by using Java bytecode instrumentation to assign fixed costs to different Java bytecode instructions... but that... that gets very complicated to implement.
When I look at discussion threads, I do not see anymore separate post highlighting? The whole discussion with action links now looks like one a single continuous stream.
Does anyone else experience it?
I experienced the same bug two weeks ago. But it seems fixed for me now, even though I didn't do anything.
Perhaps it's an intermittent issue?
I have a theory about the root cause of the problem, but I need more data to confirm.
Can someone experiencing this issue please open the browser console (F12 -> Console tab), and post the contents of it? Also, which browser are you using?
If I my idea is right, you should see Uncaught ReferenceError: jQuery is not defined
.
Same here. That's why I suspect the cause is js resources. However this issue seems to happen some time, and disappear some time. Maybe browser caches that once it successfully loads.
I see something else in Firefox:
SyntaxError: illegal character load.php:1:190
When I go to
After character 190 it is a bunch of strange characters. I guess something was corrupted on the database?
It seems there are two separate problems then.
Everyone who sees Uncaught SyntaxError: Invalid or unexpected token
is:
- Using Monobook (the default skin), either by choice or by not being logged in.
- Experiencing this problem continuously.
- The root cause is that this script, which should contain jQuery and MediaWiki frontend code, has parts of it overwritten with 155648 0x00 bytes.
- Because that script does not parse, the loading process is broken.
- This probably requires a server-side fix.
- People seeing this: Skilgannon
Meanwhile, everyone who sees Uncaught ReferenceError: jQuery is not defined
is:
- Using the Vector skin.
- Using Chrome.
- Experiencing this problem intermittently.
- For the Vector skin, this script, which contains jQuery and MediaWiki frontend code, it perfectly fine.
- However, that script is loaded by this script through document.write() of a <script> tag.
- Chrome is known to block the use of document.write() to load scripts on slow Internet connections.
- Thus, since the script that contains and exposes jQuery is not loaded, other code that depends on it errors with
Uncaught ReferenceError: jQuery is not defined
. - Possible fix: Go to chrome://flags, set "Block scripts loaded via document.write" to "Disabled", and restart your browser.
- People experiencing this: Xor and past me
The channel from the old wiki is decidedly dead. Is there a new one? I can't find one on any network.
If not, I'm on FreeNode.net/#robocode, I can transfer ownership of the channel to an appropriate veteran if one joins it.
Whilst the wiki discussion thing is good for serious robocode questions and things which require the persistency of a wiki, I think having a place to chill out and talk robocode more casually might be nice. Especially for things like bouncing ideas around and getting more instant feedback on things.
What are other robocoders thoughts/opinions?
I think part of me is still struggling to associate a wiki with quick responses... :P
ok, maybe I can't transfer ownership (it's already owned by someone?) but I can idle in there quite happily until someone else pops along :)
according to freenode's FAQ, the channel #robocode is under silly regulations, and we should use ##robocode instead, unless we can complete a "group registration" in order to secure #robocode (failing being able to contact Chase-san, who is the current "founder" of #robocode).
The upshot of this is that ##robocode is the channel I will be idling in (as well as #robocode, just in case anybody shows up there), and my recommended channel to join (unless you know who Chase-san is, or can navigate around freenode's bureaucracy)
What about me?
The reason I don't keep up the robocode IRC is that no one really ever went in there.
I used to love to hang around in IRC channels. But these days, I don't really have a good time to do it. I can't do it at work, and at home the only time I spend on my computer anymore is when I'm actually working on my robot. The rest of the time, I'm doing family activities, chores, doing home improvement projects, etc. I suppose I could fire it up during the periods when I sneak off to the bedroom to get in some Robocoding time. That would be mostly between 10pm and 1am central time, but not every day.
Sorry, Chase-san, I presumed because the IRC channel hadn't been visited in ages you might be a retiree from robocode.
If we can fire up the channel again, that would be good for people who enjoy it. Since Chase-san clearly does still exist, I'll drop the ##robocode and just idle in #robocode in that case. If anybody wants to join me, they can feel free, if not, that's cool also. I don't lose anything by idling in there (I'm already idling in ##java) so it's no biggy to add another chan. :)
While we are in the process of transferring to new littlerumble accepted clients, it make sense to revive irc channel for faster communication.
I am hanging on FreeNode.net/#robocode and will be happy to talk to you all.
I'm idling on both ##robocode and #robocode, ##robocode does not have an owner and i did not register it.
Been on a very, very long hiatus from Robocode. Got really pissed off that I lost my excellent robot, Thor, and just abandoned everything.
I am the channel owner of FreeNode.net/#robocode and I'll be there over the next few days while I try (probably in vain) to recreate my fancy targeting algorithm.
The old RoboWiki is offline. Accessing it produces 500 Internal Error.
Is anyone else seeing this problem? Does this happen often? Does anyone need to be contacted?
Never mind.
Please nuke these users: Special:Contributions/Dfsdf, Special:Contributions/Ghfdhfg, Special:Contributions/Yifaput4, Special:Contributions/Lericuxi12345, Special:Contributions/Jfnjdf, and Special:Contributions/Dsgdfhg.
Edit: See Thread:User talk:Skilgannon/Spam bot invasion instead.
Also, a better CAPTCHA is needed, MathCaptcha is too easy.
I think a question-based CAPTCHA would work. Questions such as:
- Q: "Name a sample bot." A: One of ["Corners", "Crazy", "Fire", "Interactive", "Interactive_v2", "MyFirstRobot", "MyFirstJuniorRobot", "PaintingRobot", "RamFire", "SittingDuck", "SpinBot", "Target", "TrackFire", "VelociRobot", "Walls"]
- Q: "Name a robot base class." Q: One of ["Robot", "JuniorRobot", "AdvancedRobot", "TeamRobot"]
- Q: "What is the default battlefield size (WIDTHxHEIGHT)?" A: "800x600"
- Q: "What is the default number of rounds?" A: "10"
- Q: "What is the name of the sample bot in the 'samplesentry' package?" A: "BorderGuard"
etc.
I like the question based CAPTCHA. I have a low profile wiki where it is enabled for registration, and questions keeps spamers away...mostly. From time to time there is a renegade human who reveal the answer, and spam bots invade. But than I change the question. Last time I changed it was more than a year ago.
Another good measure would be to put all messages from newly registered users in a pre-moderated pool until they prove themselves.
Overall, I think our fort is holding, we just need a way to summon admins a bit faster.
Due to the recent (May 23 - May 31) spam attack, maybe whe should reconsider the process of creating a user account. Alas I have no idea how to change that, some someone (wiki-host ?) should take some action here. Note that 'Main Page' is redirected to 'Robowiki:Main Page', and I don't know how to revert that.
Thanks for reverting so much of the spam, GrubbmGait! I've disabled account creation for now and I'll fix the main page redirect. Still not sure what we should do longer term, but I'm sure there are options... I'll try to look into it this week.
Another spam attack happened today.
Blocking some accounts, cant do more from a tablet whole on holiday
Hey ho!
I was wondering: why there is no serious website, where You can upload your bots, create rankings and tournaments and just battle. Rumble is fine, but be serious - it's has a few functionalities and it's NOT user friendly.
There is a question to all of You: do You want to have such web application? Possibility of uploading bots, instant fights, rankings, tournaments etc...
What would You expect from such application?
I am thinking about gathering a team. With that team we could create a nice webapp.
Guys, please think about it. share Your feelings and thoughts.
/skiba
I've thought about this lately, particularly after implementing a web UI for my own programming game. I have a couple thoughts:
- First, the online Robocode community is pretty hardcore about bot programming. We have the RoboRumble in place that facilitates that perfectly. A user-friendly, non-IDE development UI is just not something that would grab these people the way it would grab programming beginners, if you ask me.
- I love Robocode, but... It's ancient. :-) I think you should build something for a new generation of users, not try to prolong the life of Robocode's current code base. Or even work with Fnl to implement this in Robocode 2.
Such a web app would be great for new people. But for new people, I think there are better alternatives.
- It would be nice to have something to replace the Robocode Central, so it is possible to upload and download robots - and the same robot in various versions etc.
- It could run new types of tournaments, and divide robots into beginner (Level 1), experienced (Level 10?), veteran (Level 30?) or similar depending on how well they perform. Everybody starts as beginner, and then gain higher level, when they are able to beat more than 50% of the other robots at the same level or something like that.
- It would be great to have a web page or GUI where beginners can put program a simple robot using stuff like graphical symbols (commands) that could be drag'n'dropped, like e.g. "Turn left", "Move forward", and "Fire". And each command could take a parameter value like 90 for "Turn left" 90 degrees. Then it could write the source code on the fly which could be copy'n'pasted, saved and/or compiled for Robocode.
- Regarding Robocode 2. I am working on a prototype that is platform independent (protocol based). But it is not ready for a web page yet. Lots of details could change. So it is still on the experimental level.
Don't get me wrong! I agree with you that the Robocode community skews pretty strongly towards the hardcore. It lacks the infrastructure to attract beginners and nurture/funnel them into the ecosystem. And it's possible we could build something awesome that integrates nicely with what we already have. I just think the ship has sailed on major changes to Robocode that don't include a complete rewrite. I think your efforts would have more impact if you don't chain yourself to Robocode.
Wise words, I have to agree with You. Let's wait for other's vote. I am waiting for developer's opinion and general thoughts about Robocode 2, the future of Robocode and possibility of merging Robocode 2 with some kind of online platform. It could breathe new life into this game.
FYI a more reliable way to get in touch with the developers is the Google group: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/robocode-developers
Fnl and Pavel stop by here sometimes, but they're not that active.
Btw, have you looked around at some other games with this kind of stuff? I think it's common to find Robocode with its epic hardcore community, RoboRumble, thousands of bots, and 15 years of history and think it's the only programming game worth looking into. (And it might be, depending on what you're after...)
- RobotGame.net got a lot of attention recently. I didn't dive in but it looks neat and pretty polished. Python and looked like simple game rules with some depth.
- FightCodeGame is pretty cool. The gameplay seems mostly like a simplistic Robocode clone, but the web site is pretty awesome. The main thing that turned me off (personally) was that they gained launch momentum with a GitHub coding contest and then switched to closed source/for profit shortly after.
- Nodewar is a pretty simple UI, but I think the gameplay itself is pretty sweet. One of the few games I really feel is pushing the envelope with gameplay. I'd say at least half of programming games (including Robocode) are "2+ tanks on a rectangular battle field with no walls".
- CodeCombat seems more of a legit "learn to code" style programming game. It's a common strategy for advertising programming games, but for most games, it strikes me as similar to claiming basketball was designed to keep you healthy.
- PlayBerryBots.com is the web UI for my own game, which is a cross-platform desktop app like Robocode. For now just a simple "write code / run battles", but I may build it into something more robust soon.
Oh yeah and ProgrammingGames.org is cool too. It's run by one of the main guys from the Core War community.
Yeah, even my roboflight is just a '2+ spherical bots in a sphere'.
I need to work on it, but I was considering switching it over to C/C++ Lua like Berry Bots. I realize that Java is a lot of overhead, but due to Robocode I am most comfortable in the language.
I think Lua is awesome and totally perfect for programming games, but its relative unpopularity is probably worth considering too. I think Python or JavaScript are probably the ideal languages for attracting people to a programming game right now. But I like Lua and it's a choice I'm still happy with. And if Lua suddenly takes off, I'll be in pretty good shape. :-)
You might try out Code of Tanks, a 3-D tank battle game, which is brand new as of this writing. You write your AI in a .NET language, C# or whatever. Whenever you want to play you create or join a room, run your AI and pick your tanks, and watch the battle live in 3-D. You can watch the video trailer at the website to see it in action: codeoftanks.com
For those interested in .NET programming, you might like Code of Tanks, an online PvP tank battle game, brand new as of this writing. It does require some fundamental .NET programming knowledge, but other than that it's pretty simple: you create or join a room with other players, get your AI ready and pick your tanks, and watch the battle live from anywhere in 3-D.
It's in Beta and anyone can try it out: codeoftanks.com
No tournaments or contests yet, but live battles can be had any time. As a new product you may not find many competitors online when you are, but as more people discover it there may be rooms running around the clock. Until then you can just get some friends to play at the same time and run matches.
Hi all. Sorry for the recent downtime. For some reason the HTTP server had stopped, for no discernible reason that I can tell.
It took me much longer than it should have to get around to fixing it, as the only times I remembered were times I didn't have access to it. Sorry about that.
For the record, if anyone sees issues on the site in the future, I can be poked at http://node01.strangeautomata.com/files/email.png
When I start the battlefield,my robot and other enemy are frozen. The println messages are not displayed in the robot console. But the command prompt shows the following error. I check that the cause of error is the addition of node in my queue (queue.add(n)). However, this line of code shall be fine i guess. So I would like to ask how to solve this error message? (this part of my program is for path finding using bfs)
Thank you.
- BATTLE 1, ROUND 1 *****
TURN 1: StudentRobot* (1) hard deadline exceeded - 532809us
Err> Robot StudentRobot* (1) is not stopping. Forcing a stop.
Err> Robot StudentRobot* (2) is not stopping. Forcing a stop.
Average computation time per turn: 511706
Max turn computation time: 532809
private boolean pathFinding_BFS(Node start, Node end){
LinkedList<Node> queue = new LinkedList<Node>();
queue.add(start);
start.setMarked();
while (!queue.isEmpty()){
Node temp = (Node)queue.poll();
System.out.println("first node:" + temp.getPointInPath().getX() + " y " + temp.getPointInPath().getY());
if (temp.equals(end)){
temp.setPrevNodeInPath(temp.getPrevNodeInPath());
return true;
}else{
for (Node n : temp.getAdjacentNode()){
System.out.println("in node:" + n.getPointInPath().getX() + " y " +
n.getPointInPath().getY());
if (!n.isMarked()){
n.setMarked();
n.setPrevNodeInPath(temp);
System.out.println("test n");
queue.add(n); //problem here
}
}
}
}
return false;
}
public List<Point> getShortestPath(Point start){
Node src = new Node(start);
List<Point> path = new ArrayList<Point>();
for (int i=0;i<endup.size();i++){
Node destination = new Node(endup.get(i));
if (pathFinding_BFS(src, destination)){
while (destination.getPrevNodeInPath() != null){
destination = destination.getPrevNodeInPath();
path.add(destination.getPointInPath());
}
Collections.reverse(path);
return path;
}
}
return path;
}
I don't see any clear problems with that code there. The only way I could see it looping forever is if either setMarked and isMarked are not working correctly, or some other code being called is unsetting the marks in the middle of that loop.
It is possible that this search is just plain taking far too long (>533ms on your computer) because of there being too many nodes to search before it finds the desired end point. How many nodes are you running this code with? If this is indeed the case, you should do one or both of the following: 1) Reduce the number of nodes, and/or 2) Switch from a full breadth first search to a more efficient algorithm such as A*
To figure out what the problem is, I would tend to suggest running this under a debugger, and step through what is happening.
EDIT: Oh, and another possible thing that comes to mind, is perhaps your problem has nothing to do with your node search code. Maybe your robot is just never calling any of the methods that signal to Robocode that has finished it's turn.
So I updated MediaWiki to 1.19 and the LiquidThreads extension. The MediaWiki update script failed when dropping some index after updating LiquidThreads, but everything seems to be working (and wasn't before running the script), so I'm hoping everything's ok and please just let me know if you see any problems. The update script ran OK for just the MediaWiki upgrade, but some things were still broken due to the LiquidThreads incompatibility. Everything's backed up so I'm not too worried - I think it's mainly LiquidThreads that might be messed up.
The wiki font is also back to default size. I'm leaving it for the moment but let me know what you guys think - I'm not sure if I was the only one that wanted it bigger before anyway.
We need PHP 5.3.6 for MediaWiki 1.20, and for that I think we need to upgrade Ubuntu, so that won't happen until I can coordinate that with David.
Shoot, we also lost Twitter on the sidebar. I'll get that stuff fixed up tomorrow. And this new LiquidThreads rendering is kind of weird...
From memory, you might be able to get around updating ubuntu by adding the 'backports' repository, if it isn't already in. I don't play around with *nix enough these days to be confident with making these kinds of changes =)
Using this CSS will make the new liquid threads more tolerable (at least to me).
.lqt-post-wrapper { border-style: solid none none solid; border-color: silver; border-width: 1px !important; background: #fff; } .thread-collapse-control > a { background: none; width: 10px; height: 10px; border: 1px solid silver; }
Depending on how you apply it, you may need to include a few more !important
tags, I tested it in Stylish on Google Chrome.
I liked the font size the way it was before.
Also, when you update the sidebar, try putting the Twitter feed below the Toolbox. I think that would be more useful.
Thanks
Upgrading Ubuntu should be relatively painless. i've always had good luck with it and Debian. :)
The site looks nice!
Alright, I've finally:
- Reverted the font to non-tiny.
- Fixed the RoboRumble Twitter feed [1]
- Restored the @robowiki Twitter feed on the sidebar (actually it's a new one, I guess they killed the old widget).
- Moved Twitter feed below toolbox, as I think a couple people suggested.
- Noted that the new widget can hide @ replies, so I'm not afraid to respond to people as @robowiki on Twitter any more. :-P
A couple more new web based games got on my radar recently.
- Nodewar - Sleak, web-based, Javascript. Feels lean and mean. I like that the gameplay is not your typical "arena" style battle. Replays are very nice looking and HTML5 (a few at nodewar.com/ladders). This one doesn't seem very active atm, but I really dig it.
- Code & Conquer - This one looks really polished and education-oriented. Haven't seen the gameplay yet. Getting a fair amount of attention right now.
This new breed of fully web-based programming games really seems to be taking shape. I dig it! I hope we get some good ones and it brings tons of people into programming and programming games... It's got to be 100x easier to get people to try a game when all they need is a web browser.
But I also wonder about the future of desktop app games like Robocode. One thing I love about the Robocode community is that we contribute a lot of code outside of our bots, like RoboResearch, RoboRumble, running web sites and services, etc. It's sort of like console gaming vs computer gaming - computer gaming gives you level editors, mods, the precision of a mouse. We exercise a lot of freedom on the RoboWiki to do whatever we feel like with Robocode.
Of course you could have games that straddle this line. A fully web-based game that also lets you run your own servers for the hardcore players, or a desktop game with some web features (which is kind of where I'm going with BerryBots).
When a recently created account starts posting advertisements, should it be blocked, even if its advertisements do not contain any external links? I'm asking this because I just blocked "Twotogether," who created a page which was obviously spam, but did not contain any external links. If we should only block those who spam external links, I will unblock Twotogether.
I've got the following major issues:
- In LiquidThreads, when I type a reply the spinning loading icon never goes away, and the shortcuts at the top never load.
- When I try to edit the RoboRumble/Participants page it tells me that the server did not receive some of the message and that I should confirm the edits, but it shows me an empty box instead of all the participants data.
These behaviours are seen on both Firefox 21 b6 and Chrome 26.0. I've cleared cache and done a hard reload in both.
Is anybody seeing these?
Yeah, LiquidThreads spinners all over the place for me. I haven't tried editing the participants list but that seems pretty high priority. Hrm..
We seem to be getting a lot of user registrations, did the update break some of the blockers?
Yeah, Rednaxela had some custom things in that got broken. He's working on it now.
Yeah, the update removed the Math extension which used to be part of the core of MediaWiki, but got moved into an extension. This broke some pages, and also broke the extra math question I added in added to the reCaptcha check. (Besides the extra math question, my modifications also included a "same IP address as received the captcha must solve it" check, which based on server logs was very effective)
Due to the error that was happening on the new user creation page, Voidious reverted back to the traditional reCaptcha extension temporarily, which let that flood of bots register.
Gladly, the custom extension I added which disallows accounts less than 24 hours old inserting external links was still intact after the upgrade, and appears to have foiled those spambots.
Also, I've now reinstalled the Math extension, both fixing some wiki pages and making my modified captcha checker work again, so all should be well now :)
Good to know. On that point though, I still think KittenAuth/Asirra would be a good auth system (and has nothing to do with me liking kittens, honest).
Asirra was mentioned in some emails that went around. I don't think Asirra is fundamentally any better than reCaptcha for the main problem. I suspect there's a high probability that rather than pure computer-based bots, the reCaptcha system was being broken by a Mechanical Turk style system that farmed the captcha breaking task out to humans. From what I understand that is common these days. Asirra is equally vulnerable to that technique. Assuming that is the case, the reason my modifications help, would be that rather than preventing the captcha-breaking itself, they make it incompatible with some automation systems used to farm out captcha breaking. I have nothing against using Asirra if people want to switch it to that instead of reCaptcha, but at least in theory I doubt Asirra vs reCaptcha makes much of a difference.
Well fair, I do know Asirra is much more difficult to break then reCaptcha for computers. It might also be easier for humans to do as well ( a few clicks instead of the need to type). It could replace the two captcha systems with one (math+reCaptcha with Asirra).
But I am not going to push the topic if no one else thinks it is a good idea. I do not know the compatibility or reliability of the system, and there is always the ever present "don't fix what isn't broken" mantra as well.
A quick update regarding the RoboRumble/Participants issue: I've confirmed it's definitely related to the total size of the page. I see the error if I click preview there normally, but I don't see the error if I delete half the content of the text box before hitting preview. I don't know why it only started happening after the update though, or what a good fix would be.
Participants issue is fixed, but the spinners persist!
Yep! It's now fixed!
When the infinite spinning icon thing was happening, I checked in the browser for javascript errors. Sure enough, there was an "ext.WikiEditor" error. I looked around, and tried installing the WikiEditor extension, and it fixed the infinite spinning circle issue. It seems that the version of LiquidThreads we got in the update depends on the WikiEditor extension.
Any interest in helping me rewrite the Wikipedia entry for Robocode sometime? We can do it there (like on a user page), but just wanted to bring it up here first. It's all pretty stale, and I think could use a major overhaul besides the first 2-3 paragraphs. I also think the final product should be about half the size of what's there now.
I was under the impression that the point of Wikipedia was to have a stale and objective article for every subject.
The problem with the Robocode page is that it is not objective. It reads like an advertisement, or a fan's website. It also goes into unnecessary detail in some places, while leaving out important information in other places.
Yeah, "stale" like "hasn't been updated in a long time" seems appropriate. Inaccurate information should be fixed or removed though.
I don't think anyone (on Wikipedia) cares about which robot is best at what and such, and keeping those up to date would be a pain anyway, last update was claimed to be in 2009. So I think the RR@H champions should be removed.
The influencial robots section needs to be adjusted some. For example to me Phoenix's entry reads like an advertisement, and is YersiniaPestis' passing Shadow for a bit really worth mentioning? Plus a few are missing like Raiko/RaikoMX (First Open Source Surfer), Chalk (Open Source kNN), BulletCatcher (Bullet Shielding), MoxieBot? (Bullet Shadows? Was it the first?).
But I wouldn't mind seeing a list of past competitions on there, might give the game more clout.
Yep, I agree on all those points.
Taking a few of the bots on the Open Source page might be a good start for replacing the "influential bots" list. Maybe list more current/past competitions, but with less description of each than what's there now. For movement/targeting techniques, maybe instead of mentioning all those Robocode-specific terms, we could just mention some of the machine learning techniques that are widely used, like KNN, kernel density, multi-variate histograms (VCS), pattern matching, and neural networks.
I'm torn as to whether the wiki deserves its own special mention besides the link below. It is a pretty strong part of the online Robocode community and a resource for anyone doing Robocode, but I'm not sure that means it deserves more than just a link near the top of "See also" or "External links".
Agreed on all, unfortunately I am super busy again and don't have time to help with this.
I think there should be some sort of heading called "Community" or something like that, where you list the RoboWiki and the SourceForge forums as well as the dev groups.
I agree, and I like your thinking. Could almost copy Open Source wholesale for that section, after converting some of the jargon.
I think a mention in the actual article to the Robowiki would be justified. It is where most of the developments and long running competitions originate (like RR@H). But it might just be at most a sentence like "A great deal of the innovation occurs around Robowiki[External Link], the games premier wiki."
Perhaps a short mention of some of the licensing that occurs in Robocode. Otherwise there isn't really much to say beyond what is already covered.
Hello! We are creating our first robots, and we export the robots from eclipse, in .jar doing in the project, right click>Export>Java>JAR File.
In the next box, we export to JAR, but when we try to import the robot to robocode, it complete succesful, but it don't appear in the list of robots.
Thanks!
Welcome to the RoboWiki!
You don't need to export every time you want to run your robot. This tutorial shows you how to tell Robocode to get your robots straight from Eclipse.
It's also interesting that you say you imported the robot into Robocode, but it didn't appear on the list of robots. I assume that you used the "Import downloaded robot" feature of Robocode. I might've had the same problem with it. Try downloading this robot and then see if using the Robocode import feature works. If it doesn't, just copy the .jar file into the robot directory, and Robocode should recognize it.
This thread isn't really appropriate for the main page discussion; if you don't mind, I'll move it to User talk:Cristiancompany.
Welcome again and good luck!
Anyone checked out http://fightcodegame.com/ ? The web site seems pretty sleek and it all looks pretty active and well organized. After watching some sample battles, and that the #1 ranked bot is ~350 lines of code, I have to wonder how high a ceiling there is in terms of writing sophisticated robots. The gameplay looks pretty much like a Robocode (or whatever predecessor) clone with only blocking API calls.
It kind of annoys me, on principle, that I have to authorize it with my GitHub account even to see things that are read-only, like the rankings. So I haven't done that yet and thus haven't looked into it in much depth.
Well I have never had much success with normal Robots. Mostly since it seemed like a lot of extra effort for little gain. That is, the rumble was dominated by AdvancedRobots and their non-blocking calls.
I took a look at it, and it is difficult (for me) to write a decent robot on it. Mostly because I would like some kind of debug feature. Supposedly it has a log function to write to a console. But I can't figure out how to access said console.
I played a different Javascript / web-based programming game and also had problems with that aspect. I think it's the browser Javascript console that you need to look at.
(And it was crashing my browser / useless to me for a while before I realized I'd printed like 30k lines to it, which it isn't really designed for, and finally figured out how to clear it.)
After a bit more work I had a semi workable robot, but I don't think we will be able to apply anything more then rudimentary robocode knowledge to the game.
You're joking? Hah, wow.
Now we just need to make a port of Girl. Which I think is still the highest ranking extends Robot.
Heh. :-) Pretty cool to see sample.Walls in action in a different game.
Down to #45 now: [1] Seeing as the battles are 1 round and I think it may take some manual action to run battles, the rankings may be a couple orders of magnitude less stable than what we're used to with the RoboRumble.
That #13 place was a stream of lucky battles. Ran some more battles later and the rating kept oscilating between 1485 and 1525.
You can also choose whom to fight against and manipulate your rating by choosing only opponents with high PBI, but I avoided it.
My impressions of FightCode:
The API is simpler than "extends Robot" in Robocode.
No energy drop when firing and the gun and bullets are still invisible to radar. So, no way to detect incoming bullets. But you can assume a bunch of tick-head-on bullets.
No independent radar axis, the radar is always pointing to the same direction the gun is.
No velocity and heading in scans, making even linear targeting a challenge.
No "scan()" method, making bots miss a lot of scans, even when there is a sitting duck in front of their guns. I had to hack Walls code a bit to improve scans, but it is still missing a lot of them. And it is a key strategy in Walls to avoid being crushed by opponents close to walls, like Corners.
I wonder how a rambot will perform there. Since it is hard to keep track of opponents due to limited radar, and the only thing which works together with "ahead()" is "fire()", a bot moving and shooting straight forward can do a lot of damage.
Cool, thanks for the info MN. It's worth noting this game is really young - the first version was built from scratch in a month for a GitHub hacking contest near the end of 2012. They also replied to me on Twitter that some new stuff is coming: "we have some feats in the oven for advanced bots: independent queues for radar, cannon and tank; data storage for machine learning"
I'm curious to see how it does. The whole web-ness and feel of it all really impresses me, and I could see a lot of people trying it that wouldn't have bothered to download Robocode. But at the same time, being stuck with the web interface for all your running and testing and unstable rankings might make it hard to retain power users and maintain a passionate community. Support for local and batch battles would be nice, though it wouldn't be my top priority (yet) as a dev either. It also seems like the gameplay needs some work to approach the depth of Robocode, but it sounds like they're working on that.
What bothered me most was the missed scans, making Walls a lot weaker than it is in Robocode. Feels like bot width is only 1 pixel wide, but didn´t check the engine to be sure.
And FightCode web design is far superior to what RoboRumble is today. Robocode could copy that by having an applet version.
I did a bit of tweaking on walls to improve it specifically for FightCode (clone and invisible). I also made a copy of spinbot.
Boo :)
Thanks! I have uncovered may of Doctor Bob's secrets. You can nearly 100% him if you watch energy drops and reverse direction at around 120 distance. Then just aim a little behind him.
I meant the secrets of how successful it is, not how to beat it. I am trying my hand at nanomelee, but I haven't had much success. (My robot TestMelee is a really crappy derivative of Infinity.) DoctorBob says it has NanoAndrew's movement, but it looks like there must be a little something more. I wondered if you had ever seen DB's code, or heard something from the author.
His code cannot be completely decompiled as he obfiscated it, but if you look around a bit, there are ways of figuring out what he did. Honestly, you can reverse engineer his good pretty easily by the fact that he cannot hit stop and go targets. His radar is lock onto nearest person and charge - which against weaker melee guns and movement works great. The bots that hide in the corner and make small movements counter him well though. Dustbunny does well because it runs from him (and everyone else) :)
And work. Thanks for the good words! I am still attempting to get caught up with a new job and such. I do intend to keep track of things a bit better though going forward and maybe even update things as time allows.
I have a nano project that is currently stalled due to issues with my installation of Robocode, but looks very promising. It has three modes of movement, two of them reacting to enemy fire, and a PM gun.
The only problem is, I can't store .5 as a char, it gets rounded down to 0. So, I had to switch to 1 stored as a char and then divided by 2 to decode the value to a double. Then it was a few bytes over, so I had to switch from WeekendObsession's gun to Moebius's gun. But, in order to have any accuracy with that, I needed to add a setAdjustGunForRobotTurn(true);
, which cost 5 bytes and still left me 2 bytes over. If you think you could help, I could post my code.
By the way, I recently helped Chase with his Talon project--a nano with MRM. But I have a feeling that there is a more effective way to implement wall avoidance...
Send me your version that has the best performance but is only a few bytes over, I might have an idea of how to shrink it... as well as a secret weapon which does the same ;-)
I didn't compile this so there may be a few minor errors. Thanks again.
/*
Epeeist v2.0.0 by Sheldor. 03/19/2013
A NanoBot with multi-mode movement and a Pattern Matching gun.
Codesize: ??? Bytes without any colors.
Epee (pronounced aay-pay) is one of the three forms of modern sport fencing,
along with Foil and Sabre. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epee
Credits:
Pattern Matching code from simonton.WeekendObsession_S and mld.Moebius,
and a general thanks to all open source bot authors and contributors to the RoboWiki.
Epeeist is open source and released under the terms of the RoboWiki Public Code License (RWPCL) - Version 1.1
see license here: http://robowiki.net/wiki/RWPCL
*/
package sheldor.nano;
import robocode.*;
import robocode.util.Utils;
public class Epeeist extends AdvancedRobot
{
//Global variables.
static double direction;
static double enemyEnergy;
static int deathCount;
//En garde!
public void run()
{
//setAdjustGunForRobotTurn(true);
//Start spinning radar and initialize direction to infinity.
setTurnRadarRightRadians(direction = Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY);
}
public void onScannedRobot(ScannedRobotEvent e)
{
//Local variables.
int matchLength = 30;
double absoluteBearing;
double distance;
int i;
int index;
//Oscillating/Random movement.
if (enemyEnergy > (enemyEnergy = e.getEnergy()))
//if((enemyEnergy - (enemyEnergy = e.getEnergy())) > (Math.round(Math.random() * chancesOfReversing.charAt(deathCount)) * 111))
//if( (char) ((enemyEnergy - 1.09 - (enemyEnergy = e.getEnergy()))) < 2)
{
direction *= (chancesOfReversing.charAt(deathCount) - Math.random());
//direction *= (chancesOfReversing.charAt(deathCount) - (Math.random() * 2));
}
setAhead(direction);
//Stay perpendicular to the enemy.
setTurnRightRadians(Math.cos(absoluteBearing = e.getBearingRadians()) + ((160 - (distance = e.getDistance())) * (getVelocity() / 2500)));
//Pattern Matching.
/*enemyHistory = String.valueOf((char) (e.getVelocity() * (Math.sin(e.getHeadingRadians() - (absoluteBearing += getHeadingRadians()))))).concat(enemyHistory);
// search for a match
while((matchPosition = enemyHistory.indexOf(enemyHistory.substring(0, integer--), 14)) < 0);
// calculate aim offset
integer = 14;
do { absoluteBearing += ((short) enemyHistory.charAt(--matchPosition)) / 160; } while (--integer > 0);*/
//Pattern Matching
enemyHistory = String.valueOf((char)(e.getVelocity() * Math.sin(e.getHeadingRadians() - (absoluteBearing += getHeadingRadians())))).concat(enemyHistory);
while((index = enemyHistory.indexOf(enemyHistory.substring(0, matchLength--), (i = (int)(distance / 12.5)))) < 0);
do
{
absoluteBearing += (short)enemyHistory.charAt(index--) / distance;
}while(--i > 0);
//Aim at the predicted target.
setTurnGunRightRadians(Utils.normalRelativeAngle(absoluteBearing - getGunHeadingRadians()));
//Fire!
setFire(2.5);
//Infinite radar lock.
setTurnRadarLeftRadians(getRadarTurnRemainingRadians());
}
public void onDeath(DeathEvent e)
{
deathCount++;
}
public void onHitWall(HitWallEvent e)
{
//Reverse direction when the bot hits a wall.
direction = -direction;
}
static String chancesOfReversing = ""
+ (char) 1 + (char) 0 + (char) 1 + (char) 0
+ (char) 1 + (char) 0 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5
+ (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5 + (char) .5;
//Preloaded log of enemy movements for pattern matcher.
static String enemyHistory = ""
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
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+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
+ (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1 + (char) 1
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+ (char)-7 + (char)-6 + (char)-5 + (char)-4
+ (char)-3 + (char)-2 + (char)-1 + (char)1
+ (char) 2 + (char) 4 + (char) 6 + (char) 8
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+ (char) 7 + (char) 6 + (char) 5 + (char) 4
+ (char) 3 + (char) 2 + (char) 1 + (char) 1;
}
I'll look at this a bit tonight. There is a savings that can be had by compiling with a different Java compiler. I remember that :)
Thanks.
Skilgannon has already addressed the issue on another talk page, but I would appreciate any help I can get.
BTW, I still feel very that LBB is a pretty cheezy bot. Abusing tables like that probably shouldn't be fair. It takes hours and hours though to get each bot optimized so maybe that makes it a little better overall. besting Moebius is a better accomplishment. At least he doesn't cheat...
Was kinda bummed to see that FightCodeGame is on its way to becoming for-profit and maybe not-open source: [1] They say the game will still be "free" (as in beer, I suppose).
I mean it's their call and best of luck to them, it just feels antithetical to the spirit that's helped communities for Robocode and other programming games thrive for a really long time. And while there's demand for good programming games - a prerequisite to making money off of something - I personally think there will also always be a supply of good / free / open source programming games that make it really hard to turn one into a business. There's just plenty of people that make their living doing other stuff that are happy to create programming games as a hobby.
The majority of non-archive pages on this wiki are either bot pages or user pages. Many of these pages contain outdated information, or could be improved.
So, is it ethical to edit these pages, even though they were personally made by another user for their own work?
For the most part, I think it's fine to edit almost anything on the wiki, particularly if your goal is to improve the wiki and make it more useful to more people. I've migrated/edited lots of such pages. Cigaret and Ascendant are both pages I migrated where I tried to preserve the author's text while also updating inaccurate info and reformatting for the new wiki.
There are a few things I'd consider rude though:
- Major changes to something like User:Chase-san/NewTech.
- On Diamond, editing the ranks in "How competitive" seems fine, but modifying "What's special about it" would seem rude.
- Any major changes to a bot/user page for a user that's active - I'd just say you should discuss it on the talk page first.
Yeah, my thoughts are if the person is active then ask first, if the person isn't active feel free to add, but think very carefully before modifying.
The only good reasons I can think to modify are:
- Grammar/spelling (which is fine)
- Adding links and categories which may not have existed when the author was making the page (also fine)
- Updating rumble positioning and scores (try to stick a date next to the data that's there, then add a new date with current data).
- Possibly adding a brief blurb if the bot was particularly influential in Robocode development.
Take for instance my recent edit of AWs userpage. I contemplated it for a moment. But I decided he probably made a mistake, and so I felt it was safe to correct it.
But I wouldn't go through and change the structure of his page, or start adding on a new section. It's his page. So in the end I suppose my opinion is to have a light touch.
I don't completely agree with Skilgannon. Large corrections, yes, definitely. But for minor corrections, you shouldn't have to go through the possibly long process of asking. Such as if you can fix their misspelling of "froward" into "forward".
I don't think it's unethical, but it might be unnecessary / annoying. :-) I wouldn't do it for discussion threads, but I might on a content page.
I'm unclear as to when the while
loop in the run
method starts, so I added a debug command there:
while(true) { setDebugProperty("startingWhile", String.format("heading: %.1f° at time %d.", getHeading(), getTime())); ahead(200); // ... }
But to my surprise, this doesn't get displayed until after the ahead
and all the following commands are executed, which I would assume should be the beginning of the second iteration. Is there something that prevents these debug properties from being displayed immediately?
To Wombi: Das ist der Fluch der guten Tat. Ich hoffe, Du bereust nicht, meine Frage beantwortet zu haben.
I never used setDebugProperty. Always used plain System.out.println.
Probably, setDebugProperty value is only used inside "execute" events, like all other setter methods.
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