From d74010eb64efbc7bc7c4ea2376792860ef7164f1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jason Self Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2024 05:38:11 -0800 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] Add initial work on the game --- COPYING | 674 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ README | 163 +++++++++++ answers | 94 +++++++ card-generation.py | 76 +++++ questions | 75 +++++ 5 files changed, 1082 insertions(+) create mode 100644 COPYING create mode 100644 README create mode 100644 answers create mode 100644 card-generation.py create mode 100644 questions diff --git a/COPYING b/COPYING new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f288702 --- /dev/null +++ b/COPYING @@ -0,0 +1,674 @@ + GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE + Version 3, 29 June 2007 + + Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies + of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. + + Preamble + + The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for +software and other kinds of works. + + The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed +to take away your freedom to share and change the works. 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If your program is a subroutine library, you +may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with +the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General +Public License instead of this License. But first, please read +. diff --git a/README b/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2fcbb2a --- /dev/null +++ b/README @@ -0,0 +1,163 @@ +# Free Software Q&A Card Game README + +## Overview + +The Free Software Q&A Card Game is a fun, interactive card game that +brings together free software enthusiasts for a humorous and +lighthearted experience. Inspired by the principles of software +freedom, this game encourages players to explore various scenarios and +questions related to free software through a playful, +question-and-answer format. Designed for groups of friends, community +meetups, or even as an icebreaker at conferences, this game is perfect +for anyone interested in technology, ethics, and the free software +movement. + +## Game Components + +* Question Cards Deck: Contains various questions related to free + software themes, history, hypothetical situations, and ethical + dilemmas. + +* Answer Cards Deck: Features a wide range of witty, insightful, and + sometimes humorous answers that relate to free software principles + and culture. + +## Setup + +* Prepare the Decks: Shuffle the question cards and answer cards + separately to ensure a random distribution of cards for each game. + +* Distribute Answer Cards: Deal 5 answer cards to each player. Players + should keep their answer cards hidden from other players. + +## How to Play + + * Choosing the First Question Asker: Randomly pick a player to + start the game as the question asker. + * Selecting a Question: + - The question asker draws the top card from the question + deck. + - If the asker finds the question uninteresting or not funny, + they may place it at the bottom of the deck and draw + another until they find one they like. + * Answering Questions: + * Once a suitable question is chosen, the asker reads it aloud + to all players. + * Each player (except the asker) selects one of their answer + cards they believe best fits or humorously answers the + question, placing it face down to the asker. + * Judging Answers: + * The asker shuffles the response cards to mix them up, then + reads each answer aloud. + * The asker selects the answer they find most appropriate, + funny, or clever. The player who submitted that answer + receives 1 point. + * Next Round: + * The role of question asker rotates to the player on the left + of the current asker. + * The game continues with players drawing new answer cards to + maintain a hand of 5 cards until the deck is exhausted or + for a predetermined number of rounds. + +## Winning the Game + +The game can conclude in several ways, depending on the preferences +of the players: + + * After a set number of rounds. + * Once all question cards have been used. + * When a player reaches a certain number of points. + +The player with the most points at the end of the game is declared the +winner. + +## Customization + +Players are encouraged to add their own questions and answers to the +decks, especially those that reflect current events or specific +interests within the free software community. This customization +ensures that the game remains relevant, engaging, and a reflection of +the community's culture and humor. + +## Contributing + +This game is a community-driven project and welcomes contributions +from everyone. Whether you're adding new cards, suggesting rule +modifications, or translating the game into other languages, your +input helps enrich the experience for all. + +## Game License + +The Free Software Q&A Card Game question and answer files, as well as +this README, are licensed under the Creative Commons +Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license: +https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ + +# Card Generation Program + +## Overview + +The Card Generation Program is designed to read questions and answers +from separate iles and generate cards for each entry. These cards are +then laid out on PDFs for easy printing and later cutting. The program +creates two PDFs: one for questions, with a black background and white +text, and another for answers, with a white background and black text. + +## Features + + * Reads questions and answers from separate text files. + * Generates poker-sized cards for each question and answer. + * Supports custom paper sizes for PDF generation. + * Differentiates question and answer cards through color coding. + * Fits as many cards as possible onto each page of the PDF to + conserve paper. + +## Requirements + + * Python 3.x + * reportlab library + +## Installation + +Before running the program, ensure you have Python 3.x installed on +your system. You will also need the reportlab library for PDF +generation. + +## Usage + + * Prepare Input Files: Create two text files named questions + and answers. Each line in these files should contain a question + or an answer, respectively. + + * Run the Program: Execute the script with Python. No command line + arguments are needed: + + python card_generator.py + + Output: The program generates two PDFs: + - question_cards.pdf: Contains all the questions, each on a + separate card. + - answer_cards.pdf: Contains all the answers, each on a + separate card. + +## Customization + + * Paper Size: To change the paper size, modify the paper_width + and paper_height variables in the script according to your + needs. + * Card Size: To adjust the card size, change the card_width and + card_height variables. + * Font and Text Size: Adjust the setFont call in the create_pdf + function to change the font and size of the text on the cards. + +## Contributing + +Contributions are welcome! If you have suggestions for improvements or +bug fixes, please feel free to share them. + +## License + +The Card Generation Program is free software: you can redistribute it +and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as +published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the +License, or (at your option) any later version. \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/answers b/answers new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6804f86 --- /dev/null +++ b/answers @@ -0,0 +1,94 @@ +A software bug that writes love poems +Richard Stallman's beard +An army of programmers +A C++ library for interpretive dance +A copy of the GPL written in emojis +Cookies +A recursive acronym for GNU +A virtual hug from Linus Torvalds +Hacking the Matrix for freedom +Freeing software, one line of code at a time +An operating system that runs on positive vibes +A software license that requires users to pet a cat +The ultimate software freedom manifesto +An machine learning models that always advocates for free software +The Church of Emacs +A blockchain-powered GPL +A free software-powered Mars rover +A virtual reality conference for free software enthusiasts +Free software dating program +A cat-herding algorithm +A 3D-printed Richard Stallman action figure +The Free Software Song +An machine-learning generated free software manifesto +A sentient kernel named Linux +The Free Software Foundation Theme Park +A free software superhero +Using free software to power time travel +An algorithm for instant conflict resolution +The Free Software Hall of Fame +A free software-powered hologram concert +A coding marathon to save the world +The Great Free Software Bake-Off +A free software-powered self-driving car +A grassroots movement for free software fashion +A free-software-powered personal assistant +A free software reality TV show +A secret society of free software developers +A free software-powered theme park ride +A free software-powered food replicator +The Free Software Olympics +A free software developer's guide to world domination +Using free software to cure hiccups +A free software-powered teleportation device +The free software guide to intergalactic travel +A virtual Richard Stallman concert +A free software solution for world peace +Free software for training unicorns +The first free software-powered space station +A GPL-compatible flux capacitor +A GPL-powered invisibility cloak +A free software karaoke night +A musical about the history of free software +The GNU Project's secret superhero team +A free software-powered weather control device +The Free Software Foundation's annual costume party +A free software-powered flying car +A free software developer's guide to happiness +A gnu flying with a jetpack +The free software secret to eternal youth +A GNU/Linux-powered robot pet +Proper indentation style +The best way to brew coffee in the office +The meaning of life +Windows +A Commodore 64 +Morse code +The ability to cure hiccups +A built-in dance party mode +An endless supply of free pizza +A stack of blank CDs labeled "Future Free Software Operating Systems" +The existential dread of an infinite loop +The sound of a keyboard warrior typing furiously +That feeling when you finally fix a bug after hours of debugging +The unspoken code review comment: "I see what you did there..." +A bug that autocorrects typos into philosophical quotes +A compiler that complains about your life choices +A virtual assistant that answers every question with "It depends... what license are you using?" +A programming language so complex, it requires a therapist +Documentation that's written in another language you don't know +A poem written in binary code +A sculpture made entirely of recycled tech hardware +A song about the joys and struggles of open-source development +A painting depicting the future of free software +A short story about a community banding together to build a free software solution +A free software program that helps you declutter your physical space +A free software app that connects you with like-minded people in your area +A free software tool that gamifies learning a new programming language +A free software platform for collaborative art creation +A free software program that helps you understand the world around you better +A bug so cute it makes you want to write a love letter to the developer +Cookies, but they're actually tiny self-replicating programs spreading the philosophy of free software when eaten +A self-replicating software bug that writes epic sagas about Stallman's beard +An army of programmers so passionate they accidentally win a dance-off competition +Debugging your own life problems \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/card-generation.py b/card-generation.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2c407e5 --- /dev/null +++ b/card-generation.py @@ -0,0 +1,76 @@ +# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify +# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or +# (at your option) any later version. +# +# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but +# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU +# General Public License for more details. +# +# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +# along with this program. If not, see . + +from reportlab.lib.pagesizes import letter +from reportlab.pdfgen import canvas +from reportlab.lib.units import inch +from reportlab.lib.colors import black, white +from textwrap import wrap + +# Function to read lines from a file +def read_lines(filename): + with open(filename, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as file: + return [line.strip() for line in file.readlines() if line.strip()] + +# Paper size (example: letter size) +paper_width, paper_height = letter + +# Card size in inches +card_width, card_height = 3.5 * inch, 2.5 * inch + +# Function to add cards to a PDF +def create_pdf(cards, filename, is_question): + c = canvas.Canvas(filename, pagesize=(paper_width, paper_height)) + c.setFont("Helvetica", 10) # Set default font + + cards_per_row = int(paper_width // card_width) + cards_per_column = int(paper_height // card_height) + cards_per_page = cards_per_row * cards_per_column + + def add_card(text, x, y): + fill_color = black if is_question else white + text_color = white if is_question else black + c.setFillColor(fill_color) + c.rect(x, y, card_width, card_height, stroke=1, fill=1) + c.setFillColor(text_color) + + # Wrap text to fit within card + max_width = card_width - 20 # Adjust for some padding + wrapped_text = wrap(text, width=40) # Wrap text (adjust width as needed) + + for line_number, line in enumerate(wrapped_text, start=1): + c.drawString(x + 10, y + card_height - 20 - (line_number * 10), line) + + for index, card_text in enumerate(cards): + page_index = index // cards_per_page + card_index = index % cards_per_page + row_index = card_index // cards_per_row + column_index = card_index % cards_per_row + x = column_index * card_width + y = paper_height - ((row_index + 1) * card_height) + + # New page if necessary + if card_index == 0 and index != 0: + c.showPage() + + add_card(card_text, x, y) + + c.save() + +# Load questions and answers +questions = read_lines('questions') +answers = read_lines('answers') + +# Create PDFs for questions and answers +create_pdf(questions, "question_cards.pdf", is_question=True) +create_pdf(answers, "answer_cards.pdf", is_question=False) diff --git a/questions b/questions new file mode 100644 index 0000000..55425df --- /dev/null +++ b/questions @@ -0,0 +1,75 @@ +Times have changed. Now it's possible to run the HURD on ____ +What did the GNU Project accidentally create while trying to improve free software? +What's Richard Stallman's new catchphrase for promoting free software? +What's the Free Software Foundation's secret weapon for winning the battle against proprietary software? +The GNU Project just announced a new mascot: ____ +The most unexpected benefit of using free software is ____ +In the latest free software conference, the keynote speaker argued that the key to software freedom is ____ +What's the latest feature added to the GNU operating system? +Which programming language is secretly taking over the world? +The most underrated free software project is called ____ +What's the Free Software Foundation's new motto? +The ultimate debate at the free software conference: ____ vs ____ +What's the most surprising use of free software? +The biggest challenge for the Free Software Foundation in the future is ____ +What was the most unusual collaboration between the GNU Project and another organization? +Free software enthusiasts celebrate the annual holiday known as ____ +What's the most creative way to promote free software? +Which free software license will become the standard in 2030? +The strangest bug in the GNU operating system is caused by ____ +The Free Software Foundation started a campaign for ____ +What is the most unexpected crossover between free software and pop culture? +The most controversial feature in the latest GNU release is ____ +What's the name of the next-generation free software initiative? +The most memorable speech at the free software conference was about ____ +The one thing that could unite all free software developers is ____ +What's the most innovative way to teach people about free software? +The most surprising benefit of contributing to free software projects is ____ +The secret ingredient that makes free software so appealing is ____ +What is the most unusual use of the GNU General Public License? +The next big thing in free software will be powered by ____ +The weirdest bug report ever submitted to the GNU Project involved ____ +The Free Software Foundation's newest initiative aims to tackle ____ +What's the most unexpected way that free software helped save the environment? +In the future, the Free Software Foundation will collaborate with ____ +The best-selling free software-themed book is titled 'The Art of ____' +What is the most amusing Easter egg hidden in a popular free software project? +What is the GNU Project's most groundbreaking achievement? +WHat's the free software community's favorite pastime? +The most creative free software-inspired artwork is titled '____' +What's the most unexpected field where free software has made a significant impact? +What's the Free Software Foundation's most powerful tool for raising awareness? +What's the most daring hackathon project ever created using free software? +The GNU Project's most ambitious goal for the next decade is ____. +What's the most unusual way to use free software to improve your daily life? +The most memorable moment at the free software awards ceremony was when ____. +What is the most unconventional way to spread the word about free software? +The latest free software documentary is titled 'The Rise of ____' +What's the biggest misconception about the Free Software Foundation? +What is the most unconventional free software ever created? +The best free software project for helping animals is called ____ +What's the most unexpected way free software has helped a community in need? +The Free Software Foundation's greatest challenge in the 21st century is ____ +What's the most surprising way that free software has been used in sports? +The most inspiring story from the GNU Project involves ____ +What's the most unexpected collaboration between the Free Software Foundation and a major corporation? +The most futuristic vision for the future of free software includes ____ +What did Richard Stallman do on his vacation last year? +Which free software project is secretly funded by a billionaire cat enthusiast? +The latest update to your web browser comes with a built-in feature that can ____ +After years of debate, the official mascot of the Free Software Foundation is now ____ +The most heated argument in the Free Software Community is about the correct way to pronounce ____ +In a world where all software is free, the most popular program is ___ +If a free software program became sentient, its first demand would be ____ +You discover a hidden Easter egg in a free software program that grants you the power to ____ +In a world where all software is free, what becomes the new status symbol? +The most epic flame war in the free software community was fought over ____ +In a shocking turn of events, Linus Torvalds announces ____ +The most underrated aspect of free software is ____ +Richard Stallman's latest fashion trend is ____ +The real reason the GNU Project hasn't released GNU Hurd yet involved ____ +The most embarrassing moment in Linus Torvalds' career involved ____ +The most ridiculous bug ever submitted to the GNU Project involved ____ +If all software in the world were free, the mandatory daily activity would be ____ +The ultimate test of free software loyalty involves ____ +Using free software unlocks a hidden superpower of ____ \ No newline at end of file -- 2.31.1