(all): Depend on info. Flatten info directory. This undoes the move to one subdirectory per chapter, which was done during Empire 2. The structure doesn't buy us much, as the info name space is flat, and it complicates makefiles. Overhaul info.pl: - It now wants to run in the root of the build tree. - Information on source files and subjects is now stored in makefiles, thus info.pl no longer picks up random junk from the file system. - Clean up Perl anachronisms, in particular use subroutine arguments and results rather than global variables where convenient. - Change format of diagnostics to the common format used by GNU tools, so that Emacs and the like can parse it. - Catch missing .SA. - When creating a new subject file, cowardly refuse to overwrite an existing file. - Subject files contain topics sorted by chapter, then by name. The order of chapters used to depend on how Perl sorts hash keys. Fix it.
59 lines
2.3 KiB
Perl
59 lines
2.3 KiB
Perl
.TH Command REPORT
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.NA report "List all countries and their status"
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.LV Basic
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.SY "report <NATS>"
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The report command displays a list of nations in <NATS>. It shows
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their status (in-flux, visitor, active, etc), and their estimated tech,
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education, research and happiness levels.
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.s1
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If <NATS> is a country name or number, it will only display information
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on that country; if <NATS> is * then information on all countries will
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be listed.
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.s1
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An example of a report command for the country \*QFroom 93\*U would
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look something like this:
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.EX report *
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.NF
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Thu Sep 14 16:10:40 1995
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# name tech research education happiness status
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2 Artifax 0 - 147 79 - 99 0 - 23 0 - 9 In flux
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3 Billy 0 - 137 79 - 99 0 - 23 0 - 9 In flux
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4 CCCP 150 - 200 120 - 150 23 - 30 20 - 25 Active
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8 Khazad'ur 86 - 108 120 - 150 23 - 30 12 - 17 Active
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9 Lorphos 96 - 121 120 - 150 0 - 23 12 - 17 Active
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This is how the ranges are determined.
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(1) If your value of the statistic is 0, then n/a (not applicable)
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will be printed in that column.
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(2) If the value for both countries is > 100, then shift them down so
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the lowest one is at 100.
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(3) Each of the following tests is made in order. As soon as one of them
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is true, then that will be the range for that statistic:
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2.0 * yours < theirs
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1.5 * yours < theirs < 2.0 * yours
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1.2 * yours < theirs < 1.5 * yours
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1.1 * yours < theirs < 1.2 * yours
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yours / 1.1 < theirs < 1.1 * yours
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yours / 1.2 < theirs < yours / 1.1
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yours / 1.5 < theirs < yours / 1.2
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yours / 2.0 < theirs < yours / 1.5
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theirs < yours / 2.0
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(4) Once the range has been determined, it is shifted back up to where
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it should be.
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(5) There is a "minimum range" for the different characteristics:
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tech: 20
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res: 10
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edu: 5
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hap: 5
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If the distance between the high and low end of the range is smaller
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than the "minimum range", then the range is expanded (equally in both
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directions but never crossing zero) to be equal to the minimum range.
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However, it will never be expanded beyond twice your value of that
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statistic.
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.FI
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.s1
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.SA "country, Diplomacy, Nations"
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