|
Post by ticalcman on Feb 16, 2002 21:59:41 GMT -5
Significant progress was made today in Stratego. I've moved from writing the program on the calculator to writing it on the computer in TI's graphlink software; it allows you to copy/paste huge chunks of your program, making it much easier to work with programs larger than 1K.
The program is also a bit faster. So far it's under 3K (after optimizing some of the subroutines!)
Replies to this post must be related to Stratego, or they will be deleted!
|
|
|
Post by kinktoy on Feb 16, 2002 22:05:58 GMT -5
Okies! (Is going to be good and stay on topic) I'm ignorant, so what is Stratego, and what's it written in?
|
|
|
Post by Jbirk on Feb 17, 2002 3:37:16 GMT -5
It is a game for the calculator with link routines, wrighten in assembly.
|
|
|
Post by Chris on Feb 17, 2002 11:03:15 GMT -5
i think he meant stratego the game, not stratego the program
|
|
|
Post by Chris on Feb 19, 2002 7:50:02 GMT -5
i haven't played it in like 7 years, i don't even know where my set is, and i don't remember how you play it, but i remember that the peices are shaped really weird, and that i frequently got it cofused with risk, and that the two colors are red and blue, aside from that i don't remember anything
|
|
|
Post by Chris on Feb 21, 2002 10:48:05 GMT -5
just go to parker brothers, or milton bradly's website, and see who make it, then look up more information on it
|
|
|
Post by a@a.com on Feb 22, 2002 14:15:59 GMT -5
You're avoiding the topic...
Stratego is a 2 player game (but recently a 4 player was made), where you have a large sized board and pieces that only you can see the value of, each has a number value, and there are bombs and you have a flag. Your opponent tries to take the flag by moving his pieces forward. If he attcaks one of yours and has a higher value, you lose. But if it's lower, he loses, and theres no way to tell what value your attacking. Theres a piece that can kill every other piece, but theres a piece that can kill him, and if you use your kill all piece and hit that one or a bomb, your doomed. Theres a bomb defusor in case you surround your flag with bombs and your opponent wants in. Its a very fun game!
Id love to see it on the calc, program ahead bob!
|
|
|
Post by Chris on Feb 22, 2002 15:21:47 GMT -5
you should make it so you can save your game
|
|
|
Post by kinktoy on Feb 22, 2002 21:06:49 GMT -5
OoOOooO
tyte
I wanna play! ;D
|
|
|
Post by Chris on Feb 27, 2002 7:38:36 GMT -5
yeah, so do i, when will it be released...i want to see if i can still massacre my cousin in it
|
|
|
Post by Jbirk on Mar 2, 2002 5:39:06 GMT -5
How dose an assembly link routine work?
|
|
|
Post by Chris on Mar 2, 2002 10:33:55 GMT -5
i'm not sure that he knows, he didn't use them in this program, the asm routine (if you remember what he said on the old board, you'd know this) is just to make sure that the calcs are both at the same point at the program before the program continues, the main part of the program still uses the BASIC link routines
|
|
|
Post by ticalcman on Mar 3, 2002 16:07:28 GMT -5
LinkSync does not use any asm routiens. Stratego doesn't, either. LinkSync is just a very cleverly written basic program.
|
|
|
Post by Chris on Mar 3, 2002 16:18:22 GMT -5
linksync doesn't use asm routines either, cool
|
|
|
Post by Jbirk on Mar 9, 2002 3:41:54 GMT -5
Where do I get linksync? Thanks.
|
|