I started with the Costa Rican Ornithology example, which works as expected. I had the idea, largely for my own gratification, of allowing the player to flip randomly through the book since I don't expect to release this, to sample a random topic.
I pieced this together from several other examples.
Understand "consult [a book]" as consulting vaguely.
Consulting vaguely is an action applying to one visible thing.
Carry out consulting vaguely:
let B be the book;
let L be the number of rows in the contents of B;
let N be a random number from 1 to L;
choose row N in the contents of B;
say "[reply entry][paragraph break]".
I've separated out the steps for clarity (and to ease the parsing and error reporting), but basically, choose a random row in the table of contents, then print the result. I also tried choose a random row...
but that doesn't change the results seen below.
Where contents
(like in the example) represents the table of topics and results.
A book is a kind of thing. A book has a table name called the contents.
Unfortunately, this code crashes the game when trying to "consult book," with the following run-time error.
*** Run-time problem P10: Since the your former self is not allowed the property “contents”, it is against the rules to try to use it.
Ah-ha, I said to myself, contents
sounds like what might sit inside a container, so of course I can't access it. I can change it to something distinct like ToC
, "table of contents," though the meaning is less important than it not colliding with another name.
Unfortunately, that also doesn't work, leading me to believe that a table name
is not the same as a table. This makes sense, but I don't see any path to bridging from the table's name (if that's actually what I'm seeing) to the actual table. And I also don't know that I understand what my "former self" has to do with anything, but I don't know how critical that is in understanding the problem.