Complete Roguelike Tutorial, using python3+libtcod, setup Mac

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This is part of a series of tutorials; the main page can be found here.

Setup Mac

Installing an Editor

Editors are often a personal choice. Their primary function is to allow the creation and editing of code. Additional functionality may be included such as code intelligence, code completion, static analysis, testing, debugging, etc. usually through plugins. Some editors are also IDEs or integrated development environments. They can help manage the lifetime of a project. For this tutorial, you only need an editor and none of the extra functionality, but an IDE may be very helpful when learning programming (or Python) for the first time.

The following editors are all excellent for python development. You only need one.

Note that these are listed in order of decreasing preference for development with python as a beginner. (i.e. pick one of the top ones for the best out of the box python experience)


Setting up Bash

Open finder (cmd + space) and go to your home folder and then press CMD + SHIFT + . (command + shift + period). Look for a ".bashrc" file within finder. Open it up in your editor or create a new file. Make sure the following lines show up at the bottom of the file:

# Setup prompt colors
reset_color="\[\e[m\]"
declare -A fg
magenta="\[\e[35m\]"
yellow="\[\e[33m\]"
green="\[\e[32m\]"

function virtualenv_prompt() {
    if [ -n "$VIRTUAL_ENV" ]; then
        pyver=$(python -V 2>&1 | cut -f2 -d' ')
        echo "(${magenta}venv${reset_color}:${yellow}${VIRTUAL_ENV##*/}$reset_color|${green}${pyver}${reset_color}) "
    fi
}

export PS1="$(virtualenv_prompt)${PS1}"
export LIBTCOD_DLL_PATH="/usr/local/lib;/usr/lib;$HOME/.local/lib;$HOME/lib"

Opening a Terminal

While Mac comes with a Terminal built-in, Iterm2 is the recommend install for a terminal. Once installed, simply press `Cmd + Space Bar` and type in iterm or terminal (for the default mac terminal). Whether you've installed iterm or are using the default terminal, we will use the word "terminal" below to refer to your preferred program (iterm or terminal).


Setting up Homebrew

Homebrew is a package manager for Mac. Within a terminal, type the following to install homebrew:

/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"


Setting up Mercurial

Now that we have homebrew, we can install several dependencies. Mercurial allows us to download the `libtcod` library from `bitbucket.org` where the source code resides. Mercurial is an alternative to Git for software configuration management. Within a terminal, run:

brew install mercurial


Installing libtcod

At this point, we should be ready to download and install libtcod. While there are quite a few ways to do this, the most straightforward way is to simply use the .dylib files already built by the libtcod team.

Download libtcod

libtcod now has builds ready for macos on its bitbucket source code website. Simply download the latest macos file, unzip that file and copy the `SDL2.Framework` and `libtcod*.dylib` files into your project's folder.

Setting up Python

To install the latest python version, simply run within a terminal:

brew install python

To validate that we've installed python correctly, within a terminal, run:

python --version

The version should be at least "Python 3.6.5" (After 15 June 2018, this will be 3.7).

Troubleshooting

Environmental Variable: Path

Brew installs python into /usr/local/opt/python. You may need to add the following line to your $HOME/.bash_profile file and then restart your terminal. Do not add this line to your .bashrc file as this will invariably cause issues with subprocesses.

export PATH=/usr/local/opt/python/libexec/bin:$PATH

Pip

Python 3 comes bundled with a python package manager called `pip` which is used to install all project related python dependencies. To make sure we have `pip` installed run in a terminal:

python -m ensurepip

Setting up your Project

Creating a virtual environment

Most python developers will use a virtual environment to isolate python and any project related dependencies from being installed into the system. This practice is a safety measure to prevent a developer's computer from becoming unstable and is highly recommended.

Installing vsh

Vsh is a virtual environment generation tool. This will help you manage and build virtual environments. Most python developers will use a virtual environment to isolate their projects from their system. Additionally, vsh runs the python virtualenv in a sub-process shell To install:

python3 -m pip install vsh

Creating a virtual environment using vsh

To create a new virtual environment with python 3 for our project, just use the following:

vsh rl

You should now be in your virtual environment

(venv:rl|3.6.5) bash-3.2$

To make sure, test your python version. You should see something like version "3.6.5". Note that the version number and virtual env name is also in the command-line prompt

(venv:rl|3.6.5) bash-3.2$ python --version

Installing libtcod into our project

Navigate to where libtcod was downloaded and then run the installation or libtcod:

(venv:rl|3.6.2) $ cd $HOME/repos/other/libtcod/python
(venv:rl|3.6.2) $ pip install .

Validate that we have libtcod installed.

(venv:rl|3.6.2) $ cd $HOME/repos/other/libtcod/python
(venv:rl|3.6.2) $ python -c "import libtcodpy"

Folder structure

Our first roguelike will be run entirely from a single file, firstrl.py. However, to support some future needs regarding packaging and to make development easier, we need to add our dependencies into the project folder.

When we're all done, the basic folder structure should look like this:

  • \project\
    \firstrl.py
mkdir -p $HOME/repos/mine/roguelike
touch $HOME/repos/mine/roguelike/firstrl.py

Finishing touches

Congratulations!

You're ready to start editing firstrl.py!

Now you're ready to start writing code.