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Half-Broken Car in Heavy Traffic
#&summary An esoteric programming language with compiler/interpreter #&
#&toc
Half-Broken Car in Heavy Traffic
Half-Broken Car in Heavy Traffic is a difficult programming language with only 5 combined operators and direction "signs" for 2D grids.
hbcht is a Python 3.1+ combined compiler/interpreter for the language.
Language documentation
This is the official documentation of HBCHT.
HBCHT is a 2D grid-based programming language. You are a car fighting to get to the exit of a very chaotic highway. You have to follow the signs, but whenever you do that, you also change your memory. The value of your current memory cell can be incremented or decremented and your memory cell index can change. You can also find signs that tell you to turn either right or not turn at all, depending on your memory.
The car can drive in four directions: up, right, down, and left. Because of the chaos, you never know which direction the car is headed when the program starts. This makes it easy to randomize the output.
To make things worse (actually, it's to make programming in HBCHT possible), you cannot turn left because your car is half-broken. You can drive straight ahead, you can turn right, and you can reverse.
Markers
o car # exit, return/print
Operations
> go right, next memory cell < go left, previous memory cell ^ go up, increment v go down, decrement / go right if the current memory cell has the same value as the previous memory cell, else continue (if the previous memory cell does not exist, its value is zero)
Rules
- There can be only one car and only one exit
- The car cannot turn left; any relative left turns will be ignored along with their memory effects
- The program always starts at memory cell #0
- All memory cells have the value 0 by default
- Input values cannot be negative, but values returned by a program can
- The car cannot go out of bound; if it exits to the right, it reenters to the left, etc.
- Values cannot be input to memory cells below memory cell #0, but the program can set values in these
- Values can be arbitrarily large. An interpreter or compiler without this feature is valid, but not perfect (note that hbcht's C translator uses 32-bit ints and is thereby not perfect).
A semicolon denotes a comment. Anything from the semicolon to the end of the line is ignored.
If a program file contains a line that starts with @intext
, it will see
input as text and convert the text to ordinals before running the core
function.
If a program file contains a line that starts with @outtext
, it will show
output as a text string instead of a list of numbers.
Download
hbcht is released under the AGPLv3+.
hbcht can also be found in the Python Package Index. hbcht has its code at Gitorious; see http://gitorious.org/hbcht.