Installing and running Pyskool¶
Requirements¶
Pyskool requires Python (version 2.7) and Pygame (version 1.8+).
On Linux/*BSD, Python and Pygame are available via the package management system. Python is in the python package on all systems; Pygame is in the python-pygame package on Debian-based distros and openSUSE, the pygame package on Fedora, the devel/py-game port on FreeBSD and NetBSD, and the devel/pygame port on OpenBSD.
Windows and Mac OS X users should take care to select the Pygame installer that matches the version of Python that is installed.
Installing Pyskool¶
There are various ways to install the latest stable release of Pyskool:
- from the zip archive or tarball available at pyskool.ca
- from the DEB package or RPM package available at pyskool.ca
- from PyPI by using easy_install or pip
If you choose the zip archive or tarball, note that Pyskool can be used wherever it is unpacked: it does not need to be installed in any particular location.
However, if you would like to install Pyskool as a Python package, you can do
so by using the supplied setup.py
script. After installation, the required
images, ini files and sound files for each game will need to be created. This
can be done by using the --setup
option; for example:
$ skool_daze.py --setup
Windows¶
To install Pyskool as a Python package on Windows, open a command prompt, change to the directory where Pyskool was unpacked, and run the following command:
> setup.py install
This should install the Pyskool game launcher scripts in
C:\Python2X\Scripts (assuming you have installed Python in C:\Python2X),
which means you can run them from anywhere (assuming you have added
C:\Python2X\Scripts to the Path
environment variable).
Linux/*BSD/Mac OS X¶
To install Pyskool as a Python package on Linux/*BSD/Mac OS X, open a terminal window, change to the directory where Pyskool was unpacked, and run the following command as root:
# ./setup.py install
This should install the Pyskool game launcher scripts in /usr/local/bin (or
some other suitable location in your PATH
), which means you can run them
from anywhere.
Running Pyskool¶
Windows¶
To run Pyskool in Skool Daze mode, double-click the skool_daze.py file in the Pyskool directory. To run Pyskool in Back to Skool mode, double-click back_to_skool.py.
If that doesn’t work, try the command line. Open a command prompt, change to the Pyskool directory, and do:
> skool_daze.py
to run Pyskool in Skool Daze mode; or, to run Pyskool in Back to Skool mode:
> back_to_skool.py
Linux/*BSD/Mac OS X¶
To run Pyskool in Skool Daze mode, open a terminal window, change to the Pyskool directory, and do:
$ ./skool_daze.py
or, to run Pyskool in Back to Skool mode:
$ ./back_to_skool.py
Pyskool data files¶
When skool_daze.py, back_to_skool.py or one of the other game launcher scripts is executed, it looks for the following things:
- a file named pyskool.ini (the main ini file)
- a directory named images
- a directory named sounds
- a directory named ini/<game_name> (where <game_name> is skool_daze, back_to_skool, or whatever)
Each of these things must be present in one of the following directories in order for Pyskool to find it:
- the current working directory
- $HOME/.pyskool
- the directory containing the game launcher script
- /usr/share/pyskool
- $PACKAGE_DIR/data
$HOME refers to the user’s home directory. On Windows this is typically C:\Users\username or C:\Documents and Settings\username.
$PACKAGE_DIR refers to the directory in which the pyskool package is
installed (as shown by the --package-dir
command line option).
When you need a reminder of the locations that Pyskool searches for data files,
run one of the game launcher scripts with the --search-dirs
option.
If Pyskool doesn’t start, run the game launcher script from the command line and read the diagnostic messages that are printed to the console for clues about what’s going wrong.
When Pyskool is running, it will dump screenshots to, save games to, and load games from either $HOME/.pyskool (if it exists or can be created), or the current working directory.
Command line options¶
skool_daze.py, back_to_skool.py and the other game launcher scripts support the following command line options:
--version
- show the version number of Pyskool and exit-h
or--help
- show a summary of the available options-c
or--cheat
- enable cheat keys; equivalent to--config=Cheat,1
, this option overrides the Cheat parameter in the [GameConfig] section--config=P,V
- set the value of the configuration parameterP
toV
; this option may be used multiple times--create-images
- create the images required by the game and exit--create-ini
- create the ini files required by the game in $HOME/.pyskool/ini/<game_name> and exit--create-sounds
- create the sound files required by the game in $HOME/.pyskool/sounds and exit--force
- overwrite existing images, ini files and sound files (when using the--create-images
,--create-ini
,--create-sounds
or--setup
option)-i INIDIR
or--inidir=INIDIR
- use ini files from a specified directory-l SAVEFILE
or--load=SAVEFILE
- load a previously saved game--package-dir
- show the path to the pyskool package directory and exit-q
or--quick-start
- start the game quickly by skipping the scroll-skool-into-view and theme tune sequence; equivalent to--config=QuickStart,1
, this option overrides the QuickStart parameter in the [GameConfig] section-r SAVEDIR
or--load-last=SAVEDIR
- load the most recently saved game from the specified directory--sample-rate=RATE
- set the sample rate of the sound files created by--create-sounds
(default: 44100)-s SCALE
or--scale=SCALE
- set the scale of the display; equivalent to--config=Scale,SCALE
, this option overrides the Scale parameter in the [ScreenConfig] section--search-dirs
- show the locations that Pyskool searches for data files and exit--setup
- create the images, ini files and sound files required by the game in $HOME/.pyskool and exit
The --create-images
option first looks for Skool Daze and Back to Skool
tape or snapshot files by the following names in $HOME/.pyskool:
- skool_daze.tzx
- skool_daze.sna
- skool_daze.z80
- skool_daze.szx
- back_to_skool.tzx
- back_to_skool.sna
- back_to_skool.z80
- back_to_skool.szx
If no such files are found, TZX files are downloaded from one of the sources listed in images.ini and saved to $HOME/.pyskool. Then the required images are built from the tape or snapshot files and saved to the appropriate subdirectories under $HOME/.pyskool/images/originalx1.