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Andy Meneely 8b12344c7b Tons of docs, xlsx can be used outside Deck now 12 years ago
bin Putting together a basic squib new command 12 years ago
lib Tons of docs, xlsx can be used outside Deck now 12 years ago
samples Stabilizing the code after the options switch. Getting there... 12 years ago
spec Got all the specs passing! 12 years ago
.gitignore Ignoring inch doc stuff 12 years ago
.travis.yml Getting travis to use new bundler 12 years ago
.yardopts Starting work on the new options 12 years ago
API.md Starting work on the new options 12 years ago
Gemfile Re-generating gem with bundler 12 years ago
LICENSE.txt Re-generating gem with bundler 12 years ago
README.md Starting work on the new options 12 years ago
Rakefile Rake installs THEN specs 12 years ago
squib.gemspec Adding in coveralls CI 12 years ago

README.md

Squib Gem Version Build Status Dependency Status Coverage Status Inline docs

Squib is a Ruby DSL for prototyping card and board games. Think of it like nanDeck done "the Ruby way". Squib supports:

  • Complex text rendering using Pango
  • Reading PNGs and SVGs using Cairo
  • Reading .xlsx files
  • Basic shape drawing
  • Rendering to PNGs and PDFs
  • Plus the full power of Ruby!

Check this out.

require 'squib'

Squib::Deck.new do
  text str: 'Hello, World!'  
  save_png
end

That script just created 3 PNG images at 825x1125 with the string "Hello, World" in the upper-left corner.

Installation

Install it yourself with:

$ gem install squib

If you're using Bundler, add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'squib'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Note: Squib has some native dependencies, such as Cairo, Pango, and Nokogiri, which all require DevKit to compile C code. This is usually not painful, but can cause headaches on some setups. For Windows users, I strongly recommend using the non-64 bit RubyInstaller at http://rubyinstaller.org. For Mac, I recommend using rvm. Squib requires Ruby 2.0 or later.

Getting Started

After installing Squib, you can create a project and run your first build like this:

$ squib new my-cool-game
$ cd my-cool-game
$ ruby deck.rb

The squib new command will generate files and folders like this:

_output
  gitkeep.txt
.gitignore
ABOUT.md
config.yml
deck.rb
Gemfile
layout.yml
PNP NOTES.md

The central file here is deck.rb. Here's a basic example of a deck to work from:

{include:file:samples/basic.rb}

Learning Squib's API

  • The samples directory in the source repository has lots of examples
  • The document called API.md walks through the various methods and options that apply to the entire Squib API
  • API Documentation is also kept up-to-date.

Development

Squib is currently in pre-release alpha, so the API is still maturing. If you are using Squib, however, I'd love to hear about it! Feel free to file a bug or feature request.

Contributing

Squib is an open source tool, and I would love participation. If you want your code integrated:

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/[my-github-username]/squib/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request