Project 3: Ants Vs. SomeBees
The bees are coming!
Create a better soldier
With inherit-ants.
Introduction
Important submission note: For full credit,
- Submit with Phase 1 complete by Monday, October 31 (worth 1 pt).
- Submit with Phases 2 and 3 complete by Thursday, November 3 (worth 1 pt).
- Submit with all phases complete by Wednesday, November 9.
Try to attempt the problems in order, as some later problems will depend on earlier problems in their implementation and therefore also when running
oktests.The entire project can be completed with a partner.
You can get 1 bonus point by submitting the entire project by Tuesday, November 8.
In this project, you will create a tower defense game called Ants Vs. SomeBees. As the ant queen, you populate your colony with the bravest ants you can muster. Your ants must protect their queen from the evil bees that invade your territory. Irritate the bees enough by throwing leaves at them, and they will be vanquished. Fail to pester the airborne intruders adequately, and your queen will succumb to the bees' wrath. This game is inspired by PopCap Games' Plants Vs. Zombies.
This project uses an object-oriented programming paradigm, focusing on material from Chapter 2.5 of Composing Programs. The project also involves understanding, extending, and testing a large program.
When students in the past have tried to implement the functions without thoroughly reading the problem description, theyβve often run into issues. π± Read each description thoroughly before starting to code.
Download starter files
The ants.zip archive contains several files, but
all of your changes will be made to ants.py.
ants.py: The game logic of Ants Vs. SomeBeesants_gui.py: The original GUI for Ants Vs. SomeBeesgui.py:A new GUI for Ants Vs. SomeBees.-
graphics.py: Utilities for displaying simple two-dimensional animations -
utils.py: Some functions to facilitate the game interface ucb.py: Utility functions for CS 61Astate.py: Abstraction for gamestate for gui.py-
assets: A directory of images and files used bygui.py -
img: A directory of images used byants_gui.py ok: The autograderproj3.ok: Theokconfiguration filetests: A directory of tests used byok
Logistics
The project is worth 25 points. 21 points are assigned for correctness, 2 points for composition, 1 point for submitting Phase 1 by the first checkpoint date, and 1 point for submitting Phases 2 and 3 by the second checkpoint date.
Additionally, there are some extra credit point opportunities. You can get 1 EC point for submitting the entire project by Tuesday, March 15, and 2 EC points for submitting the extra credit problem.
Important: In order to receive all of the extra credit points for Ants, your implementation of the entire project, including the EC problem, must be submitted by the early submission deadline.
You will turn in the following files:
ants.py
You do not need to modify or turn in any other files to complete the project. To submit the project, run the following command:
python3 ok --submit
You will be able to view your submissions on the Ok dashboard.
For the functions that we ask you to complete, there may be some initial code that we provide. If you would rather not use that code, feel free to delete it and start from scratch. You may also add new function definitions as you see fit.
However, please do not modify any other functions. Doing so may result in your code failing our autograder tests. Also, please do not change any function signatures (names, argument order, or number of arguments).
Throughout this project, you should be testing the correctness of your code. It is good practice to test often, so that it is easy to isolate any problems. However, you should not be testing too often, to allow yourself time to think through problems.
We have provided an autograder called ok to help you
with testing your code and tracking your progress. The first time you run
the autograder, you will be asked to
log in with your Ok account using your web browser. Please do so.
Each time you run ok, it will back up your work and progress
on our servers.
The primary purpose of ok is to test your implementations.
We recommend that you submit after you finish each problem. Only your last submission will be graded. It is also useful for us to have more backups of your code in case you run into a submission issue. If you forget to submit, your last backup will be automatically converted to a submission.
If you do not want us to record a backup of your work or information about your progress, you can run
python3 ok --local
With this option, no information will be sent to our course servers. If you
want to test your code interactively, you can run
python3 ok -q [question number] -i
with the appropriate question number (e.g. 01) inserted. This
will run the tests for that question until the first one you failed, then
give you a chance to test the functions you wrote interactively.
You can also use the debugging print feature in OK by writing
print("DEBUG:", x)
which will produce an output in your terminal without causing OK tests to
fail with extra output.
The Game
A game of Ants Vs. SomeBees consists of a series of turns. In each turn,
new bees may enter the ant colony. Then, new ants are placed to defend
their colony. Finally, all insects (ants, then bees) take individual
actions. Bees either try to move toward the end of the tunnel or sting
ants in their way. Ants perform a different action depending on their
type, such as collecting more food or throwing leaves at the bees. The
game ends either when a bee reaches the end of the tunnel (you lose), the
bees destroy the QueenAnt if it exists (you lose), or the
entire bee fleet has been vanquished (you win).
Core concepts
The Colony. This is where the game takes place. The
colony consists of several Places that are chained together
to form a tunnel where bees can travel through. The colony also has some
quantity of food which can be expended in order to place an ant in a
tunnel.
Places. A place links to another place to form a tunnel. The player can put a single ant into each place. However, there can be many bees in a single place.
The Hive. This is the place where bees originate. Bees exit the beehive to enter the ant colony.
Ants. Players place an ant into the colony by selecting
from the available ant types at the top of the screen. Each type of ant
takes a different action and requires a different amount of colony food to
place. The two most basic ant types are the HarvesterAnt,
which adds one food to the colony during each turn, and the
ThrowerAnt, which throws a leaf at a bee each turn. You will
be implementing many more!
Bees. In this game, bees are the antagonistic forces that the player must defend the ant colony from. Each turn, a bee either advances to the next place in the tunnel if no ant is in its way, or it stings the ant in its way. Bees win when at least one bee reaches the end of a tunnel.
Core classes
The concepts described above each have a corresponding class that encapsulates the logic for that concept. Here is a summary of the main classes involved in this game:
-
GameState: Represents the colony and some state information about the game, including how much food is available, how much time has elapsed, where theAntHomeBaseis, and all thePlaces in the game. -
Place: Represents a single place that holds insects. At most oneAntcan be in a single place, but there can be manyBees in a single place.Placeobjects have anexitto the left and anentranceto the right, which are also places. Bees travel through a tunnel by moving to aPlace'sexit. -
Hive: Represents the place whereBees start out (on the right of the tunnel). -
AntHomeBase: Represents the placeAnts are defending (on the left of the tunnel). If Bees get here, they win :( -
Insect: A superclass forAntandBee. All insects havehealthattribute, representing their remaining health, and aplaceattribute, representing thePlacewhere they are currently located. Each turn, every activeInsectin the game performs itsaction. -
Ant: Represents ants. EachAntsubclass has special attributes or a specialactionthat distinguish it from otherAnttypes. For example, aHarvesterAntgets food for the colony and aThrowerAntattacksBees. Each ant type also has afood_costattribute that indicates how much it costs to deploy one unit of that type of ant. -
Bee: Represents bees. Each turn, a bee either moves to theexitof its currentPlaceif thePlaceis notblockedby an ant, or stings the ant occupying its samePlace.
Game Layout
Below is a visualization of a GameState. As you work through the unlocking tests and problems, we recommend drawing out similar diagrams to help your understanding.
Object map
To help visualize how all the classes fit together, we've also created an object map for you to reference as you work, which you can find here:
Playing the game
The game can be run in two modes: as a text-based game or using a graphical user interface (GUI). The game logic is the same in either case, but the GUI enforces a turn time limit that makes playing the game more exciting. The text-based interface is provided for debugging and development.
The files are separated according to these two modes.
ants.py knows nothing of graphics or turn time limits.
To start a text-based game, run
python3 ants_text.py
To start a graphical game, run
python3 gui.py
When you start the graphical version, a new browser window should appear.
In the starter implementation, you have unlimited food and your ants can
only throw leaves at bees in their current Place. Before you
complete Problem 2, the GUI may crash since it doesn't have a full
conception of what a Place is yet! Try playing the game anyway! You'll
need to place a lot of ThrowerAnts (the second type) in order
to keep the bees from reaching your queen.
The game has several options that you will use throughout the project,
which you can view with
python3 ants_text.py --help.
usage: ants_text.py [-h] [-d DIFFICULTY] [-w] [--food FOOD]
Play Ants vs. SomeBees
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-d DIFFICULTY sets difficulty of game (test/easy/normal/hard/extra-hard)
-w, --water loads a full layout with water
--food FOOD number of food to start with when testing
Phase 1: Basic gameplay
Important submission note: For full credit, submit with Phase 1 complete by Wednesday, March 2 (worth 1 pt).
In the first phase you will complete the implementation that will allow
for basic gameplay with the two basic Ants: the
HarvesterAnt and the ThrowerAnt.
Problem 0 (0 pt)
Answer the following questions with your partner after you have read the
entire ants.py file.
To submit your answers, run:
python3 ok -q 00 -u
If you get stuck while answering these questions, you can try reading
through ants.py again, consult the
core concepts/classes
sections above, or ask a question in Slack.
-
What is the significance of an Insect's
healthattribute? Does this value change? If so, how? -
Which of the following is a class attribute of the
Insectclass? -
Is the
healthattribute of theAntclass an instance attribute or a class attribute? Why? -
Is the
damageattribute of anAntsubclass (such asThrowerAnt) an instance attribute or class attribute? Why? -
Which class do both
AntandBeeinherit from? -
What do instances of
Antand instances ofBeehave in common? -
How many insects can be in a single
Placeat any given time (before Problem 8)? - What does a
Beedo during one of its turns? - When is the game lost?
Remember to run:
python3 ok -q 00 -u
Problem 1 (1 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 01 -u
Part A: Currently, there is no cost for placing any type
of Ant, and so there is no challenge to the game. The base
class Ant has a food_cost of zero. Override this
class attribute for HarvesterAnt and
ThrowerAnt according to the "Food Cost" column in the table
below.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
HarvesterAnt
|
2 | 1 |
ThrowerAnt
|
3 | 1 |
Part B: Now that placing an Ant costs food,
we need to be able to gather more food! To fix this issue, implement the
HarvesterAnt class. A HarvesterAnt is a type of
Ant that adds one food to the
gamestate.food total as its action.
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 01
Try playing the game by running python3 gui.py. Once you have
placed a HarvesterAnt, you should accumulate food each turn.
You can also place ThrowerAnts, but you'll see that they can
only attack bees that are in their Place, making it a little
difficult to win.
Problem 2 (1 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 02 -u
In this problem, you'll complete Place.__init__ by adding
code that tracks entrances. Right now, a Place keeps track
only of its exit. We would like a Place to keep
track of its entrance as well. A Place needs to track only
one entrance. Tracking entrances will be useful when an
Ant needs to see what Bees are in front of it in
the tunnel.
However, simply passing an entrance to a Place constructor
will be problematic; we would need to have both the exit and the entrance
before creating a Place! (It's a
chicken or the egg
problem.) To get around this problem, we will keep track of entrances in
the following way instead. Place.__init__ should use this
logic:
-
A newly created
Placealways starts with itsentranceasNone. -
If the
Placehas anexit, then theexit'sentranceis set to thatPlace.
Hint: Remember that when the
__init__method is called, the first parameter,self, is bound to the newly created object
Hint: Try drawing out two
Places next to each other if things get confusing. In the GUI, a place'sentranceis to its right while theexitis to its left.
Hint: Remember that
Placesare not stored in a list, so you can't index into anything to access them. This means that you can't do something likecolony[index + 1]to access an adjacentPlace. How can you move from one place to another?
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 02
Problem 3 (1 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 03 -u
In order for a ThrowerAnt to throw a leaf, it must know which
bee to hit. The provided implementation of the
nearest_bee method in the ThrowerAnt class only
allows them to hit bees in the same Place. Your job is to fix
it so that a ThrowerAnt will throw_at the
nearest bee in front of it
that is not still in the Hive. This includes
bees that are in the same Place as a ThrowerAnt
Hint: All
Places have anis_hiveattribute which isTruewhen that place is theHive.
Change nearest_bee so that it returns a random
Bee from the nearest place that contains bees. Your
implementation should follow this logic:
-
Start from the current
Placeof theThrowerAnt. -
For each place, return a random bee if there is any, and if not, inspect
the place in front of it (stored as the current place's
entrance). - If there is no bee to attack, return
None.
Hint: The
random_beefunction provided inants.pyreturns a random bee from a list of bees orNoneif the list is empty.
Hint: As a reminder, if there are no bees present at a
Place, then thebeesattribute of thatPlaceinstance will be an empty list.
Hint: Having trouble visualizing the test cases? Try drawing them out on paper! The sample diagram provided in Game Layout shows the first test case for this problem.
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 03
After implementing nearest_bee, a
ThrowerAnt should be able to throw_at a
Bee in front of it that is not still in the
Hive. Make sure that your ants do the right thing! To start a
game with ten food (for easy testing):
python3 gui.py --food 10
Make sure to submit by the checkpoint deadline using the following command:
python3 ok --submit
You can check to ensure that you have completed Phase 1's problems by running:
python3 ok --score
Congratulations! You have finished Phase 1 of this project!
Phase 2: Ants!
Important submission note: For full credit,
- Submit with Phases 2 & 3 complete by Friday, March 11 (worth 1 pt).
Now that you've implemented basic gameplay with two types of
Ants, let's add some flavor to the ways ants can attack bees.
In this phase, you'll be implementing several different Ants
with different attack strategies.
After you implement each Ant subclass in this section, you'll
need to set its implemented class attribute to
True so that that type of ant will show up in the GUI. Feel
free to try out the game with each new ant to test the functionality!
With your Phase 2 ants, try python3 gui.py -d easy to
play against a full swarm of bees in a multi-tunnel layout and try
-d normal, -d hard, or
-d extra-hard if you want a real challenge! If the
bees are too numerous to vanquish, you might need to create some new ants.
Problem 4 (2 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 04 -u
A ThrowerAnt is a powerful threat to the bees, but it has a
high food cost. In this problem, you'll implement two subclasses of
ThrowerAnt that are less costly but have constraints on the
distance they can throw:
-
The
LongThrowercan onlythrow_ataBeethat is found after following at least 5entrancetransitions. It cannot hitBees that are in the samePlaceas it or the first 4Places in front of it. If there are twoBees, one too close to theLongThrowerand the other within its range, theLongThrowershould only throw at the fartherBee, which is within its range, instead of trying to hit the closerBee. -
The
ShortThrowercan onlythrow_ataBeethat is found after following at most 3entrancetransitions. It cannot throw at any bees further than 3Places in front of it.
Neither of these specialized throwers can throw_at a
Bee that is exactly 4 Places away.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
ShortThrower
|
2 | 1 |
LongThrower
|
2 | 1 |
To implement these new throwing ants, your ShortThrower and
LongThrower classes should inherit the
nearest_bee method from the base
ThrowerAnt class. The logic of choosing which bee a thrower
ant will attack is the same, except the ShortThrower and
LongThrower ants have a maximum and minimum range,
respectively.
To do this, modify the nearest_bee method to reference
min_range and max_range attributes, and only
return a bee if it is within range.
Make sure to give these min_range and
max_range attributes appropriate values in the
ThrowerAnt class so that the behavior of
ThrowerAnt is unchanged. Then, implement the subclasses
LongThrower and ShortThrower with appropriately
constrained ranges.
You should not need to repeat any code between
ThrowerAnt, ShortThrower, and
LongThrower.
Hint:
float('inf')returns an infinite positive value represented as a float that can be compared with other numbers.
Hint: You can chain inequalities in Python: e.g.
2 < x < 6will check ifxis between 2 and 6. Also,min_rangeandmax_rangeshould mark an inclusive range.
Important: Make sure your class attributes are called
max_rangeandmin_rangeThe tests directly reference these attribute names, and will error if you use another name for these attributes.
Don't forget to set the implemented class attribute of
LongThrower and ShortThrower to
True.
After writing code, test your implementation (rerun the tests for 03 to make sure they still work):
python3 ok -q 03
python3 ok -q 04
π©π½βπ»π¨πΏβπ» Pair programming? Remember to alternate between driver and navigator roles. The driver controls the keyboard; the navigator watches, asks questions, and suggests ideas.
Problem 5 (3 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 05 -u
Implement the FireAnt, which does damage when it receives
damage. Specifically, if it is damaged by amount health
units, it does a damage of amount to all bees in its place
(this is called reflected damage). If it dies, it does an
additional amount of damage, as specified by its
damage attribute, which has a default value of
3 as defined in the FireAnt class.
To implement this, override FireAnt's
reduce_health method. Your overriden method should call the
reduce_health method inherited from the superclass
(Ant) to reduce the current FireAnt instance's
health. Calling the inherited reduce_health method
on a FireAnt instance reduces the insect's
health by the given amount and removes the
insect from its place if its health reaches zero or lower.
Hint: Do not call
self.reduce_health, or you'll end up stuck in a recursive loop. (Can you see why?)
However, your method needs to also include the reflective damage logic:
-
Determine the reflective damage amount: start with the
amountinflicted on the ant, and then adddamageif the ant's health has dropped to 0. -
For each bee in the place, damage them with the total amount by calling
the appropriate
reduce_healthmethod for each bee.
Important: The
FireAntmust do its damage before being removed from itsplace, so pay careful attention to the order of your logic inreduce_health.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
FireAnt
|
5 | 3 |
Hint: Damaging a bee may cause it to be removed from its place. If you iterate over a list, but change the contents of that list at the same time, you may not visit all the elements. This can be prevented by making a > copy of the list. You can either use a list slice, or use the built-in
listfunction.>>> lst = [1,2,3,4] >>> lst[:] [1, 2, 3, 4] >>> list(lst) [1, 2, 3, 4] >>> lst[:] is not lst and list(lst) is not lst True
Once you've finished implementing the FireAnt, give it a
class attribute implemented with the value True.
Note: Even though you are overriding the superclass's
reduce_healthfunction (Ant.reduce_health), you can still use this method in your implementation by calling it. Note this is not recursion. (Why not?)
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 05
You can also test your program by playing a game or two! A
FireAnt should destroy all co-located Bees when it is stung.
To start a game with ten food (for easy testing):
python3 gui.py --food 10
Phase 3: More Ants!
Important submission note: For full credit,
- Submit with Phase 2 & 3 complete by Friday, March 11.
Problem 6 (1 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 06 -u
We are going to add some protection to our glorious home base by
implementing the WallAnt, an ant that does nothing each turn.
A WallAnt is useful because it has a large
health value.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
WallAnt
|
4 | 4 |
Unlike with previous ants, we have not provided you with a class header.
Implement the WallAnt class from scratch. Give it a class
attribute name with the value
'Wall' (so that the graphics work) and a class
attribute implemented with the value True (so
that you can use it in a game).
Hint: To start, take a look at how the previous problems' ants were implemented!
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 06
Problem 7 (3 pt)
Implement the HungryAnt, which will select a random
Bee from its place and eat it whole. After
eating a Bee, a HungryAnt must spend 3 turns
chewing before eating again. If there is no bee available to eat,
HungryAnt will do nothing.
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 07 -u
We have not provided you with a class header. Implement the
HungryAnt class from scratch. Give it a class attribute
name with the value 'Hungry' (so that
the graphics work) and a class attribute implemented with the
value True (so that you can use it in a game).
Hint: When a
Beeis eaten, it should lose all its health. Is there an existing function we can call on aBeethat can reduce its health to 0?
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
HungryAnt
|
4 | 1 |
Give HungryAnt a chew_duration
class attribute that stores the number of turns that it
will take a HungryAnt to chew (set to 3). Also, give each
HungryAnt an instance attribute
chew_countdown that counts the number of turns it has left to
chew (initialized to 0, since it hasn't eaten anything at the beginning.
You can also think of chew_countdown as the number of turns
until a HungryAnt can eat another Bee).
Implement the action method of the HungryAnt:
First, check if it is chewing; if so, decrement its
chew_countdown. Otherwise, eat a random Bee in
its place by reducing the Bee's health to 0.
Make sure to set the chew_countdown when a Bee is eaten!
Hint: Other than the
actionmethod, make sure you implement the__init__method too so theHungryAntstarts off with the appropriate amount ofhealth!
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 07
We now have some great offensive troops to help vanquish the bees, but let's make sure we're also keeping our defensive efforts up. In this phase you will implement ants that have special defensive capabilities such as increased health and the ability to protect other ants.
π©π½βπ»π¨πΏβπ» Pair programming? This would be a good time to switch roles. Switching roles makes sure that you both benefit from the learning experience of being in each role.
Problem 8 (3 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 08 -u
Right now, our ants are quite frail. We'd like to provide a way to help
them last longer against the onslaught of the bees. Enter the
BodyguardAnt.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
BodyguardAnt
|
4 | 2 |
A BodyguardAnt differs from a normal ant because it is a
ContainerAnt; it can contain another ant and protect it, all
in one Place. When a Bee stings the ant in a
Place where one ant contains another, only the container is
damaged. The ant inside the container can still perform its original
action. If the container perishes, the contained ant still remains in the
place (and can then be damaged).
Each ContainerAnt has an instance attribute
ant_contained that stores the ant it contains. This ant,
ant_contained, initially starts off as None to
indicate that there is no ant being stored yet. Implement the
store_ant method so that it sets the
ContainerAnt's ant_contained instance attribute
to the passed in ant argument. Also implement the
ContainerAnt's action method to perform its
ant_contained's action if it is currently containing an ant.
In addition, you will need to make the following modifications throughout your program so that a container and its contained ant can both occupy a place at the same time (a maximum of two ants per place), but only if exactly one is a container:
-
There is an
Ant.can_containmethod, but it always returnsFalse. Override the methodContainerAnt.can_containso that it takes an antotheras an argument and returnsTrueif:-
This
ContainerAntdoes not already contain another ant. - The other ant is not a container.
-
This
-
Modify
Ant.add_toto allow a container and a non-container ant to occupy the same place according to the following rules:- If the ant originally occupying a place can contain the ant being added, then both ants occupy the place and original ant contains the ant being added.
- If the ant being added can contain the ant originally in the space, then both ants occupy the place and the (container) ant being added contains the original ant.
-
If neither
Antcan contain the other, raise the sameAssertionErroras before (the one already present in the starter code). -
Important: If there are two ants in a specific
Place, theantattribute of thePlaceinstance should refer to the container ant, and the container ant should contain the non-container ant.
-
Add a
BodyguardAnt.__init__that sets the initial amount of health for the ant.
Hint: You may find the
is_containerattribute that eachAnthas useful for checking if a specificAntis a container. You should also take advantage of thecan_containmethod you wrote and avoid repeating code.
The constructor of
ContainerAnt.__init__is implemented as follows:def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): super().__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.ant_contained = NoneAs we saw in Hog,
argsis bound to all positional arguments (which are all arguments passed without keywords), andkwargsis bound to all the keyword arguments. This ensures that both sets of arguments are passed to the Ant constructor.Effectively, this means the constructor is exactly the same as its parent class's constructor (
Ant.__init__) but here we also setself.ant_contained = None.
Once you've finished implementing the BodyguardAnt, give it a
class attribute implemented with the value True.
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 08
Problem 9 (1 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 09 -u
The BodyguardAnt provides great defense, but they say the
best defense is a good offense. The TankAnt is a container
that protects an ant in its place and also deals 1 damage to all bees in
its place each turn.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
TankAnt
|
6 | 2 |
We have not provided you with a class header. Implement the
TankAnt class from scratch. Give it a class attribute
name with the value 'Tank' (so that
the graphics work) and a class attribute implemented with the
value True (so that you can use it in a game).
You should not need to modify any code outside of the
TankAnt class. If you find yourself needing to make changes
elsewhere, look for a way to write your code for the previous question
such that it applies not just to BodyguardAnt and
TankAnt objects, but to container ants in general.
Hint: The only methods you need to override from
TankAnt's parent class are__init__andaction.
Hint: Like with
FireAnt, it is possible that damaging a bee will cause it to be removed from its place.
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 09
Phase 4: Water and Might
Important submission note: For full credit,
- Submit with all phases complete by Wednesday, March 16.
You will get an extra credit point for submitting the entire project by Tuesday, March 15.
In the final phase, you're going to add one last kick to the game by introducing a new type of place and new ants that are able to occupy this place. One of these ants is the most important ant of them all: the queen of the colony!
Problem 10 (1 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 10 -u
Let's add water to the colony! Currently there are only two types of
places, the Hive and a basic Place. To make
things more interesting, we're going to create a new type of
Place called Water.
Only an insect that is waterproof can be placed in Water. In
order to determine whether an Insect is waterproof, add a new
class attribute to the Insect class named
is_waterproof that is set to False. Since bees
can fly, set their is_waterproof attribute to
True, overriding the inherited value.
Now, implement the add_insect method for Water.
First, add the insect to the place regardless of whether it is waterproof.
Then, if the insect is not waterproof, reduce the insect's health to 0.
Do not repeat code from elsewhere in the program. Instead, use
methods that have already been defined.
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 10
Once you've finished this problem, play a game that includes water. To
access the wet_layout, which includes water, add the
--water option (or -w for short)
when you start the game.
python3 gui.py --water
π©π½βπ»π¨πΏβπ» Pair programming? Remember to alternate between driver and navigator roles. The driver controls the keyboard; the navigator watches, asks questions, and suggests ideas.
Problem 11 (1 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 11 -u
Currently there are no ants that can be placed on Water.
Implement the ScubaThrower, which is a subclass of
ThrowerAnt that is more costly and waterproof,
but otherwise identical to its base class. A
ScubaThrower should not lose its health when placed in
Water.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
ScubaThrower
|
6 | 1 |
We have not provided you with a class header. Implement the
ScubaThrower class from scratch. Give it a class attribute
name with the value 'Scuba'
(so that the graphics work) and remember to set the class attribute
implemented with the value True (so that you can
use it in a game).
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 11
Problem 12 (3 pt)
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q 12 -u
Finally, implement the QueenAnt. The queen is a waterproof
ScubaThrower that inspires her fellow ants through her
bravery. In addition to the standard ScubaThrower action, the
QueenAnt doubles the damage of all the ants behind her each
time she performs an action. Once an ant's damage has been doubled, it is
not doubled again for subsequent turns.
Note: The reflected damage of a
FireAntshould not be doubled, only the extra damage it deals when its health is reduced to 0.
Note: If you downloaded the project early, there were a couple unlock questions that are no longer relevant. Rather than asking you to redownload the project, we will give you the answers to the affected questions:
Which QueenAnt instance is the true QueenAnt?
The first QueenAnt that is instantiated
What happens to any QueenAnt instance that is instantiated after the first one?
Its health is reduced to 0 upon taking its first action
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
QueenAnt
|
7 | 1 |
However, with great power comes great responsibility. The
QueenAnt is governed by three special rules:
-
If the queen ever has its health reduced to 0, the ants lose. You will
need to override
Ant.reduce_healthinQueenAntand callants_lose()in that case in order to signal to the simulator that the game is over. (The ants also still lose if any bee reaches the end of a tunnel.) -
There can be only one queen. A second queen cannot be constructed. To
check if an Ant can be constructed, we use the
Ant.construct()class method to either construct an Ant if possible, or returnNoneif not. You will need to overrideAnt.constructas a class method ofQueenAntin order to add this check. To keep track of whether a queen has already been created, you can use an instance variable added to the currentGameState. -
The queen cannot be removed. Attempts to remove the queen should have no
effect (but should not cause an error). You will need to override
Ant.remove_frominQueenAntto enforce this condition.
Hint: Think about how you can call the
constructmethod of the superclass ofQueenAnt. Remember that you ultimately want to construct aQueenAnt, not a regularAntor aScubaThrower.
Hint: You can find each
Placein a tunnel behind theQueenAntby starting at the ant'splace.exitand then repeatedly following itsexit. Theexitof aPlaceat the end of a tunnel isNone.
Hint: To avoid doubling an ant's damage twice, mark the ants that have been buffed in some way, in a way that persists across calls to
QueenAnt.action.
Hint: When buffing the ants' damage, keep in mind that there can be more than one ant in a
Place, such as if one ant is guarding another.
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q 12
Extra Credit (2 pt)
During Office Hours and Project Parties, the staff will prioritize helping students with required questions. We will not be offering help with this question unless the queue is empty.
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q EC -u
Implement two final thrower ants that do zero damage, but instead apply a
temporary "status" on the action method of a
Bee instance that they throw_at. This "status"
lasts for a certain number of turns, after which it ceases to take effect.
We will be implementing two new ants that inherit from
ThrowerAnt.
-
SlowThrowerthrows sticky syrup at a bee, slowing it for 3 turns. When a bee is slowed, it can only move on turns whengamestate.timeis even, and can do nothing otherwise. If a bee is hit by syrup while it is already slowed, it is slowed for an additional 3 turns. -
ScaryThrowerintimidates a nearby bee, causing it to back away instead of advancing. (If the bee is already right next to the Hive and cannot go back further, it should not move. To check if a bee is next to the Hive, you might find theis_hiveinstance attribute ofPlaces useful). Bees remain scared until they have tried to back away twice. Bees cannot try to back away if they are slowed andgamestate.timeis odd. Once a bee has been scared once, it can't be scared ever again.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
SlowThrower
|
4 | 1 |
ScaryThrower
|
6 | 1 |
In order to complete the implementations of these two ants, you will need
to set their class attributes appropriately and implement the
slow and scare methods on Bee,
which apply their respective statuses on a particular bee. You may also
have to edit some other methods of Bee.
You can run some provided tests, but they are not exhaustive:
python3 ok -q EC
Make sure to test your code! Your code should be able to apply multiple statuses on a target; each new status applies to the current (possibly previously affected) action method of the bee.
Optional Problems
Optional Problem 1
During Office Hours and Project Parties, the staff will prioritize helping students with required questions. We will not be offering help with this question unless the queue is empty.
Before writing any code, read the instructions and test your understanding of the problem:
python3 ok -q optional1 -u
Implement the NinjaAnt, which damages all Bees
that pass by, but can never be stung.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
NinjaAnt
|
5 | 1 |
A NinjaAnt does not block the path of a Bee that
flies by. To implement this behavior, first modify the
Ant class to include a new class attribute
blocks_path that is set to True, then override
the value of blocks_path to False in the
NinjaAnt class.
Second, modify the Bee's method blocked to
return False if either there is no Ant in the
Bee's place or if there is an Ant,
but its blocks_path attribute is False. Now
Bees will just fly past NinjaAnts.
Finally, we want to make the NinjaAnt damage all
Bees that fly past. Implement the action method
in NinjaAnt to reduce the health of all Bees in
the same place as the NinjaAnt by its
damage attribute. Similar to the FireAnt, you
must iterate over a potentially changing list of bees.
Hint: Having trouble visualizing the test cases? Try drawing them out on paper! See the example in Game Layout for help.
After writing code, test your implementation:
python3 ok -q optional1
For a challenge, try to win a game using only
HarvesterAnt and NinjaAnt.
Optional Problem 2
During Office Hours and Project Parties, the staff will prioritize helping students with required questions. We will not be offering help with this question unless the queue is empty.
We've been developing this ant for a long time in secret. It's so
dangerous that we had to lock it in the super hidden CS61A underground
vault, but we finally think it is ready to go out on the field. In this
problem, you'll be implementing the final ant -- LaserAnt, a
ThrowerAnt with a twist.
Note: There are no unlocking tests for this question.
| Class | Food Cost | Initial Health |
LaserAnt
|
10 | 1 |
The LaserAnt shoots out a powerful laser, damaging all that
dare to stand in its path. Both Bees and Ants,
of all types, are at risk of being damaged by LaserAnt. When
a LaserAnt takes its action, it will damage all
Insects in its place (excluding itself, but including its
container if it has one) and the Places in front of it,
excluding the Hive.
If that were it, LaserAnt would be too powerful for us to
contain. The LaserAnt has a base damage of 2.
But, LaserAnt's laser comes with some quirks. The laser is
weakened by 0.25 each place it travels away from
LaserAnt's place. Additionally, LaserAnt has
limited battery. Each time LaserAnt actually damages an
Insect its laser's total damage goes down by
0.0625 (1/16). If LaserAnt's damage becomes
negative due to these restrictions, it simply does 0 damage instead.
The exact order in which things are damaged within a turn is unspecified.
In order to complete the implementation of this ultimate ant, read through
the LaserAnt class, set the class attributes appropriately,
and implement the following two functions:
-
insects_in_frontis an instance method, called by theactionmethod, that returns a dictionary where each key is anInsectand each corresponding value is the distance (in places) that thatInsectis away fromLaserAnt. The dictionary should include allInsectson the same place or in front of theLaserAnt, excludingLaserAntitself. -
calculate_damageis an instance method that takes indistance, the distance that an insect is away from theLaserAntinstance. It returns the damage that theLaserAntinstance should afflict based on: -
The
distanceaway from theLaserAntinstance that anInsectis. -
The number of
Insectsthat thisLaserAnthas damaged, stored in theinsects_shotinstance attribute.
In addition to implementing the methods above, you may need to modify,
add, or use class or instance attributes in the
LaserAnt class as needed.
You can run the provided test, but it is not exhaustive:
python3 ok -q optional2
Make sure to test your code!
Project submission
At this point, run the entire autograder to see if there are any tests that don't pass:
python3 ok
You can also check your score on each part of the project, including the extra credit problem:
python3 ok --score
Once you are satisfied, submit to complete the project.
python3 ok --submit
If you have a partner, make sure to add them to the project submission on okpy.
You are now done with the project! If you haven't yet, you should try playing the game!
python3 gui.py [-h] [-d DIFFICULTY] [-w] [--food FOOD]
Acknowledgments: Tom Magrino and Eric Tzeng developed this project with John DeNero. Jessica Wan contributed the original artwork. Joy Jeng and Mark Miyashita invented the queen ant. Many others have contributed to the project as well!
The new concept artwork was drawn by Alana Tran, Andrew Huang, Emilee Chen, Jessie Salas, Jingyi Li, Katherine Xu, Meena Vempaty, Michelle Chang, and Ryan Davis.