Randomized templating language DSL.
Madlang is a text templating language written in Haskell, meant to explore computational creativity and generative literature.
Madlang DSL for generating random text
This is the Madlang DSL for generating text. You specify a template, and Madlang will create randomized text from the template.
Madlang is an interpreted language, written in Haskell. Madlang can be used as an EDSL for Haskell or using the command-line interpreter.
Madlang is intended to explore computational creativity and provide an easy way to get started with generative literature.
Installation
Binary Releases
Head over to the releases page and grab a binary for your platform.
Cabal
If you do not see you platform listed, you will have to install from source. Download cabal and GHC. Then:
$ cabal update
$ cabal new-install madlang
You may need to add $HOME/.local/bin
to your PATH
. To do so:
$ echo 'export PATH=$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH' >> $HOME/.bashrc
$ source $HOME/.bashrc
Tutorial
The smallest program possible in Madlang is simply a return declaration, viz.
:return
1.0 "heads"
1.0 "tails"
The :return
tells us this that this will be the final value when run, while the numbers in front of the strings denote relative weights. Save this as gambling.mad
, and run
$ madlang run gambling.mad
heads
Now let's try something a little more complicated:
:define person
1.0 "me"
1.0 "you"
:return
1.0 "The only one of us walking out of this room alive is going to be " person "."
A bit more sinister, perhaps. The :define
statement there declares a new identifier, which we can later reference. Save this as fate.mad
and run:
$ madlang run fate.mad
The only one of us walking out of this room alive is going to be you.
We can also refer to another identifier within a :define
block.
:define coin
1.0 "heads"
1.0 "tails"
:define realisticCoin
1.0 coin
0.03 "on its side"
:return realisticCoin
In addition to identifiers, we can also define categories. Categories are just groups of identifiers. We can define one like so:
:define color
1.0 "yellow"
1.0 "blue"
:define texture
1.0 "soft"
1.0 "scratchy"
1.0 "dimpled"
:category adjective
| color
| texture
:return
1.0 adjective
Then, when we can adjective
, it will pick one of "yellow", "blue",… "dimpled" with equal probability.
Finally, one of the most powerful features of madlang
is the ability to include libraries in a file. Open the following and save it as gambling.mad
:
:library
:define coin
1.0 "heads"
1.0 "tails"
Then, open the following and save it in the same directory as realistic-gambling.mad
:
:include gambling.mad
:define realisticGambling
1.0 gambling-coin
0.03 "on its side"
:return
1.0 realisticGambling
Then run it with:
$ madlang run realistic-gambling.mad
madlang
comes with several libraries prepackaged. You can install them for the current user with:
$ madlang install
Try this out:
:include colors.mad
:define weirdDog
1.0 colors-color "dog"
:return
1.0 "On my walk today I saw a " weirdDog "."
EDSL
You can use Madlang as a Haskell EDSL, generating values of type RandTok
. This can be done a couple ways. One is to use the file embedder:
randomText :: RandTok
randomText = $(madFile "mad-src/some-bot.mad")
While the other is to use the madlang
quasi-quoter:
randomText :: RandTok
randomText = [madlang|
:include adjectives.mad
:return
1.0 "I am feeling very " adjectives-adjective " today."
|]
You can then transform this into a random text file with:
generateText :: IO Text
generateText = run randomText
Examples
There is a Shakespearean insult generator available to test out at my site. For a look at using Madlang as an EDSL, check out my recursion scheme generator
Tooling
Vim
There is a vim plugin available here.
Project Templates
There is a project template bundled with pi, which you can install with
$ curl -LSfs https://japaric.github.io/trust/install.sh | sh -s -- --git vmchale/project-init
and invoke with
$ pi new madlang story
There is also a templated project here that can be invoked via
pi git vmchale/https://github.com/vmchale/madlang-miso story
Manpages
You can view documentation for madlang
on Linux, Mac, or BSD by typing:
$ man madlang
Contributions
Guide
Contributions, bug reports, and feature requests are emphatically welcome. Please see the CONTRIBUTING.md
guide for more specific details.
Release Naming
Releases are named using the releases.mad
file found here. You will need to install the standard libraries using
$ madlang install
before running
$ just name