Creator-defined statements allow you to add your own statements to Ren’Py. This makes it possible to add things that are not supported by the current syntax of Ren’Py.
Creator-defined statements must be defined in a python early
block. What’s more,
the filename containing the user-defined statement must be be loaded earlier
than any file that uses it. Since Ren’Py loads files in Unicode sort order, it
generally makes sense to prefix the name of any file containing a user-defined
statement with 01, or some other small number.
A user-defined statement cannot be used in the file in which it is defined.
Creator-defined statement are registered using the renpy.register_statement()
function.
The parse method takes a Lexer object:
Lexer
linkeol
() linkTrue if the lexer is at the end of the line.
match
(re) linkMatches an arbitrary regexp string.
All of the statements in the lexer that match things are implemented in terms of this function. They first skip whitespace, then attempt to match against the line. If the match succeeds, the matched text is returned. Otherwise, None is returned.
keyword
(s) linkMatches s as a keyword.
name
() linkMatches a name. This does not match built-in keywords.
word
() linkMatches any word, including keywords. Returns the text of the matched word.
string
() linkMatches a Ren’Py string.
integer
() linkMatches an integer, returns a string containing the integer.
float
() linkMatches a floating point number, returns a string containing the floating point number.
simple_expression
() linkMatches a simple Python expression, returns it as a string.
rest
() linkSkips whitespace, then returns the rest of the line.
checkpoint
() linkReturns an opaque object representing the current state of the lexer.
revert
(o) linkWhen o is the object returned from checkpoint(), reverts the state of the lexer to what it was when checkpoint() was called. (This is used for backtracking.)
subblock_lexer
() linkReturn a Lexer for the block associated with the current line.
advance
() linkIn a subblock lexer, advances to the next line. This must be called before the first line, so the first line can be parsed.
These functions are useful in writing lint functions.
This creates a new statement line
that allows lines of text to be specified
without quotes.
python early:
def parse_smartline(lex):
who = lex.simple_expression()
what = lex.rest()
return (who, what)
def execute_smartline(o):
who, what = o
renpy.say(eval(who), what)
def lint_smartline(o):
who, what = o
try:
eval(who)
except:
renpy.error("Character not defined: %s" % who)
tte = renpy.check_text_tags(what)
if tte:
renpy.error(tte)
renpy.register_statement("line", parse=parse_smartline, execute=execute_smartline, lint=lint_smartline)
This can be used by writing:
line e "These quotes will show up," Eileen said, "and don't need to be backslashed."