doodle/cmd/doodad
Noah a79601f983 D++ Default Author and Embedded Doodads Error
* Update native.DefaultAuthor to get the name registered from the user's JWT
  license in a way that avoids cyclic dependency errors.
* When plus_dpp.go#GetRegistration succeeds, it updates DefaultAuthor to the
  registered name. The main.go now gets and prints the registered owner to
  ensure this is populated on startup.
* Return correct ErrRegisteredFeature error when the FOSS version fails
  to load embedded doodads.
2024-04-18 22:31:11 -07:00
..
commands D++ Default Author and Embedded Doodads Error 2024-04-18 22:31:11 -07:00
README.md Add doodad.exe binary and PNG to Drawing Converter 2018-10-16 12:26:41 -07:00
main.go Resolve circular import errors for Doodle++ plugin 2024-04-18 22:12:56 -07:00

README.md

doodad.exe

The doodad tool is a command line interface for interacting with Levels and Doodad files, collectively referred to as "Doodle drawings" or just "drawings" for short.

Commands

doodad convert

Convert between standard image files (bitmap or PNG) and Doodle drawings (levels or doodads).

This command can be used to "export" a Doodle drawing as a PNG (when run against a Level file, it may export a massive PNG image containing the entire level). It may also "import" a new Doodle drawing from an image on disk.

Example:

# Export a full screenshot of your level
$ doodad convert mymap.level screenshot.png

# Create a new level based from a PNG image.
$ doodad convert scanned-drawing.png new-level.level

# Create a new doodad based from a BMP image, and in this image the chroma
# color (transparent) is #FF00FF instead of white as default.
$ doodad convert --key '#FF00FF' button.png button.doodad

Supported image types:

  • PNG (8-bit or 24-bit, with transparent pixels or chroma key)
  • BMP (bitmap image with chroma key)

The chrome key defaults to white (#FFFFFF), so pixels of that color are treated as transparent and ignored. For PNG images, if a pixel is fully transparent (alpha channel 0%) it will also be skipped.

When converting an image into a drawing, the unique colors identified in the drawing are extracted into the palette. You will need to later edit the palette to assign meaning to the colors.