Games-Tournament-Swiss Version 0.15 The complexity of the C11 code slowed this release down. C12 code wasn't touched, so I'm sure bugs remain. This is a major revision. In addition, we have a nicer interface to writing pairing tests. Look at three.t in the t/ directory. Warning! This is ALPHA-level software. Although it attempts to implement the FIDE Swiss Rules, it may not pair players correctly. It may take over your computer, and force you to reboot. It may DELETE files. It may DESTROY your computer. Use at your own risk. The complexity (recursiveness) of the C10-14 procedures and the bugs hidden there means nothing can be guaranteed. Cross your fingers that your tournament does not exercise the C12 code! NOTICE: More tests are needed. If you have an interesting pairing table that is difficult to pair, please report it as a bug at http://search.cpan.org/~drbean/Games-Tournament-Swiss/, ideally in the same format as t/three.t. Bring it on! Try to break Games::Tournament::Swiss and report your results! I recommend looking at the scripts. If you want some more help, look at the tests. Again, scripts are still likely to break, but the purpose of that is to get you to write your own scripts. (ha-ha) Look at the scripts and the tests. This program is run from a shell. You need to work from a command line and type commands. It also depends on perl to run. If you don't know anything about perl, you will have to learn something about installing it and running scripts, before you can use this software. Alternatively, there is a web app frontend in a subversion repo at http://svn.openfoundry.org/swiss For perl on Windows, try the free download of ActiveState's distribution at http://www.activestate.com/store/activeperl, or the experimental Strawberry Perl http://win32.perl.org/wiki/index.php?title=Strawberry_Perl On other platforms, find it from your regular source for new packages. INSTALLATION This software doesn't install itself. To install this module, run the following commands: perl Build.PL or perl Makefile.PL ./Build make ./Build test make install ./Build install make may be nmake or dmake on Windows. The tests will take a few minutes. The distribution is made up of modules and scripts. The modules provide functionality that you can use to write your own tournament software. The scripts are an example of a swiss pairing program. SCRIPTS The scripts in script_files/ need to be installed somewhere so that they can be run in the directory in which pairing of each round is done. DIRECTORY LAYOUT The scripts assume that there is a directory in which a configuration file, called league.yaml, with data about the players exists. The rounds are paired in subdirectories, named 1,2,3,.. below this directory. Files named: brackets.yaml pairing.yaml round.yaml matches.yaml player.yaml tourney.yaml may be left in these subdirectories after pairing. Scores are entered in the same subdirectories in a file called 'scores.yaml'. You need to create these files, if you use 'pairstately'. You can create a pairing table with 'pairingtable,' convert it into YAML form with 'pairtable2yaml' and run 'pair.' DATA FILES Do not use tabs in these YAML files. The level of indentation is significant. Follow the examples closely. The first, league.yaml has lines of the form: member: - id: 1 name: Laver, Rod rating: 2810 title: Grandmaster - id: 2 name: Sampras, Pete rating: 2800 title: Unknown - id: 3 name: McEnroe, John rating: 2780 title: Unknown If you are using your own scoring scheme, and colors (called, roles), see the example below. You can add your own data to the member records. A pairing number is generated for the players, so don't add a pairing number. Late entries in a round after the first get their own "late" records, of the same form as the member records. TODO Configuration of your own scoring scheme looks like it is broken. The score files: 1.yaml, etc, are of the form: 'Laver, Rod': Loss 'Sampras, Pete': Win 'McEnroe, John': Bye First number is the name of the player. (Every name will have to be unique.) The second is the result for that player. Alternatively, 1: - 'Laver, Rod': 0 - 'Sampras, Pete': 1 2: - 'McEnroe, John': - A template file is generated in the rounds subdirectory. A sample scoring scheme, abbreviations and roles in league.yaml could be: scores: win: 1 loss: 0.5 draw: 0.75 absent: 0 bye: 1 abbreviation: W: White 1: Win '=': Draw roles: - White - Black For the form of the pairing table and its YAML equivalent, see the documentation for 'pairtable2yaml.' GENERATING PAIRINGS Starting with an empty main directory, create league.yaml, and an empty subdirectory for the first round. Run the script, 'pair' in the empty round subdirectory. A log of the pairing is printed and 'round.yaml' in the directory contains the matches. After the games in the round are complete, in the scores subdirectory, enter the scores for the players in the file, '1.yaml', or whatever the round is. You can use the file called 1.yaml, or whatever in the round subdirectory as a template and afterward move it to the scores subdirectory. Then you can run 'crosstable 1' or 'pairingtable 1' in the original directory above the subdirectory, to get current standings. Convert your pairing table into YAML form with 'pairtable2yaml' and copy it into a subdirectory for the next round, and continue as before. Alternatively, set up the Catalyst web app frontend and access Games::Tournament::Swiss through the Internet. SUPPORT AND DOCUMENTATION After installing, you can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command. perldoc Games::Tournament::Swiss You can also look for information at: Search CPAN, for documentation and source: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Games-Tournament-Swiss CPAN Request Tracker (Report Bugs here): http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Games-Tournament-Swiss AnnoCPAN, annotated CPAN documentation: http://annocpan.org/dist/Games-Tournament-Swiss CPAN Ratings: http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/Games-Tournament-Swiss COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE Copyright (C) 2010 Dr Bean This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.