cribbage.6.in 5.6 KB

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  1. .\" $NetBSD: cribbage.6,v 1.11 2003/08/07 09:37:09 agc Exp $
  2. .\"
  3. .\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1993
  4. .\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
  5. .\"
  6. .\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
  7. .\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
  8. .\" are met:
  9. .\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
  10. .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
  11. .\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
  12. .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
  13. .\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
  14. .\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
  15. .\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
  16. .\" without specific prior written permission.
  17. .\"
  18. .\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
  19. .\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
  20. .\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
  21. .\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
  22. .\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
  23. .\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
  24. .\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
  25. .\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
  26. .\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
  27. .\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
  28. .\" SUCH DAMAGE.
  29. .\"
  30. .\" @(#)cribbage.6 8.1 (Berkeley) 5/31/93
  31. .\"
  32. .Dd May 31, 1993
  33. .Dt CRIBBAGE 6
  34. .Os
  35. .Sh NAME
  36. .Nm cribbage
  37. .Nd the card game cribbage
  38. .Sh SYNOPSIS
  39. .Nm
  40. .Op Fl eqr
  41. .Sh DESCRIPTION
  42. .Nm
  43. plays the card game cribbage, with the program playing one hand
  44. and the user the other.
  45. The program will initially ask the user if the rules of the game are
  46. needed \(en if so, it will print out the appropriate section from
  47. .Em According to Hoyle
  48. with
  49. .Xr more 1 .
  50. .Pp
  51. .Nm
  52. options include:
  53. .Bl -tag -width indent
  54. .It Fl e
  55. When the player makes a mistake scoring his hand or crib, provide an
  56. explanation of the correct score.
  57. (This is especially useful for beginning players.)
  58. .It Fl q
  59. Print a shorter form of all messages \(en this is only recommended for
  60. users who have played the game without specifying this option.
  61. .It Fl r
  62. Instead of asking the player to cut the deck, the program will randomly
  63. cut the deck.
  64. .El
  65. .Pp
  66. .Nm
  67. first asks the player whether he wishes to play a short game (
  68. .Dq once around ,
  69. to 61) or a long game (
  70. .Dq twice around ,
  71. to 121).
  72. A response of
  73. .Sq Ic s
  74. will result in a short game, any other response will play a long game.
  75. .Pp
  76. At the start of the first game, the program
  77. asks the player to cut the deck to determine who gets the first crib.
  78. The user should respond with a number between 0 and
  79. 51, indicating how many cards down the deck is to be cut.
  80. The player who cuts the lower ranked card gets the first crib.
  81. If more than one game is played, the
  82. loser of the previous game gets the first crib in the current game.
  83. .Pp
  84. For each hand, the program first prints the player's hand,
  85. whose crib it is, and then asks the player
  86. to discard two cards into the crib.
  87. The cards are prompted for one per line, and are typed as explained below.
  88. .Pp
  89. After discarding, the program cuts the deck (if it is the player's
  90. crib) or asks the player to cut the deck (if it's its crib); in the latter
  91. case, the appropriate response is a number from 0 to 39 indicating
  92. how far down the remaining 40 cards are to be cut.
  93. .Pp
  94. After cutting the deck, play starts with the non-dealer (the person
  95. who doesn't have the crib) leading the first card.
  96. Play continues, as per cribbage, until all cards are exhausted.
  97. The program keeps track of the scoring of all points and the total of
  98. the cards on the table.
  99. .Pp
  100. After play, the hands are scored.
  101. The program requests the player to
  102. score his hand (and the crib, if it is his) by printing out the
  103. appropriate cards (and the cut card enclosed in brackets).
  104. Play continues until one player reaches the game limit (61 or 121).
  105. .Pp
  106. A carriage return when a numeric input is expected is equivalent
  107. to typing the lowest legal value; when cutting the deck this
  108. is equivalent to choosing the top card.
  109. .Pp
  110. Cards are specified as rank followed by suit.
  111. The ranks may be specified
  112. as one of:
  113. .Sq a ,
  114. .Sq 2 ,
  115. .Sq 3 ,
  116. .Sq 4 ,
  117. .Sq 5 ,
  118. .Sq 6 ,
  119. .Sq 7 ,
  120. .Sq 8 ,
  121. .Sq 9 ,
  122. .Sq t ,
  123. .Sq j ,
  124. .Sq q ,
  125. and
  126. .Sq k ,
  127. or alternatively, one of:
  128. .Sq ace ,
  129. .Sq two ,
  130. .Sq three ,
  131. .Sq four ,
  132. .Sq five ,
  133. .Sq six ,
  134. .Sq seven ,
  135. .Sq eight ,
  136. .Sq nine ,
  137. .Sq ten ,
  138. .Sq jack ,
  139. .Sq queen ,
  140. and
  141. .Sq king .
  142. Suits may be specified as:
  143. .Sq s ,
  144. .Sq h ,
  145. .Sq d ,
  146. and
  147. .Sq c ,
  148. or alternatively as:
  149. .Sq spades ,
  150. .Sq hearts ,
  151. .Sq diamonds ,
  152. and
  153. .Sq clubs .
  154. A card may be specified as:
  155. .Dq Ao rank Ac \ Aq suit ,
  156. or:
  157. .Dq Ao rank Ac of Aq suit .
  158. If the single letter rank and suit designations are used, the space
  159. separating the suit and rank may be left out.
  160. Also, if only one card
  161. of the desired rank is playable, typing the rank is sufficient.
  162. For example, if your hand was
  163. .Dq 2H, 4D, 5C, 6H, JC, and KD
  164. and it was desired to discard the king of diamonds, any of
  165. the following could be typed:
  166. .Sq k ,
  167. .Sq king ,
  168. .Sq kd ,
  169. .Sq k d ,
  170. .Sq k of d ,
  171. .Sq king d ,
  172. .Sq king of d ,
  173. .Sq k diamonds ,
  174. .Sq k of diamonds ,
  175. .Sq king diamonds ,
  176. .Sq king of diamonds .
  177. .Sh FILES
  178. .Bl -tag -width @cribbage_instrfile@ -compact
  179. .It Pa @gamesdir@/cribbage
  180. .It Pa @cribbage_scorefile@
  181. .It Pa @cribbage_instrfile@
  182. .El
  183. .Sh AUTHORS
  184. Earl T. Cohen wrote the logic.
  185. Ken Arnold added the screen oriented interface.