A simplified variant of the classic tetris game done in less that 140 bytes of JavaScript.
function(a,b,c,d,e){return d+=c,
e=a|b<<d,d<0|a&b<<d&&(a=e=
parseInt((a|b<<c).toString(d=32)
.replace(/v/,""),d),b=new Date%2?1:3),
[a,b,d,e]}
Feel free to edit the source and follow me on Twitter (@aemkei).
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
..... ..... ..... ..... .....
..... ..... ..... ..... .....
...## ..... ..... ..... .....
..... ...## ..... ..... .....
##... ##... ##.## ##... .....
###.. ###.. ###.. ##### ##...
The main logic to move blocks, detect collision, assign new blocks, remove full lines and render the layout are included. Excluded are keyboard controls and the final rendering.
This version is heavy based on binary numbers and bit shift operators. I had to limit the board size to 5x6 (30 bits), because JavaScript converts numbers to 32-bit integers when using bitwise operators. The two left bits are later uses to add the correct padding when dealing with numbers that start with "0".
The Board
00000 .....
798 11000 => ##...
11110 ####.
The Block
3 00011 => ...##
Checking for Collision
00000 .....
798&3 = 2 00000 => .....
00010 ...X.
Moving the Block at X Axis
3 << 1 = 6 00110 => ..##.
Moving the Block at Y Axis
00011 ...##
3<<10 = 3072 00000 => .....
00000 .....
Combining Block and Board
00011 ...##
798|3072 = 3870 11000 => ##...
11110 ####.
Find full line (using base 32)
00011 3
3999 11100 => s
11111 v
See the 140byt.es site for a showcase of entries (built itself using 140-byte entries!), and follow @140bytes on Twitter.
To learn about byte-saving hacks for your own code, or to contribute what you've learned, head to the wiki.
140byt.es is brought to you by Jed Schmidt, with help from Alex Kloss. It was inspired by work from Thomas Fuchs and Dustin Diaz.