Aug. 12th, 2010

FAROUT

Aug. 12th, 2010 09:16 am
davidn: (skull)
As I was in a Commodore 64 mood thanks to yesterday, I was remembering some of the other things that I used to play about with on it. I really have no idea where any of the diverse tapes that we had for this thing came from, but one of them that I remember loading up quite a lot was a sort of graphics program called The Designer's Pencil.

I say "sort of" because while its focus was on producing graphics and music, this was done through programming a routine to draw and play them, like some sort of unlikely prototype of a cross between Mario Paint and ZZT. An analogy that falls down immediately, because the interface was nothing like either of them - as far as I can tell, on the right you have a list of commands that you can select from to add them to the list on the left, and you can then edit some of their parameters. Different variations on the commands let you draw in a direction for [variable] number of pixels, so you can set up things like loops, and the whole thing can get surprisingly complex.

The language is quite understandable and LOGO-like on the surface, but thanks to the limited space, all the commands are named things like JSUB and it looks like Assembler - and it wasn't helped by the way that the designers had declined to use the arrow keys and instead put up/left/right/down on F1, F3, F5, F7, which doesn't really make any more sense on a Commodore keyboard. Naturally, through this extraordinarily cumbersome interface I failed to create anything worthwhile of my own at all, but it came with a library of example files. Some of these were algorithms like a spiral, and some were very impressive complete little programs, drawing things like helicopters and cars. But while scrolling innocently through these titles when I was four - CUBES, MUSIC, SAILING, COPTER - I eventually stumbled across one called FAROUT. It... was terrifying.

The horrific spectacle looked like this. )

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