home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Monte Carlo
-
- Version 1.14
-
- Copyright 1991 By
- Randy Rasa
- 18215 Troost
- Olathe, KS 66062
-
-
-
- What Is It? ___________
-
- Monte Carlo, also known as "Weddings" and "Double and Quits", is a
- solitaire card game that is simple and restful, yet challenging and
- addictive as well. The origin of the name "Monte Carlo" is
- unknown, but the game belongs to the "matching" family of solitaire
- games. The game offers a reasonable opportunity for skill, yet
- winning often depends as much on luck as making the right moves.
-
-
- Program Requirements ____________________
-
- Monte Carlo requires 256K of memory, EGA or higher graphics
- capability, and a Microsoft-compatible mouse. If you are not sure
- you have the right hardware, just run the program. If there's a
- problem, the program will let you know.
-
- In addition to the program file (MC.EXE), the game requires that
- the card definition files (CARDS.CD1 and CARDS.CD2) be in the
- current directory. These files contain the bit-maps for each
- cardface in the deck.
-
-
- Using The Mouse _______________
-
- The mouse pointer will appear as a white arrow with black edges.
- In general, the left button is used to select the object being
- pointed to (a card or an on-screen button), while the right button
- is used to exit menus or prompts.
-
- If you have a three-button mouse, the middle button will blank the
- screen. This can also be accomplished by pressing the left and
- right buttons simultaneously.
-
- The right button also acts as an "Undo" key. Refer to the
- paragraph describing the undo feature in the "How To Play" section
- for more details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Monte Carlo Documentation Page 2
-
-
- How To Play ___________
-
- Monte Carlo uses a standard 52-card deck (no jokers). To begin the
- game the deck is shuffled, then dealt face-up, one card at a time,
- into five rows of five cards each (the tableau), with the remainder
- of the deck held in reserve for later play.
-
- The object of the game is to remove pairs of cards from the
- tableau. These cards can be any combination of colors, but must be
- of the same rank (eg: a 3 of hearts and a 3 of spades), and must be
- located adjacent to each other in a row, column or diagonal. Note
- that the removal of a card does not make the two cards beside it
- "adjacent".
-
- After removing all possible pairs, the tableau must be
- consolidated, which means that the remaining cards in the tableau
- must be "backed up" (moved to the left, then up, keeping the
- original order) to fill in the blank spaces created by the removed
- pairs. Cards from the reserve are then dealt into the newly-
- created spaces and the process of removing pairs begins again. The
- tableau can be consolidated and re-dealt as many times as
- necessary.
-
- The game is won when the entire deck has been removed, or lost when
- no more moves can be made.
-
- The Undo feature can be used to "un-remove" cards (that is, to
- return them to the screen sfter they've been removed). The program
- keeps an undo buffer that contains all the cards that have been
- removed since the last deal. You can pull these cards back into
- play by pressing the right mouse button. The buffer is "last-in-
- first-out" -- the last cards you've removed from the screen will be
- the first cards returned. The only limitation to the undo feature
- is that it cannot go back further than the last deal. So once you
- remove some cards and press "Deal", they're gone for good.
-
-
- Buttons _______
-
- Along the right side of the screen are a number of "buttons", which
- may be selected by pointing and clicking with the mouse. The
- buttons are:
-
- Deal: This button will initiate a re-deal, in which the cards
- remaining in the tableau are consolidated, and new cards are
- dealt from the reserve.
-
- Hint: Selecting this button will cause the program to step
- through all the possible pairs in the tableau. After each
- pair is displayed, you will be asked to continue (press the
- left mouse button), or exit (right mouse button). If no
- pairs can be made, a "No more pairs" message will be
- displayed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Monte Carlo Documentation Page 3
-
-
- Options: This button brings up the options menu, which you can
- use to set your preferences for the following:
-
- Sound: Select "Off" to disable the beeps, click, and various
- other noises the program makes. Select "On" to enable the
- sounds.
-
- Session Statistics: When this option is set to "On", the
- program will keep track of your statistics (games played,
- games won, change in average score) throughout the game
- and then display them when you quit. (Note: During play,
- you can also display the session statistics by clicking on
- the score box.)
-
- Background Color: Click on the up-arrow and down-arrow to
- step through the available background colors, until you
- find one that suits your tastes.
-
- Card Back: Click on the card back to bring up a dialog box
- which will show you all the available card backs and allow
- you to choose one.
-
- Once you've set things to your liking, you may click on the
- "OK" button to save your preferences to disk, or on the
- "Cancel" button to exit the Options menu without changing
- anything.
-
- Help: This button will bring up several pages of help screens,
- which you can view by clicking on the "Next" or "Prev"
- buttons to move from page to page. When you are finished
- reading the help, click on the "Done" button to exit.
-
- New Game: This button will end the current game, update your
- statistics, and start a new game. Note that the stats will
- only be updated if you have a score greater than zero. This
- allows you to evaluate the layout of the cards and, if you
- don't like what you see, to begin a new game without having
- it count against you.
-
- Quit: Click on this button to exit the program. If you have a
- score greater than zero, your statistics will be updated and
- displayed briefly before returning you to DOS. Another way
- to exit the game is to press the "Abort" key (F10). If you
- press F10 (and select the "Exit This Program" option in the
- pop-up dialog box or press F10 again), the program will quit
- to DOS without saving the data file (and thus not giving you
- a low score if you have to quit the program in the middle of
- a game). Of course you realize this is cheating, don't you?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Monte Carlo Documentation Page 4
-
-
- Command-Line Options ____________________
-
- /LCD -- This option may improve the screen display on monochrome
- LCD displays. This option simply changes a few color
- combinations to improve contrast on LCDs.
-
- /Rxxxxxx -- This option is used to convert a shareware version of
- the program to a registered version. Refer to "A Note
- To Registered Users" at the end of this document for
- more information.
-
- /SW -- This option is used to convert a registered version to a
- shareware version.
-
- filename.ext -- This option is for alternate data files (see
- discussion below).
-
-
- Statistics __________
-
- Monte Carlo keeps track of the score (the number of cards you've
- removed from the tableau), the total number of games you've played,
- the number of games you've won (expressed as both a number and a
- percentage), and your average score. At the end of each game, the
- statistics are written to disk, either in the default MC.DAT or in
- the data file specified on the command line. The data file also
- contains the preferences you set in the options menu (sound on/off
- and background color).
-
- To specify a data file on the command line, start up Monte Carlo
- with the following syntax:
-
- MC filename.ext
-
- This allows several different people to use the same copy of Monte
- Carlo on the same machine, yet keep separate statistics for each
- person. For example, suppose three people (Tom, Dick, and Harry)
- played the game at various times on the same machine. They could
- each easily keep personalized data files, containing their scores
- and preferences for sound and background color. Tom would use his
- data file by typing:
-
- MC TOM.DAT
-
- Likewise, Dick and Harry could have data files called DICK.DAT and
- HARRY.DAT. Note that the "DAT" extension could be "SCR" or "HGH",
- or whatever, as long as it is three letters or less.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Monte Carlo Documentation Page 5
-
-
- Legalese ________
-
- Monte Carlo is shareware. As such, you can play it, copy it, and
- give it away as you wish. In fact, you are encouraged to
- distribute the program to friends, family, and strangers alike.
- This includes distribution via electronic bulletin board systems
- (BBS), user's groups, and disk-distribution services. All that I
- ask is that the program remain unaltered, and be distributed in an
- archive consisting of:
-
- MC.EXE ............. the program
- MC.DOC ............. documentation
- CARDS.CD1 .......... card definition file #1
- CARDS.CD2 .......... card definition file #2
-
-
- Registration ____________
-
- Monte Carlo is shareware. If you enjoy the game, please support
- it. There are three registration packages available:
-
- 1. Basic Registration ................................... $5.00
-
- This minimum registration will get you the latest registered
- (no shareware "beg" message) version of Monte Carlo on a
- diskette of your choice, along with a registration code good
- for all future updates.
-
- 2. Package Deal #1 ..................................... $10.00
-
- This package consists of the latest registered version of
- Monte Carlo, plus shareware versions of my other programs,
- along with a menu program to tie them all together. Note
- that all of the additional programs are unregistered versions
- (with shareware "beg" screens). You will also receive a
- registration code good for all future updates of Monte Carlo.
-
- 3. Package Deal #2 ..................................... $15.00
-
- This package consists of the latest registered versions of
- Monte Carlo, plus registered versions of my other programs,
- along with a menu program to tie them all together. Note
- that all of the additional programs are fully registered
- versions (no shareware "beg" screens). You will also receive
- registration codes good for all future updates of Monte Carlo
- and the programs included with your registration.
-
- Basic registration is available on a 5.25", 360K disk or on a
- 3.50", 720K disk. The package deals are available on two 360K
- disks (with the programs ZIPped (with the PKZIP compression
- program) to pack as much as possible onto each disk), one 720K disk
- (ZIPped), or one 5.25", 1.2M disk. If you do not have access to
- PKZIP, you'll need to order the package deals on a 1.2M disk.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Monte Carlo Documentation Page 6
-
-
- No matter what option you choose, you'll be getting a lot of
- quality software for just a little dough. Please consider
- registering.
-
- The programs that you will get with the package deals will be
- selected from the following:
-
- Midnight Oil: An EGA solitaire card game, otherwise known as La
- Belle Lucie and Three Shuffles and a Draw. In this game the
- deck is dealt into seventeen fans of three cards each. Cards
- are moved from the fans to four foundations, which are then
- built up in suit from Ace to King. Midnight Oil is one of
- the best solitaires, affording great opportunity for skillful
- play. The game keeps statistics in a disk file, and has a
- special auto mode that makes the game especially easy to
- play.
-
- Calculation: This EGA-based solitaire card game is a real brain-
- teaser in which you build up four foundations, each in a
- different sequence. It requires skill and logical thinking
- to win, but on-screen assistance makes learning and playing
- the game a snap. It keeps a statistic file like Monte Carlo
- and has selectable card designs.
-
- Osmosis: In this EGA solitaire card game you have four
- foundations to build, but a card can only be played to a
- lower foundation if it has also been played to an upper
- foundation. This addictive game is simple to play but
- difficult to win, with success often depending as much on
- luck as skill. It keeps statistics on-disk, offers
- selectable card backs and has a "peek" option to give you an
- extra edge.
-
- Idiot's Delight: An EGA version of "Aces Up", a simple but
- addictive game of luck and skill. This is one of those games
- that leave you saying "just one more game" time after time
- after time. As in my other EGA games, it keeps a statistic
- file and offers selectable card backs.
-
- Royal Cotillion: This is a two-deck EGA solitaire in which you
- must build up eight foundations in suit by twos. It offers
- good opportunity for skillful play, a pleasing layout, and
- hours of engrossing fun. It keeps a statistics file, has
- selectable card backs, and a time-saving auto mode.
-
- Concentration: An EGA graphics version of the classic memory-
- stretching solitaire. It keeps a statistics file, features
- selectable card backs, and offers a unique multi-player mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Monte Carlo Documentation Page 7
-
-
- You can print the registration form from the initial shareware
- screen. Simply select the "Print Registration Form" button, then
- select a destination, either to a printer or a file. If you elect
- to send the form to a printer, make sure it is on-line and ready.
- The form should print on any standard 80-column printer. If you
- want to save the form to a file, the file "MC.FRM" will be created
- in the current directory. You can then print out the registration
- form by entering the following command from the DOS prompt (with
- your printer connected and ready):
-
- COPY MC.FRM PRN
-
- Then just fill out the form and send it, along with cash, check or
- money order, to:
-
- Randy Rasa
- 18215 Troost
- Olathe, KS 66062
-
-
- Revision History ________________
-
- 1.00 01-03-91 First Public Release.
- 1.01 01-11-90 Added "Session Statistics" option.
- Cosmetic changes.
- 1.02 02-09-91 More small cosmetic changes.
- 1.03 03-12-91 Added registration procedure.
- 1.04 03-23-91 Modified registration procedure.
- 1.05 04-23-91 Added option to print registration form.
- Changed card definition filenames to CARDS.CD*.
- 1.06 05-17-91 Fixed problem with displaying an equipment test
- failure.
- 1.10 06-14-91 Added "Undo" feature.
- Added "Abort" (F10) key.
- Made outline of selected cards easier to see.
- 1.11 08-27-91 The program now exits to DOS after running the
- registration procedure, and the program date and
- time are set correctly.
- Added command-line help ("MO ?").
- Added /LCD command-line switch.
- 1.12 09-02-91 Rewrote mouse initialization routine.
- 1.13 10-28-91 Added dialog box to select card back.
- Improved parsing of command-line arguments.
- Modified the "abort" sequence so that pressing F10
- once will bring up the abort dialog box, and
- pressing F10 again will exit the program.
- 1.14 11-30-91 Increased number of available card backs to seven.
- A few minor tweaks ...
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Monte Carlo Documentation Page 8
-
-
- A Note To Registered Users __________________________
-
- The registration procedure allows previously-registered users to
- update to the new registered version of the program by entering a
- special 'registration code' that was included as part of your
- order. Run the shareware version of the program with the "/R"
- command-line switch, followed by the registration code, like this:
-
- MC /Rxxxxxx
-
- You would, of course use the proper registration code in place of
- the "xxxxxx". Note also that there should be no space between the
- "R" and the registration code. After running the program with /R
- switch and the proper code, you'll have a brand-spanking new
- registered version of the program. What this essentially amounts
- to is unlimited, free updates with each registration.
-
- The registration procedure comes with the following limitations:
-
- 1. The name your EXE file must be MC.EXE.
-
- 2. You cannot perform the registration procedure on a compressed
- version (ie: an EXE file processed with PKLite, Diet, or
- LZEXE). The EXE file may be compressed after the
- registration procedure, but not before.
-
- 3. Please do not distribute registered versions of the program.
-
- 4. Since the registration procedure is a new feature, there are
- a number of people who have registered earlier versions that
- won't be able to take advantage of it just yet. But if you
- send me a self-addressed stamped envelope, I'll be happy to
- send you the registration code.
-
-
- Note: You can also change the program back to the shareware version
- by using the "/SW" command-line switch. This function is
- subject to the same limitations as with the registration
- procedure (ie: the program must be properly named and
- uncompressed). Please use this option to "un-register" the
- program if you wish to pass it along to anyone. Also, please
- include all of the files listed under the "Legalese" section
- of this document. Thanks.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-