Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@jasonsperske
Last active March 1, 2023 03:06
Show Gist options
  • Star 33 You must be signed in to star a gist
  • Fork 7 You must be signed in to fork a gist
  • Save jasonsperske/42284303cf6a7ef19dc3 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save jasonsperske/42284303cf6a7ef19dc3 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
A simple Python program that can read DOOM.Hexen IWAD and PWAD files and render them as SVG see examples at http://jason.sperske.com/wad/
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2018 Jason Sperske
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
SOFTWARE.
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import struct
import re
class Wad(object):
"""Encapsulates the data found inside a WAD file"""
def __init__(self, wadFile):
"""Each WAD files contains definitions for global attributes as well as map level attributes"""
self.levels = []
self.wad_format = 'DOOM' #Assume DOOM format unless 'BEHAVIOR'
with open(wadFile, "rb") as f:
header_size = 12
self.wad_type = f.read(4)[0]
self.num_lumps = struct.unpack("<I", f.read(4))[0]
data = f.read(struct.unpack("<I", f.read(4))[0] - header_size)
current_level = Level(None) #The first few records of a WAD are not associated with a level
lump = f.read(16) #Each offset is is part of a packet 16 bytes
while len(lump) == 16:
filepos = struct.unpack("<I", lump[0:4])[0] - header_size
size = struct.unpack("<I", lump[4:8])[0]
name = lump[8:16].decode('UTF-8').rstrip('\0')
print(name)
if(re.match('E\dM\d|MAP\d\d', name)):
#Level nodes are named things like E1M1 or MAP01
if(current_level.is_valid()):
self.levels.append(current_level)
current_level = Level(name)
elif name == 'BEHAVIOR':
#This node only appears in Hexen formated WADs
self.wad_format = 'HEXEN'
else:
current_level.lumps[name] = data[filepos:filepos+size]
lump = f.read(16)
if(current_level.is_valid()):
self.levels.append(current_level)
for level in self.levels:
level.load(self.wad_format)
class Level(object):
"""Represents a level inside a WAD which is a collection of lumps"""
def __init__(self, name):
self.name = name
self.lumps = dict()
self.vertices = []
self.lower_left = None
self.upper_right = None
self.shift = None
self.lines = []
def is_valid(self):
return self.name is not None and 'VERTEXES' in self.lumps and 'LINEDEFS' in self.lumps
def normalize(self, point, padding=5):
return (self.shift[0]+point[0]+padding,self.shift[1]+point[1]+padding)
def load(self, wad_format):
for vertex in packets_of_size(4, self.lumps['VERTEXES']):
x,y = struct.unpack('<hh', vertex[0:4])
self.vertices.append((x,y))
self.lower_left = (min((v[0] for v in self.vertices)), min((v[1] for v in self.vertices)))
self.upper_right = (max((v[0] for v in self.vertices)), max((v[1] for v in self.vertices)))
self.shift = (0-self.lower_left[0],0-self.lower_left[1])
packet_size = 16 if wad_format is 'HEXEN' else 14
for data in packets_of_size(packet_size, self.lumps['LINEDEFS']):
self.lines.append(Line(data))
def save_svg(self):
""" Scale the drawing to fit inside a 1024x1024 canvas (iPhones don't like really large SVGs even if they have the same detail) """
import svgwrite
view_box_size = self.normalize(self.upper_right, 10)
if view_box_size[0] > view_box_size[1]:
canvas_size = (1024, int(1024*(float(view_box_size[1])/view_box_size[0])))
else:
canvas_size = (int(1024*(float(view_box_size[0])/view_box_size[1])), 1024)
dwg = svgwrite.Drawing(self.name+'.svg', profile='tiny', size=canvas_size , viewBox=('0 0 %d %d' % view_box_size))
for line in self.lines:
a = self.normalize(self.vertices[line.a])
b = self.normalize(self.vertices[line.b])
if line.is_one_sided():
dwg.add(dwg.line(a, b, stroke='#333', stroke_width=10))
else:
dwg.add(dwg.line(a, b, stroke='#999', stroke_width=3))
dwg.save()
class Line(object):
"""Represents a Linedef inside a WAD"""
def __init__(self,data):
self.a, self.b = struct.unpack('<hh', data[0:4])
self.left_side, self.right_side = struct.unpack('<hh', data[-4:])
def is_one_sided(self):
return self.left_side == -1 or self.right_side == -1
def packets_of_size(n, data):
size = len(data)
index = 0
while index < size:
yield data[index : index+n]
index = index + n
return
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
if len(sys.argv) > 1:
wad = Wad(sys.argv[1])
for level in wad.levels:
level.save_svg()
else:
print('You need to pass a WAD file as the only argument')
@kmonsoor
Copy link

Neat job, buddy ...

@jasonsperske
Copy link
Author

Thanks Slipyx, I really can't too much credit for the brevity, Python (specifically list comprehensions and the excellent struct.unpack() is making things a lot cleaner). My longer term plan is to make something like my http://sndtst.com site but for doom/hexen/Wolf3d/Duke3d levels :)

@jasonsperske
Copy link
Author

Moved to python3 :)

@RobertATfm
Copy link

Great script; I'm using it to create "Deathkings of the Dark Citadel" maps for the Doom Wiki (the Doom Wiki, not the new one).

Is anyone else having the problem that the maps created are flipped vertically? Fortunately this is just a slight annoyance, and soon fixed using Inkscape.

@adamsumm
Copy link

What is the licensing on this?

@sleibrock
Copy link

Thanks for the script Jason! I found your script and for fun converted it to a Rust project so I could understand how to read wads. I had a lot of fun reading your code.

@trumad
Copy link

trumad commented Jan 6, 2022

Is the website for this down? https://jason.sperske.com/wad/

@jasonsperske
Copy link
Author

jasonsperske commented Jan 6, 2022 via email

@trumad
Copy link

trumad commented Jan 6, 2022

ohh of course! Why didn't I think to try that. Thank you!

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment