moth/example-puzzles/example/1/puzzle.moth

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Author: neale
Summary: static puzzles
Answer: puzzle.moth
Puzzle categories are laid out on the filesystem:
example/
├─1
│ └─puzzle.moth
├─2
│ ├─puzzle.moth
│ └─salad.jpg
├─3
│ └─puzzle.py
├─10
│ └─puzzle.moth
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└─100
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└─puzzle.py
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In this example,
there are puzzles with point values 1, 2, 3, 10, and 100.
Puzzles 1, 2, and 10 are "static" puzzles:
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their content was written by hand.
Puzzles 3 and 100 are "dynamic" puzzles:
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they are generated from a Python module.
To create a static puzzle, all you must have is a
`puzzle.moth` file in the puzzle's directory.
This file is in the following format:
Author: [name of the person who wrote this puzzle]
Summary: [brief description of the puzzle]
Answer: [answer to this puzzle]
Answer: [second acceptable answer to this puzzle]
This is the puzzle body.
It is Markdown formatted:
you can read more about Markdown on the Internet.
To move to the next puzzle in a category,
someone on some team must provide an answer to the highest-point puzzle in that category.
The answer to this puzzle is the name of the file required to make a static puzzle.