note: i did NOT create the ASCII art. I’m not good enough to do that. I found on various ascii art archives as well as those image to ascii art converters for the continents I couldn’t find.

countryguess was a project I made recently because I wanted to make a quiz that could be customised as you see fit. Also, I had no clue how to make GUIs with Python and ASCII art is cool so I decided to roll with it. It turned out pretty cool!

I made the maps by printing the ASCII art map, and then all the spaces that make up each country would be an array. These arrays would fill up the spaces like morocco[0], morocco[1], etc.

Then, when the country is guessed, the country (or an alternate name/abbrviation, such as uk for the united kingdom or ivory coast for cote d’ivoire) is matched with its index in the list of countries in that continent.

A second list contains all the countries that show up on the map (excluding citystates, islands, etc. that aren’t big enough to be shown on the map) and has all the countries as either 0 (false) or 1 (true). Whenever the country is guessed, its respective list item turns into 1.

The map printing function checks each list item for whether it is true or false. If it is true, then the list of spaces for that country would be replaced with a list of equal length and equal number of characters but with hashes “#” instead of spaces " ". This means that, when the county is printed, hashes are printed instead of spaces and the country fills up

I’ve got africa, europe, north america, and oceania completed. I haven’t yet made the map for asia because it’s HUGE, and south america I haven’t done yet as well. Also, central/eastern europe is VERY out of proportion and will be fixed…eventually. (i.e. long romanian panhandle)

other fun features I added include the ability to enable/disable disputed territories (Western Sahara, Kosovo, and Somaliland bc why not) and the U.N. observer states (the Vatican and Kosovo) as well as score saving to a “scores.txt” that shows the date, time, and name of quiz that you complete along with your score.

once I finished all the continents, I’ll work on making a world quiz with ALL the countries. other things like capital quizzes and flag quizzes could be added on later, but that’s likely very far into the future.

here are some more screenshots:

europe

oceania

north america

the github link if you want to look at the code or just have a go at the quiz: https://github.com/swarbler/countryguess

32 points
*

note: i did NOT create the ASCII art. I’m not good enough to do that. I found on various ascii art archives as well as those image to ascii art converters for the continents I couldn’t find.

FYI:

$ telnet mapscii.me

Zoom is “a” and “z”, arrow keys pan, “q” quits.

e.g.:

Can produce a map of wherever at whatever zoom.

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9 points

oh damn that’s kinda cool

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This is so cool!

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13 points
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<redacted>\countryguess\countryguess.py", line 3, in <module>
    from art import *
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'art'

you might want to add a requirements.txt

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6 points

oop yep that’s probably important. I’ve added that to the repo!

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10 points

wow that’s… quite a list. Are you sure you need them all? What are you using like redis, yt-dlp or spotifyapi, ytmusicapi for??

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7 points

oh wait shoot did it just add all the modules installed on my computer…damn… how do I make a proper requirements.txt? that pip command definitely didn’t do it…

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3 points

ok I fixed it, it should just be “art” (a library to make ascii art) and “colorama” (easier coloured text)

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6 points

another upside to this quiz over things like Sporcle is that since it’s a python program, you don’t need an internet connection to play it.

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3 points

Have you considered adding a license to your repository so that it can be packaged in repositories? And a pyproject.toml or setup.py? That would help us in nixpkgs specifically

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2 points

what do those do?

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1 point

Well, adding a code license alllows other people to use your code. Technically now, you reserve all rights to your code and it is illegal for us to look at it or use it.

Those other two make it easier to manage dependencies and setup python virtual environments. Additionally, they allow the package to be more easily to software repositories like Nixpkgs or Debian or Arch. It’s also just an industry standard. Poetry has been used to manage pyprojects for years, but uv is a popular tool too and what I use.

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2 points

oh okay, what’s the best license? what’s the difference between CC, MIT, etc.

I’ll look at setting up python virtual environments later, they seem pretty important to at least learn how to use

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3 points

besides weird central/eastern europe chaos, there’s also no islands that are highlighted at all in north america, not even the big ones like cuba or haiti/dominican republic. I will probably add those at some point, but that’ll be later.

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