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Post by nawglan on Sept 14, 2015 18:45:28 GMT -5
I'm working on the replacement again. To play with the data for a bit try lurch.homelinux.org:3000 username: guest, password: password. This is the default configuration that the software I am using provides. This interface will not be available when I'm done, it is basically just a portal into the database itself. It allows you to do some basic filtering, etc.
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Post by nawglan on Oct 2, 2015 20:36:04 GMT -5
Pending any issues, the database will be fully populated in about 30 hours. Each turn of each game is searchable, etc. I'll post again when it is completed. It's about 20% completed right now, with 40800ish to go.
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Post by nawglan on Oct 2, 2015 22:05:26 GMT -5
at the 25% mark, Green Goblin, having been summoned 1025 times, is the most popular monster summoned, and has done 1936 dmg, 1641 of that to players. For Melee games, the Fire Elemental is the most popular choice, having been summoned 311 times, and has done 3447 dmg, 2367 of that to players.
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Post by nawglan on Oct 4, 2015 13:08:21 GMT -5
grr, 55% completed, when I realized that I had a bug in the fact I wasn't tracking poison killing monsters, and on top of that, I had the disease killing monster detecting code in the wrong spot. So... Restarting the load process.
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Post by nawglan on Oct 6, 2015 17:54:36 GMT -5
wow. 2.1 million turns in 51498 games. There were 118493 monsters summoned and 8642 players cataloged. There is some more work I can do to correct some mistakes (too many deaths categorized as a result of Damage, which could possibly be attributed to Cause Light Wounds, etc.). These can be fixed without needing to reload the entire database. If you want, just log in at lurch.homelinux.org:3000 username guest, password password. This is the development code and won't be pushed to the main url (minus the port) until development is farther along. One thing that should be possible is to provide a graph showing the ups and downs of your elo from the beginning of the archive. If you want the data for yourself, you can export it in a variety of formats by clicking on each table and in the top left corner there is a Options button. One of the choices is Download, which allows you to download as csv, excel, etc. Progress, now the fun of doing stuff with the data can begin. Also, if anyone wants to help, this is all done in Perl with DBIx::Class and Catalyst. I'll be pushing the code to github at some point.
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