So, I don’t know how to explain this well, but I have this generator that has a “char = {[contestant.consumableList]|[host.consumableList]}” thingimajig, and my goal is to get it to have the output have no duplicates of either an item from the contestant list or from the host list, but I’m still getting duplicates anyways. How do I do this correctly?
The reason this doesn’t work:
char = {[contestant.consumableList]|[host.consumableList]}
Is because you’re essentially defining a “list” where [contestant.consumableList]
or [host.consumableList]
will be randomly chosen every time you write [char]
. So, to be clear, you’re basically creating a fresh consumable list every time you write [char]
.
This is unfortunately a bit confusing for newbies - it’s a common misunderstanding.
What you probably want is something like this:
output
[makeChar] ..........
makeChar
[char = contestant.consumableList, ""]
[char = host.consumableList, ""]
So, at the start of your ‘output’ you ‘execute’ the makeChar
which creates the char
variable for you based on a random choice between those two makeChar
items.
Hopefully that helps!
Try this:
[char1 = char.selectOne.titleCase] gives the worst hot take about [char2 = char.selectOne.titleCase], and [char2] subsequently kills them over it.
Here you’re creating a placeholder (aka variable) for the character you’ve selected so you can reference it later on. I also added titleCase
so the character name gets capitalized.
EDIT: The above does do random, but not unique. Here’s a working example I wrote:
https://perchance.org/41mlspb7hk#edit
Code:
title
Let's do this
output
[names = chars.consumableList, ""] [char1 = names.selectOne.titleCase] gives the worst hot take about [char2 = names.selectOne.titleCase], and [char2] subsequently kills them over it.
chars
Chaz
Karen
Thad
It did both, but not unique. I added an edit with a more robust solution.