Skip to content

Mahelita/tip-toi-reveng

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Das tttool hat jetzt eine deutsche Webseite für Anwender: http://tttool.entropia.de/

tip-toi-reveng

The goal of this project is to understand the file and paper format for the Ravensburger TipToi pen. The ultimate goal is that everyone can create their own books, with their own sounds.

The current status is that we understood most of the file format (see the GME file format specification). We provide a tool that allows you to dissect these files.

The tool can also be used to generate completely new files from scratch; see below for details.

If you want to learn more please have a look into our wiki (https://github.com/entropia/tip-toi-reveng/wiki).

The tttool tool

Use the tool tttool to investigate the gme files and build new ones. It supports various subcommands:

GME creation commands:
  assemble                 creates a gme file from the given source

OID code creation commands:
  oid-table                creates a PDF or SVG file with all codes in the yaml file
  oid-codes                creates files for every OID in the yaml file (default: PNG).
  oid-code                 creates PNG files for each given code(s)

GME modification commands:
  set-language             sets the language field of an GME file

GME analysis commands:
  info                     Print general information about a GME file
  export                   dumps the file in the human-readable yaml format
  scripts                  prints the decoded scripts for each OID
  script                   prints the decoded scripts for a specific OID
  games                    prints the decoded games
  lint                     checks for errors in the file or in this program
  segments                 lists all known parts of the file, with description.
  segment                  prints the segment that contains a specific offset
  explain                  print a hexdump of a GME file with descriptions
  holes                    lists all unknown parts of the file.
  rewrite                  parses the file and writes it again (for debugging)

GME extraction commands:
  media                    dumps all audio samples
  binaries                 dumps all binaries

Simulation commands:
  play                     interactively play a GME file

Run

./tttool --help

to learn about global options (e.g. DPI settings), and

./tttool command --help

for the options of the individual command.

Installation

We release tttool for Windows and Linux users as a zipfile. You can find them in the releases section of the GitHub project.

Linux users likely want to install additional packages. On Debian or Ubuntu, run sudo apt install libttspico-utils vorbis-tools

See Building.md for instructions on how to build tttool from source.

Building your own gme files

Once you have installed tttool, you can create your own .gme files. The process is as follows

  1. Record the audio samples you want to include, as Ogg Vorbis files, mono, 22050Hz. I use

    arecord -r 22050 foo.wav
    oggenc foo.wav
    rm foo.wav
    
  2. Write a my-book.yaml file containing some general information, and especially the scripts (i.e. what to do) for each OIDs (i.e. the various fields of a book). You can use the example.yaml file as a starting point; it contains more information in its comments.

  3. Run ./tttool assemble my-book.yaml, and make sure it reports no error, i.e. finishes silently.

  4. Copy the now generated my-book.gme to your TipToi pen and enjoy!

If you need to find out what OID code corresponds to what part of the book, you can generate a debug gme using the debug.yaml file, adjusting its Product-Id to your product’s id, building it with ./tttool assemble debug.yaml and loading the resulting debug.gme on your pen. It will then read out the codes, as a sequence of english digits.

If you want to convert existing audio files of almost any format, and you have ffmpeg installed, you can use

ffmpeg -i input-audio-in-some.fmt -ar 22050 -ac 1 foo.ogg

Text to speech

If you have libttspico-utils and vorbis-tools installed, you can have tttool generate audio files from text for you, which makes developing your yaml file much easier. See text2speech.yaml for more information.

Printing your own books

With the code in this repository, you can create GME files. This is even more fun if you can also create your own books! „Pronwan“ found out how that works, as you can see in this video demonstration. He also published 30 minute video tutorial (in German).

Press Review

TODO

  • What are all the header fields? (See wip/Header.md)
  • Finish decoding the games. (See wip/games.txt)
  • What is the purpose of the additional script table?

Other resources in this repository

  • oid-decoder.html allows you to manually decode an OID image.

  • scripts/update.sh downloads all gme files from the Ravensburger server (requires perl and the XML::Simple module).

    Instead of downloading all of them, you can conveniently browse them at http://tiptoi.vakat.de/, a service provided by Falko Oldenburg [email protected].

  • gameanalyse.c and libtiptoi.c is an alternative tool to investigate gme files. It can also replace audio files in gme files; compile and run it for diagnostic output.

  • Audio/ contains some audio files, such as digits read out.

  • docs/ collects information about TipToi found elsewhere.

  • wip/ (work in progess) contains notes about the parts of the gme files that are not fully understood yet.

  • perl-tools contains a perl based script, to generate a PDF with all OID codes from a yaml-file as well some functions to generate PNG-files, inject pHYs-chunks with resolution hints into GD generated PNG files as result from some testing

About

Trying to understand the file format of Tip Toi

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Haskell 68.1%
  • C 10.2%
  • Perl 9.1%
  • HTML 5.0%
  • Nix 2.9%
  • Shell 2.0%
  • Other 2.7%