A screenplay compiler.
There's a nice screenplay LaTeX package but using it is not particularly convenient, as the code gets quite verbose.
Instead let's use an ad-hoc minimal script language and transpile to TeX.
INT.
or EXT.
are treated as sluglines, what
comes after INT.
and EXT.
is free-form:
in them are split using this character and it's assumed that
generates two parts. The first is the character that's speaking, the second
is what's being said. Parts in parentheses are treated as parentheticals.Input:
``` The Alienant, version 1 Firstname Lastname
INT. SPACE STATION
Dark corridor. Something lurks in the shadows.
EXT. MILITARY BASE -- DAY
COLONEL SMITH smokes a cigarette. Looks up as CAPTAIN PARKER approaches.
CAPTAIN PARKER doesn't look too well.
SMITH: So, it's begun.
PARKER: Yes. (inhales) Yes, it has.
SMITH: I was afraid it'd come to this.
```
TeX output:
```tex \documentclass{screenplay} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage[polish]{babel} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \title{The Alienant, version 1} \author{Firstname Lastname} \begin{document} \coverpage \fadein \intslug{SPACE STATION}
Dark corridor. Something lurks in the shadows.
\extslug{MILITARY BASE -- DAY}
COLONEL SMITH smokes a cigarette. Looks up as CAPTAIN PARKER approaches.
CAPTAIN PARKER doesn't look too well.
\begin{dialogue}{SMITH}So, it's begun.\end{dialogue}
\begin{dialogue}{PARKER}Yes. \paren{inhales} Yes, it has.\end{dialogue}
\begin{dialogue}{SMITH}I was afraid it'd come to this.\end{dialogue}
\fadeout \theend \end{document} ```