In-Game Menus link
In many visual novels, the player is asked to make choices that
control the outcome of the story. The Ren'Py language contains a menu
statement that makes it easy to present choices to the user.
Here's an example of a menu
statement:
menu:
"What should I do?"
"Drink coffee.":
"I drink the coffee, and it's good to the last drop."
"Drink tea.":
$ drank_tea = True
"I drink the tea, trying not to make a political statement as I do."
"Genuflect.":
jump genuflect_ending
label after_menu:
"After having my drink, I got on with my morning."
The menu
statement begins with the keyword menu
. This may be followed
by a label name, in which case it's equivalent to preceding the menu
with that label. For example:
menu drink_menu:
...
The menu statement is followed by an indented block. This block may contain a say statement, and must contain at least one menu choice. If the say statement is present, it is displayed on the screen at the same time as the menu.
Menu Choices. A menu choice is an option the user can select from the in-game menu. A menu choice begins with a string. The string may be followed by an if-clause, which makes the choice conditional. The menu choice ends with a colon, and must be followed by a block of Ren'Py statements.
When the choice is selected, the block of statements is run. If execution reaches the end of the block, it continues with the statement after the end of the menu statement.
An if-clause consists of the keyword if
, followed by a Python
expression. The menu choice is only displayed if the expression is
true. In the following menu:
menu:
"Go left.":
...
"Go right.":
...
"Fly above." if drank_tea:
...
The third choice will only be presented if the drank_tea
variable is
true. (However if, the config.menu_include_disabled
variable is set
to True, it will be shown as a disabled button.)
If all menu options have their if conditions unfulfilled, the menu will be skipped and control will advance to the statement following it.
Menu Set link
A menu can take a set clause, on a line by itself. If present, only items with captions that are not in the set are displayed as part of the menu. When a choice is selected, the caption of that choice can be added to the set.
As with if clauses, if no choice is available, control advances to the statement after the menu.
For historical reasons, the set can be either a set object or a list.
default menuset = set()
menu chapter_1_places:
set menuset
"Where should I go?"
"Go to class.":
jump go_to_class
"Go to the bar.":
jump go_to_bar
"Go to jail.":
jump go_to_jail
label chapter_1_after_places:
"Wow, that was one heck of a Tuesday."
Menu Arguments link
It's possible to pass arguments to the menu itself, and to the individual
choices in a menu. To pass arguments to the menu, add them to the
menu line, after the optional name, and immediately before the colon. To
pass arguments to a menu choice, put them after the menu string and before
the if
keyword or colon.
menu ("jfk", screen="airport"):
"Chicago, IL" (200):
jump chicago_trip
"Dallas, TX" (150, sale=True):
jump dallas_trip
"Hot Springs, AR" (300) if secret_unlocked:
jump hot_springs_trip
Menu arguments passed to the menu itself become arguments to the screen, except the screen argument which selects the screen, and the nvl argument that selects the NVL-mode menu.
See the documentation for the choice screen and
config.menu_arguments_callback
.