This is a Final Fantasy: XIV Roleplay Formatter, designed to take your logs from your roleplaying sessions in FFXIV and format them up into a nice looking HTML page, that's easy to re-read, share with others, and with intelligently embedded pictures you took in-game.
Besides formatting it into a simple, readability-focused, HTML page: it also works to make your sessions easier and more enjoyable to read by converting simple formatting into styled HTML, combining continued messages, removing unrelated messages, embedding images intelligently, and picking your session out of the noise of a busy venue and even across multiple sessions and different logs of different formats.
And don't worry, it's still all private: The only place your writing or images go by the end of the program's run is into an HTML file on your own computer, your privacy is still completely in your own hands. Additionally, it is completely safe to mess around with: it doesn't edit the original logs or images at all, only reads them and uses that to create the formatted output.
Ready to get started? Check out the instructions below.
Need some help, or want to get more advanced? Check out the wiki (ToDo!).
Want to contribute? Check out the contributing guide (ToDo!) or the Sponsor section along the right.
Running into some problems? Check out the troubleshooting guide (ToDo!) or open an issue.
These considerations and functionalities are baked into the program at its core for the best experience.
- Great for reading on desktop or mobile.
- Faster than reading the log itself, and easier to read than how you originally wrote it.
- Easy to share, with everything encoded into one file.
- Lightweight, standalone, portable, and easy to use with defaults that don't even need adjusted for a great output.
- Saving of settings for optional use next-run, and command-line arguments for specific settings or sweeping defaults, intelligent and automatic or manual and fine-grained settings, so you can use the program however you like.
All of these are optional and can be turned on or off as you like per-run.
- Remove Out-Of-Character messages from the log.
- Highlight
~emphatic~ /text/ *used*
in the log. - Combine messages that are continued, with various detections for this.
- Embed images depending on when they were taken during the session.
- Find gaps in sessions that spanned multiple sittings and remove them, for real writing lengths.
- Remove time data from the output for greater immersion.
(Roughly in order of priority)
- Designating cover images for the output, and styling it a variety of ways.
- Profile images that match character names in the provided log.
- Finding sessions based on provided character names.
- Finding images automatically. (e.g. finding your XIV folder and checking for screenshots, or finding your gshade/reshade settings and checking where screenshots are saved)
- Finding log files automatically. (e.g. finding your XIVLauncher folder and checking where the plugins store their logs)
- Finding roleplay sessions within a larger log.
- Finding a roleplay session continued across multiple logs and combining them into one.
- More detection for continued messages, e.g. simply the same person talking twice in a row.
- Check releases for the latest version.
- Download the
XIVRP-Formatter.zip
file and extract it somewhere. - Place your logs next to the executable.
- Place any images taken during the session next to the executable.
- Run the executable and follow the prompts.
- Open the generated HTML file in your browser.
The following log types are currently supported:
- ChatScan logs
The following log types are planned for future support:
I don't know, sorry; this is my first c project, after building the core of this for a class project after wanting a tool like this for some time and then continuing on with the project.
You will need to include the following libraries in the includes/
folder:
But then, theoretically, it should just be good to go as-is in c 20 with cmake on Windows 10.
That said: It was built in CLion with CMake, an included MinGW toolchain, on Windows 10. This
information, along with the .idea/
folder - which includes the run and build configs - should
hopefully be enough produce a workable build.
This software is licensed under GPLv3, and as such can be shared and modified freely.
XIVRP-Formatter Copyright (C) 2024 Ethan Henderson <[email protected]>
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.