Tags

In game
> tag obj = tagname
In code, using .tags (TagHandler)
obj.tags.add("mytag", category="foo")
obj.tags.get("mytag", category="foo")
In code, using TagProperty (auto-assign tag to all instances of the class)
from evennia import DefaultObject
from evennia import TagProperty
class Sword(DefaultObject): 
    can_be_wielded = TagProperty(category='combat')
    has_sharp_edge = TagProperty(category='combat')

Tags are short text lables one can ‘hang’ on objects in order to organize, group and quickly find out their properties. An Evennia entity can be tagged by any number of tags. They are more efficient than Attributes since on the database-side, Tags are shared between all objects with that particular tag. A tag does not carry a value in itself; it either sits on the entity

Above, the tags inform us that the Sword is both sharp and can be wielded. If that’s all they do, they could just be a normal Python flag. When tags become important is if there are a lot of objects with different combinations of tags. Maybe you have a magical spell that dulls all sharp-edged objects in the castle - whether sword, dagger, spear or kitchen knife! You can then just grab all objects with the has_sharp_edge tag. Another example would be a weather script affecting all rooms tagged as outdoors or finding all characters tagged with belongs_to_fighter_guild.

In Evennia, Tags are technically also used to implement Aliases (alternative names for objects) and Permissions (simple strings for Locks to check for).

Working with Tags

Properties of Tags (and Aliases and Permissions)

Tags are unique. This means that there is only ever one Tag object with a given key and category.

Not specifying a category (default) gives the tag a category of None, which is also considered a unique key + category combination.

When Tags are assigned to game entities, these entities are actually sharing the same Tag. This means that Tags are not suitable for storing information about a single object - use an Attribute for this instead. Tags are a lot more limited than Attributes but this also makes them very quick to lookup in the database - this is the whole point.

Tags have the following properties, stored in the database:

  • key - the name of the Tag. This is the main property to search for when looking up a Tag.

  • category - this category allows for retrieving only specific subsets of tags used for different purposes. You could have one category of tags for “zones”, another for “outdoor locations”, for example. If not given, the category will be None, which is also considered a separate, default, category.

  • data - this is an optional text field with information about the tag. Remember that Tags are shared between entities, so this field cannot hold any object-specific information. Usually it would be used to hold info about the group of entities the Tag is tagging - possibly used for contextual help like a tool tip. It is not used by default.

There are also two special properties. These should usually not need to be changed or set, it is used internally by Evennia to implement various other uses it makes of the Tag object:

  • model - this holds a natural-key description of the model object that this tag deals with, on the form application.modelclass, for example objects.objectdb. It used by the TagHandler of each entity type for correctly storing the data behind the scenes.

  • tagtype - this is a “top-level category” of sorts for the inbuilt children of Tags, namely Aliases and Permissions. The Taghandlers using this special field are especially intended to free up the category property for any use you desire.

Adding/Removing Tags

You can tag any typeclassed object, namely Objects, Accounts, Scripts and Channels. General tags are added by the Taghandler. The tag handler is accessed as a property tags on the relevant entity:

     mychair.tags.add("furniture")
     mychair.tags.add("furniture", category="luxurious")
     myroom.tags.add("dungeon#01")
     myscript.tags.add("weather", category="climate")
     myaccount.tags.add("guestaccount")

     mychair.tags.all()  # returns a list of Tags
     mychair.tags.remove("furniture") 
     mychair.tags.clear()    

Adding a new tag will either create a new Tag or re-use an already existing one. Note that there are two “furniture” tags, one with a None category, and one with the “luxurious” category.

When using remove, the Tag is not deleted but are just disconnected from the tagged object. This makes for very quick operations. The clear method removes (disconnects) all Tags from the object. You can also use the default @tag command:

 @tag mychair = furniture

This tags the chair with a ‘furniture’ Tag (the one with a None category).

Searching for objects with a given tag

Usually tags are used as a quick way to find tagged database entities. You can retrieve all objects with a given Tag like this in code:

     import evennia
     
     # all methods return Querysets

     # search for objects 
     objs = evennia.search_tag("furniture")
     objs2 = evennia.search_tag("furniture", category="luxurious")
     dungeon = evennia.search_tag("dungeon#01")
     forest_rooms = evennia.search_tag(category="forest") 
     forest_meadows = evennia.search_tag("meadow", category="forest")
     magic_meadows = evennia.search_tag("meadow", category="magical")

     # search for scripts
     weather = evennia.search_tag_script("weather")
     climates = evennia.search_tag_script(category="climate")

     # search for accounts
     accounts = evennia.search_tag_account("guestaccount")          

Note that searching for just “furniture” will only return the objects tagged with the “furniture” tag that has a category of None. We must explicitly give the category to get the “luxurious” furniture.

Using any of the search_tag variants will all return Django Querysets, including if you only have one match. You can treat querysets as lists and iterate over them, or continue building search queries with them.

Remember when searching that not setting a category means setting it to None - this does not mean that category is undefined, rather None is considered the default, unnamed category.

import evennia 

myobj1.tags.add("foo")  # implies category=None
myobj2.tags.add("foo", category="bar")

# this returns a queryset with *only* myobj1 
objs = evennia.search_tag("foo")

# these return a queryset with *only* myobj2
objs = evennia.search_tag("foo", category="bar")
# or
objs = evennia.search_tag(category="bar")

There is also an in-game command that deals with assigning and using (Object-) tags:

 tag/search furniture

Aliases and Permissions

Aliases and Permissions are implemented using normal TagHandlers that simply save Tags with a different tagtype. These handlers are named aliases and permissions on all Objects. They are used in the same way as Tags above:

    boy.aliases.add("rascal")
    boy.permissions.add("Builders")
    boy.permissions.remove("Builders")

    all_aliases = boy.aliases.all()

and so on. Similarly to how @tag works in-game, there is also the @perm command for assigning permissions and @alias command for aliases.