hermes-agent/agent/pet/constants.py
Brooklyn Nicholson e7dbfdaad7 feat(pets): pet engine + display.pet config
Add the shared pet engine under agent/pet/: spritesheet manifest loading
and in-process caching, six-state animation model, frame rendering, and
the persistent pet store. Register the display.pet config block (pet,
scale, enabled, etc.) that every surface reads from. Covered by
tests/agent/test_pet_engine.py.
2026-06-20 14:18:30 -05:00

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"""Pet sprite geometry + animation-state taxonomy.
These values are the common petdex/Codex pet geometry. The real ``pet.json``
usually only carries ``id``/``displayName``/``description``/``spritesheetPath``;
row taxonomy is inferred from the atlas shape so Hermes can render both legacy
8-row sheets and current 9-row Codex sheets.
"""
from __future__ import annotations
from enum import Enum
# Frame geometry (pixels). Current Codex/petdex spritesheets are 8 columns x 9
# rows (1536x1872), while older Hermes/petdex sheets used 9 columns x 8 rows
# (1728x1664). Renderers derive both row taxonomy and real column count from the
# concrete sheet, so either shape works.
FRAME_W = 192
FRAME_H = 208
# Frames consumed per animation state (the petdex web app uses CSS
# ``steps(6)``). A sheet may physically contain more columns; we only step
# through the first ``FRAMES_PER_STATE``.
FRAMES_PER_STATE = 6
# Full-loop duration for one state, milliseconds (petdex default).
LOOP_MS = 1100
# Default on-screen scale relative to native frame size. ``display.pet.scale``
# is the single master scalar: the desktop canvas multiplies its native pixels
# by it and every terminal surface derives its half-block/kitty column width
# from it (see :func:`cols_for_scale`), so one number shrinks all three
# interfaces together. (petdex's own clients render at 0.7; we default smaller
# so the kitty/GUI mascot stays a glanceable corner sprite. The half-block
# fallback can't shrink as far — see ``UNICODE_MIN_COLS`` — and clamps to its
# legibility floor instead.)
DEFAULT_SCALE = 0.33
# User-settable scale bounds (``/pet scale``, desktop slider). Floor keeps the
# pet clickable/visible; ceiling stops a fat-fingered value from filling the
# screen. The unicode fallback additionally clamps to ``UNICODE_MIN_COLS``.
MIN_SCALE = 0.1
MAX_SCALE = 3.0
def clamp_scale(scale: float) -> float:
"""Clamp *scale* to ``[MIN_SCALE, MAX_SCALE]`` (the single validation point)."""
return max(MIN_SCALE, min(MAX_SCALE, scale))
# Terminal cells one native frame spans at ``scale == 1.0``. A cell is ~8px
# wide, a frame is ``FRAME_W`` (192) px → 24 cells. This mirrors the kitty
# graphics placement (``scaled_px // 8``) so at full scale every renderer agrees.
BASE_UNICODE_COLS = FRAME_W // 8
# Legibility floor for the half-block fallback. A half-block cell samples the
# sprite at only 1 horizontal + 2 vertical taps, so below this width a 192×208
# pet collapses into an unreadable blob *regardless* of scale. kitty/GUI draw
# true pixels and have no such floor — that's why the same ``scale: 0.33`` is
# crisp there but mush in half-blocks. ``scale`` shrinks the unicode pet down
# TO this floor (and grows it above), instead of past it into noise.
UNICODE_MIN_COLS = 16
def cols_for_scale(scale: float) -> int:
"""Half-block width implied by *scale*, clamped to the legibility floor.
Above the floor it tracks the kitty cell box (``scaled_px // 8``) so the two
renderers converge at larger sizes; below it the floor keeps the sprite
readable rather than letting it devolve into a blob.
"""
return max(UNICODE_MIN_COLS, round(BASE_UNICODE_COLS * (scale or DEFAULT_SCALE)))
def resolve_cols(scale: float, unicode_cols: int = 0) -> int:
"""Resolve terminal width: explicit *unicode_cols* override, else from *scale*."""
return int(unicode_cols) if unicode_cols and int(unicode_cols) > 0 else cols_for_scale(scale)
class PetState(str, Enum):
"""Animation state a pet can be shown in.
These are Hermes' activity state names. They are not always identical to the
source atlas row names: Codex-format pets use rows like ``jumping`` /
``running`` while the UI keeps the shorter ``jump`` / ``run`` names.
"""
IDLE = "idle"
WAVE = "wave"
RUN = "run"
FAILED = "failed"
REVIEW = "review"
JUMP = "jump"
WAITING = "waiting"
# Legacy Hermes/petdex row order (top -> bottom) used by the older 8-row,
# 9-column atlas shape.
LEGACY_STATE_ROWS: list[str] = [
PetState.IDLE.value,
PetState.WAVE.value,
PetState.RUN.value,
PetState.FAILED.value,
PetState.REVIEW.value,
PetState.JUMP.value,
"extra1",
"extra2",
]
# Current Petdex row order (top -> bottom) used by 1536x1872 atlases:
# 8 columns x 9 rows of 192x208 cells.
CODEX_STATE_ROWS: list[str] = [
PetState.IDLE.value,
"running-right",
"running-left",
"waving",
"jumping",
PetState.FAILED.value,
PetState.WAITING.value,
"running",
PetState.REVIEW.value,
]
# Default/fallback for callers without a sheet. Prefer the current 9-row Codex
# format because generated pets and the public Codex pet contract use it.
STATE_ROWS: list[str] = CODEX_STATE_ROWS
# Canonical Hermes activity names -> accepted row-name aliases in descending
# preference. This keeps our internal state names stable (`wave`/`jump`/`run`)
# while matching Petdex's current `waving`/`jumping`/`running` taxonomy.
STATE_ALIASES: dict[str, tuple[str, ...]] = {
PetState.IDLE.value: (PetState.IDLE.value,),
PetState.WAVE.value: (PetState.WAVE.value, "waving"),
PetState.JUMP.value: (PetState.JUMP.value, "jumping"),
PetState.RUN.value: (PetState.RUN.value, "running"),
PetState.FAILED.value: (PetState.FAILED.value,),
PetState.REVIEW.value: (PetState.REVIEW.value,),
PetState.WAITING.value: (PetState.WAITING.value,),
}
def state_aliases_for(state: "PetState | str") -> tuple[str, ...]:
"""Return accepted row-name aliases for *state* (always non-empty)."""
value = state.value if isinstance(state, PetState) else str(state)
aliases = STATE_ALIASES.get(value)
return aliases if aliases else (value,)
def state_rows_for_grid(row_count: int | None) -> list[str]:
"""Return the row taxonomy for a spritesheet with *row_count* rows."""
try:
rows = int(row_count or 0)
except (TypeError, ValueError):
rows = 0
if rows >= len(CODEX_STATE_ROWS):
return CODEX_STATE_ROWS
return LEGACY_STATE_ROWS
def state_row_index(state: "PetState | str", row_count: int | None = None) -> int:
"""Return the spritesheet row index for *state* (clamped, never raises)."""
rows = state_rows_for_grid(row_count)
for name in state_aliases_for(state):
try:
return rows.index(name)
except ValueError:
continue
return 0 # fall back to the idle row