Jan 15, 2025
There’s a global community dedicated to finding new ways to challenge themselves in Tetris, from speedruning the classic puzzler to technically “beating” it. But the latest feat isn’t a newly discovered hidden glitch or high score—it’s an entirely new way to play the game. Thomas Rinsma, a security analyst and hobbyist tinkerer, recently figured out how to create a version of Tetris that runs inside a PDF file. According to a personal website post subsequently highlighted by BoingBoing on January 15th, Rinsma tackled the project “just for fun” after learning the potential implementations of PDF’s JavaScript API. The result is a novel version Rinsma calls PDFTRIS. PDFTRIS in action. Credit: Popular Science “[I] realized there just might be enough I/O possibility there for a game,” he wrote. “I/O” stands for “Input/Output,” and refers to the communication between a computer and its users. Rinsma explained that it’s already “relatively well-known” that PDFs can support a number of features such as dynamic content scripting when opened in something like Adobe Acrobat/Reader. Some of that same scripting support, however, is also available in both Mozilla Firefox and Google Chromium’s respective PDF readers, PDF.js and PDFium. [ Related: Is Tetris infinite? Teen world champ reaches fabled ‘rebirth’ ] It gets a bit complex to the layperson from there, but regardless, the end result is a PDF containing a 10×20 grid of field buttons. These alternate between shaded and empty blocks depending on the JavaScript input, allowing a player to use preprogrammed keyboard instructions to move and shift the tetronimoes—the official term for four-block shapes such as those in Tetris blocks. “It was a bit tricky to find a union of features that work in both engines, but in the end it turns out that showing/hiding annotation ‘fields’ works well to make monochrome pixels, and keyboard input can be achieved by typing in a text input box,” Rinsma wrote in a post to Hacker News. Throw in the ability for the file to automatically loop and reload each command, and you have a functional game of Tetris. It even speeds up as your score increases. Anyone interested in checking under PDFTRIS’s hood can check out Rinsma’s open-source files available on GitHub. For those in the know, the ability to play a video game in a PDF file begs a certain, extremely specific programming community question. As luck would have it, Rinsma already has the answer: Yes, PDFs can also run Doom. The post You can now play ‘Tetris’ in a PDF file appeared first on Popular Science.
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