2 ; Example file for the OpenTTD Base Sound replacement sets.
3 ; This file consists of basically two different parts:
5 ; * information about the files
7 ; Metadata contains information about the name and version
10 ; == Getting started ==
11 ; - you can't add comments after values
12 ; - you have to fill the MD5 checksum for each file
13 ; - you may not miss any of the metadata or files items
14 ; - `openttd -h` lists all sound replacements sets it found to be correct
15 ; - `openttd -d grf=1` shows warnings/errors when parsing an .obs file
16 ; - `openttd -S <name>` starts OpenTTD with the given set (case sensitive)
17 ; - adding `soundsset = <name>` to the misc section of openttd.cfg makes
18 ; OpenTTD start with that sound set by default
19 ; - there is a command line tool for all platforms called md5sum that can
20 ; create the MD5 checksum you need.
21 ; - all files specified in this file are search relatively to the path where
22 ; this file is found, i.e. if the sound files are in a subdir you have
23 ; to add that subdir to the names in this file to! It will NOT search for
24 ; a file named like specified in here.
27 ; the name of the pack, preferably less than 16 characters
29 ; the short name (4 characters), used to identify this set
31 ; the version of this sound set (read as single integer)
33 ; a fairly short description of the set
34 ; By adding '.<iso code>' you can translate the description.
35 ; Note that OpenTTD first tries the full ISO code, then the first
36 ; two characters and then uses the fallback (no '.<iso code>').
37 ; The ISO code matching is case sensitive!
38 ; So en_US will be used for en_GB if no en_GB translation is added.
39 ; As a result the below example has 'howdie' for en_US and en_GB but
40 ; 'foo' for all other languages.
42 description.en_US = howdie
44 ; The files section lists the files that replace sprites.
45 ; The file names are case sensitive.
47 ; The file with the samples. Must contain exactly 73 samples.
50 ; The md5s section lists the MD5 checksum for the files that replace them.
51 ; Note that the list of files is case sensitive. Each file listed in the
52 ; files section must be listed here with it's MD5 checksum, otherwise you
53 ; will get a lot of warnings when starting OpenTTD.
55 SAMPLES.CAT = 422ea3dd074d2859bb51639a6e0e85da
57 ; The origin section provides the possibility to put and extra line into
58 ; the warning that a file is missing/corrupt. This can be used to tell
59 ; them where to find it. It works on the filename specified in the
60 ; files section and if that is not found it will fall back to the default
61 ; as shown below here.
63 default = You can find it on your Transport Tycoon Deluxe CD-ROM.
64 SAMPLES.CAT = You can find it also on your Transport Tycoon Deluxe CD-ROM.