| name | scienceworld-conductivity-tester |
| description | Determines if an object is electrically conductive by integrating it into a circuit and observing a light bulb. Triggered when classifying an object based on conductivity. |
Instructions
Objective
Classify a target object as electrically conductive or non-conductive by using it to complete a simple circuit with a battery and a light bulb.
Core Procedure
- Locate & Acquire Object: Teleport to the object's location and pick it up.
- Focus on Object: Use the
focus action on the object to signal intent.
- Setup in Workshop: Teleport to the
workshop. Place the object down.
- Inspect Available Components: Use
look around and identify the exact battery, wires, indicator bulb or buzzer, and answer boxes that are actually present in the current workshop variation.
- Construct Test Circuit: Build the test circuit using the exact component names you observed. Prefer this proven series topology:
a. Identify:
battery anode and battery cathode
- a first wire with
terminal 1 and terminal 2
- an indicator component with
anode and cathode
- a second wire with
terminal 1 and terminal 2
- the target object's
terminal 1 and terminal 2
b. Connect battery anode to the first wire terminal 1.
c. Connect the first wire terminal 2 to the indicator cathode.
d. Connect the indicator anode to the second wire terminal 1.
e. Connect the second wire terminal 2 to the target object's terminal 1.
f. Connect the target object's terminal 2 directly to battery cathode.
g. Every connect action must use the exact observed contact-point syntax, not abstract object-to-object connections.
- Observe & Classify: After the circuit is complete, use
look around or look at <indicator> to inspect the indicator state.
- If the indicator is on/activated, the object is conductive.
- If the indicator is off/not activated, the object is non-conductive.
- Place in Correct Answer Box: Use the task description to decide which observed answer box corresponds to conductive vs. non-conductive, then move the object into that box.
Key Notes
- Do not assume specific wire colors, bulb colors, or box colors unless they are explicitly present in the current observation.
- The exact circuit layout can vary by task variation; ground every connection in the components actually visible in the workshop.
- The observation after the circuit is built is critical for determining the indicator state.
- This skill assumes the environment's action set and room structure as provided in the trajectory.