You need to specify the whole path:
tar -xf playground.tar playground/test.txt
You can use tar --list or tar -t to list the contents of an archive to see what's in there:
$ tar -tf playground.tar
playground/
playground/text.txt
Here's a complete log of what I did to reproduce your issue:
$ cd $(mktemp -d) # Go to a new empty directory
$ mkdir playground
$ touch playground/test.txt # Make the file we will tar
$ tar cf playground.tar playground # Make the tar
$ tar -tf playground.tar # List the contents of a tar
playground/
playground/test.txt # There's our file! It has a full path
$ rm -r playground # Let's delete the source so we can test extraction
$ tar -xf playground.tar playground/test.txt # Extract that file
$ find . # Check if the file is now there
.
./playground.tar
./playground
./playground/text.txt # Here it is!
Alternatively, you didn't need to pack the whole directory. This would have also worked. I also added test2.txt to show the whole directory isn't unpacked.
$ cd $(mktemp -d) # New directory
$ touch test.txt test2.txt # Let's make a few files
$ tar -cf playground.tar *.txt # Pack everything
$ tar -tf playground.tar # What's in the archive?
test2.txt
test.txt # Look: No directory!
$ rm *.txt # Clear the source files to test unpacking
$ tar -xf playground.tar test.txt # Unpack one file (no directory name)
$ find .
.
./test.txt
./playground.tar # There it is!
test.txtexactly stored as that. It might be./test.txtorsome/path/to/test.txtplayground/test.txtnottest.txttar xf playground.tar <TAB>and it's like being into the directory tree. You can select the file you want.