Several window ports that support perm_invent were
using a call back to the core display_inventory()
function.
While calling from the window port back to core functions
is arguably not ideal in the first place, it was recently
brought to light that code NetHack-3.7 code changes to
display_inventory() actually caused it to stop repopulating
the perm_invent window as intended under certain circumstances.
For now, provide an alternative function, repopulate_perminvent(),
that hopefullshould still work the way it did previously.
There will likely be some additional changes after this to
further improve things, at some point.
For now though, this
Resolves#1454
../win/X11/winX.c: In function ‘init_standard_windows’:
../win/X11/winX.c:2769:46: warning: passing argument 2 of ‘XtAppSetErrorHandler’ makes ‘__attribute__((noreturn))’ qualified function pointer from unqualified [-Wdiscarded-qualifiers]
2769 | (void) XtAppSetErrorHandler(app_context, X11_error_handler);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from ../win/X11/winX.c:27:
/usr/include/X11/Intrinsic.h:1771:5: note: expected ‘__attribute__((noreturn)) void (*)(char *)’ but argument is of type ‘void (*)(char *)’
1771 | XtErrorHandler /* handler */ _X_NORETURN
| ^
Remove start_screen() and end_screen() from the
Window-port interface.
They were only ever used by tty, and there was a comment
carried to several window-ports about how they "really
should go away. They are tty-specific"
term_start_screen() and term_end_screen() are part of
terminal/NO_TERMS supporting routines now.
There was a transcription error in the comments in cstd.h for
the standard list of header files, where only the description
remained for <stdlib.h>, not the name of the file itself.
Remove several extraneous inclusions of the standard C99 headers.
Tested on the following afterwards:
Linux (using hints/linux.370) including tty, curses, qt6, and X11
macOS (using hints/macOS.370) including tty, curses, qt5, and X11
Windows MSYS2 using sys/windows/GNUmakefile
Windows Visual Studio using sys/windows/Makefile.nmake
msdos cross-compile on Ubuntu using djgpp cross-compiler
The g? structs had a mix of variables that were written to
the savefile, and those that were not.
For better clarity and to distinguish those that end up in
the savefile, relocate some g? variables that get written
directly to the savefile into different structs.
This updates EDITLEVEL, although technically it probably
didn't need to, since savefile contents are not changing.
Details:
gb.bases -> svb.bases
gb.bbubbles -> svb.bbubbles
gb.branches -> svb.branches
gc.context -> svc.context
gd.disco -> svd.disco
gd.dndest -> svd.dndest
gd.doors -> svd.doors
gd.doors_alloc -> svd.doors_alloc
gd.dungeon_topology -> svd.dungeon_topology
gd.dungeons -> svd.dungeons
ge.exclusion_zones -> sve.exclusion_zones
gh.hackpid -> svh.hackpid
gi.inv_pos -> svi.inv_pos
gk.killer -> svk.killer
gl.lastseentyp -> svl.lastseentyp
gl.level -> svl.level
gl.level_info -> svl.level_info
gm.mapseenchn -> svm.mapseenchn
gm.moves -> svm.moves
gm.mvitals -> svm.mvitals
gn.n_dgns -> svn.n_dgns
gn.n_regions -> svn.n_regions
gn.nroom -> svn.nroom
go.oracle_cnt -> svo.oracle_cnt
gp.pl_character -> svp.pl_character
gp.pl_fruit -> svp.pl_fruit
gp.plname -> svp.plname
gp.program_state -> svp.program_state
gq.quest_status -> svq.quest_status
gr.rooms -> svr.rooms
gs.sp_levchn -> svs.sp_levchn
gs.spl_book -> svs.spl_book
gt.timer_id -> svt.timer_id
gt.tune -> svt.tune
gu.updest -> svu.updest
gx.xmax -> svx.xmax
gx.xmin -> svx.xmin
gy.ymax -> svy.ymax
gy.ymin -> svy.ymin
Related note:
There are some pointer variables that are heads of chains that were not
moved from 'g?' to 'sv?', because they are not actually written to the
savefile directly, but the objects/monst/trap/lightsource/timer in the
chains they point to are. That can be changed, if desired.
Examples: gi.invent, gm.migrating_objs, gb.billobjs, gm.migrating_mons,
gf.ftrap, gl.light_base, gt.timer_base
Pull request from mkuoppal: avoid integer overflow when user types
digits and they're combined into a number by successively multiplying
intermediate value by 10 and adding new digit. Needed to avoid
triggering undefined behavior if the value overflows the largest
signed integer (actually long int).
This is a much more general fix than the code in the pull request,
which imposed an arbitrary limit for one aspect of tty input.
I'm not convinced that integer.h was the right place to add the new
AppendLongDigit() macro. I may not have caught all the places where
it is needed. files.c accumulates a value from digits but uses
unsigned int, so overflow won't trigger undefined behavior (although
it presumably ends up with a different value than what was intended).
options.c and coloratt.c accumulate smaller integers and have a limit
on the number of digits they'll use, so can't overflow.
Fixes#1254
move the custom color data into its own field in the glyphmap
and disassociate it from the unicode/utf8 stuff.
move the glyphcache stuff during options processing and parsing
into new file glyphs.c and out of utf8map.c, and make it
general, and not part of ENHANCED_SYMBOLS.
Do the groundwork for allowing glyph color customizations to
work when any symset is loaded and not restrict it only to
the enhanced1 H_UTF8 symsets.
The customizations in effect are still affiliated with a particular
symset.
Also closes#1224, but the PR itself references a data structure
made obsolete by this commit. The curses comment from the PR was
added into the code.
The PR also made several suggestions, but only the first
one has been included in this commit (and no longer based on
the handler), that being:
"allow defining colors if other symbol handling modes are used
(possibly limited to the standard 16 colors)."
FredrIQ also wrote the following suggestions in PR#1224:
Something I was also contemplating, unrelated to implementation of this
support in curses, would be the ability for the following:
allow defining colors if other symbol handling modes are used (possibly limited to the standard 16 colors)
allow defining attributes (for example: glyph:G_pet_female_kitten:U+0066/red/underline)
allow specifying glyphs as wildcards for defining global color/attribute changes
Something I also want to see are keywords for "don't change the current defined data". If this
were to be added, you could for example do this:
OPTIONS=glyph:G_*_fox:U+0064/blue
OPTIONS=glyph:G_statue_*:basechar/gray/underline
for "make all foxes use a blue color, make all statues gray with underline" without needing
to specify the relevant character for every statue. This ("basechar", "basefg", etc)
should perhaps also be added for MENUCOLORS and statushilites, so that you can, for
example, underline all items being worn without needing to specify a bunch of
near-duplicate rules for combining BUC colors + underline worn items
as per #1064
The 0x1000000 bit (NH_BASIC_COLOR bit) was used to mark
CLR_BLACK when storing it in u->ucolor. Now, all of the basic CLR_*
colors are stored that way.
The NH_BASIC_COLOR bit indicates that the value in u->ucolor is
not an rgb value, rather it is one of the 0-15 basic NetHack colors.
The window-ports need to strip the NH_BASIC_COLOR bit off before using
it for color changes.
Add options 'showvers' (boolean) and 'versinfo' (numeric mask) to
show nethack's version on the status lines during play. It won't be
particularly interesting to ordinary players but should be useful
when making screenshots or video to be streamed, or for someone who
switches between git branches or between nethack and variants.
I worked on this several months back but it was combined with
unfinished changes to 'hitpointbar'. I've separated it out so that
it can be put into use. When enabled, one or more components of
"<name> <branch> <version>" will be shown right justified after
status conditions. At present the default is "<branch>" if that is
available and overall status isn't 'released', or "<version>" if
'released' or if branch isn't available. That might need some
refinement.
It works as intended for tty and curses, although some abbreviation
mechanism would be useful if/when the program resorts to abbreviating
status conditions to make things narrow enough to fit.
For X11, it works ok for fancy_status:True (the default, controlled
via NetHack.ad settings) but is messed up for tty-style status. The
text is positioned correctly but there are gaps in it, making it
appear garbled, similar to what I saw when I tried and failed to
implement statuslines:3 for X11. [It might be due to having empty
condition widgets be 1 pixel wide instead of being totally removed
but I don't think the situation is that simple.]
For Qt, if the text needs to be truncated in order to fit, the center
portion of the string will be shown, discarding parts from the left
and right. That ought to discard from left and retain rightmost
portion instead.
For win32|mswin|Win GUI, no attempt to support it has been included.
Things should be ok when 'showvers' is left as False (the default)
but I don't know what will happen if that gets toggled to True. At a
minimum, the version info won't be right justified. The information,
or at least some of it, is displayed in the game window's title bar
so there isn't any pressing need to add it to status, but toggling
the option will need to behave sensibly if it doesn't already.
add CRASHREPORT for Windows
add ^P info to report (via DUMPLOG)
new options: crash_email, crash_name, crash_urlmax
new game command: #bugreport
new config option: CRASHREPORT_EXEC_NOSTDERR
new command line option: --bidshow
deleted helper scripts:
NetHackCrashReport.Javascript
nhcrashreport.lua
misc:
update CRASHREPORTURL (will need to be updated before release)
update bitrot in winchain
winchain for Windows
add missing synch_wait for NetHackW --showpaths
add PANICTRACE (and CRASHREPORT) in mdlib.c:build_opts
missing:
packaging (Windows needs the pdb file)
no testing with MSVC command line build
port status:
linux: working, but glibc's backtrace doesn't show static functions
Windows VS: working. pdb file is large - looking into options
MacOS: working
msdos: not supported
VMS: not supported
MSVC: planned, but not attempted
MSYS2: working, but libbacktrace not showing symbols (yet?)
This implements the mechanics to use the ctrl_nhwindow() interface
capability to pass down a setting change from the core to the active
window port, without resorting to accessing a core global variable
from within the window port, and without altering the interface..
The passed setting is honored in the tty and curses window ports.
X11 and mswin receive and store the values, but no implementation
to change the menu prompt style is there yet.
Qt does not store the values or have an implementation.
The setting change is done in allmain.c immediately after
creating the WIN_INVEN window.
Remove menu_color support from the window port side of the interface.
The window port just has to honor the color parameter that was added
to the add_menu() interface definition in June 2022 commit
2770223d10, and let the core-side of
the interface handle things.
To that end, this does the following:
Removes the #define of add_menu() from include/winprocs.h and add a
real core-side add_menu() function to windows.c which acts as a
trampoline to the window port win_add_menu() function, while providing
a single location to adjust the parameters passed to the window port
function. get_menu_coloring() is now called in there.
Moves get_menu_coloring() from options.c into windows.c and makes it
static.
Removes all the calls to get_menu_coloring() from the tty, Qt, X11,
curses, and win32 interfaces and adjusts their code to simply honor
the color parameter in add_menu, similar to what the menu_headings
change from earlier today did.
Instead of just accepting an attribute, it's now possible to
use a color, or both color and attribute, for example:
OPTIONS=menu_headings:inverse
OPTIONS=menu_headings:red
OPTIONS=menu_headings:red&underline
Default is still just inverse.
This lets the player change the menu heading color without
needing to use menu colors for them.
Also makes it so the core uses NO_COLOR instead of 0, for all
the menu lines which don't have any prefedefined color.
Tested for tty, curses, x11, qt, and win32
Pull request from bernhardreiter: NetHack.ad has a comment about
needing to use an external tool such as XV or PBMplus rather than
the NetHack.double_tile_size resource if nethack is built with the
USE_XPM configuration. Add some more detail since using 'hints' when
setting up the Makefiles can define that behind the builder's back.
The extra detail won't be useful to players who obtain prebuilt
binaries that incorporate the X11 interface. The comment in config.h
(see preceding pull request) won't be either, and maybe should be
moved to NetHack.ad where such users will be able to see it.
Fixes#1114.
It turned out that using '^' as a group accelerator (new behavior for
the 'whatis' command to view traps) already worked for curses and Qt.
Fix that for tty and X11. I don't know the situation for WinGUI.
Offering any of the menu paging keystrokes as group accelerators
should be avoided if there's any chance that the menu will need more
that one page. The menu for '/' is short though so losing "^ to go
back to first page" for it isn't an issue.
The default engraving-in-corridor character is the same as the default
corridor symbol (and also default lit corridor one), distinguished by
color. Show it differently (in inverse vidoe, like lava vs water and
sink vs fountain) if color is Off.
It might be better to change the engraving-in-room symbol to be the
same as the room one so that they'll be more consistent with corridors;
color is probably sufficient without resorting to back-tick. But this
update hasn't done that.
Neither X11 nor Qt would compile with TEXTCOLOR disabled. With this
they build and seem to work, but no promises, particularly for the
ENHANCED_SYMBOLS config.