Applying a non-wielded cursed pick-axe first wielded it, then dug,
but it didn't report "pick-axe is welded to your hand". (Attempting
to drop it or wield something else did report that, after the fact.)
The same thing happened if you used a pole-arm rather than pick-axe.
Stinking cloud placed near water or poison gas breathed across it
would affect and potentially kill underwater monsters. Most swimmers
are on the surface and should be affected, but eels and other fish
shouldn't be.
This also changes minliquid() to not treat flying and levitating as
ways to survive water when on the Plane of Water.
I think goodpos() needs to be taught about that Plane (where many ways
of existing at a water location don't apply). This doesn't do that.
There was a spurious seli-colon after an if's test, making a boundary
check be ineffective. When looking at that, I noticed that the 'O'
command's display of the current value for mouse_support ("0=off" and
so forth) was relying on implicit concatenation of adjacent string
literals, which would break K&R compilation. Do that concatenation
the old fashioned way....
While testing (after temporarily adding WC_MOUSE_SUPPORT to tty's
window_procs), I also noticed that wording used by config_error_add
looked strange when it was in response to giving a bad value via 'O'
command. Suppress its "config_error_add: " prefix is that situation.
On Windows only:
0 = turn off mouse_support
1 = turn on mouse_support and turn off QuickEdit mode
2 = turn on mouse_support and leave QuickEdit mode untouched
More generally, but not implemented anywhere:
0 = turn off mouse_support
1 = turn on mouse_support and make supporting O/S adjustments
(O/S adjustments not implented beyond Windows as yet)
2 = turn on mouse_support and do not make OS adjustments
(unimplemented as yet so behaves as 1)
Fixes#163Fixes#153
Encumbrance calculations for taking things out of a bag of holding
where subject to rounding issues due to integer division. This may
improve things, although I think taking out a partial stack might not
be much better than before.
I simplified the contributed code, then decided that it wasn't an
improvement. In the process of switching back and forth I may have
introduced bugs which weren't present originally.
Under some circumstances, when all the marauding orcs belonging to the
horde operating within the gnomish mines had been provided with their
spoils and placed appropriately, there could still be some pillaged stuff
left-over on the migrating obj chain. Orcs created by regular monster
generation elsewhere would then be susceptable to receiving that stuff
until it was used up. That part is fine, except that the orcs were then
being named as part of the same horde operating within the mines. Now
they will no longer be named as part of the Gnomish Mines horde.
Mythos: There's a good chance that these particular orcs received the
stolen goods from the Gnomish Mines horde.
Fixes#161
Report states that scattering objects might leave a 'pile' glyph when
no longer appropriate. I didn't try to reproduce that, just took it
on faith. The fix tried to be too efficient and might have missed
fixing the display if breaks() or ohitmon() destroyed the objects
being scattered and left 'total' at 0.
During level change, when a monster from mydogs (monsters accompaying
hero, usually pets) couldn't be placed because the level was full, it
was set to migrate to that level (in order to get another chance to
arrive if hero left and returned). The code sequence
mon_arrive()-> mnexto()-> m_into_limbo()-> migrate_to_level()-> relmon()
tried to remove the monster from the map, but it wasn't necessarily on
the map (depending upon whether it couldn't arrive at all, or arrived
at the hero's spot and couldn't be moved out of the hero's way). The
EXTRA_SANITY_CHECKS for remove_monster() issued impossible "no monster
to remove". relmon() now checks whether monster is already off the map.
While investigating that, I discovered that pets set to re-migrate
to the same level to try again on hero's next visit didn't work at all.
migrating_mons gets processed after mydogs so moving something from
the latter to the former after arrival failure just resulted in
immediate second failure when the more general list was handled during
the hero's current arrival. And failure to arrive from migrating_mons
would kill the monster instead of scheduling another attempt.
The sanest fix for that turned out to be to have all monsters who
can't arrive be put back on the migrating_mons list to try again upon
hero's next visit. Pets still fail twice but are no longer discarded
during the second time, and now do arrive when hero leaves and comes
back provided he or she has opened up some space before leaving. If
there's still no space on the next visit, monsters who can't arrive
then are scheduled to try again on the visit after that.
Recent fix for invalid corpses becomes moot. Monsters aren't killed
during arrival failure so there are no resulting corpses to deal with.