Changes to be committed:
modified: include/config.h
modified: include/extern.h
modified: include/flag.h
modified: include/global.h
modified: include/ntconf.h
modified: include/wintty.h
modified: src/cmd.c
modified: src/files.c
modified: src/options.c
modified: sys/share/pcmain.c
modified: sys/share/pcsys.c
modified: sys/share/pcunix.c
modified: sys/winnt/Makefile.gcc
modified: sys/winnt/Makefile.msc
modified: sys/winnt/nttty.c
new file: sys/winnt/stubs.c
modified: sys/winnt/winnt.c
modified: util/makedefs.c
modified: win/tty/wintty.c
Adjust the code and the command line Makefile so that
you no longer have to choose whether to build the tty
version NetHack.exe, or the gui version NetHackW.exe.
Both will now be built in a single 'nmake install' pass.
- honor blindness and hallucination
- honor ability to see one of the mergees
- provide audible feedback if appropriate
- merging inside pack gets special-cased so player knows something
different/unusual is happening
mongone() would send away a vault guard, whether alive or already
dead and parked at <0,0>, losing the information needed to remove
the temporary vault corridor once whatever obstacle (ie, the hero)
that's keeping it in place has been cleared. Have mongone() call
grddead() like mondead() does, so that a guard will just be moved
to <0,0> with 0 HP and kept there rather than being purged during
the next dead monster removal.
Move polearm context reset to m_detach() [and, unfortunately,
duplicated in grddead()] rather than in having it in dmonsfree()
since execution of the latter is deferred. I'm not sure offhand
whether a fast hero could get a second move before end-of-turn
purging of dead monsters.
Give 20 experience points the first time the hero reads a passage
from a tribute novel. It's enough to go from level 1 to 2 or from
2 to 3. By the time a book store is found, that's too trivial for
most to care about, but it's potentially useful to a pacifist.
When minimal_xname() set up a dummy object containing as few details
as possible, it wasn't setting up the fruit id field, so xname()
couldn't figure out what type of fruit it had and issued a warning.
I haven't managed a test case that uses minimal_xname so testing of
the fix is less than comprehensive. [Pasi got it through dopay, but
that only resorts to minimal_xname if the formatted name is really
long and would otherwise cause the shopkeeper's prompt to overflow.
Long fruit name combined with long individual object name wasn't
long enough to trigger that. Maybe uncursed, greased, rustproof
the like, or possibly just a longer shopkeeper name than I had?]
The previous fix prevents the crash from 'the()' when NO_GLYPH was
used as an index into the defsyms array, but it resulted in giving
feedback of "you attack thin air" regardless of what was at the
target location, reverting to the situation that the buggy code was
attempting to address in the first place. Handle that differently
by removing the unseen monster glyph sooner. Also, the underwater
handling wasn't working as intended.
I blamed Derek's pudding farming patch for introducing the problem,
but all that did was replace the offending line(s) with different
indentation. The older post-3.4.3 patch which produced the problem
was mine. Sorry, Derek.
Changes to be committed:
modified: include/extern.h
modified: src/files.c
modified: src/objects.c
modified: src/spell.c
- charge a little more.
- no free read in the bookstore.
Changes to be committed:
modified: src/hack.c
modified: src/pager.c
Don't use glyph_to_cmap as an array index into
the defsyms[] array unless it really is a cmap.
Recent situation: glyph_to_cmap will return
NO_GLYPH for the unknown monster glyph 'I', which
is not a valid index for the defsyms[] array.
A recent fault on mingw32 revealed that faulty
code which passes a bad or out-of-range date
value could have game-fatal consequences.
Add some protection.
currently it's locked behind _MSC_VER, but anything that runs on Win32
should be able to use those functions as long as it has something that
can pass as a debug window.
also, add a non-wildcard-accepting version of showdebug for the dumpit()
functions in dungeon.c and questpgr.c; this makes DEBUGFILES=* workable
without being excruciatingly painful
...if the map is filled with monsters, and for some reason
the drowning just won't kill you.
Infinite looping cannot currently happen, because no-one who
can drown can keep surviving the drowning once their amulet
of life saving is used up.