Condense the Qt status slightly, moving Alignment field from the
Conditons line to the Characteristics line and the Time and Score
fields from their own possibly blank line to the HP,&c,Gold line.
That's for statuslines:2, which is the default. statuslines:3
restores the previous layout. I tried to make that become the
default for Qt but it got messy fast and I gave up.
I also tried to make changing 'statuslines' back and forth on the
fly work but failed. I left the code in as #if DYNAMIC_STATUSLINES
but that isn't defined anywhere. For the time being at least,
'statuslines' is config file or NETHACKOPTIONS only for Qt, not
changeable via 'O' like for curses and tty.
Change the option description for 'statuslines'. That depended
upon whether curses was compiled in when it should depend on which
interface is active. This moves the alternate info to Guidebook.
Replace the blank placeholder icon with individual placeholders
for Stone, Slime, Strngl, Deaf, Lev, Fly, and Ride. They're just
40x40 tiles showing solid color (different for each) holding white
block letters spelling the condition. For the first four of those,
the text runs from upper-left to lower-right, for Lev and Fly the
text runs from lower-left towards upper-right, and for Ride it's
horizontal. Not particularly exciting but better than blank. We
still need real artwork to make them be similar to the older
conditions.
Also moves the two petmarks and the pilemark from qt_xpms.h to
qt_map.cpp. The marks and the assorted status icons are all
static arrays, and including that header in two source files
meant that they were all duplicated unless the compiler or linker
was smart enough to discard the unused ones.
In the Qt status panel the six characteristics and the older
status conditions all have icons (similar to map tiles) drawn
above their values. (The 3.6 era conditions that I added all
have blank icons and are in need of artwork. 3.7 conditions
aren't implemented.)
Int, Stun, and Conf all feature a brain oriented towards the
player's right shoulder. The intelligence one is just a bare
brain, the stunned one features a black cloud over it, and the
confusion one has something over it that is cloud-like but
shaped differently from Stun as well has being white rather
than black; I'm not sure what that depicts. This transposes
the Confusion icon so that it faces the player's left shoulder
instead of right. Not a very emphatic suggestion of confusion
but seems a useful difference without requiring any artistic
competence.
The status lines are out of date. This brings status conditions
up to 3.6.0 level: adding Stoned, Slimed, Strangled, Deaf,
Levitating, Flying, Riding. It also reorders a few things:
put encumbrance after hunger, put Confused after Stunned, and
Blind after Hallucinating. Also renames Sick to FoodPois and
Ill to TermIll.
So, the portion of status devoted to conditions is now (left to
right on one line):
Satiated/[omitted]/Hungry/Weak/Fainting/Fainted,
[omitted]/Burdened/Stressed/Strained/Overtaxed/Overloaded,
Stone, Slime, Strngl, FoodPois, TermIll,
Stun, Conf, Hallu, Blind, Deaf,
Lev, Fly, Ride.
It's actually two lines. The upper line has a 40x40 or so icon
(aka tile, defined in qt_xpms.h rather than a data file) above
the corresponding text on the lower line. I created a blank icon
and used it for all the added conditions. At some point someone
with artistic talent will need to draw a bunch of things.
In order for 'make depend' to be able to handle both Qt4/5 and Qt3,
they need to operate on different object file names.
renames qt*.o to qt3*.o for Qt3
renames qt*.cpp to qt3*.cpp for Qt3 (not essential but seems worthwhile)
moves Qt3's headers from include/qt*.h to win/Qt3/qt3*.h
copies include/qt_xpms.h (before rename) or win/Qt3/qt3_xpms.h (after)
to win/Qt/qt_xpms.h so that Qt4/5 no longer shares one header file
modifies win/Qt3/*.cpp and win/Qt3/qt3_win.h to reflect new header names
modifies Makefile.src to have Qt3 'moc' commands use new names
updates Makefile.src via re-running 'make depend'
'make depend' was only looking at include/*.h to find nested inclusion.
Now it will also look at win/*/*.h. That found a bunch of missing
dependencies for the old gnome sources and a few for Qt3.
Building without Qt still works. Building with it (any version) has
not been tested.