Instead of outright destroying the armor, the spell will instead
first erode the armor. The spell hits 2-4 times, so if it hits
the same armor 4 times, it will get destroyed. This does not
hit erodeproof armor.
Also change the scroll of destroy armor, so that blessed one will
destroy a cursed armor, if hero is only wearing that.
After discussing with paxed, I decided that instead of reducing the
safe enchantment limit for magical armor, it is instead better to
make the scrolls less effective on it. So this commit restores the
previous rules for the safely-enchant-from level and changes the
effectiveness of the scrolls to compensate.
Non-elven magical armor now only gets +1 from blessed scrolls of
enchant armor when enchanted from +3, coming to a total of +4. But
scrolls of enchant armor are now more effective on nonmagical and
elven and previously unenchanted armor, giving more of an incentive
to use them in the early game.
Cursed and uncursed scrolls of enchant armor are now also more
powerful than they were (but less powerful than blessed scrolls),
hopefully making it a more interesting decision as to whether to use
scrolls of enchant armor even if you don't have the means to bless
them.
The safe armor enchantment limit is lowered by one, if the armor
is innately magical. This takes off 3-7 points of AC from
a typical ascension kit, but should not really have any effect
for early game.
Also clean up the relevant code a bit.
Uncursed genocide while hallucinating deliberately reports hero's
role to the player as the affected target, but it was also showing
that for livelog and #chronicle.
Making the true target be visible for #chronicle gives away a little
information but that should be inconsequential in this siutation
since the player specifies the target.
Not sure why this report got misclassified as spam.
Commit 1acc2727 helped ensure that the which_armor(mtmp, W_SADDLE)
test at the top of put_saddle_on_mon() wouldn't lead to an obj
leak.
This commit covers off the adjacent can_saddle() test in
put_saddle_on_mon(), because if that failed, it could also lead
to a memory leak of the saddle obj passed by the caller.
- have put_saddle_on_mon() create and use its own saddle obj
if a NULL saddle obj is passed, instead of having to do that
in the caller.
- where an existing saddle obj needs to be passed from the caller,
ensure that the caller has done its own can_saddle(mon) check prior
to calling put_saddle_on_mon(), so that the can_saddle() test
in put_saddle_on_mon() won't fail.
- lastly, add an impossible() to put_saddle_on_mon() to catch
a failure when a saddle obj is passed from the caller and either
test has failed, just in case. That should not happen with any of
the existing cases now, but it will provide some bullet-proofing
for new code, new callers.
- Add a vision sanity checking routine
- Recalc block point when digging a door for temporary clouds
- Add recalc_block_point after cvt_sdoor_to_door, because doorways
on the Rogue level have no doors, and otherwise the sanity checking
would complain. This doesn't actually change how the Rogue level
vision works, as it uses a different vision system
- Monster using a trap in a secret corridor revealed the corridor,
but didn't unblock the vision unless you saw the location
Merge the recent change in the effect of blessed scroll of taming on
already tame monsters with the earlier change of any taming on already
tame monsters. Non-blessed has a chance of boosting monst->mtame by 1
when it is less than 10, more likely the lower the current value is.
For blessed, boost by 2 after that, so possibly by 3 if it is very low.
Make spell of charm monster when skilled or expert in enchantment
spells behave the same as blessed scroll of taming. [I'm not too sure
about this; it may make the spell too powerful.]
GitHub issue #1315 points out that it is possible for
a downstream function to change an object's nobj field
to point to a completely different chain.
The cited example by @vultur-cadens was:
for (obj = gi.invent; obj; obj = obj->nobj)
if (obj->oclass != COIN_CLASS && !obj->cursed && !rn2(5)) {
curse(obj);
++buc_changed;
}
curse() drops the weapon with drop_uswapwep(),
which calls dropx(),
which calls dropy(),
which calls dropz(),
which calls place_object().
place_object alters the nobj pointer, to point to the floor chain:
otmp->nobj = fobj;
fobj = otmp;
The result was that the next loop iteration was then using floor
objects from the floor chain.
This alters several for-loops to use a more consistent approach,
particularly when the obj is being handed off to a function,
where a downstream function might, or might not, alter the nobj
field.
References:
https://github.com/NetHack/NetHack/issues/1315https://www.reddit.com/r/nethack/comments/1gkc9ub/even_if_you_drop_an_item_before_drinking_from_the/
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
Using #invoke on wielded or carried Sunsword and picking direction
'>' or '<' lights the hero's spot. But setting levl[u.ux][u.uy].lit
was too simplistic. Lighting on the Rogue Level operates on full
rooms when done inside a room and doesn't to anything with done in a
corridor.
litroom() gave inappropriate messages in a couple of special cases.
read.c:148:13: warning: suspicious concatenation of string literals in an array initialization; did you mean to separate the elements with a comma? [-Wstring-concatenation]
147 | "Ms. Palm's House of Negotiable Affection--A Very Reputable"
|
| ,
148 | " House Of Disrepute",
| ^
read.c:147:9: note: place parentheses around the string literal to silence warning
147 | "Ms. Palm's House of Negotiable Affection--A Very Reputable"
| ^
1 warning generated.
Adds a new extended command #lookaround, which will describe
the map around the hero they can see or remember.
Adds a new boolean option mention_map, which will give a message
when an interesting map location in sight changes.
Simplify the valid-position highlighting via '$' by combining the
tmp_at(start) and tmp_at(populate) steps.
Add highlighting for a couple of targetting operations that would
give valid/invalid feedback via autodescribe but weren't displaying
highlight markers for $.
I made several jumping changes, most of them dealing with picking
hero's own spot.
src/read.c(2889): warning: Dereferencing NULL pointer 'sobj'.
The analyzer doesn't know that the one caller that passes a NULL
sobj argument, angrygods(), checks !Punished before doing so.
Use a NULL guard before dereferencing sobj so that it doesn't
matter anyway.
I didn't like "your hands begin to glow red even more" very much (the
hero's hands aren't really 'beginning' to glow if they already have an
active confuse monster effect, and "glow red even more" was an awkward
turn of phrase on top of that). Rephrase it to "The red glow of your
hands intensifies."
I used ^G to create a monster and specified "invisible owlbear". I
then got "An owlbear appears next to you." Except it didn't; it was
invisible and I lacked see-invisible. I imagine that newsym() was
called for the new-yet-invisible monster, but that remained buffered
and was gone overridden by the time pending map update got flushed
at some point after the monster was made invisible.
Add a new makemon() flag to turn a newly created monster invisible
during its creation, before "monster appears" message is delivered.
Since that message will now be suppressed in this situation, use the
cursor-flash hack that indicates where the new, unseen monster got
placed. Creating "1000 invisible <mon>" is something you probably
won't do twice.
At either of the genocide prompts,
|What type of monster do you want to genocide?
or
|What class of monsters do you want to genocide?
answering "?<return>" will show the list of monster types that have
already been genocided, then re-prompt.
Issue reported by vultur-cadens: changing helm of brilliance to
crystal made it stop being classified as "hard helmet" so it gave
less protection against things falling onto the hero's head.
Change the is_metallic() tests used on helmets to new hard_helmet().
Unlike when thrown, crystal helmets don't break when objects fall
on them.
Fixes#1060
Heroes recognized unseen same-race monsters by voice, but it yielded
an unexpected result if the monster was unique. Change it so that
hero will recognize any type of monster by its voice if that monster
has been seen and limit unseen same-race ones to non-unique monsters.
Treats shopkeepers as unique since they have distinct names.
This adds a new flag to struct monst in order to track whether each
specific monster has ever been seen or sensed.
relocate surface(), ceiling(), and avoid_ceiling() to dungeon.c
adjacent to has_ceiling() etc.
astral and fire, like airlevel and waterlevel return FALSE
for has_ceiling()
if a caller does happen to call ceiling() on fire level,
return "flames above"
if a caller does happen to call ceiling() on quest level,
return a more-generic "expanse above", instead of the
word "ceiling"
add "stairs" return to surface()
remove recent update to engrave.c to special-case "stairs"
since surface() will return that now