This started out as a one line change. After I saw someone in the
newsgroup mention that Sunsword's light was inferior to that of a lamp,
I decided to make it work better (than in 3.4.3, that is, becoming the
same brightness as a lamp) when blessed and worse when cursed (useless to
hero but still visible if wielded by a monster). But then it needed to
change light radius when its curse/bless state changed, and it needed
message feedback when doing so, and that got kind of complicated. I
wouldn't have bothered if I'd known what I was getting into, but I don't
want to throw it away now that I've done all this work....
Sunsword now gives a light radius of 3 when blessed (same as a lit
lamp), radius of 2 when uncursed (same as a lit candle and as it has been
providing since added in 3.4.0), and a radius of 1 when cursed (nearly
but not completely useless, as mentioned above). Also, it now "shines"
rather than "glows" since we usually use the latter for temporary effects.
[the problem in the earlier rev was tracked to cleanup_burn(),
where arg was holding a (genericptr_t) timer id, and
passed directly to del_light_source() as is.]
P64 (Win64) has a 64 bit pointer size, but a 32 bit long size.
Remove some code that forced pointers into a long int, and
vice versa where information could be lost.
This part deals with light source functions and their
arguments mostly, and switches some arguments
from type genericptr_t to 'anything'.
P64 (Win64) has a 64 bit pointer size, but a 32 bit long size.
Remove some code that forced pointers into a long int, and
vice versa where information could be lost.
This part deals with light source functions and their
arguments mostly, and switches some arguments
from type genericptr_t to 'anything'.
Hide pointer formatting in alloc.c by eliminating the need for callers
to know how big a buffer is required. I generally prefer the caller to
pass in its own buffer for this sort of thing, but in this case the usage
is almost entirely for debugging so using static buffers results in less
clutter in the rest of the code.