I started out just to replace the weird partial expression in the
maybe_display_usteed macro but ended up cleaning up some other stuff
such as line wrapping.
There are still tabs present.
* derek-elbereth:
ensure that the 'safe' objects remain safe
finish up the changes to trigger erosion on use
initial pass for toning down Elbereth
Conflicts:
dat/castle.des
dat/sokoban.des
include/extern.h
src/engrave.c
src/mklev.c
src/monmove.c
src/zap.c
Suppress close to 400 warnings generated by gcc on the win/X11/*.c code,
most due to -Wwrite-strings which makes string literals implicitly have
the 'const' attribute. (Since modifying a string literal results in
undefined behavior, that is an appropriate check to have enabled, but
it can be troublesome since string literals have type 'char *' and code
that uses them that way is correct provided it avoids modifying them.)
113 warning: initialization discards qualifiers from pointer target type
127 warning: assignment discards qualifiers from pointer target type
29 warning: passing argument discards qualifiers from pointer target type
109 warning: unused parameter
12 warning: comparison between signed and unsigned
The nhStr() hack casts to 'char *', explicitly removing 'const', for
situations where it isn't feasible to make code directly honor const.
The vast marjority of uses are for the second parameter to XtSetArg(),
which is a macro that actually performs an assignment with the second
argument rather than passing it in a function. It takes values like
'XtNtop', which doesn't need to be altered (although in many places I
changed that to nhStr(XtNtop) for uniformity with the surrounding code,
and 'XtNbottom', which does need to have the extra const stripping to
avoid a warning. Go figure.
The nhUse() hack actually uses its argument in a meaningless way if the
code is compiled with FORCE_ARG_USAGE defined. When GCC_WARN is defined,
FORCE_ARG_USAGE will be enabled if it hasn't been already. Example:
/*ARGUSED*/
int foo(arg)
int arg; /* not used */
{
+ nhUse(arg);
return 0;
}
The extra line will expand to ';' when FORCE_ARG_USAGE is not defined
or too
nhUse_dummy += (unsigned)arg;
when it is. I figured direct assignment might lead to a different
warning by some compilers in a situation like
nhUse(arg);
nhUse(otherarg);
where the first assignment would be clobbered by the second, and using
bitwise operations or safer '+= (arg != 0)' would most likely generate
more non-useful code. Some tweaking might turn out to be necessary.
modified files: include/hack.h, src/decl.c, sys/unix/Makefile.src
Groundwork for cleaning up the X11 sources, where gcc with the option
settings specified in the OSX hints file currently generates close to
400 warnings for win/X11/*.c.
lint.h is included by hack.h, and I've moved the debugpline stuff from
the latter to the former to hide it better. (By rights it belongs in
debug.h or something of the sort, but I didn't want to go that far.)
Makefile and project dependencies need to catch up.
nhStr() hides a cast to char *, and is intended to by used on string
literals where it isn't feasible to maintain the 'const' attribute.
(A pernicious problem with X11 code, where the include situation can
become very convoluted, and many, MANY string literals are hidden
behind macros to look like keyword-type tokens.)
nhUse() can be used to force a fake usage on something which triggers
an unused parameter warning. There are a 6 or 8 or 10 places in the
core code where that applies, but so far I have't touched any of them.
There's a tradeoff since it will result in some worthless code being
generated and executed, but is much simpler than tacking on compiler-
specific workarounds like '#pragma unused' or gcc's __attribute__ hack.
are being flat-dumped into save file and this causes segfault in restore()
whenever data segment layout changes (e.g. global variables added/removed).
bmask should either be stored with the objects.
Remove the code that converted statues shown as monsters into stautes
shown as big rocks when saving and then reversed the effect when
restoring. It was done to preserve save file compatability with 3.4.3
where statue-as-monster glyphs didn't exist, so is no longer useful.
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
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.