Moving over at item that's resting on ice gives a message about there
being ice present and then about the item, whether mention_decor is On
or Off. With it On, you'll get a message about being back on solid
ground as soon as you leave the ice. With it Off you wouldn't get
that at all if not levitating; that's the basic no-mention_decor
behavior for ice. However, if you were levitating, you would get a
delayed "back on solid ground" message when moving over some other
object, which might occur quite a bit later. Autopickup handling is
calling describe_decor() when the hero is levitating and some of that
wasn't appropriate for no-mention_decor.
This issue has been present since I first implemented mention_decor,
not introduced by recent back_on_ground() changes.
Add pickup_stolen option to autopick items stolen from you by a nymph or
monkey, even if they don't match your normal autopickup settings.
Replace was_dropped, was_thrown with a 2-bit bitfield that can contain
values LOST_DROPPED, LOST_THROWN, and LOST_STOLEN (or 0), since they
should all be mutually exclusive anyway as they track the most recent
way the item left the hero's inventory.
[Rebase/merge conflict fixed up. PR]
This is based on a feature in UnNetHack (and I think some other variants
as well). If the hero intentionally drops an item with 'pickup_dropped'
disabled, don't autopick it back up when walking over that square again.
Typically when the player drops an item, it's because she doesn't want
it in her inventory any more, and this option stops autopickup from
defeating that goal (especially useful for tasks like stash management
without a container). Players have come up with workarounds to this
problem like toggling autopickup when approaching their stash pile or
adding name-based autopickup exceptions to allow them to exclude
individual items from autopickup, but this behavior should reduce the
need for those things.
I think 'pickup_dropped' is a little unfortunate because it suggests
equivalence to 'pickup_thrown' (i.e. any dropped items will be
automatically picked up regardless of autopickup exceptions). Calling
it something like 'nopick_dropped' might be better, but as far as I can
tell options cannot start with the word 'no' because it's interpreted as
a negation of the rest of the option name.
When picking up multiple items (or looting multiple items) in one
operation, only show encumbrance for the first item that causes that
to change instead of complaining about non-zero encumbrance on every
item. The very first item is treated as if it caused a change, so
you get "you have a little trouble lifting <obj>" even if you were
already burdened, same as before.
Only lightly tested.
Simplify suppression of highlighting for menu header lines during end
of game disclosure. Didn't actually affect as many things as I was
expecting.
Plus a bit left out of the optfn_dogname() parsing commit.
Instead of just accepting an attribute, it's now possible to
use a color, or both color and attribute, for example:
OPTIONS=menu_headings:inverse
OPTIONS=menu_headings:red
OPTIONS=menu_headings:red&underline
Default is still just inverse.
This lets the player change the menu heading color without
needing to use menu colors for them.
Also makes it so the core uses NO_COLOR instead of 0, for all
the menu lines which don't have any prefedefined color.
Tested for tty, curses, x11, qt, and win32
Put everything through a single function that can handle all the
complicated parts of using the correct proposition for different terrain
types, and will not just call things "solid ground" indiscriminately.
This got complicated but I'm not sure if it's possible to do it much
simpler while still using the distinct names for each type of terrain
(unless you are OK with the sentences sounding sort of wonky).
When moving off a body of water with mention_decor on, describe_decor()
would produce messages like "You are back on cloud", "You are back on
wall", and "You are back on air bubble." For those types of terrain
that were producing odd sentences like this, change the format to "You
are back in a cloud", "You are back in a wall", "You are back in an air
bubble", and "You are back in the air."
Modifying an() [actually just_an()] to treat "<thickness> ice" and
"frozen <hallucinatory liquid>" as special cases which shouldn't be
prefixed with "a" or "an" affected using something like "shaved ice"
or "frozen yogurt" as named fruit.
|a) shaved ice
|b) frozen yogurt (weapon in hand)
now have article "a" preceding them:
|a) a shaved ice
|b) a frozen yogurt (weapon in hand)
However, the existing cases
|c) iron bars
|d) an iron bars (weapon in hand)
still get item 'c' wrong. 'd' is slightly odd but that's because the
fruit name is ambiguous as to whether it's singular or plural.
Classify nearby ice as "solid" (no melt timer), "sturdy" (more than
1000 turns left), "steady" (101 to 1000 turns left), "unsteady" (51
to 100 turns left), "thin" (15 to 50 turns left), or "slushy" (1 to
14 turns left, matching walking on ice with the Warning attribute).
[I'm not thrilled with "steady" and particularly "unsteady".]
I was originally going to do this just for probing downward, but ended
up also doing it for look-here and getpos's autodescribe. It nearly
got out of hand and touched more files than anticipated.
'mention_decor' ought to treat moving from ice firmer than thin to
thin or slushy, from thin to slushy, from slushy to any other, and
from thin to firmer as if moving onto different terrain but I haven't
attempted to tackle that.
The melt timer could work more like a candle's burn timer, triggering
at intermediate stages and resetting itself, so that ice which changes
to a weaker state under the hero could be reported to the player. But
this doesn't implement that.
For Autoselect-all confirmation, accept yes|n|q (or yes|no|quit)
rather than just yes|n (or yes|no). An extra query routine is needed
to support it, but the existing paranoid_query() can just call the
new paranoid_ynq() with an extra argument, keeping things painless.
For menustyle:full plus paranoid_confirmation:Autoall, if you include
'A' in the class filtering choices then you're prompted for whether
you really meant it. (Same behavior as in the past few weeks.) Yes
auto-selects items matching all other chosen classes, or from all
classes if 'A' is the only choice. (Again, same behavior.) n|no
moves on to menu:full's second menu. If anything else was chosen
along with 'A', that's what the second menu will offer. (Same as
past few weeks but revised from initial implementation.) If 'A' was
the only choice, it will now use 'a' and offer a choice of everything
in the second menu. (That's a change; it used to cancel if declining
to honor 'A' and nothing else was present.) Now <return> without
answering or q|quit or ESC skips the second menu, whether or not the
rejected 'A' was the only choice made in the first menu. (New.)
Other paranoid confirmations still just accept yes and n|no responses,
treating ESC as n|no.
When paranoid confirmation for menustyle:full's "Autoselect all" is
enabled, it is handling yes vs no backwards.
The initial implementation had it right, then a negation got dropped
when it was expanded to support yes|no via paranoid_confirm:Confirm.
ESC is being treated as 'n' rather than as cancel. Fixing that will
take some more work. This just adds the missing negation to make 'y'
and 'n' behave properly.
An issue from nearly three years ago, reported by Anerag: asking
player whether to really pray isn't paranoid enough because it
accepts 'y' rather than requring "yes".
This changes it to require "yes" followed by <return> or <enter> if
paranoid_confirm:Confirm is also set. (A side-effect of that is
explicit "no<return|enter>" is required instead of just 'n' to
decline--for all the paranoid confirmations, not just for prayer.)
This extension of paranoid:Confirm applies to paranoid:AutoAll too.
A comment asks why paranoid_confirm:pray is different from the other
paranoid questions in the first place. The answer is that when it
isn't set, no confirmation prompt is issued at all. The others all
have y/n confirmation prompts when the corresponding paranoid option
isn't set.
Once upon a time there was a boolean option called 'prayconfirm' that
issued "really pray?" prompt when True. It was added after players
whinged about typing Alt+p when they meant to type Alt+o. When the
more advanced 'paranoid_confirmation' was introduced, paranoid:pray
superseded prayconfirm, but it still only issues a confirmation
prompt where there normally wouldn't be one rather than change an
existing one to require "yes<return|enter>" instead of 'y'.
Closes#303
If confirmation for menustyle:Full 'A' choice is on and player
chooses 'A' but answers no at the "Really autoselect All?" prompt,
just remove 'A' from the list of choices and act on the rest. If it
was the only choice, the menu operation will behave as if no choices
had been made. (That was the previous behavior even when other
choices were also present.) But when other choices have been made
along with 'A', use them without 'A': the normal second menu will
be put up, listing objects matching the specified classes and not
autoselecting anything.
Issue most recently reported by Xdminsy (previously reported by
others): it is too easy to accidentally pick choice 'A' in object
class selection menus for menustyle:Full. Previous change relevant
to this was to exclude choices 'A' and 'a' from being set by '.'
(choose all entries) and '~' (toggle all entries). That was an
improvement but doesn't help with pressing shift when meaning to
type 'a' by those who type faster than they cogitate.
This implements a suggestion by janne-hmp: add new choice for the
paranoid_confirmation option, 'Autoall' (synonym 'Autoselect-all').
If the player sets this and includes 'A' among the choices for
class selection, prompt to confirm whether to honor it. Like
confirmation for praying, it adds an extra y/n prompt rather than
change an existing y/n prompt into a yes/n or yes/no one. If the
player declines, then nothing is selected and the operation is
cancelled rather than putting the menu back up to choose again.
OPTIONS=paranoid_confirm:autoall requires at least two letters
('au') even if the 'a' is capitalized. paranoid_confirm:a means
confirm attacking peaceful monsters. And it should be
OPTIONS=paranoid_confirm:autoall pray swim
if someone just wants to add autoall to the default paranoid bits.
The Guidebook hasn't been updated to describe the new choice since
it seems likely that it might undergo adjustments.
Closes#1065
Use of select-all, select-page, toggle-all, and toggle-page in the
object class selection menu for menustyle:full excluded A (auto-
select all), a (all classes), B, C, U, X (bless/curse states), and
P (recently picked up) but allowed u and x (unpaid and used-up shop
goods) to be set. Treat u and x like the other pseudo-classes;
they have to be chosen explicitly rather than be set with . and ~.
Using the 'm' prefix with #tip was putting up a menu to pick between
one or more floor containers and 'choose from invent', but that
interfered with choosing Tip as a context-sensitive item-action for
carried container. Change 'm' to behave like it does with #eat and
\#quaff and several other commands: skip possible candidates on the
floor and go directly to picking something from inventory.
That prevents using 'm' to force a menu of
|a - <floor container>
|i - pick a container being carried
for any menustyle when there is one floor container. For menustyles
other than traditional, I think that's inconsequential; player needs
to answer 'n' for floor container and then get the choose-from-invent
prompt instead of 'i' and then choose. When there are two or more
containers on hero's spot, 'm' prefix isn't needed to get that menu.
Unfortuately using 'm' to override menustyle:Traditional is still a
thing players might want to do. Keep the prior behavior for that
style when multiple containers are present (dotip() already skipped
that menu despite 'm' when there was just one container). Use the
new behavior (skip floor containers) when one (or none) is present.
That's inconsistent but seems more useful than alternatives. It is
relatively unlikely that anyone who uses traditional non-menu item
selection will also use newfangled inventory item-actions so the menu
isn't likely to interfere with the latter. Update the Guidebook to
describe how Traditional differs just in case.
sound_verbal(char *text, int32_t gender, int32_t tone, int32_t vol,
int32_t moreinfo);
-- NetHack will call this function when it wants to pass text of
spoken language by a character or creature within the game.
-- text is a transcript of what has been spoken.
-- gender indicates MALE or FEMALE sounding voice.
-- tone indicates the tone of the voice.
-- vol is the volume (1% - 100%) for the sound.
-- moreinfo is used to provide additional information to the soundlib.
-- there may be some accessibility uses for this function.
It may be useful for accessibility purposes too.
A preliminary implementation has been attempted for macsound to test
the interface on macOS. No tinkering of the voices has been done.
Use of the test implementation requires the following at build time with make.
WANT_SPEECH=1
That needs to be included on the make command line to enable the test code,
otherwise just the interface update is compiled in.
I don't know for certain when AVSpeechSynthesizer went into macOS, but older versions
likely don't support it, and would just leave off the WANT_SPEECH=1.
If built with WANT_SPEECH=1, the 'voices' NetHack option needs to be enabled.
It was a bit strange, when I first started up the test, to hear Asidonhopo,
the shopkeeper, talking to me as I entered his shop and interacted with him.
The consolidation of global variables from scattered source
files into decl.c and declared in decl.h was begun in 3.7.0.
Their placement in common files was done for centralized
initialization and potential re-initialization during a
"play again" scenario.
It wasn't really necessary for all of them to be housed in a
single huge structure to meet the "play again" requirement,
and the single huge structure has been a little unwieldy when
it comes to maintenance.
Following this commit, instead of one single extremely large structure
named 'g' to house all of the relocated global variables, they
are distributed into several ga through gz.
To make things easy for the developer, each variable is placed
into the struct corresponding to the starting letter of the variable.
That way, no lookup is required in order to know which struct houses
a particular variable, it is a simple match to the starting letter
for all the centralized global variables.
A global variable named 'amulets', would be found in ga.
ga.amulets
^ ^
A global varable named 'move', would be found in gm.
gm.moves
^ ^
A global variable named 'val_for_n_or_more' would be found in gv.
gv.val_for_n_or_more
^ ^
A global variable named 'youmonst' would be found in gy.
gy.youmonst
^ ^
Short for distu(mtmp->mx, mtmp->my) (i.e. the distance between the hero
and the specified monster), which is a very common use of distu(). The
idea is that this would be a convenient shorthand for it; I actually
thought it (or something very similar) existed already, but couldn't
find it when I tried to use it earlier. Based on the number of uses of
fully-spelled-out 'distu(mtmp->mx, mtmp->my)' replaced in this commit
I'm guessing I just imagined it.
Instead of using index() macro defined to strchr, use C99 strchr.
Instead of using rindex() macro defined to strrchr, use C99 strrchr.
If you want to try building on a platform that doesn't offer those
two functions, these are available:
define NOT_C99 /* to make some non-C99 code available */
define NEED_INDEX /* to define a macro for index() */
define NEED_RINDX /* to define a macro for rindex() */
Issue reported by k2: tipping a wand of cancellation, bag of
holding, or bag of tricks from a non-magic container into a bag of
holding causes the bag of holding to explode but it wasn't dealing
out explosion damage nor being logged for livelog/chronicle the way
putting the item directly into a bag of holding is handled.
This fixes the described issues but bones handling leaves a lot to
be desired.
Fixes#875
Require a free hand when tipping a container into another container.
Presumeably you need to open the destination container and possibly
keep holding it open.
If you try to tip a carried container into an unknown bag of tricks,
apply the bag (once) instead of performing the tip. (To 'open' the
destination as above.) Possibly slightly confusing if bag is empty.
When tipping a container, always ask for the destination instead of
doing that only when carrying other containers. Confirming floor
as destination can be annoying but having to do that sometimes and
skipping that sometimes is aggravating because it is error prone.
And floor is preselected so can be chosen with space or return.
(I wanted to change the selector letter for floor from '-' to '.'
and then keep '-' as an unseen group accelerator, but the latter
doesn't work for PICK_ONE so I've left '-' as-is.)
Don't display "monsters appear" after tipping a bag of tricks.
Monster creation gives feedback these days. (Comparable to recent
"summon nasties" fix.)
For tipping purposes, a horn of plenty is treated like a container.
But using one as the source container in a container-to-container tip
wasn't supported. Implement that.
Also, #tip was offering carried bags of tricks as candidate containers
to tip some other carried container into. Only do that for ones which
aren't known to be bags of tricks (so when type not discovered yet, or
specific bag not seen yet due to blindness).
When tipping a magic-bag exploder from a sack or box into a bag of
holding, the choice of whether to call useup() or useupf() was
backwards. But nothing bad happened which is fishy.
Reported by k2: tipping one container's contents directly into
another container allowed transferring a wand of cancellation (not
mentioned: or a bag of holding or a bag of tricks) into a bag of
holding without blowing it up.
That's now fixed. There are other issues that this doesn't touch:
I think it's odd that you can transfer stuff from one carried
container to another but not from a carried container to a floor
container nor from one floor container to another one at same spot.
I didn't test shop billing so an not sure what happens when #tip
blows up a bag of holding and there are some unpaid items involved.
Using #tip on horn of plenty treats it like a container, but doing
that when it's carried doesn't offer the chance to tip its contents
directly into a carried container.
Tipping a carried container does not require free hands or even
limbs (for playability) but tipping such into another container
should require at least one free hand.
Fixes#872
The pull request included some changes that were neither accidental nor
unintentional, so only a subset of the changes from pull request #869
submitted by klorpa were manually applied.
behaviour -> behavior
speach -> speech
knowlege -> knowledge
incrments -> increments
stethscope -> stethoscope
staiway -> stairway
arifact -> artifact
extracing -> extracting
The uses of "iff" were left alone.
Close#869
Inspired by the diff from entrez. I didn't care for 'time'. I don't
like 'novelty' much either, but it is a little more accurate since
there is no time factor involved with just-picked-up.
Change trappers and lurkers above to remove digestion damage. They
fold themselves around rather than swallow the victim. There were
are lot of places that assumed that an engulfer which is an animal
would swallow and digest the victim. In hindsight, it might have
been simpler to take the M1_ANIMAL flag off of trappers and lurkers
above.
This adds a new digests() predicate for creatures with AT_ENGL+AD_DGST
(purple worm) and also enfolds() for AT_ENGL+AD_WRAP (both 't'-class
critters).
There are several minor fixes mixed in with this. I didn't record
them as I went along but the two I remember are
1) if poly'd into a holder and holding on to a monster, the '<' and
'>' commands refursed to work; release the held creature first
and then treat those commands as normal;
2) throwing a non-weapon while engulfed by an ochre jelly reported
"the <item> vanishes into the ochre jelly's /currents/".
This needs a lot more testing. I found and fixed multiple minor
details before my own testing burned out.
Using #loot with the 'm' prefix would claim there was nothing to loot
even if the hero was standing on a box, as long as there was no adjacent
monster. 'm' prefix is an explicit request to select a direction so
make it work regardless of whether a monster is there. Once I did that
I noticed that it was providing no feedback for using '.' or '>' as the
direction if no container was available, so adjust that to give the
"there is nothing here to loot" feedback.
This replaces the old pushq/saveq arrays (which were used to save
the keys pressed by the user for repeating a previous command)
with a new command queue. This means there's no hard-coded limit
to the saved keys, and it can repeat extended commands which are
not bound to any key.
A comment in allow_category states that if gold is explicitly selected
as a category, it should be included in the results regardless of what
other BUCX filters may have also been applied. That makes sense to me:
there's only one thing in the gold category, and it always has the same
BUCX status, so it's pointless to try to "filter" the gold category with
a BUCX filter. Considering it a "also add gold, on top of the filtered
results" category adds utility.
However, other categories which may include gold (specifically
justpicked; unpaid is in the code too, but that can't actually happen
in-game) were treated the same way: if the category included gold, no
filter could exclude it. As a result, if the hero had just picked up
gold, 'P'+'C', 'P'+'U', 'P'+'X', and 'P'+'B' all showed the just-picked
gold pieces -- there was no way to filter justpicked to exclude gold
the BUCX categories. This approach made less sense to me: justpicked as
a category may include gold, but filtering by BUCX actually has utility
there, and selecting it doesn't carry a "show me gold in addition to the
other filtered items" implication.
Maintain the same special treatment of selecting the coins category, but
drop it for justpicked and unpaid. In those cases whether gold is
listed in the justpicked result will depend on it not being filtered out
by the selected BUCX categories (and which one it belongs to, in turn,
depends on the 'goldX' option).
One of the drivers of this change was that screen coordinates require a
type that can hold values greater than 127. Parameters to the window
port routines require a large type in order to be able to have values
a fair bit larger than COLNO and ROWNO passed to them, particularly for
their use to the right of the map window.
This splits the uses of xchar into 3 different situations, and adjusts
their type and size:
xchar
|
-----------------------
| | |
coordxy xint16 xint8
coordxy: Actual x or y coordinates for various things (moved to 16-bits).
xint16: Same data size as coordxy, but for non-coordinate use (16-bits).
xint8: There are only a few use cases initially, where it was very
plain to see that the variable could remain as 8-bits, rather
than be bumped to 16-bits. There are probably more such cases
that could be changed after additional review.
Note: This first changed all xchar variables to coordxy. Some were
reviewed and got changed to xint16 or xint8 when it became apparent that
their usage was not for coordinates.
This increments EDITLEVEL in patchlevel.h
(user-side decisions really, but as it stands right now
user-side decisions/options are made and processed by the core)
add a parameter to add_menu so color can be passed
Switch to using a macro invocation Verbos(n, s) in place of the
flags.verbose checks.
Provide the mechanics for individual suppression of any of the
existing messages that were considered verbose.
Mechanics only - this code update does not provide any means of
setting the suppression bits.
iflags.verbose = 0
is still a master suppression of all the verbose messages.
iflags.verbose = 1
turns on the verbose messages only for those whose suppression
bit is 0 (not set).