If for some reason a shop room has multiple doors, try all of them
to find a good shop door, instead of just the first one, and failing
if it wasn't a good one.
This only matters for wizard-mode with SHOPTYPE environment var.
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
^ ^
Indent all labels one space. Having uniform placement makes spotting
them much easier. (Having no indent at all would impact the change
bars of 'git diff'. Those display the last unindented line--which
doesn't start with punctuation--occuring before each band of changes,
so usually the name of the function being changed now that we no
longer have unindented K&R-style function argument declarations.)
While in there, shorten or split various wide lines and replace a few
tabs with spaces.
Teleporting a monster only updated the map. Give a message
so blind players can get the same information.
Making a monster invisible gives the same message, if you
cannot detect invisible.
Several other places where monsters teleported themselves
now also give the same message.
This evolves and hopefully eases the game-build requirements by
removing game-compile dependencies on any header files generated
by the makedefs utility, including:
date.h dependency and its inclusion is removed and comparable functionality
is produced at runtime via new file src/date.c.
pm.h dependency and its inclusion is removed and comparable functionality is
produced by moving the monster definitions from monst.c into new header
file called monsters.h and altering them slightly. The former pm.h header
file #define PM_ values are now replaced with appropriate emitted enum
entries during the compiler preprocessing.
onames.h dependency and its inclusion is removed and comparable functionality
is produced by moving the object definitions from objects.c into new header
file called objects.h and altering them slightly. The former onames.h header
file #define values are now replaced with appropriate emitted enum entries
during the compiler preprocessing.
artilist.h has been slightly altered, and the former onames.h artifact-related
header file #define ART_ values are now replaced with appropriate emitted enum
entries during the compiler preprocessing.
makedefs can still produce date.h (makedefs -v), pm.h (makedefs -p), and
onames.h (makedefs -o) for reference purposes. They won't be used during
the compiler.
The other uses for makedefs remain. They are used to prepare external
file content that the game utilizes, not prerequisite code for the
compile:
makedefs -d (database)
makedefs -r (rumors)
makedefs -h (oracles)
makedefs -s (epitaphs, engravings, bogusmons)
date.c
Pull the code for date/time stamping from mdlib.c into date.c.
Set date.o to be dependent on source files, header files, and .o files
so that date.o is rebuilt from date.c when any of those changes, thus
ensuring an accurate date/time stamp. It also includes git sha
functionality formerly done by makedefs writing #define directives
into include/date.h. For unix it passes the git info on
the compile line for date.c (via sys/unix/hints/linux.2020, macOS.2020)
nethack --dumpenums (optional, but on by default)
Allow developer to obtain some internal enum values from NetHack
without having to resort to an external utility such as
makedefs.
Uncomment #define NODUMPENUMS in config.h to disable this.
The updates to sys/windows/Makefile.gcc have not been tested yet.
Shop population code set the mimic shape to strange object
without checking for protection from shape changers.
Let set_mimic_sym (via makemon) handle it correctly instead.
This themed room boasts two shops, a weapons and an armor store,
that can generate in a number of different configurations.
Makes the random corridor joining routine obey unjoined areas.
Fixes a bug in shopkeeper naming routine, where multiple shops
of the same type on the same level might reuse the shopkeeper name.
This is modified and consolidated commit from xNetHack by
copperwater <aosdict@gmail.com>.
The plan is to unify special room filling code and cause special rooms
to be filled as the very last stage of level creation. Since this will
occur after fixup_special, it was necessary to address the one remaining
piece of code in there that affects special room filling. (The Medusa
code remaining in there doesn't have to do with special rooms.)
Instead of trying to figure out in core whether to change a minetown
food shop to health food shop for monks, just figure it out in the
minetown level creation script.
When a food shop gets converted into a health food shop (minetown
when playing as a monk), the shop type and underlying room type
weren't changed to match.
Health food stores use a special "vegetarian class" of items,
which mkobj doesn't understand. Just make the mimic use a random
item class in that case.
Fixes#113
Incorporate the contents of pull request #113 to fix shopkeeper setup
for irregularly shaped shop rooms. Code intending to adjust the Y
coordinate was erroneously incrementing the X one instead. (I'm not
sure whether we have any irregular shops at all but if so, they don't
have the necessary orientation to trigger this bug.)
And add a couple of formatting tweaks in the vicinity....
Most shop messages use shkname() to give the shopkeeper's accurate
name (or hallucinatory substitute) even if he or she can't be seen.
stolen_value() was using mon_nam(), which calls shkname() if the
monster is a shopkeeper who can be seen, but produces "it" when not
seen. Change it to use shkname() like the rest of the shop routines.
Also, replace Monnam() (quite a few instances) with new Shknam() to
do the same duty when the name is at the start of a sentence.
There was also a very obscure bug where if you could see two
shopkeepers at the same time, you could probe the map one spot at
a time with repeated use of the 'p' command to locate monsters in
general and other shopkeepers in particular. Very tedious and not
very useful, but now fixed.
Fix some more of the complaints from clang's static analyzer. The one
in options.c (manipulating warnings symbols) appears to be an actual bug.
All the rest are either because the analysis isn't quite sophicated
enough or outright bogus.
Two of them appear to be because a static routine is attempting to guard
against callers in the same file failing to pass in required output
pointers. Stripping away the check for missing pointer should convince
the analyzer that those output parameters always receive a value. We'll
see once the analysis is eventually re-run....
The automated reformatting put a space in casts of the form
'(type)(expression)', yielding '(type) (expression)', but it didn't
do that for '(typedef)(expression)'. There are lots of instances of
'(boolean)(expression)'; (uchar) and (xchar) also occur. I haven't
noticed other types, but I haven't looked in very many files yet.
I'll push a formatting guide at some point. There may still be
outstanding changes, but please feel free to resolve those as you arrive
a them.
To the best of my knowledge, there is no changes to the actual code
content, but the formatter does have the occasional bug. If you run into
an issue, please fix it!
modified: src/shknam.c
modified: src/trap.c
modified: src/zap.c
While polymorph was clearing the name because poly_obj
actually creates a brand new obj and copies field values
over, water_damage does not so the name persisted on
the blank spellbook. In this case, that isn't really
appropriate. Clear the name.
Ensure that cancellation has no effect on these
ordinary books.
Make the second-hand bookstore an option for holding
the book tribute item too.
From a bug report, if you rob a shop, let the
angry shopkeeper catch up with you outside his shop, escape to another
level with adjacent shk tagging along, then pacify the shk by paying him
off, he will dismiss kops on the present level and return to his shop
but when you return to his shop level there'll still be kops chasing you
there. This fix adds an extra flag to the eshk structure so that kops
can be dismissed a second time when the shk migrates back to shop level.
The first dismisal (on the "wrong" level) still takes place in case any
kops are around. Neither dismissal actually occurs if there happens to
be another angry shk present on the level where dismissal is being done.
There was an issue reported where save files between different
versions of a manufacturer's compiler were incompatible because the time_t
ubirthday field was changed from 32 bits to 64 bits.
32 bit time_t implementations will break at 19:14:07 on January 18, 2038.
64 bit time_t implementations will break at 23:59:59 on December 31, 3000.
This removes the dependency on the size of time_t from the save file.
The ubirthday field is no longer embedded in struct you.
This also adds two general purpose routines to hacklib.c, one to convert a time
value to a 14 character char representation and the other to convert that
back to time_t. Those are used by the save/restore routines.
This is a savefile breaking change, so editlevel in patchlevel.h was
incremented.
shknam.c had the same comment typo as the one just fixed in do_name.c.
In the process of fixing it, I noticed that the prefix usage for Janet's
name didn't match that comment. And in the process of fixing _that_, I
promoted several names from being port-specific to general and added a few
missing ones. There was no attempt to be comprehensive; I'm sure that lots
of port team members' names are still missing.
The devteam feedback was to place casts in the code
in question.
This puts explicit casts on some code that was being
compiled into 'int64' then stuffed into smaller types with
VC2005.
The code to have Izchak recognize the Candelabrum of Invocation
instead of just being uninterested in an item not stocked in his shop was
being skipped when the character is hallucinating. Make it work for any
lighting store (slash'em sometimes has another candle shop, run by a
randomly named shopkeeper), and make it recogize Izchak even when
hallucinating. Also, have him give a message about the need for 7 candles
if the candelabrum doesn't already have them attached.