Dying in a shop while carrying partly eaten food would place that food
on the floor without marking it no_charge. But marking it that way
wouldn't have helped because as bones data gets saved, every object on
the level has its no_charge flag cleared. So 'no_charge' needs to be
explicitly set for partly eaten food in tended shops as a bones level
gets loaded.
Most of the shk.c diff is reformatting, but it does change the
get_pricing_units() routine to lie that the quantity is zero for
partly eaten food so that when multiplying with price it won't matter
whether the price has been forced to zero or been left non-zero.
One of the comments for pull request #234 mentions that the colors
for sleep and poison are backwards. Yellow dragons had green breath.
Green dragons would have had yellow breath if they used the normal
zap symbols, but they use the poison cloud one which is green so
they had green breath. I rarely have color enabled and had never
noticed. (At the moment I can't find where the switch from zap to
cloud is being done.)
Pull request #234 is based on #231, about control of the shield
effect animation when resisting. But it changes struct flags so
would break 3.6.x save file compatibility.
Fixes#235
For initial options under curses, specifying 'DECgraphics' as a
boolean rather than as 'symset:DECgraphics' wasn't overriding the
new default 'symset:curses'. Since previously DECgraphics was
rejected for curses, it's possible that no one noticed.
Primary and rogue symbols were being set to default if primary hadn't
been given a value, possibly clobbering rogue symbols if those had
been given a value. Initialize them independenly.
Return early from curses_convert_glyph() if the value doesn't have
the 8th bit set since it now deals exclusively with DECgraphics
handling. Force a sane value for returning early on rogue level.
Change the way symbol sets are loaded to make them have the same order
as they appear in the symbols file rather than being reversed.
Revise dat/symbols so that the new ordering yields a result similar
to the old ordering, more or less. I've added a few set descriptions.
The only substantive change is marking DECgraphics as primary-only
(not available on rogue level) and adding new set DECgraphics_2 which
is commented out near the end.
Define symbol handling H_MAC since one of the sets specifies
'handling: MAC'. All H_MAC is used for now is to avoid showing
MACgraphics as a symset when compiled without MAC_GRAPHICS_ENV (which
was used for pre-OSX Mac by the old code in sys/mac/), so it will be
hidden for everyone.
I left handling H_CURS even though curses doesn't implement anything
for it. It could do something when rendering the map or assign a
function to 'cursesgraphics_mode_callback' for special init or both
but hasn't needed to. Since curses is now supporting DECgraphics,
define 'decgraphics_mode_callback' for it. No value is being
assigned so that doesn't do anything; curses seems to be setting up
the primary character set as text and secondary one as line-drawing
without the need for that hook.
With the added set descriptions, 'O's symset menu looked horrible for
curses due to the way curses decides to set the width of menus and
the resulting line wrapping which took place because of a too-narrow
menu. I've added a chunk of code to the options handling code which
shouldn't really be there but makes the menu much easier to read.
Lastly, do some formatting cleanup in files.c.
Move a declaration that became mid-block when a preceding 'if () {'
got removed to top of block suppress warning about C99 feature.
Add new entry for the curses symset change to fixes36.3.
This time I'm putting things in as-is before making a few tweaks.
The pull request was three or four separate changes. I used the
patch instead so they've been collected into one commit.
Highlighting for monsters shown due to extended monster detection and
for lava shown in black and white didn't work because that keys off
of 'iflags.use_inverse' (actually a macro for 'iflags.wc_inverse') and
curses wasn't enabling that window-capability option. To be fair, it
was probably unconditional at the time the curses interface was first
developed. It checked for whether a monster was supposed to be drawn
with inverse highlighting but wouldn't draw it that way because the
flag was always false. Inverse b&w lava is relatively new and curses
hadn't been taught about it.
Various other things such as pets (if hilite_pet is on) and object
piles (if hilite_pile is on) get highlighted with inverse video when
use_color is off, regardless of whether use_inverse is on or off.
That's probably a bug.
Fixes#230
Incorporate github pull request #230, support for DECgraphics-style
line drawing in the curses interface. I've rewritten the
curses_convert_glyph() part so that it doesn't require C99 and
doesn't reinitialize its pair of arrays for every character written
to the map. The DECgraphics conversion is now a straight char for
char one, DEC line drawing code to ACS, without regard to what map
symbol is intended or what 'cursesgraphics' uses for that symbol.
In launch_obj, the code first got the trap, then called ohitmon
(which can delete the trap by doing mondied -> fill_pit ->
flooreffects -> deltrap), then after that used the trap variable.
Trigger a land mine while being polymorphed into a monster that
automatically hides (eg. scorpion). Have the statue on the land mine
shatter and all items on that square scatter away. Avoid falling
into the pit left by the land mine.
For the DECgraphics symbol set, down ladder is the greater-than-or-
equal-to character as intended and up ladder is less-than-or-equal-to,
but comments in dat/symbols had their descriptions transposed.
If you chat with a peaceful gnome while hallucinating, you might
get a silly message from the TV show South Park.
To make it work for non-gnome characters, I changed the speech of
monsters who normally just grunt (gnomes, orcs, ogres, a couple
of other groups) to full humanoid when the hero is hallucinating.
(It already does that for orcs if the hero--hallucinating or not--
is an orc and for gnomes when the hero is a gnome.)
... when the guard is angry, and he's in the vault or in his corridor,
you're not in the vault nor in his corridor, and the level is full
so the guard cannot relocate.
If mksobj() was told to initialize the object it's creating and the
object class was something it didn't understand, it would issue a
warning and return Null. But an unknown object class is a severe
internal error and very few callers were prepared to deal with a
Null result, so change mksobj() to panic instead. Also eliminate the
few attempts to deal with Null result that are present in mkobj.c;
I didn't go looking elsewhere.
Noticed while investigating the message loop. If I had level files
from an interrupted game and was asked "Destroy old game?" when
starting a new one, answering 'n' left the terminal in an unusable
state. Executing 'stty sane' (invisibly since input echo was off)
repaired things but the user shouldn't have to do that.
Change unixtty.c's error() to shut down windowing if that has been
initialized. This might need some tweaking for tty, which will now
clear the screen before showing the startup error message. Other
systems besides unix use unixtty.c so are affected, but I think the
change doesn't introduce anything that should cause trouble (aside
from the potential screen erasure).
Sword given to angels used obj->spe = max(obj->spe, rn2(4)) [except
using a temporary to sanely work with max() macro]. But the obj was
explicitly created as no-init, so obj->spe was always 0 and the max()
was pointless. Shield given to angels was manipulating bless/curse
state directly instead of using the functions intended for that, a
no-no and also pointless to be clearing 'cursed' for a no-init item.
Mace for priests had useless handling for object creation failure.
Object creation failure could only happen if the mksobj() call had a
valid entry in objects[] (or out of bounds access that didn't crash)
for an object class that it doesn't know how to handle. That can't
happen unless somebody screws up big time. If it ever did happen,
it would have produced a memory leak.
Report #H9243 misinterpreted W_WEAPON as W_WEP and attributed a
hypothetical ball and chain sanity checking problem to that.
Rename the former to W_WEAPONS to emphasize that it includes
alternate/secondary weapon and quivered stack as well as wielded
weapon.
Scatter did not consider the ball or chain, and moved them around, causing
ball and chain sanity error.
One way to trigger was being punished, with chain on a land mine and having
a monster trigger the mine. Now the chain will shatter, unpunishing the hero.
I had this in place at one point but must have accidentally undone it
before deciding that yesterday's patch was finished. Defer fetching
'pw' until it's needed.
Fixes#26
Report stated that the attempt to look up the player's username
(on Unix) failed (reason unknown) and nethack refused to allow the
player to execute the #explore command even though sysconf was set
to use character names (CHECK_PLNAME=1) instead of user names.
Setting EXPLORERS to "*" overcomes this glitch, but the fix moves
a bit of code around to honor CHECK_PLNAME before fetching username
so that that isn't necessary.
I ended up doing some formattng clean up (replace tabs with spaces,
whitespace cleanup in 'port_insert_pastebuf()'). The actual change
to fix#26 is only a few lines.
the return value from condition_size() was unused so
eliminate an unused variable warning and rename the function
to better reflect that it updates tty_status[NOW][BL_CONDITION].lth
Another part of github issue 227. Casting a function pointer when
passing it to another function is iffy when lying about the return
type. tputs() expects a routine which returns int, so give it one.
Other xputc() usage is equivalent to putchar(), so define xputc()
with the same function signature as that has.
The tputs() declarations in system.h should probably be changed
(third argument is a function which takes an int rather than
unspecified parameters) but I've left them alone. I made that change
to tputs() in sys/share/tclib.c though.
NT and MSDOS changes are untested. tclib.c compiles ok with clang-
as-gcc on OSX but hasn't been tested with the port that uses it (VMS).
Fixes#227
Travel, <ctrl><direction>, <g|G><direction> all stop on engravings,
but <shift><direction> told the player what the engraving said and
kept going. The message output is buffered until map update or
another message, so player couldn't tell where hero was at the time
the engraving got shown. Make <shift> running stop on engravings.
More from github issue 229: mark routines in util/dlb_main.c which
don't return as such and add some 'break' statements for compilers
that don't have support for that.
Another part of github issue 229, mixtype() didn't have either 'break'
or '/*FALLTHRU*/' separating healing from extra healing, extra healing
from full healing, and full healing from unicorn horn. So dipping
"bad" potions (sickness, confusion, blindness, hallucination) into
healing/extra healing/full healing or vice versa operated the same as
dipping a unicorn horn into the bad potion (producing fruit juice for
sickness and water for the others). It wasn't clear from the code
whether or not that was intentional. It actually seems reasonable
(albeit suboptimal use of {plain, extra, full} healing), so continue
to allow it and make the code clear that it's intentional.
Fix the first part of github issue 229. sortloot_classify() tries to
group musical instruments separately from other tools, but missing
'break' in a 'switch' prevented that from happening--they were mixed
together.
Since that grouping isn't documented anywhere, only source divers
would ever notice that it wasn't working as intended.
when polymorph causes loss of levitation boots or water walking boots
while over water. If discarding stuff while trying to crawl out got
rid of the taken-off boots, they wouldn't be in inventory any more
when break_armor() tried to drop them after taking them off.
when attempting to crawl out of water fails and hero is life-saved
or wizard-/explore-mode player declines to die. If the hero is saved
by positioning him/her one step further away from ball and chain,
teleds() tries to drag them, but if 'emergency disrobe' left the hero
stressed or worse, dragging fails. Ball and chain were being left
where they were, with chain no longer being adjacent to hero.
If drag_ball() fails, have teleds() teleport ball and chain to hero's
new spot, same as when that isn't within range of a one step drag.
A couple of early returns could result in temporary windows getting
left around instead of being released for re-use, which in turn might
lead to a panic due to lack of available window slots. The first
one is accompanied by an 'impossible' warning which no one has ever
reported and the second one could only happen if data file 'keyhelp'
was missing, so panic due to either of these is hypothetical as far
as released versions go. Somebody making modifications could run
afoul of either of them though.
query_category() - switch from early return to 'goto' so that the
temporary window used for a menu will always be destroyed;
whatdoes_help() - defer creating the display window until after the
data file has been successfully opened so that early return won't
need any window cleanup.