<email deleted>
> comments: When dieing from an iron ball landing on your head, the death is
> listed as: "Crunched in the head by an iron ball"
> However no other deaths start with a capital letter.
Monks get a big penalty to hit when wearing a suit; otherwise they
get a bonus when not wielding a weapon. But as reported, that lets them
have their martial arts bonus even while wearing a shield which does seem
rather unexpected. This change makes them only get their to-hit bonus
while shieldless as well as weaponless. Impact on play balance is likely
to be quite small; late game characters hardly ever miss due to high luck
bonus and very early game ones won't have found a shield yet.
Shouldn't the "your armor is cumbersome" message be ``if (verbose)''?
Prevent #rub from wielding an item that is already being worn
(which should narrow things down to the various types of eyewear;
other tools and weapons that go through wield_tool() can't be worn).
Fix up the wield_tool message spacing in the process.
This moves wield_tool() from apply.c to wield.c. Some plural
handling for messages is included; it is feasible to try to #rub a
"pair of lenses" or a stack of N candles.
m_initweap() was trying to give him wands of fire and cold; since
he had no weapon attacks, he wasn't is_armed(), so this code never
got called.
This moves the code to m_initinv().
resulted in "That is a silly thing to [put on | wear]".
But those two cases really aren't so "silly", so adjust
the messages to better explain why the game objected
to the action and point new players at the appropriate
command.
Also adds a cmdassist message for the case where
'R' or 'T' have no appropriate items to point
new players to the correct command. (That can be
turned off with !cmdassist, of course.)
Also adds a const to a recent shade patch by request.
hold_another_object() will try to quiver the object being held if
it's a weapon (or gem/rock ammo) and the autoquiver option is enabled and
the quiver is empty. It was doing that even if the object had just merged
with primary or secondary weapon, resulting in it being equipped in two
slots at once. (Easiest way to reproduce it is via wish+wield+wish for
similar item, but it could also occur when stealing while in nymph form.)
This also addresses one of the old items on <Someone>'s list: if you
carry a sling equipped in the alternate weapon slot, include gems and
rocks as likely candidates for quivering same as when wielding a sling.
This extends that to autoquivering; ammo appropriate for your alternate
is now given preference over arbitrary weapons (ammo for your wielded
weapon and arbitrary missiles still take precedence over alternate ammo).
Bug? pickup_object() is not autoquiver aware, hence autopickup isn't
either.
Bug too (perhaps moot if the above is changed)? Snagging a monster's
weapon with a bullwhip uses hold_another_object() so possibly autoquivers;
snagging an object off the floor with a grappling hook uses pickup_object()
so doesn't.
This makes all unique monsters resist being given a name. Aside
from the Oracle, the four high priests are the only monsters affected
that weren't already being covered by the old tests. They might as well
decline to receive names too.
This also fixes a longstanding quirk that prevented you from
calling a type of object something if the representative sample of it
had been picked up while blind and you hadn't explicitly examined your
inventory since regaining sight. There's not much point in requiring
an extra 'i' command or use of '?' or '*' at the "what do you want to
call?" prompt, particularly since that makes gameplay be slightly
different depending on whether perm_invent is available and in use.
> Bug with flaming attacks...? These monsters should be unaffected,
> IMO.
>
> The fire elemental hits the stone golem. The stone golem is on
> fire!
fixed in patch
> The pyrolisk gazes at the flaming sphere... The flaming sphere is
> on fire!
This was already corrected in CVS.
For "traditional" menu style, pickup and #loot/apply can't accept an 'm'
response to bring up a menu upon request when all items involved are of
the same class, because the prompt where that response is allowed only
gets issued when multiple classes are present.
Also allow 'm' prefix for pickup.
For "traditional" menu style, pickup and #loot/apply can't accept an 'm'
response to bring up a menu upon request when all items involved are of
the same class, because the prompt where that response is allowed only
gets issued when multiple classes are present.
From the newsgroup recently: cause of death on tombstone and in
log file was "slipped while mounting a saddled Stockholm" (with horse
named after city). This fix will produce "slipped while mounting a
saddled horse called Stockholm" in that case.
Narrow openings are currently not checked for by hurtle_step() or
mhurtle_step. This has the consequence that you can jump or use
Newton's 3rd to get through somewhere you can't get through on the
ground, and monsters can stagger or be jousted through somewhere
they wouldn't attempt under their own steam.
This patch fixes hurtle_step(). It does not address mhurtle_step.
Wizard mode monster creation underwent several changes for 3.4.0
(explicitly create "tame <monster>", create a monster by class letter,
repeat the creation for N monsters) and one of them rendered the check
to prevent creating orphaned shopkeepers, temple priests, vault guards,
and worm tails inoperative. Put that back, and extend the control to
allow you to specify "peaceful <monster>" and "hostile <monster>" too.
This patch ensures that two-weaping stops if uswapwep gets cursed
while two-weaponing. I think this means the 'A' command will never
encounter the situation now in the complaint now.
See rules at top of wield.c.
Fix the problem From a bug report. An earlier fix (3.3.1)
made them be listed during final disclosure, but the points shown for
them actually got left out of the total due to misplaced brackets.
Rather than just fixing the brackets, merge the two inventory scanning
loops so that both passes will always be synchronized with each other.
Various damage types which wouldn't work when a cancelled monster
attacks the player were working when it attacked other monsters instead.
Besides attempting to fix that, this also makes cloaks and other magic
blocking armor ("magic cancellation factor") work for monsters similar
to the way it works for the player.
Most types of damage appear to revert to physical damage when the
attacker is cancelled; I'm not sure that's appropriate in many of the
instances. The leg-pricking case was clearly wrong, since it gives
messages about the attack failing yet still hurt the character.
This really needs a lot more testing than I have energy for. I've
tried to clean up various inconsistencies and may have made some typos
in the process.
> You're equally unlikely to be wishing for spellbooks by colour,
> but I note that 'grey' for 'gray' only works for dragonscale and
> stones, not the spellbook description.
Add the caveman, healer, and monk data.base entries supplied by
<Someone>, plus the healer one from <Someone>'s list of outstanding bugs and
requests. Every role now has its own entry. I left "dwarven caveman"
and "gnomish caveman" pointing at the generic dwarf and gnome entries
respectively, because the caveman quote feels to me to be more human-
specific than the earlier role ones have been.
I added blank lines to the monk quote to break it into paragraphs,
and made two minor tweaks to the text. I hope we can find or invent a
separate entry for Master Kaen though. Getting a quote that refers to
Buddhism for him seems wrong to me, but leaving the generic human one
now that there's a monk-specific one didn't feel right either.
I've moved a few quest guardians around this time. Deciding which
of them should yield the corresponding role entries and which shouldn't
involves judgement calls and I don't claim that the current situation
is now perfect.
<Someone> wrote: "Also, hobbits can't wear armour,
at least, you can't wear armour when polymorphed into a hobbit, even
though hobbits do tend to be carrying elven mithril-coats.
It's tempting to suggest adding an explicit exception in
sliparm() for elven mithril just to keep the Tolkienness."
- added a general routine for adding race-based /object
combination exceptions.
- hobbits can wear elven mithril-coats
Invoking the archeologist's Orb of Detection gave "you feel a surge
of power, but nothing seems to happen" if you were able to see invisible,
but various other ways of toggling invisibility give fade/unfade messages
in that situation. Also, you would get false reports of invisibility
changes if you invoked the artifact while temporarily invisible due to
potion or spell or while wearing a mummy wrapping.
- The code in xkilled failed to call spoteffects after killing the monster
that was engulfing you. Being expelled already worked correctly.
- While testing this, I discovered that removing a ring of levitation or
similar while engulfed would call spoteffects when it shouldn't. Fixed
that too.
Prevent a demon who is carrying the Amulet of Yendor from being
removed from the game when player meets his demand for a bribe since
that was effectively destroying the Amulet. There are various ways
to accomplish this; I chose to make the bribe demand be for an amount
that the player cannot possibly satisfy in that case.
Make timeout of temporary invisibility consistent with other
forms of toggling that state: you notice it even when you are able
to see invisible. (Invoking the archeologist's quest artifact is
still inconsistent in this regard.)
> Zapping a wand of digging at trees in ranger's quest gives a message
> "rock glows then fades".
There was code to handle this, but it didn't work due to the
definition of IS_TREE making checks for STONE be sensitive to code
ordering (STONE was checked first in this case).
#define IS_TREE(typ) ((typ) == TREE || \
(level.flags.arboreal && (typ) == STONE))
Why is it defined this way? Shouldn't STONE simply be converted
into TREE when arboreal levels get created?
Most callers of dropx did not check for altars, but should have. Rather
than add such checks, I moved the check from drop to dropx. I also found
several callers of dropx that could generate out-of-order messages for some
cases (not new) and fixed them. FYI - callers of dropy don't seem to want
altar checks or already do them.
Menu styles `partial' and `full' will let you remove any type of
item from the three weapon slots via the 'A' command, but `traditional'
and `combination' would only do that for the primary weapon slot. For
the alternate weapon and quiver slots, the item in question had to be
one which can normally be wielded or worn, otherwise when choosing the
object class letter you'd be told that it was "Not applicable." And
for wearable items, you needed to be really wearing one of that class
(besides the quivered one) or else you'd get "not wearing any amulet"
or similar.
Ahe 'A' command would not let you remove a cursed item from the
quiver or alternate weapon slot. But other commands such as drop or
quiver would let you get rid of such things since they aren't considered
to be welded in place the way a wielded weapon is.
This seemingly minor bug is more significant than first appears
because it opens a loophole to allow you determine whether any held item
is cursed: quiver it, try to remove it with 'A' and possibly be told
that it's cursed, really remove it with 'Q' if so.
Change tty extended command autocomplete, based loosely on <Someone>'s
patch, to allow you to type autocompleted characters. That is, you can type
characters the autocompleter inserted without invalidating the command.
I haven't looked closely, but at least some other windowport extended
command readers seem to already behave similarly.
- water elementals now get a special message when they land in lava
- rather than track down all places where non-moving monsters can end up in
lava (or water, not that it currently matters), add a check to mcalcdistress
to catch all such cases, once per turn.
As From a bug report.
- tengu is plural, some true rumors spelled it "tengus"
- Caveman quest messages shouldn't contain the word "human" since not all
cavemen are human, changed such messages in various ways
- fix a typo in a Wizard quest message
Part I: it's possible to use two-weapon combat while wielding a
lance (which seems odd to me); the second weapon would hit even if the
the first delivered a lance jousting blow that knocked the target away.
Part II: always getting the joust knockback effect when hitting
with a lance while mounted was too powerful; implement a suggestion
from the newsgroup that it be a random chance based on skill level.
Related: it's now possible to break your lance when hitting; when
adding that, I noticed that it was theoretically possible (didn't try
to reproduce) for a shattered boomerang or mirror to yield the stagger
bonus sometimes given for unarmed attacks.
<Someone> reported several incorrect death messages
1) "petrified by deliberately gazing at Medusa's hideous countenance" is
too long and won't fit on the tombstone. I reworded it, which also better
reflects that Medusa's gaze is really an active attack.
2) "killed by war hammer named Mjollnir" for partly identified Mjollnir now
says "killed by a war hammer named Mjollnir".
3) "using a magical horn on himself" was missing the "killed by" prefix
4) there were supposedly cases the the a/an article was missing after being
killed by a monster. I didn't see where this was occuring (eg AoLS resets
killer_format before it returns), but now done_in_by always resets
killer_format, which should address any such cases.
Prompted by a message to the list from <Someone> which noted that your
strength controls the traps effect, not the steed's strength, although the
messages say otherwise. Changed this case to use mintrap to determine what
happens.
teleds now needs to handle the case where an uncarried ball starts out
inactive, but becomes active as a result of teleporting out of a monster
while engulfed.
Soft "helmets" don't protect against falling rocks, but did protect against
piercers. Update the checks so only hard (metallic) helmets provide this
protection. The same report quibbled about using the word "helmet" for
soft head coverings. This patch does not address that quibble.
Fix the reported problem of getting impossible warnings for unpaid
inventory items during final disclosure if you level teleport out of
the dungeon while holding shop goods. The fix makes you trigger a shop
robbery first; that required a minor end of game change to prevent the
shopkeeper from seeming to tag along (shk would take your possessions
as if you'd died on the shop level).
Put in the missing parentheses that <Someone> reported; I don't know
how much that's going to impact experience calculations. Also, update
some related code that didn't reflect the increase in default speed
from 10 to 12 back in 3.3.0.
use get_adjacent_loc() rather than getdir() directly for some things where
you want to ensure valid adjacent coordinates are returned
<email deleted> wrote:
>>> [...]
>>> I've noticed that the loot adjacent spot code doesn't have any
>>> isok(x,y) test, so will risk crashing if used at the edge of
>>> the screen (whether deliberately, or accidentally due to being
>>> confused or stunned when picking the direction).
>> Would this not be a problem elsewhere, such as use_leash() too?
> Yes, that looks like the same risk. getdir() doesn't validate
> that the <u.ux+u.dx, u.uy,u.dy> is safe and neither does m_at(),
> so their callers need to.
>
> I did manage to provoke a crash with #loot on the plane of earth,
> although an accidental case would be a lot less likely to happen.