In addition to C99=1 on the make command line, also allow
C89=1 or C11=1 or C23=1.
NOTE: Those won't all lead to a successful build of NetHack,
and the use of C23=1 (-std=c2x) will only be valid on recent
compiler versions (clang-15, for one, accepts it).
CSTD can be manually set near the top of src/Makefile, util/Makefile
or by including c99=1 or C99=1 on the build make command line if
using the linux.370 or macOS.370 hints files.
This iteration:
Places the resulting bundle folder off the top of the tree, rather than as a subdirectory of src.
Leaves the Applescript files out for now.
Builds the Info.plist (for now) via hard-coded values in the Makefile.
Builds the bundle launch script on the fly at make-time.
I think this revision may be working, at lease on my test machine.
There are more improvements to be done.
Have 'make clean' and 'make spotless' in 3.7 cleanup include/tile.h
from 3.6. Otherwise use of 'cc -I../include -I../win/share' in
util/Makefile will get 3.6's include/tile.h instead of 3.7's
win/share/tile.h; use of FDECL() causes the old header to break when
used in various tiles utilities.
This creates a new target 'bundle' for make on macOS, when using
sys/hints/macOS.370.
The 'bundle' recipe:
- creates a subdirectory of src called 'bundle', and creates
a bundle (nethack.app/ etc) below that.
- the executable that is placed inside the bundle
(bundle/nethack.app/Contents/MacOS/nethack) will find resources
within the bundle, including the sounds, so a manual placement
of the sounds into your '~/Library/Sounds' is no longer
required when using the executable that's inside the bundle.
- the sounds are included in the bundle if a soundlib option is
chose at build time (for example 'make WANT_MACSOUND=1'), such
that the bundled executable supports sounds.
- the executable inside the bundle seems to find the resources
it needs, even if invoked through a symlink elsewhere that points
to the executable that's inside the bundle (only limited testing of that
has been done).
- at some point, its probably appropriate to add a
'mv bundle/nethack.app <proper location>', possibly under
a subsequent 'make install' step.
- right now, the bundle step has a dependency on 'update'. I don't
know if that's the right ordering or not, yet.
make WANT_MACSOUND=1 update
make WANT_MACSOUND=1 bundle
or, you can probably get away with:
make WANT_MACSOUND=1 bundle
if the nethack bundle is the goal anyway.
make clean
will clear the bundle subdirectory and everything below it.
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.
cppregex.cpp recently had `#include "extern.h"' added as the last
quoted include. That gets set to "" while collecting dependencies,
then preceded by a space when output. So the unexpected trailing
space was new and wasn't caused by a change of awk versions as I
was suspecting. This removes it.
Start to add supporting code to windsound and macsound. The latter
remains commented out because I haven't had a chance to try
it on macOS yet.
In order to test it out, I added two more stock sounds:
sa2_xplevelup and sa2_xpleveldown.
Makefile.src didn't know about 'sndprocs.h' yet.
Something weird is going on with 'make depend'. It has started
adding a trailing space to
|$(TARGETPFX)cppregex.o: ../sys/share/cppregex.cpp $(CONFIG_H)
(actual trailing space omitted here). It's repeatable. I don't
understand it and have not tried to fix it, just removed the space
from the generated Makefile before putting into place as modified
Makefile.src and making this commit.
Move pieces of the Makefile hints sound-related changes that
are not macOS-specific from sys/unix/hints/macOS.370 to some new
include files. The WANT_MACSOUND block stays in
sys/unix/hints/macOS.370 because it is system-specific.
Before this change, the various Makefiles were assembled via
hints files macOS.370 or linux.370. Both were using included
portions from the following files in the sys/unix/hints/include
directory, in this sequence:
-INCLUDE multiw-1.370
-INCLUDE multiw-2.370
-INCLUDE compiler.370
-INCLUDE multiw-3.370
-INCLUDE cross-pre.370
-INCLUDE gbdates-pre.370
-INCLUDE gbdates-post.370
-INCLUDE cross-post.370
After this change, the various Makefiles will still be assembled
via hints files macOS.370 or linux.370. They will continue to use
included portions from the following files in the
sys/unix/hints/include directory, but with three additional
include files related to sound and soundlibs. This is the new
sequence:
-INCLUDE multiw-1.370
-INCLUDE multiw-2.370
-INCLUDE compiler.370
-INCLUDE multiw-3.370
+ -INCLUDE multisnd1-pre.370
-INCLUDE cross-pre.370
-INCLUDE gbdates-pre.370
+ -INCLUDE multisnd2-pre.370
-INCLUDE gbdates-post.370
+ -INCLUDE multisnd-post.370
-INCLUDE cross-post.370
The include mechanism continues to allow common portions that can
be shared between macOS and Linux to be maintained in a single
place only, with minimal duplication. Now, that has been extended
to include Makefile lines related to sounds and soundlib.
rename display_gamewindows() to init_sound_and_display_gamewindows()
(I know that's getting pretty long-named).
move activate_chosen_soundlib() into init_sound_and_display_gamewindows()
from moveloop_preamble().
Also included was a missing break in a switch related to sounds.
Use macOS AppKit framework routines for a first cut at a
macsound soundlib interface.
Requires WANT_MACSOUND=1 on build.
Nothing has been done to move the stock sounds into the resources
of a bundle, so after building, if you want to try the stock sounds
out:
cp sound/wav/*.wav ~/Library/Sounds
Because the NSSound macOS routines always do the search, supposedly
the following locations are searched in this order:
1. the application’s main bundle
2. ~/Library/Sounds
3. /Library/Sounds
4. /Network/Library/Sounds
5. /System/Library/Sounds
Although not specifically implemented as of yet, it may be pretty
close to being able to put soundeffects wav files (by se_ name)
into ~/Library/Sounds working for the SND_SOUNDEFFECTS_AUTOMAP feature.
Feedback is welcome. Contributions for improving it are even more
welcome.
The new soundlib supporting file is named
sound/macsound/macsound.m since it's got objective C in it.
Known bugs and glitches:
The Hero_playnotes on a set of 5 notes goes too fast, so there
needs to be a slight delay added between the note of a multi-note
play.
Groundwork for a more versatile interface for using
sound libraries. A lot of sound libraries work across
multiple platforms.
The current NetHack sound stuff is quite limited.
Binaries can have a variety of window ports linked into
them, and it makes sense to have something similar for
sound.
This tries to set things up in a more soundlib-centric way,
rather than inserting things in a platform-centric way.
It establishes a new top-level directory sound (akin to win
for the window interface routines, or "window-port") where
sound-related additions and sndprocs and support files can be
added and used across platforms.
The default interface is nosound and the 'nosound' interface
is in src/sounds.c
The interface for 'windsound', which contains the same minimal
USER_SOUNDS support using built-in routines that has been in the
windows port for a long time is added to
sound/windsound/windsound.c.
For now, the sound interface support for 'qtsound' has been added
to the existing Qt files win/Qt/qt_bind.h and win/Qt/qt_bind.cpp,
and a note has been placed in sound/qtsound/README.md to avoid
confusion.
New header file added: include/sndprocs.h.
A number of C compiler suites have a math.h library that includes a yn()
function name that conflicts with NetHack's yn() macro:
"The y0(), y1(), and yn() functions are Bessel functions of the second kind,
for orders 0, 1, and n, respectively. The argument x must be positive. The
argument n should be greater than or equal to zero. If n is less than zero,
there will be a negative exponent in the result."
At one point, isaac64.h included math.h, although that has since been removed.
Some libraries used in NetHack (Qt for one) do include math.h and that required
build work-arounds to avoid the conflict.
Rename the NetHack macro from yn() to y_n() and avoid the math.h conflict
altogether, eliminating the need for that particular work-around.
A recent commit to alloc.c by Keni drew attention to the fact that
there are extern prototypes scattered around in various .c files.
Those can make use of ATTRNORETURN (non-gcc compilers and C23) the
same way the prototypes in extern.h can, and they were overlooked
when ATTRNORETURN was first added.
Instead of just plain old boring mazes, spice up Gehennom by
occasionally adding lava, iron bars, or even mines-style levels
(with lava, of course).
Of the fixed Gehennom levels, only Asmodeus' lair has been changed
to add some random lava pools.
Also some lua fixes and changes:
- Fixed a selection negation bounding box being wrong.
- Fixed a selection negated and ORed returning wrong results.
- des.map now returns a selection of the map grids it touched.
- When using des.map contents-function the commands following the
map are not relative to it.
Also includes support by paxed for polearm targeting using the
frame color.
Also renames USE_TILES to TILES_IN_GLYPHMAP which is a more
accurate description.
Not all window interfaces have full support for the color framing
of the background square yet.
MS-DOS needs further work (to bring it to both VESA and VGA, with
and without tiles.
Windows GUI is missing support.
X11 and Qt have been started, but may require further refinement.
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
^ ^
The test system is Slackware 14.2, which uses Qt 4.8.7.
* WANT_WIN_QT4 is defined, and has the expected meaning. Qt 5 is still
the default.
* The QT_NO_SOUND macro now excludes all headers and declarations
relating to sound; the multimedia package is not needed to build
(on any Qt 4, 5 or 6).
* A new function, nh_qsprintf, replaces QString::asprintf, for Qt
older than 5.5. These versions do not have QString::asprintf.
* DYNAMIC_STATUSLINES is disabled for Qt older than 5.9. These versions
do not have QSplitter::replaceWidget.
Using '-u name' rather than '-uname' was being treated as '--usage'
for any value of 'name'.
'-uname' worked as intended unless name was 'sage' (or leading
substring of it). That's still the case after this fix, where the
space after -u is now necessary for that special case name.
Instead of using a compile-time macro to suppress inclusion of the
menu entry to show UNIX command-line usage in the help menu, use a
sysconf setting instead.
Default is HIDEUSAGE=0, to include the entry for command-line usage.
Set HIDEUSAGE=1 to exclude that. Does not affect 'nethack --usage'
if player actually has access to the command-line.
Write up a description of how the command line works on UNIX and put
that in new file dat/usagehlp. Add support for
|nethack --usage | --help | -? | ?
to display it and exit.
Also add a menu entry for nethack's help command to show it during
play. That can be suppressed by uncommenting new '#define HIDE_USAGE'
in config.h since it won't be useful on servers that don't give
players access to command lines.
New genl_display_file() just writes to stdout. opt_usage(), which
calls it, might need some suid/sgid handling to make sure the output
is done as the player rather than as nethack.
doc/nethack.6 is already out of date again.
For Unix, set plname[] to the default value (player's username)
before running prscore() for 'nethack -s'. Avoids reference to
mysterious "hackplayer" if no entries are found.
1. remove all window interface bits from compiler.370, and have
the preceding include files set some variables to control
the behavior of compiler.370 when it comes to c++.
2. some more common Makefile lines into sys/unix/hints/include/multiw-3.370.
3. make it so you can pass cppregex=1 on the Make command line to build with
sys/share/cppregex.cpp instead of posixregex.c
4. fix sys/share/cppregex.cpp so that it will build with clang compiler
(required an additional header include). I don't know if it would have
worked with g++ without that change. The include can be placed into an #ifdef
block if there's an issue with the change on other compilers.
5. Anything that needs to compile using c++ (Qt, sys/share/cppregex.cpp) can
just ensure that CPLUSPLUS_NEEDED Makefile variable is set above the lines
in compiler.370 to ensure that things get set up for c++. It no longer
checks specifically for Qt. That is what sys/unix/hints/include/multiw-2.370
does now.
Add a 3rd multi-window include file that comes after compiler.370.
Relocate a small section of Makefile lines common to both macOS.370
and linux.370 to multiw-3.370.
Also relocate a section near the tail of compiler.370 that really
has nothing to do with compilers or compiler flags, but was
related to Qt which is one of the supported multi-window interfaces.
Now, the only usage of GCC_WARN is for the guard of PRINTF_F in wincurs.h.
This guard can be removed safely, as PRINTF_F is already used unconditionally in extern.h.
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() */