This doesn't solve the <0,0> problem but it does prevent mnexto()
from using uninitialized coordinates if enexto() fails. It also adds
several debugging messages.
enexto() was ignoring map row #0 (unlike column #0, row #0 contains
valid map locations). Fixing that doesn't matter for Plane of Water
though since that row is stone there--that's probably a bug. It was
also repeatedly re-testing the top+1 and bottom rows and left and
right columns after they had already failed to be acceptable. It
still does some of that, but less.
Unfreed memory noticed after interrupting the fuzzer and quitting.
query_objlist() has an early return--for touching a cockatrice
corpse--that was skipping release of sortloot info (an array with
one element per object from whichever object list was being used).
Some formatting that's been sitting around for a while got mixed in
and I decided not to take that back out.
Leaving the Plane of Water to return to a previously visited endgame
level didn't free the air bubbles unless/until you visit a new level.
Returning to that level creates a new set of air bubbles, losing track
of the previous set. Likewise with Plane of Air and its clouds. (Not
an issue with actual save and restore when on those levels, or when
just moving forward to not-yet-visited levels.)
Not applicable to normal play where it isn't possible to return to a
previously visited endgame level.
For 3.7, bubble save/restore ought to become part of savlev() instead
of being handled by savegamestate().
If you died while Punished but with attached ball and chain temporarily
off the map (changing levels and when swallowed are the cases I looked
at; there may be others), the ball and chain objects would not appear
in bones (for the falling-down-stairs case; bones are never saved if
hero dies while swallowed) and they weren't being freed. Put them
back on the map so that they'll be included in bones and also freed as
part of normal map cleanup.
This caused a problem if the attached ball had state OBJ_FREE due to
being thrown rather than being temporarily off the map. 'thrownobj'
was being deallocated without first cancelling punishment, so uball
object was freed via thrownobj pointer but stale uball pointer still
referenced it. Unpunishing would introduce sequencing issues because
that would need to be after attribute disclosure. So instead of
deallocating thrown or kicked object, put it/them (can't actually have
both at the same time) back on the map. This has a side-effect of
saving thrown Mjollnir in bones if it kills hero when failing to be
caught upon return. (I thought that that had been fixed ages ago?)
Bones information for the current level was freed during save but not
at end of game. Have freedynamicdata() call savelev(,,FREE_SAVE) to
throw away current level instead of trying to duplicate the actions
that performs.
The #overview command can provide some feedback about levels loaded
from bones files; that data wasn't being released at end of game.
(There are two copies of that data, one set always in memory with
the overview data [final_resting_place field in the 'mapseen' data],
and another set with portions attached to each relevant level [via
level.bonesinfo]. Neither set was being properly freed; this only
addresses one of them, so far. The per-level data can probably be
eliminated--for post-3.6--since DUNGEON_OVERVIEW isn't a conditional
feature as it was when that was implemented.)
if one of the random objects happened to be a luckstone then
it and the explicit one got marked as a prize.
Following this change, only one will be marked as the prize,
but a follow-up on the order of things in mines.des may be
warranted to ensure it is the explicitly placed luckstone.
Air bubble movement on the Plane of Water manipulated <u.ux,u.uy>
directly when changing hero's coordinates, leaving steed with old
coordinates, resulting in dunking it when the old spot switched from
air to water. Switch to u_on_newpos() which moves the steed with
the hero and also handles clipping when the screen is too small to
show the whole map at once.
Make unpaid (shop owned, that is) globs show same weight information
as for-sale globs. And don't treat required arguments to globwt() as
if they were optional.
Verify that objects with the globby bit set are actually glob objects,
that their quantity is 1, and that their weight at least superficially
makes sense.
When using '/' or ';' and picking--not just viewing the autodescribe
feedback for--a space or '#' on the map, the game would produce
That can be many things (stone)
or
That can be many things (corridor)
unlike the usual
- the interior of a monster or a wall or an open door (wall)
when the symbol matched more than 4 things. I first changed it to
append the full sentence's missing period, but ultimately switched to
# can be many things (corridor)
so that the symbol that "many things" refers to isn't hidden. This
works better for ^P where player isn't looking at the symbol anymore.
There was a post-3.6.2 discussion on a forum where someone had
tried to copy the NetHack 3.6.2 exe file overtop of an
existing NetHack 3.6.0 playground, and then try to run it.
We have never suggested trying that, nor do we attempt to
provide any backward or forward compatibility between the
supporting files found in nhdat that would allow that. Any
particular version of NetHack expects to have matching
support files designed and matched to that version.
This adds optional support for helping to prevent the
opening of nhdat containing support files from an
unmatched version of NetHack.
If you #define VERSION_IN_DLB_FILENAME in your
platform's include/*conf.h file, it will use a
name such as nhdat362, instead of plain nhdat, and
will exit more gracefully than the fault/crash
mentioned in the discussion if it doesn't find the
file it is looking for.
Developers - please note that if you do
to cause NetHack to look for an nhdat* file with
the version info appended to the name, you will likely
have to modify your build/clean/spotless mechanics
beyond the C compile itself to properly deal with the
new generated file name.
When place_object() puts a non-boulder underneath a boulder, make it
put the non-boulder under all the boulders there rather than just under
the topmost one. Otherwise the map display will show the non-boulder
rather than the 2nd boulder if the top boulder gets moved away by some
means other than pushing. (Pushing explicitly brings lower boulder to
top of pile in order to try to push it next.)
Reproduce by: wish for boulder--it will drop. Drop something else--
the something-else will end up under the boulder. Repeat. The second
boulder will be on top but the second something-else will be next in
the pile, above the first boulder. Now polymorph into a giant and pick
up the first boulder, then move away from that spot. Map will show
second something-else instead of the remaining boulder.
This fairly simple fix should work reliably on new games since boulders
will end up being consecutive on the top of piles. For old games,
boulders after the topmost could be anywhere and still yield a display
glitch, but since that's all the problem is (I hope...), we ought to
be able to live with that until old games eventually go away.
[A map display glitch doesn't explain a corrupted 'uball' so this fix
doesn't solve that.]