The persistent inventory window wasn't being updated if you toggled
the 'sortpack' option interactively. (The new setting was honored
once something else triggered a 'perm_invent' update.)
The logic for toggling 'fixinv' seemed backwards. I hope this "fix"
for that hasn't actually broken it.
I noticed the wrapping issue while testing out the 'bad fruit' fix,
then the other things while fixing it.
1) inventory entries too wide for narrow persistent inventory window
wrapped without any control; normally can't be seen except for the
last entry when the list is short enough to leave at least one line
available; it looked fairly reasonable with window borders Off, but
when On the last char of the first line and first char of second
line were clobbered by the border box;
2) when there were too many entries to fit within the height, those
after the last one which fit were appended to it for borders Off
(or written on bottom line and then overwritten by the border box
for borders On); noticed because the selector letter is highlighted
with inverse video, even when written at an unexpected place;
3) suppress the inverse video hightlighting of inventory letters since
they can't be selected from that 'menu';
4) for borders Off, the top line was left blank as if a border was
going to be drawn there;
5) since the entries are truncated due to the narrow window (on a
modest sized display), strip off leading "a", "an", or "the" prefix
for inventory entries (written to curses perm_invent window only);
lets a couple more characters of more interesting stuff be seen.
savebones() sets all the fruit indices negative, then resets to the
normal positive value for each fruit it actually writes into the bones
file. But if 'perm_invent' is enabled and something triggers an
update_inventory() while bones saving is in progress, object formatting
for the inventory display won't be able to find any fruits, resulting
in impossible "Bad fruit #N". Fix is to turn off 'perm_invent' when
the game ends, so it won't be On when bones are written. Disclosure
uses a popup for inventory so persistent window is obsolete by then
anyway.
[I don't know what is triggering update_inventory() while savebones()
is executing. Also, I don't see where the fruits whose index stayed
negative--because there aren't any on level being saved--get purged.
Maybe when those bones are loaded by another game?]
If a punished player picks up the iron ball, gets engulfed and
saves, then the saved game will have missed saving the dangling
chain since it was not on the floor or in the inventory. Upon
restoring the saved game, the game will be in a bad state since
the ball will be worn but the chain will be missing.
random_dir() for picking a spot to put a segment of a long worm's tail
(when it is being placed on the map, perhaps after teleport, not when
movement allows it to grow) had mistakes in three of the four compass
directions. The one for the top of the map was benign; it just
neglected to use the top row (#0). But it could pick a value off the
edge of the map for bottom and right or both.
This doesn't explain a couple of long worm [segment] oddities on the
Astral level because that level doesn't go all the way to the edge.
A couple changes dealing with overcrowded levels. So many monsters
are moving from the Plane of Water to the Astral Plane that the
latter can start out completely full.
Give monsters who trigger the endgame portals a 6/7 chance to not go
through ('home' elementals or any monster carrying the Amulet already
wouldn't go through). They should learn about magic portal trap in
the process and not voluntarily step on that afterward.
When the Wizard or other covetous monster tries to teleport next to
the hero and fails, he was being sent to limbo. There's no need for
that; he's already on the map and can just stay where he is. That
doesn't actually help with the endgame population issue, it just
fixes a couple of uses of mnearto().
I have significant changes for mnearto() and elemental_clog() that
also help with this but will test those more before committing.
when carrying things. The fuzzer toggled on 'perm_invent' and after
interrupting it I used ^I. Having 'perm_invent' enabled makes the
inventory code avoid having a totally empty inventory display (by
supplying "Not carrying anything" instead--in the menu rather than
via normal pline) so that interface code will see a change and know
that an update is needed. But to decide whether the menu was empty,
the inventory code was testing union 'any' field 'a_char' to check
whether some item had used the union (implying that something had
been passed to add_menu()), but wizidentify (^I) uses field 'a_obj'
instead. Apparently the a_char bits stayed 0 because the menu ended
up with "Not carrying anything" after a list of inventory items.
Switch to a separate variable to track whether anything has been put
into the menu instead of trying to rely on the union.
Unrelated but noticed when checking other "Not carrying anything"
instances, the #adjust command ends early when there's no inventory
but it was asking for a letter to adjust even when the only thing in
inventory was gold in '$' slot, which isn't allowed to be adjusted
away from that slot. Treat gold-only like no-invent.
Express the logic of various early returns more consistently.
clone_mon() wasn't handling mon->isminion correctly. I'm not sure
whether it is actually possible to clone a minion (maybe after
polymorphing it into a gremlin or blue jelly?). When it wasn't tame,
which is the case for every minion other than the guardian angel on
Astral, the emin structure wasn't being allocated for the clone but
its isminion flag was left set.
Also, clones inherited mon->mtrack[] so would unnecessarily avoid
moving onto spots the original had recently moved across.
Cloned pets are inheriting various pet-specific fields that they
probably should be starting with a clean slate on but I haven't made
any attempt to address that.
Observed on a text file with crlf endings on Linux, where the
so-called blank lines weren't being ignored as they should
have been, despite there being a line to remove \r from the
end.
A pointer was being pre-decremented before the check for a
matching whitespace character.
and receiving a random amulet instead of an "amulet of <foo>".
Although the failure to produce the 'right' amulet wasn't a regression
compared to earlier versions as the report indicated, supporting that
wish is straightforward.
Even though it isn't using verbalize() to make a specific statement,
don't let a demon ask the hero for a bribe when the hero is deaf.
Also, give alternate setup messages in a couple of places where a
divine voice is overriding deafness.
Recent commit 5d59b288c9 changed monster
zapping a fire horn at self to cure sliming to not use the wand-zap
feedback routine, but inadvertently did for zaps of wands of fire too.
Use the zap routine for wand and play-instrument routine for horn.
Most of the entries for '?' looked awful because curses was using
((terminal_width / 2) - 2) for the window width ('- 2' was to make
for for a border around the popup window, regardless of what the
'windowborder' option was set to). Splitting text that has been
manually formatted for 80 columns "worked" but looked bad when not
required.
Some of the help files are using 79 characters on a few lines,
producing wrapped text when displayed. Those would look better if
limited them to 78 or if curses can be modified to suppress the
window border when the entire display is being covered by a popup.
Recent fuzzer tweak had an unintended side-effect: NUL character is
used to indicate a mouse click and we weren't setting up fake value
for one of those. Go back to avoiding NUL when obtaining a random
value for user's keystroke.
tty ignores map column #0 (0-based index), like the core, and draws
the map in screen columns 1 (1-based index) through 79, leaving screen
column 80 blank. curses was drawing all 80 map columns and since #0
was always unused, screen column 1 was blank and the map was shown in
2 through 80. Change curses to work like tty.
This was too easy; there may be problems lurking. One known issue: it
should be made smarter about when clipping/panning is necessary since
it thinks that a full 80 columns are needed but 79 suffice.
A recent change to make_slimed() overlooked a different recent change
in how mon->m_ap_type and youmonst.m_ap_type are referenced. In this
case it had no impact; fix on general principles.
Prevent the fuzzer from randomly toggling the 'silent' option. If
you use the default value of True then this eliminates most--but not
all--of the beeping that happens when it is running. I'm not sure
where the remaining beeps are coming from.
Modify the random keystroke selection to implement some bias towards
direction keys that I thought had already been there, plus a higher
chance to entering digits to initiate number responses.
Like #annotate, #name monster, #name individual object, and #name
object type are places where it makes some sense to have an existing
name be the default for the new name, in case taking off from the end
and/or adding to the end is more convenient than retyping everything.
When there is an existing name used as default, clearing that default
and hitting <return> is not enough to remove the name, you still need
to 'assign a new name' of <space> to do that.
Messages on tty which bypass message history weren't handling long
lines properly. If the text wrapped to line 2, that continuation
portion was left on the screen after whatever operation that put it
here was finished. (To reproduce: assign a long name to a monster
with a long type name so that the combined length exceeds the display
width, then move the cursor over it with ';' or '/' while autodescribe
is On.)
This time prompting isn't adversely affected.
This effectively reverts 1ad2415315
because it was interfering with prompts that spanned more than one
line (by inserting '--More-- + erase' between displaying of prompt and
getting input for the answer).
So we're back to the situation where autodescribe feedback when moving
the cursor will leave text on the second line if it generates text too
wide for one line. (^R redraws the screen correctly.)
For wizard mode 'monpolycontrol', the getlin() answer buffer for the
"Change <monster> @ <x,y> into what kind of monster?" prompt is also
used to format the coordinate portion of that prompt, so when
EDIT_GETLIN is enabled getlin() was inadvertently given "<x,y>" to use
as default response. Clear it after the prompt is formatted instead
of via an initializer. Also, shorten the prompt on the first try:
"Change <monster> @ <x,y> into what?", expanding to the old prompt if
retry is needed.
This also allows specifying 'chameleon' when <monster> is a chameleon,
'doppelganger' when it's a doppelganger, and 'sandestin' when it's one
of those (but not 'doppelganger' when it's a chameleon or sandestin,
and so forth), instead of blanket refusal to accept any non-vampire
shapechanger as the choice.
Messages on tty which bypass message history weren't handling long
lines properly. If the text wrapped to line 2, that continuation
portion was left on the screen after whatever operation that put it
here was finished. (To reproduce: assign a long name to a monster
with a long type name so that the combined length exceeds the display
width, then move the cursor over it with ';' or '/' while autodescribe
is On.)
The wizard mode runtime option 'wizweight' appends an object's weight
to its formatted description, but that was skipped for globs on the
assumption that it had already been included. But that inclusion only
happens in shops so most globs lacked weight feedback.
One of the claims in #H8849 was that a monster which zapped a wand
that the hero had fully identified made hero's knowledge of it revert
to "a wand". That doesn't happen; it had to have been a different
wand which hadn't been seen up close yet. But the hero should lose
track of known number of charges if a wand is zapped outside his/her
view. When implementing that I noticed that a monster playing a fire
horn to burn away slime was using the routine that gives wand
feedback. Add a separate, similar routine for magical horn feedback.
Half this diff is due to moving a naming support routine from mhitm.c
to do_name.c.
EDIT_GETLIN is more complicated on curses than on tty due to way that
long lines are handled....
Using ESC to get rid of the default response removed it from the
answer buffer but didn't erase back to the end of actual prompt,
making it look as if it was still there. Fixing that for a one-line
prompt+answer was needed and would have been easy but it also needs to
be prepared to go back to prior lines. Both the prompt and the answer
could conceivably span lines although in practice it will usually just
be one line or else prompt+answer combined spanning to a second line.
This hasn't been exhaustively tested been seems to be working correctly.
Fix a couple of glitches and add an enchancement. The monster
attributes structure left the 'hidden' field uninitialized unless user
specified "hidden". Mimics were being flagged with mon->mundetected
because they pass the is_hider() test but they 'hide' by taking on an
appearance rather than being unseen due to mundetected. hides_under()
monsters fail the is_hider() test, but can become mundetected if there
is at least one object present. Eels/other fish are neither is_hider()
nor hides_under() but can be mundetected at water locations. So alter
'hidden' handling to deal with these various circumstances.
Asking for 'hidden' for any type of creature will result in having its
location be highlighted if it can't be actively seen or detected. So
using '2000 ^G piranha' will fill up the Plane of Water "normally" but
'2000 ^G hidden piranha' will result in a ton of draw-glyph/delay/
draw-other-glyph/delay sequences and take a painfully long time. Moral
of the story: don't combine 'hidden' with a large count unless you
want to spend quite a while watching the level's fill pattern. Turning
off the 'sparkle' option will cut the flashing in half but still take
a long time. If you really need to fill a level with hidden creatures
and can't bear the flashing/highlighting, use blessed potion of monster
detection or #wizintrinsics to have extended detect. Then all created
monsters will be seen so none will trigger location highlighting.
If you create a 'stalker' or 'invisible stalker' or 'invisible <other-
mon>' its location won't be highlighted, but for 'hidden stalker' or
'hidden invisible stalker' or 'hidden invisible <other-mon>' it will
(provided you don't actually see it due to See_invisible or sensemon()).
Fixes#197Fixes#195
Add a call to nonl() to tell curses not to convert carriage return (^M)
to newline. Line input accepts both ^J and ^M as end of line/end of
input, but the core's command processing treats ^M as "unknown command"
(by default; someone could use the BIND option to assign some command
to that character). The end result is that accidentally pressing the
<return> or <enter> key (or Ctrl+M key combination) won't make the hero
run towards the bottom of the screen as if the user had typed ^J. The
curses docs also claim that it allows more optimization during screen
updating by making ^J work as plain linefeed rather than ^M^J newline.
The tty interface can achieve this (the 'do not convert ^M to ^J part',
not the 'more optimization' part) by issuing the command 'stty -icrnl'
(on Unix or sufficiently Unix-like system) prior to running nethack,
but that has no effect when using the curses interface (at least with
ncurses on OSX where I've tested it).
A better fix would be to look up the current terminal settings at
program startup and only call nonl() if -crnl was in effect so that
curses and tty would behave the same in this regard, but curses is
supposed to let us avoid those sorts of messy details....
Fixes#198
Watching a monster try to switch from a cursed weapon to some other
weapon (of any bless/curse state) reported that the old weapon was
welded to the monster's hand and wouldn't switch to the new one.
But watching a monster try to wield a cursed weapon didn't say that
it was becoming welded at the time. Report correctly pointed out
that the weld-to-hand check wouldn't work unless the weapon was
already flagged as wielded, and the code in question was deferring
wielding so that the message wouldn't include "(weapon in hand)" in
the formatted object description. There was also another problem:
it was erroneously testing the monster's old weapon (if any, after
unwielding it), instead of the new one being wielded.
Also, Sunsword starting to emit light when first wielded by a monster
only reported that it was shining if hero could see the monster.
Give an alternate message if hero sees the location instead. (Just
the monster's/Sunsword's location rather than any newly lit spot
within Sunsword's radius.)
Throwing or kicking a lit lamp, lit candle, or lit potion of oil
wasn't giving off any light as it travelled to its destination.
Now it does, and dungeon features, objects, or monsters that are
temporarily seen as it moves from square to square till appear on
the map. In the monster case, they go away as soon as the light
moves beyond range, but when it finishes moving the "remembered,
unseen monster" glyph will be drawn at their location. I think that
part has some room for improvement, but mapping temporarily seen
terrain features is the primary impetus for this change.
Also, any message delivery while the "lit missile" travelled still
showed its light around the hero. Noticeable for lamps or stacks
of sufficient candles if hero has no other light source.
This cannibalizes the monst->mburied bit for temporarily seeing a
monster. It has been present but unused for ages. I needed to
replace a couple of vision macros to make sure they didn't examine
it any more so that overloading for transient lighting doesn't
introduce any vision oddities. For version $NEXT, monst->mtemplit
can be given its own bit. It is only set during bhit() execution
and cleared by the time that returns, so has no effect on save files.
When looking at something else I stumbled across this. Using #turn
is described as chanting a formula but was allowed even if hero wasn't
able to speak due to strangulation or speechless polymorph form.
Also, the check for whether a potential target monster was in range
used 'cansee(mx,my)' which required the hero to be able to see but
not necessarily to be able to see the target. I've changed that to
'couldsee(mx,my)' on the assumption that it was intended to prevent
\#turn from operating through walls.
Also, the comment about the effective range was wrong. I changed the
comment to match the code rather than vice versa.
While testing, I noticed that I could completely fill the Water level
with air elementals.
Hero can't fly or levitate or water walk into/onto water locations
on Water level without drowning/crawling out the water, and monsters
shouldn't have been able to but could, then they were hit by drowning
since minliquid used different criteria than movement. But goodpos(),
used for teleport destination and new monster creation among other
things, consided water locations acceptable on that level for
non-aquadic creatures with Fly/Lev/Wwalk ability.
It explains why so many dragons and other 'nasty' monsters have been
ending up on the vanquished monsters list when hero uses level
teleport to go directly there from level 1. They've either been
getting created in water and then they drown when it's their turn to
move or moving into it to approach the hero and drowning (not sure
whether that case is immediate or on next move). There's no message
since hero doesn't see it, and air elementals didn't drown since thy
don't breathe.