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.
Add 17 fake objects to objects[], one for each object class. All
specific color as gray. They're grouped at the start--actually near
the start since "strange object" is still objects[0]--rather than
being among the objects for each class. init_object() knows to start
at [MAXOCLASSES] instead of [0]; other code that loops through every
object might need adjusting.
For potions, non-stone gems, and non-novel/non-Book_of_the_Dead
spellbooks that don't have obj->dknown set, display the corresponding
generic object rather the object itself. Fixes the longstanding bug
of seeing color for not-yet-seen objects whose primary distinguishing
characteristic is their color. Walking next to a generic object
while able to see its spot will set dknown and redraw as specific.
It's slightly disconcerting to have objects change as you reach them;
I hope it's just a matter of becoming used to that. (If there is any
code still changing the hero's location manually instead of using
u_on_newpos(), it should be changed to use that routine.)
Most of the new tiles are just a big rendering of punctuation
characters. The potion, gem, and spellbook ones could be cloned from
a specific object in their class and then have the color removed. I
started out that way but wasn't happy with the result. I'm not
artisticly inclined; hopefully someone else will do better. Each of
them is preceded by a comment beginning with "#_"; the underscore
isn't required, just being used to make the comments stand out a bit.
Invalidates existing save and bones files.
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.
Allow the preferred sort order for the vanquished monsters list to
be specified in the run-time config file
|OPTIONS=sortvanquished:X
where X is t, d, a, c, n, or z. It can also be set to 'A' or 'C'
but those aren't documented and aren't offered as choices when
setting the value interactively, which can be done via 'm O' or by
using 'm #vanquished'.
Guidebook.mn has been updated but Guidebook.tex is lagging again.
Keep track of how a role|race|gender|alignment option got its value
so that role:!Tourist in .nethackrc and role:!Priest in NETHACKOPTIONS
yield 'role:!Priest' rather than merging into 'role:!Priest !Tourist'.
It also doesn't write the value into new config file for #saveoptions
if that value comes from environment or command line (not applicable
since the command line arguments for role,&c don't go through options
handling). Also, the old config file value takes precedence over
the current game's value file so that 'role:random' doesn't become
'role:Healer' or such in a new config after the random value gets
picked for play.
This only tracks the role, race, gender, and alignment options but the
concept could be extended to all options. The data would need to be
saved and restored if values set interactively need to be retained in
restore sessions (doesn't apply to role,&c since those don't change
during play).
Redo the details about giving or suppressing "with great effort you
push the boulder". It works the same except that if push a different
boulder than previously, you'll get a new message. If you do it
while riding, you have the same lack-of-message for successive pushes
instead of getting a message every turn.
Don't exercise strength when pushing a boulder if poly'd into a giant.
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
^ ^
Monster purple worms can now gain intrinsics from swallowing foes whole,
so maybe the hero should be able to do so too. Intrinsics aren't
granted immediately upon swallowing (that would probably have been
easier), but only once a corpse is created and then entirely digested.
I'm not sure if this is too powerful and was being avoided deliberately
for that reason, since it includes potential level gain from wraith
corpses in addition to other intrinsics. That's consistent with monster
purple worms but may be a bit too much in the hands of the hero, though
it is limited by needing the corpse creation roll to succeed.
Fix a bunch of "suggest braces around initialization of subobject"
warnings from clang. If gcc didn't warn about these before, it might
start complaining about too many braces now.
It doesn't attempt to do anything about missing field initializers
because I'm not seeing any warnings for those.
initoptions(), including initoptions_finish(), was running to
completion with the default window system before windowtype from the
command was parsed and activated. When the default window system
is tty without MS-DOS the map type gets set to ascii; command line
--windowtype:X11 doesn't switch it back to the X11 default of tiled.
So,
| NETHACKOPTIONS=windowtype:X11 nethack
ran nethack in tiles mode but
| nethack --windowtype:X11
ran it in text mode (assuming .nethackrc left tiles vs text with the
default setting).
I think this fix is quite iffy but it seems to work as intended....
It reclassifies '--windowtype' as an "early option" in unixmain.c,
and the options.c code ultimately processes it twice.
The monster knockback could mess with the monster linked list while
the code was going through it for monster movements. (For example,
a monster knocked back another into a level teleport trap)
Add iter_mons_safe, which first grabs all the monster pointers in
the list into an array, and goes over that array instead of relying
on the "next monster" pointer. This is possible because dead monsters
are not removed from the linked list until after all the monsters
have moved.
Testing is very minimal, and I'm not sure the vault guard check
for migration is correct - it should probably check for more states?
Also the iterator could be improved by not continually allocating
and freeing the monster pointer array.
This replaces the old pushq/saveq arrays (which were used to save
the keys pressed by the user for repeating a previous command)
with a new command queue. This means there's no hard-coded limit
to the saved keys, and it can repeat extended commands which are
not bound to any key.
Change the inner workings of the experimental TTY_PERM_INVENT.
Switch to delivering the content to tty for the experimental perm_invent
via the existing window port interface (start_menu(), add_menu(), end_menu).
This also adds a new window port interface call ctrl_nhwindow() for
delivering information to the window port, and/or obtaining specific
information from the window port. The information and requests can
be extended as required. To be documented later once the changes settle
down.
Due to the intrusive nature of these changes and the possibility of
some bugs in the new code, I'm going to leave TTY_PERM_INVENT commented
out in the repository for a day or two. Anyone wishing to test it out
can do so by uncommenting TTY_PERM_INVENT in config.h.
This starts the tty perm_invent just in time later in the
startup rather than initializing it with the other
game windows.
This also splits the duties:
The core will inquire from the window port about how many
inventory slots it can fill.
The core will handle figuring out the inventory text and
inventory letters, and will do the traversing of internal
data structures like obj chains, and passing customization
options on to the window port.
The window port will look after placing each inventory slot's
text at an appropriate location on the screen.
This, in theory, makes the core-portion available for
window ports other than tty to use, though none currently do.
The decision of what goes in an inventory slot is all left up
to the core with the update_invent_slot interface.
Documentation updates will come later, not at this time.
Add a rudimentary experimental always-up inventory display
capability to tty when the perm_invent option is in effect.
It requires an additional 28 rows available on the terminal
underneath the bottom status line.
It hasn't been optimized for performance as of yet.
Switch to using a macro invocation Verbos(n, s) in place of the
flags.verbose checks.
Provide the mechanics for individual suppression of any of the
existing messages that were considered verbose.
Mechanics only - this code update does not provide any means of
setting the suppression bits.
iflags.verbose = 0
is still a master suppression of all the verbose messages.
iflags.verbose = 1
turns on the verbose messages only for those whose suppression
bit is 0 (not set).
starting screen (Issue #783)
On 2022-06-01 12:22 p.m., NetSysFire wrote:
> Steps to reproduce:
>
>1. Get any prompt and answer it. In my case it was a horribly old
> save I forgot about or when I wiztested something and forgot
> about that save, too.
>2. See that the copyright information got overwritten by the prompt:
>
>There is already a game in progress under your name. Destroy old game? [yn] (n)
> By Stichting Mathematisch Centrum and M. Stephenson.
> Version 3.7.0-59 Unix Work-in-progress, built May 31 2022 12:28:31.
> See license for details.
>
>
> Shall I pick character's race, role, gender and alignment for you? [ynaq]
>
> Expected behavior:
>
> Redraw after a prompt was answered, so the prompt vanishes and the
> entirety of the starting screen will be shown.
>
> NetHack, Copyright 1985-2022
> By Stichting Mathematisch Centrum and M. Stephenson.
> Version 3.7.0-59 Unix Work-in-progress, built May 31 2022 12:28:31.
> See license for details.
>
>
> Shall I pick character's race, role, gender and alignment for you? [ynaq]
>
> Proposed severity: low. Not gamebreaking, it is cosmetic only and does
> not have any other consequences.
>
The Copyright notice is placed by tty internal routines writing onto
the BASE_WINDOW fairly early in the startup sequence.
The prompt to "Destroy old game? [yn] (n)" is using the in-game
routine to write to the message window at the top of the screen and
prompt there, just like in-game prompts and messages.
If the player answered 'y' to that, the prompt for
"Shall I pick character's race, role, gender and alignment..."
appeared immediately after. That one, however, is written using
the BASE_WINDOW routines in tty, like the copyright notice.
This change does the following:
It moves the copyright lines down a little bit leaving room for the
"Destroy.." prompts.
It places the "Shall I pick characters's..." prompt further down the
screen by default, leaving some room for about 3 raw_print startup
messages after the copyright notice, just in case there are any.
The "Shall I pick character's..." prompt will still appear immediately
if there is a prompt such as "Destroy old game?..."
There were a couple of other issues around raw_print startup messages
too. Those are delivered using a raw_print mechanism to ensure they
are written even if the window-port is not fully operational. However,
they were only on the screen for the blink of an eye. This call
sequence in restore.c made them disappear almost immediately:
docrt() -> cls()
Put in a mechanism to detect the presence of raw_print messages
from the early startup, and if there were some, wait for a
keypress before obliterating the unread notifications.
Now that the garbage collection problem has been fixed, record lua
warnings in the paniclog file rather than showing them on the screen.
Move nhl_warn()'s warnbuf[] to struct g in case restart ever gets
implemented so that it can be cleared if the restart occurred while
a warning message was under construction.
A new feature, enabled by default to maximize testing, but one which can
be disabled by commenting it out in config.h
With this, some additional information is added to the glyphmap entries
in a new optional substructure called u with these fields:
ucolor RGB color for use with truecolor terminals/platforms.
A ucolor value of zero means "not set." The actual
rgb value of 0 has the 0x1000000 bit set.
u256coloridx 256 color index value for use with 256 color
terminals, the closest color match to ucolor.
utf8str Custom representation via utf-8 string (can be null).
There is a new symset included in the symbols file, called enhanced1.
Some initial code has been added to parse individual
OPTIONS=glyph:glyphid/R-G-B entries in the config file.
The glyphid can, in theory, either be an individual glyph (G_* glyphid)
for a single glyph, or it can be an existing symbol S_ value
(monster, object, or cmap symbol) to store the custom representation for
all the glyphs that match that symbol.
Examples:
OPTIONS=glyph:G_fountain/U+03A8/0-150-255
(Your platform/terminal font needs to be able to include/display the
character, of course.)
The NetHack core code does parsing and storing the customized
entries, and adding them to the glyphmap data structure.
Any window port can utilize the additional information in the glyphinfo
that is passed to them, once code is added to do so.
Also, consolidate some symbol-related code into symbols.c, and remove it from
files.c and options.c
The air bubbles on the Plane of Water and the clouds on the Plane of
Air were being saved and restored as part of the current level's state
(which is the 'u' struct and invent and such) rather than with the
current level itself. That was ok for normal play, but for wizard
mode's ^V allowing you to return to a previously visited endgame level
after moving to a different one it meant a new set of bubbles for
Water and new set of clouds for Air. Even that was ok since it only
applied to wizard mode, but using #wizmakemap to recreate Water or Air
while you were on it added a new set of bubbles or clouds to the
existing ones. If repeated, eventually there wouldn't be much water
or air left.
Instead of just adding a hack to #wizmakemap, change save/restore to
keep the bubbles/clouds with the level rather than with the state.
That wasn't trivial and now I know why the old odd arrangement was
chosen. Saving hides u.uz by zeroing it out for levels that the hero
isn't on and it is zero during restore so simple checks for whether a
given level is water or air won't work.
This also adds another non-file/non-debugpline() use of DEBUGFILES:
DEBUGFILES=seethru nethack -D
will make water and clouds be transparent instead of opaque. It also
makes fumaroles and other light-blocking gas clouds be transparent
which wasn't really intended, but avoiding it would be extra work that
doesn't accomplish much.
Increments EDITLEVEL for the third time this week....
When asking for an inventory subset for one of the meta-classes that
can generate output which spans object classes (so B,U,C,X, and P),
insert a title at the start of the resulting inventory list. (Iu and
Ix produce alternate output that already includes a title.)
Also, stop handling '$' differently for menustyles traditional and
combination from full and partial. 'I$' was running the '$' command
for the first two styles but just showing the inventory entry for
gold for the last two. Change to the latter for all styles.
My fixes to the travel stuck oscillation did not fix all of them,
and I've even seen a 3-step loop - which my fixes cannot detect.
I guess there could be arbitrary-sized loops too.
To definitely fix this, keep track of all the map locations travel
has moved the hero through, and if it tries to go on a location already
used, stop travel and give the unsure -message.
Lay groundwork for generating a log event when finding an artifact
on the floor or carried by a monster. This part should not produce
any change in behavior.
Move g.artidisco[] and g.artiexist[] out of the instance_globals
struct back to local within artifact.c. They are both initialized
at the start of a game (and only used in that file) so don't need
to be part of any bulk reinitialization if restart-instead-of-exit
ever gets implemented.
Convert artiexist[] from an array of booleans to an array of structs
containing a pair of bitfields. artiexist[].exists is a direct
replacement for the boolean; artiexist[].found is new but not put to
any significant use yet. If will be used to suppress the future
found-an-artifact event for cases where a more specific event (like
crowning or divine gift as #offer reward) is already produced.
Remove g.via_naming altogether and add an extra argument to oname()
calls to replace it.
Add an extra argument to artifact_exists() calls.
I've implemented 'nethack -nethackrc=filename' as an alternative to
'NETHACKOPTIONS='@filename' nethack' but at the moment it doesn't
work because the command line parsing comes after the run-time config
file has already been processed. But this part should work, or maybe
have problems spotted and fixed if it doesn't. The RC file part of
initoptions_finish() has been rewritten so that it won't need extra
replication of
| set_error_handling()
| process_file()
| reset_error_handling()
| if (NETHACKOPTIONS) {
| set_error_handling()
| process_options()
| reset_error_handling()
| }
I've tried to test all the combinations mentioned in the comment but
am not sure that I covered everything, particulary for repeating
earlier tests after making incremental changes.
Log game events, such as entering a new dungeon level, breaking
a conduct, or killing a unique monster, in a new "Major events"
chronicle. The entries record the turn when the event happened.
The log can be viewed with #chronicle -command, and the entries
also show up in the end-of-game dump, if that is available.
This feature is on by default, but can be disabled by
defining NO_CHRONICLE compile-time option.
This also contains "live logging", writing the events as they
happen into a single livelog-file. This is mostly useful for
public servers. The livelog is off by default, and must be
compiled in with LIVELOG, and then turned on in sysconf.
Mostly this a version of livelogging from the Hardfought server,
with some changes.
Trying to use #reqmenu/#rush/#run/#fight prefixes by their extended
command names didn't work because rhack()'s post-processing was stuck
dealing with the entry for the '#' key after using doextcmd() to run
any command. Use a static variable (actually a global one since I put
it into struct g) to notify rhack() of the command that ultimately got
executed.
... you will also get a message when a seen stinking cloud
or the one surrounding the hero dissipates.
Original feature comes from Fourk, but this version (with some
minor changes) comes from xnethack by copperwater <aosdict@gmail.com>
There are no longer distinct gendered versions of monsters, so femalenum
is unused (i.e. set to NON_PM) for all roles and races. Take a pass at
removing all uses of/references to femalenum, and rename 'malenum' to
'mnum' since it no longer has any particular association with
gender or sex.
'moves' is actually turns and there hasn't been any straightforward
way to track actual hero moves. Add hero_seq for that. It isn't a
counter but is distinct each time the hero makes a move. I wanted
it for curses ^P support but so far use it for checking stethoscope
usage and for shopkeeper behavior when items in a shop are broken by
the hero.
Increment EDITLEVEL due to change in save file contents.
Give a better message than "Unknown config statement" if SOUNDDIR or
SOUND directives are found in the configuration file being loaded by
an executable built without support for USER_SOUNDS. And just give
it for the first occurrence since when present there will likely be
multiple SOUND instances.
It doesn't attempt to deal with the case where the current interface
does not support sound but USER_SOUNDS is enabled because another
interface in the same executable does.
Get rid of the last reference to 'g.restoring' (which managed to
unintentionally survive the change to 'g.program_state.restoring').
Also have suppress_map_output() check 'g.program_state.saving' and
switch the couple of checks against that flag to use the function.
The walls for the mines, gehennom, knox, and sokoban had been
changed at the "tile"-level, with no awareness of the core game,
or non-tile interfaces.
- Expand the glyphs to include a set of walls for the main level
as well as each of those mentioned above.
Altars had been adjusted at the map_glyphinfo() level to substitute
some color variations on-the-fly for unaligned, chaotic, neutral,
lawful altars, and shrines. The tile interface had no awareness of
the feature.
- Expand the glyphs to include each of the altar variations that
had been implemented in the display code for tty-only. This required
the addition of four placeholder tiles in other.txt. Someone with
artistic skill will hopefully alter the additional tiles to better
reflect their intended purpose.
Explosions had unique tiles in the tile window port, and the display
code for tty tinkered with the colors, but the game had very little
awareness of the different types of explosions.
- Expand the glyphs to include each of the explosion types: dark,
noxious, muddy, wet, magical, fiery and frosty.
Pile-markers to represent a pile had been introduced at the
display-level, without little to no awareness by the core game.
- Expand the glyphs to include piletops, including objects,
bodys, and statues.
Recently male and female variations of tiles and monsters had been
had been introduced, but the mechanics had been mostly done at the
display-level through a marker flag. The window port interface then
had to increment the tile mapped to the glyph to get the female version
of the tile.
- Expand the glyphs to include the male and female versions of the
monsters, and their corresponding pet versions, ridden, detected
versions and statues of them.
Direct references to GLYPH_BODY_OFF and GLYPH_STATUE_OFF
in object_from_map() in pager.c were getting incomplete results.
- Add macros glyph_to_body_corpsenm(glyph) and
glyph_to_statue_corpsenm(glyph) macros for obtaining the corpsenm
value after passing the glyph_is_body() or glyph_is_statue() test.
Other relevant notes:
- The tile ordering in the win/share/*.txt tile files has been altered,
other.txt in particular.
- tilemap.c has had a lot of alterations to accommodate the expanded
glyphs. Output that is useful for troubleshooting will end up in
tilemappings.lst if OBTAIN_TILEMAP is defined during build.
It lists all of the glyphs and which tile it gets mapped to, and also
lists each tile and some of the references to it by various glyphs.
- An array glyphmap[MAXGLYPH] is now used. It has an entry for each
glyph, ordered by glyph, and once reset_glyphs(glyph) has been run, it
contains the mapped symindex, default color, glyphflags, and tile
index.
If USE_TILES is defined during build, the tile.c produced from the
tilemap utility populates the tileidx field of each array element with
a glyph-to-tile mapping for the glyph. Later on, when reset_glyphmap()
is run, the other fields of each element will get populated.
- The glyph-to-tile mapping is an added field available to a window
port via the glyphinfo struct passed in the documented interface. The
old glyph2tile[] array is gone. The various active window ports that
had been using glyph2tile[] have been updated to use the new interface
mechanism. Disclaimer: There may be some bug fixing or tidying
required in the window port code.
- reset_glyphmap() is called after config file options parsing
has finished, because some config file settings can impact the results
produced by reset_glyphmap().
- Everything that passes the glyph_is_cmap(glyph) test must
return a valid cmap value from glyph_to_cmap(glyph).
- An 'extern glyph_info glyphmap[MAX_GLYPH];' is inserted into the
top of only the files which need awareness of it, not inserted into
display.h. Presently, the only files that actually need to directly
reference the glyphmap[] array are display.c, o_init.c (for shuffling
the tiles), and the generated tile.c (if USE_TILES is defined).
- Added an MG_MALE glyphflag to complement the MG_FEMALE glyphflag.
- Provide an array for wall colorizations. reset_glyphmap() will draw
the colors from this array: int array wallcolors[sokoban_walls + 1];
The indices of the wallcolors array are main_walls (0), mines_walls
(1), gehennom_walls (2), knox_walls (3), and sokoban_walls (4).
In future, a config file option for adjusting the wall colors and/or
an 'O' option menu to do the same could be added. Right now, the
initializaton of the wallcolors[] array entries in display.c leaves the
walls at CLR_GRAY, matching the defsym color.
- Most of the display-level kludges for some of the on-the-fly
interface features have been removed from map_glyphinfo() as they
aren't needed any longer. These glyph expansions adhere more closely to
the original glyph mechanics of the game.
- Because the glyphs are re-ordered and expanded, an update to
editlevel will be required upon merge of these changes.
When using a menu to drop or put in items into a container,
allow putting in the item (or items) you picked up previously,
by selecting the 'P' entry from the item class menu
Inspired by the itemcat patch by Stanislav Traykov.
Invalidates saves and bones.
It's redundant with g.moves, so there is no more need for it.
Way, way back, it looks like g.moves and g.monstermoves can and did
desync, where g.moves would track the amount of moves the player had
gotten (and would therefore increase faster if the player were hasted)
and g.monstermoves would track the amount of monster move cycles, aka
turns. But this has not been the case for a long time, and they both
increment together in the same location in allmain.c. There are no
longer any cases where they will not be the same value.
This is a save-breaking change because it changes struct
instance_globals, but I have not updated the editlevel in this commit.
When discussing the recent commit that removed makedefs -o from the
build process, nhmall pointed out that a sanity check ensuring all
objects within one class add up to 1000 probability had been removed as
well. This requirement was a perennial thorn in the side for anyone
doing anything that touches object probabilities, because allocating
probability to something meant deciding what to take it away from,
without a good way to evenly distribute that across all the other
members of the object class.
I had gotten around this in xNetHack by removing the sanity check and
making mkobj() total up the probability within an object class and then
using that instead of 1000. This commit takes a similar approach, but
instead of inefficiently recalculating the sum every time mkobj() is
called, it instead computes it at the start of the game or when
restoring the save file and stores it in a global variable.
This fixes a slight bias problem with rings - they are all supposed to
be of equal probability, but there are 28 of them and 1000 is not evenly
divisible by that, so the old formula made the later rings slightly more
likely. Now instead of a 35/1000 or 36/1000 chance, they are all
uniformly 1/28. (Internally they have a oc_prob of 1 now, not 0).
Gems are also weird, because their oc_prob values change every level.
This ought to have still worked without a change, because the arcane
formula for assigning the probabilities would still end up with them
adding to 1000. But I added in code to reset the total gem probability
anyway; this may help make the formula less arcane in the future.
There is still a sanity check against object classes having a nonzero
number of objects but zero total probability, in which case an
impossible will be thrown and every member of the class will be given
equal probability. I also downgraded the "probtype error" panic in
mkobj() to an impossible because it has a reasonable failure case -
return the first item in that class.
Allows the fire-command to autowield a launcher; it will now
do either swapweapon or wield an appropriate launcher, if you
have ammo quivered.
This assistance can be turned off with the fireassist boolean option.
Adds a rudimentary command queue, which allows the code to add keys
or extended commands into the queue, and they're executed as if
the user did them. Time passes normally when doing the queue,
and the queue will get cleared if hero is interrupted.
Adds possible callbacks for "start_new_game", "restore_old_game",
"moveloop_turn", and "game_exit" which when defined, will be called
from core code at the appropriate time.
Adds lua hooks for dump_fmtstr (only if DUMPLOG), dnum_name, u.moves,
u.uhave_amulet, and u.depth.
If the killer and the paralyzer are the same monster, truncate
that to "Killed by a foo, while paralyzed". When not the same,
spell out the paralyzer's monster type instead of using generic
"monster". "Killed by a fox, while paralyzed by a ghoul", or
"Killed by a ghoul, while paralyzed by a ghoul" *if* they were
two different ghouls.
'final_fpos' shouldn't have been moved to the 'g' struct. Even if
a game went all the way through topten and was restarted as a new
game that also went all the way through topten, 'final_fpos' would
get a new value rather than being messed up by a stale old one.
Change Trollsbane versus troll corpse revival: instead of revival
failing if Trollsbane is wielded at time of revival attempt, mark
the corpse no-revive if killed by Trollsbane (whether by the hero
or a monster).
If a no-revive corpse is within view when time to revive occurs,
give "the troll corpse twitches feebly" even when the hero isn't
responsible. That used to only apply if the hero zapped the
corpse with undead turning, which would have become inoperative
because now being zapped by undead turning clears the no-revive
flag and revives as normal. In other words, undead turning magic
overrides killed-by-Trollsbane or non-ice troll having been in an
ice box.