Developed for 3.6 but deferred to 3.7. Most of the testing was with
the earlier incarnation.
Report was that pronouns were accurate for the underlying monsters
when hallucination was describing something random, and also that the
gender prefix flag from bogusmon.txt wasn't being used. The latter
is still the case, but pronouns are now chosen at random while under
the influence of hallucination. One of the choices is plural and an
attempt is made to make the monster name and verb fit that usage.
|The homunculus picks up a wand of speed monster.
|The large cats zap themselves with a wand of speed monster!
|The blue dragon is suddenly moving faster.
There is no attempt to match gender for the singular cases; you might
get
|The succubus zaps himself [...]
or
|The incubus zaps herself [...]
Report stated:
"Poes deliberately slither onto a polymorph trap!" ... it's only one cat, er,
black naga. Why does the parser treat the name as plural? There are lots of
singular words and names that end in -s or -es!
H9249 1780
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.
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.
This is based on the multiple-RNGs code fron NetHack4, but using
only the parts relevant to the display RNG (and with substantial
changes, both because of post-3.4.3 changes, and because Nethack4's
display code is based on Slash'EM's rather than NetHack's).
They're never modified. Minor complication: &zeroobj is used as
a special not-Null-but-not-an-object value in multiple places and
needs to have 'const' removed with a cast in that situation.
mons[].difficulty takes over for monstr[]
Invoking "makedefs -m" gives a deprecation message; it is also included
in the (now mostly empty) monstr.c.
Ports should now remove "makedefs -m" from their build procedures but this
commit does not include that change.
mons[].difficulty takes over for monstr[]
Invoking "makedefs -m" gives a deprecation message; it is also included
in the (now mostly empty) monstr.c.
Ports should now remove "makedefs -m" from their build procedures but this
commit does not include that change.
Reported directly to devteam, case WAN_TELEPORTATION in use_offensive()
is never used. Disable it, although this also adds other disabled code
which would make it become used if enabled.
Report was for a blinded horse which ate a carrot but remained blind.
This fixes that, and also lets blinded carnivorous pets eat carrots.
Gelatinous cubes now handle carrots too, but since they lack eyses
there won't be any noticeable effect for them.
Requested by one of the beta testers 13 months ago... when a visible
monster becomes invisible and vanishes, mark its map location with
the remembered, unseen monster glyph. (When the player zaps a
monster with a wand of make invisible, that only happens if the wand
type is known. I'm not sure that's right but didn't alter it....)
The request suggested also doing it for a monster who disappears by
teleporting away, but I haven't attempted to implement that.
I've hunted for other instances where monster hit points were set
to zero or less without calling the routine that kills off the
monster (see recent mon_unslime() vs zhitm()) and didn't find any
for mhp subtraction. I haven't checked for direct assignment yet.
For a while I thought I'd found several cases where a monster was
intended to be killed but got left with positive hit points, but
it turned out that lifesaved_monster(), of all places, was setting
them to zero. I've moved that to its callers so that it isn't so
well hidden. And changed several ''if ((mon->mhp -= dmg) <= 0)''
into separate subtraction and 'if' just so the mhp manipulation is
a bit more visible.
I think the only actual change here is the message for monster
being killed by lava, where glass golems now melt instead of burn.
Implement the suggestion that a monster killing itself with acid
to avoid turning to stone or with fire to avoid turning into green
slime not break pacifist conduct even if the player caused the
"turning into" situation that triggered the accidental suicide.
Along the way I discovered a serious bug: zhitm() applies damage
to target monster but leaves it to caller to finish killing off
that monster when damage is fatal, but muse_unslime() called it
without checking whether the monster should die. For fire breath
that shouldn't matter since all fire breathers are immune to fire
damage, but when support for wands of fire and fire horns was
added later it just cloned the fire breath code and neglected to
check for fatal damage. The result was that a monster with 0 HP
would be left on the map, then impossible "dmonsfree: 1 removed
doesn't match 0 pending" would be given when taking it off fmon
list, but a stale monster symbol (presumably level.monsters[][]
pointer too) was left on the map which eventually led to monsndx
panic or arbitrary crash.
Do it properly, using the arguments to xkilled() instead of reversing
the conduct counter after the fact.
The xkilled() flag value of '1' has been reversed. It used to mean
'display message' but now means 'suppress message' since both of the
other flag bits are for suppression. All callers have been updated
to specify either XKILL_GIVEMSG or XKILL_NOMSG so the underlying
number remains transparent.
The bug report was actually about letting monsters use fire horns
without checking whether they could actually use wind instruments.
The previous fix probably handled most cases by excluding animals
and mindless creatures, but this is a more specific fix for MUSE
of fire and frost horns--they must pass the same test as the hero
and it's not limited to stopping being turned into slime.
There was no check for being capable of using items when an attempt
to cure being turned into green slime picked scroll, wand, or horn
of fire.
Also, implement a 'TODO' in the same section of code. Monsters
can enter fire traps to cure themselves from slime. I made that
be for monsters smart enough to use items too, even though there's
no actual item involved.
The code to handle monsters fleeing up the upstairs on level 1 was
expecting those stairs to be normal upstairs but they are actually
sstairs like the ones down into the mines. So monsters fled to the
Plane of Earth instead of escaping the dungeon as intended.
Message given when you see a cursed wand explode while being zapped
by a monster got suppressed if hero was deaf, even though there's no
reference to sound in that message. Change it to ignore deafness;
also, change the alternate message when not visible (which uses
You_hear so already gets suppressed when deaf without caller worrying
about it) use "nearby" or "in the distance" with same criteria as
hearing a wand being zapped, instead of always "in the distance".
I also changed the near/far criteria: threshold to be considered
"far" shrinks from 9 steps to 5 when there's no direct line of sight.
Fix a couple of the clang static analyzer's warnings.
muse.c has some reformatting. zap.c wasn't triggering any warning about
possible null pointer, but using MON_AT() to maybe avoid m_at() is not
a useful optimization since m_at() is a macro which starts out by using
MON_AT() itself.
Somewhere along the line I started removing redundant parentheses from
return statements, but only in files that needed continuation fixups
so it's not comprehensive.