branch only. This adds a check when setting a new fruit so that if no fruits
have been created since the last time the option has been set, the current
fruit is overwritten. Result: the user cannot repeatedly set the fruit
option and overflow the maximum fruit number.
From a bug report, if the high scores file
is brand new (empty), statues placed in a cockatrice nest (special room)
end up all being giant ant statues. Statue creation for that room
suppresses object initialization (to prevent the statues from containing
spellbooks), so statue type is left as 0 by mkobj(), then when 'record'
is empty it never gets overridden with a role value as intended.
This forces obj->corpsenm to be initialized as NON_PM instead of 0
by default, then overrides that for corpses, statues, and figurines even
when mkobj()'s caller requests that initialization be suppressed. So if
'record' is empty, there will be a sensible fallback statue type.
obj->corpsenm is overloaded for leashes ('leashmon', mon->m_id),
potions ('fromsink', fountain quaff hack), spellbooks ('spestudied', the
number of times the book has been read), and loadstones (corpsenm hack to
handle singular vs plural for "you can't let go of that/those" message).
If there are any other hidden corpsenm overloads, they may behave
strangely now that corpsenm is defaulting to -1 instead of 0....
From a bug report, the weight of a non-cursed bag
of holding would be off by 1 when the weight of contents was a multiple
of 2 (for uncursed) or of 4 (for blessed), since the round off handling
added 1 when it shouldn't in those cases. Mainly noticeable when empty;
the extra 1 unit made it be twice as heavy as it should have been.
Probably never noticed in actual play. He has implemented a patch
which shows weights as part of an object's formatted description, making
this stand out. Supposedly the Vulture's Eye interface also added a
patch like that a farily long time ago; I wonder why nobody using it ever
noticed. (Maybe the weight was suppressed for bags of holding there?)
Rename ``kickobj'' to ``kickedobj'' so that the tense matches that
of ``thrownobj''. Also, move their declarations to decl.h and their
definitions to decl.c since usage has spread from dokick.c/dothrow.c to
various files and is about to expand to another one.
A mimic posing as a statue was displayed as a tengu statue (and
recognizeable as such now that statues are displayed as the corresponding
monster rather than rock-class back tick), but the lookat code described
it as a giant ant statue (since there was no obj->corpsenm available to
indicate the monster type, it defaulted to 0). This adds monst->mextra
field `mcorpsenm' so that mimics have a place to remember what sort of
statue or corpse they are mimicking. And it picks a random monster type
when they take such forms so that the old tengu hack becomes irrelevant.
newmextra() and newoextra() initialized pointers via memset(...,0)
which is not portable; switch to explicit assignments. The wizard mode
code to display memory used for monsters and objects added in amounts
for the miscellaneous things pointed to by monst->mextra and obj->oextra
structs but didn't include memory for those structs themselves; add it.
Simplify monster save/restore slightly; there's no need for extra zeroes
to represent monst->mextra->X sizes when monst->mextra is null.
Update the startup banner for 2009. I should have done this with a
separate patch but I'm taking a shortcut. :-]
This started out as a one line change. After I saw someone in the
newsgroup mention that Sunsword's light was inferior to that of a lamp,
I decided to make it work better (than in 3.4.3, that is, becoming the
same brightness as a lamp) when blessed and worse when cursed (useless to
hero but still visible if wielded by a monster). But then it needed to
change light radius when its curse/bless state changed, and it needed
message feedback when doing so, and that got kind of complicated. I
wouldn't have bothered if I'd known what I was getting into, but I don't
want to throw it away now that I've done all this work....
Sunsword now gives a light radius of 3 when blessed (same as a lit
lamp), radius of 2 when uncursed (same as a lit candle and as it has been
providing since added in 3.4.0), and a radius of 1 when cursed (nearly
but not completely useless, as mentioned above). Also, it now "shines"
rather than "glows" since we usually use the latter for temporary effects.
I almost abandoned this when Michael beat me to it, but besides
handling the fruit rename bug it also moves `current_fruit' into the
context structure to eliminate separate save/restore for that.
From a bug report, wizard mode's sanity_check
option has a check for container contents but wasn't using it recursively
for nested containers, so the contents of the latter weren't checked.
This fixes that, and also adds a check for objects carried by migrating
monsters. And it now formats objects and monsters fully even if the hero
happens to be blind or hallucinating at the time.
Tested by using a debugger to poke in various bits of invalid data.
From another many year old news posting: if you picked up a stack
of potions of oil in a shop and then applied them, one potion was split
off and started burning but you were forced to pay for all of them.
Split the to-be-lit one off first so that the remainder of the stack
stays as ordinary unpaid shop goods.
This also fixes an old bug with bill_dummy_object sometimes charging
a different price than the player got quoted when an object was picked up.
Genociding * to clear a level in wizard mode, or paying off a
shopkeeper to dismiss kops in any mode, could trigger the recently added
warning about deleting worn items in obfree(). mongone -> discard_minvent
wasn't bothering to unwear/unwield monster gear before deletion.
Reported in August by <email deleted>, the code that handles
slower rotting for corpses on top of or buried under ice is misusing its
ROT_ICE_ADJUSTMENT factor such that a value other than the current 2 would
produce incorrect results. Instead of multiplying by 1/N it needs to use
(N-1)/N, which happens to be the same when N is 2. In a second message he
asked about why putting a corpse on ice starts out by subtracting from its
age to make it older, and it took me a while to decide that that is correct
behavior.
No effect on game play since ROT_ICE_ADJUSTMENT remains set to 2.
Someone in the newsgroup complained about zapping probing at a large
box dropped by a quantum mechanic and being told that it was empty rather
than that it held a corpse or live cat. This sidesteps the issue by
reporting "the box seems empty" instead of "the box is empty", and not
setting its contents-known flag. (That message is the main difference
between probing and the assorted other methods of observation [telepathy
and monster detection and possibly Warning for live cat, object detection
and food detection for dead cat's corpse] which might be expected to
trigger the cat's fate but don't.) This also makes probing of self and
of monsters set the contents-known and locking-known flags for containers
in inventory, same as is done for probing which hits objects. (Display of
container contents still only occurs for loose objects, not in inventory.)
From the newsgroup: you weren't charged anything if you broke the
lock of a box or chest which was owned by a shop. Force the hero to pay
for the damaged container; any contents remain owned by the shop and don't
affect the cost of the forced purchase. This existing entry in fixes35.0
is adequate to cover the fix:
various actions--such as enchanting--performed on an unpaid shop object
either force the hero to buy the item (when its value is lowered) or
increase the current bill (when its value is raised)
simple_typename and obj_typename operate on item types rather than
particular objects so have to assume that the item involved has been seen.
That means that simple_typename(obj->otyp) is not suitable; if obj->dknown
hasn't been set, it gives away information. This adds mininal_xname(obj)
to be used for that purpose. I'm not aware of any straightforward way to
actually expose the original problem; it's more than hypothetical but not
something anyone's likely to have come across.
Not fixed: test driver program reveals that obj_typename(GOLD_PIECE)
and simple_typename(GOLD_PIECE) yield "coin of gold piece". But I don't
think there's any way to get nethack to show that to the user.
Using #tip (post-3.4.3 code) on a container that's on a shop floor
didn't handle ownership correctly. Bag of tricks could be emptied for
free, and contents of other containers were being sold to the shop even
when the shop already owned them. This fixes bag of tricks and makes a
first cut at doing so for regular containers.
Message handling when #tipping any bag of tricks was also suboptimal
since the decision about message delivery was made again as each charge
released something instead of waiting until the whole bag was emptied.
So you could get inappropriate "nothing seems to happen" before or after
a monster visibily popped up if something unseen was also produced.
Make objects created by applying or #tipping a horn of plenty which
is owned by a shop also start out being owned by the shop. That's in
addition to the usage charge for using an unpaid item.
I think wishes conferred by unpaid objects, or by entities released
from unpaid objects, should probably work that way too, but have left
that alone.
From a bug report, the fallback selection criteria
(used when everything is extinct?) in rndmonnum() was excluding hell-only
monsters when outside of Gehennom, but failed to exclude never-in-hell ones
when inside. [Some of the never-in-hell monsters are Angels, but the rest
are all cold based creatures. That must date to when fire resistance was
required for the hero, which is no longer the case. Should those cold
monsters retain their never-in-hell setting?]
This also fixes a latent copy/paste bug in the unused mons[] definition
of Cerberus (it was the only unique monster which failed to specify G_NOGEN).
Remove some more code that forced pointers into a long int, and
vice versa where information could be lost (P64 platforms such as
WIN64 have a 64 bit pointer size, but a 32 bit long size.)
This 2nd part deals with timeout functions switching
some arguments from type genericptr_t to 'anything'.
Like part 1, this needs to increment EDITLEVEL in patchlevel.h.
[the problem in the earlier rev was tracked to cleanup_burn(),
where arg was holding a (genericptr_t) timer id, and
passed directly to del_light_source() as is.]
P64 (Win64) has a 64 bit pointer size, but a 32 bit long size.
Remove some code that forced pointers into a long int, and
vice versa where information could be lost.
This part deals with light source functions and their
arguments mostly, and switches some arguments
from type genericptr_t to 'anything'.
Hide pointer formatting in alloc.c by eliminating the need for callers
to know how big a buffer is required. I generally prefer the caller to
pass in its own buffer for this sort of thing, but in this case the usage
is almost entirely for debugging so using static buffers results in less
clutter in the rest of the code.
Bug in #tip handling for horn of plenty. Emptying one while levitating
would trigger an "obj not free" panic by flooreffects() due to following
hitfloor() with redundant/inappropriate dropy().
<Someone> reported that he applied an unID'd bag and it became
discovered as a bag of tricks even though a spellbook appeared on the floor
next to him rather than having a monster show up (the monster was a mimic).
Suppress the bag discovery unless you can see or sense a monster appear.
(This doesn't really achieve much for most players, who'll recognize the
bag because they know that only one type of container doesn't prompt to
take things out and/or put things in, but I think it does make sense.)
While mucking with bag of tricks I decided that to be consistent with
the behavior of other containers, the #tip command should release all the
monsters in the bag instead of just one.
And after doing that, I realized that horn of plenty ought to behave
much the same, so #tip will operate on it now. However, it won't be listed
as a likely candidate in the "which item?" prompt unless/until it has been
discovered. (Attempting to empty any other type of horn yields "nothing
happens", same as for a horn of plenty with no charges left.) Emptying a
horn of plenty in a shop can be extremely verbose, but I don't think that
qualifies as a bug and don't currently have any plans to alter it.
Provide a common routine that always does the right
thing with respect to timers and weight when altering
obj->corpsenm, and use it throughout the code.
The revised newmail() wouldn't compile (Strncpy doesn't exist, `buf'
was an array of pointers rather than of char). Simplify it substantially,
and adjust the one caller (vms) that relied on the old convoluted bit.
move oattached and oname and other things that vary
the size of the obj structure into a separate
non-adjacent oextra structure, similar to what has
already been done for mextra. The obj structure
itself becomes a fixed size.
New macros:
#define ONAME(o) ((o)->oextra->oname)
#define OMID(o) ((o)->oextra->omid)
#define OMONST(o) ((o)->oextra->omonst)
#define OLONG(o) ((o)->oextra->olong)
#define OMAILCMD(o) ((o)->oextra->omailcmd)
#define has_oname(o) ((o)->oextra && ONAME(o))
#define has_omid(o) ((o)->oextra && OMID(o))
#define has_omonst(o) ((o)->oextra && OMONST(o))
#define has_olong(o) ((o)->oextra && OLONG(o))
#define has_omailcmd(o) ((o)->oextra && OMAILCMD(o))
changed macros:
has_name(mon) becomes has_mname(mon) to correspond.
The CVS repository was tagged with
NETHACK_PRE_OEXTRA
before commiting these, and
tagged with
NETHACK_POST_OEXTRA
immediately after. The diff
between those two tags is this oextra patch.
The associated mail daemon changes to use an oextra
structure instead of a hidden command located in the
name after the terminating NUL, have not been tried
or tested.
Cut down on the excessive verbosity generated when entering a temple.
The first time you enter a particular temple (or more accurately, the
temple attended by a particular priest), you still get the three message
sequence
The <priest of foo> intones:
Pilgrim, you enter a sacred place!
You have a strange forbidding feeling...
or
You experience a strange sense of peace.
except that the last one doesn't say "strange" any more. On subsequent
visits to the same temple, you usually won't get the first introductory
message any more, often won't get the second entry one, and sometimes
won't even get the final one, depending upon how much time has elapsed
since the previous entry. The old verbosity could really be infuriating
when attempting to lug corpses to the altar before they spoil. Even
though the messages don't affect the passage of time, it always felt as
if they were slowing you down. And even when you weren't in any hurry,
it required at least one and often 2 or even 3 responses to --More--
depending upon the length of the deity's name and whether some other
message was also delivered on the same turn (fairly common in minetown).
Saving and restoring, or leaving the level and returning, resets
the priest's memory of when the messages were last given, so the next
entry after that behaves similar to the very first. This was initially
intended for cleanup prior to saving bones data, but it seemed reasonable
to have it apply to the current game too. Unattended temples now also
have a 25% chance of not giving any message when entering. That one is
random rather than based on the passage of time since last entry; there's
no priest available to track the latter data.
Note: The CVS repository was tagged with NETHACK_PRE_MEXTRA
prior to application of this patch to allow easy withdrawal if necessary.
Adds a new mextra structure type that has a set
of pointers to various types of monster structures
including:
mname, egd, epri, eshk, emin, edog
Replaces the mextra bits in the monst structure
with a single pointer called mtmp->mextra of type
(struct mextra *).
The pointer can be null if there are no additional
structures attached. The mextra structure is not
adjacent to the monst structure.
Reduces the in-memory footprint of the monst that
has no other structures attached, at the cost
of adding 6 extra long ints per monster to
the save file
The new mextra structure has the mextra fields
independent of each other, not overlapping as was
the case with previous NetHack versions.
This patch doesn't do anything to capitalize on
that difference however.
Consolidates vault.h, epri.h, eshk.h, emin.h and edog.h
into mextra.h
Adds a macro for checking for whether a monster has
a name:
has_name(monst)
This fixes the magic trap panic
expels() -> spoteffects() -> dotrap() ->
domagictrap() -> tamedog()
because the monst no longer varies in size so no
replacement is required.
Remove several duplicate includes I discovered while reconciling the
vms Makefile. All of these are already being brought in via hack.h so don't
need to be explicitly included after it.
From a bug report: cancelling objects
in a shop doorway or one step inside would cause the shopkeeper to brand you
a thief. The relevant code is trying to handle the case where you're inside
one shop and zap a wand or spell from there into another one; it didn't cope
with being in the neutral area of a single shop.
From a bug report. Pushing one
boulder from a location which had more than one would open up line of sight
at that spot as if all boulders there were gone.
My previous fix (trap.c) prevented the panic, but didn't actually stop
gold possessed by a reanimated statue from doubling. That problem was due
to how the monster info was saved rather than to how it was restored.
The previous fixes entry applies.
For cancellation I accidentally used terrain type WATER when I meant
object type POT_WATER, so being charged for cancelling holy or unholy water
wasn't working. When I first put in COST_UNHOLY the name made some sense
based on its usage, but after later adding COST_UNBLSS it didn't any more;
change it to COST_UNCURS.
A shopkeeper's complaint that you're uncursing or unblessing his wares
(only applies to water) now sets bknown flag since you know that the object
has become uncursed. I hadn't realized that confused remove curse only
affects uncursed objects; this greatly simplifies extra code I added there
for costly_alteration().
[No fixes entry needed.]
[This ought to be suitable for the branch version too but I'm not going to
spend the effort to migrate it there.]
Recently From a bug report, reducing
the value of a shop object via cursed enchantment was ignored by shopkeeper.
This replaces the existing costly_cancel() routine with costly_alteration()
which performs a similar task: bill for any item whose value has been made
less. The hero owns the resulting object but must pay for the original one
before being allowed to leave the shop.
This covers the majority of cases where bill_dummy_object() was already
being used: cancelling a charged or enchanted item, casting drain life at
same, diluting potions or blanking scrolls or books by dipping them into a
potion of water, dulling a weapon by engraving with it, eating unpaid food
or opening unpaid tins, applying a cream pie to hit yourself with it in the
face, applying a wand to break it, burning something by dipping it into lit
potion of oil, and clearing potions by dipping a unicorn horn into them.
The shop billing behavior for those actions hasn't been changed, just
consolidated into one place which delivers a common message for them.
This also covers many cases which weren't being handled: stripping
wand or magic tool charges via cursed scroll of charging, reducing a charged
ring's enchantment via same, reducing weapon or armor enchantment via cursed
scroll of enchant weapon or armor, stripping an item's rustproofing via
confused enchantment, making a crysknife revert to a worm tooth, unblessing
potions of holy water or uncursing potions of unholy water. (That last one
won't be billed if it's the result of prayer rather scroll, spell, or #dip.)
And this tries to handle the reverse situation more thoroughly too:
many actions which improve the value of an unpaid item now also cause the
shop bill to be updated to reflect its new higher price. Aside from the
basic enchanting and charging magic, it covers converting dragon scales into
dragon scale mail and worm tooth into crysknife. Some things which might be
expected to inflate shop prices, like rustproofing or increasing the number
of charges in a wand, don't actually affect the price. And there are bound
to be cases where the price is affected but I've overlooked.
Various actions (potion dilution, igniting candles or oil, dulling a
weapon by engraving) on an unpaid object can modify it in such a way that
a shopkeeper will force the hero to buy it. bill_dummy_object() is used
to make a copy for the shop bill; play continues with the modified item
now owned by the player. bill_dummy_object() was setting the no_charge
flag unconditionally on the modified object but the flag shouldn't be set
for items in inventory. It was possible to drop the object and sell it,
pick it back up for free due to that flag setting, then drop it and sell
it again. One easy way to reproduce is to zap yourself with a wand of
cancellation while carrying unpaid positively enchanted armor or weapon.
The no_charge flag gets cleared when you pick something up off the
floor or take it out of a container, so this sell-it-again case would only
repeat once. Selling a dropped item ought to clear the flag, but my head
is still spinning after looking at the shop code to see about implementing
that. This fix just prevents bill_dummy_object() from mis-setting the
flag in the first place; sellobj() still can't fix it up after the fact.
[Attention: This patch increments EDITLEVEL in patchlevel.h, rendering all
previous save and bones files obsolete.]
Here's the first cut at the two recommended flags lknown and cknown.
I've attempted to stay close to Pat's recommendations:
"Containers ought to have two new flags: lknown for lock status known,
and cknown for contents known (ie, `secret'). Formatted box and chest
descriptions should include locked/unlocked/broken when that is known
and empty/nonempty (or something like "holds N items") when contents
are known. The contents indicator would also apply to nonlockable
containers."
I probably overlooked a place where a flag should be adjusted, but this
should give us a good starting point.
I wasn't sure what to do with the case of the auditory feedback for
magical locking "Click" and "Clunk". The question that came to my mind
was: Should those reveal the locked or unlocked status of a box?
I suppose if you knew the type of wand you were zapping or the spell
you were casting, you could argue that they should.
In the end, I opted for setting lknown right off the zap/cast effect
for anyone playing a Wizard role, and not setting it for anyone else,
thus advancing class differentiation a little bit too.
I haven't checked the cknown results under all flags.menu_style options
at this point, only MENU_FULL.
<Someone> wrote:
> "You kill the invisible storm giant. The boulder fills a pit."
> [...] why did I find the corpse *lying on* and not *buried in* the
> former pit?
Ensure that the corpse ends up buried in that case.
- store the variety of tin at tin creation time
rather than at tin-opening time (as a negative
value in spe just as homemade was; spinach
is still spe 1)
Allow wishing for a particular variety of tin
from the tin variety list:
"deep fried", "boiled","broiled","candied"
"dried", "french fried", "homemade"
"pickled", "pureed", "rotten", "sauteed"
"smoked", "soup made from", "stir fried",
"szechuan"
Example: "tin of soup made from orc"
non-debug player could randomly fail on the
variety specification 1 in 4 times