There was code higher up that could destroy the obj,
so this eliminates any risk of trying to dereference a
bad pointer in the deferred silver message by saving
a copy of the name earlier on.
From the newsgroup:
> <email deleted> (<Someone>)
> Newsgroups: rec.games.roguelike.nethack
> Subject: Question: Why don't silver wands give silver damage?
> Date: 9 Nov 2003 09:18:50 -0800
> Organization: http://groups.google.com
> Lines: 7
> <email deleted>
>
> I had a character cornered by a werejackal the other day. I'm not too
> bothered by the death but why didn't the silver wand he desperately
> wielded in his final moments do extra damage? I mean, silver rings do
> so why not wands? I realise this is a pretty minor problem since not
> that many people will be going around wielding wands, but still.
>
> ~<Someone>
There was a code path for objects such as wands that avoided
all the silver checks. Now fixed.
Acknowledge Schroedinger's cat at end of game.
- determine cat's status:
- give points for the animal which accompanied
you.
or
- include dead cat in the box contents.
Schroedinger's cat is the only ordinary creature
that could actually ascend with you.
This patch doesn't deal with any supernatural creatures
including:
- djinn in bottles
- ghosts in bottles
Follow suit with what <Someone> did for the object name buffers,
so that this sort of statement can work correctly:
pline("%s hits %s.", Monnam(mtmp), mon_nam(mtmp2));
A trapped monster with one step between you and the monster (@.@) would
repeatedly switch between a ranged and hand-to-hand weapon if carrying both.
Since the monster switches each turn, it will not make ranged attacks.
Modified the test in dochug to prefer a ranged weapon in this case.
A trapped monster with one step between you and the monster (@.@) would
repeatedly switch between a ranged and hand-to-hand weapon if carrying both.
Since the monster switches each turn, it will not make ranged attacks.
Modified the test in dochug to prefer a ranged weapon in this case.
<Someone> wrote:
> The new ^V wizmode menu is nice, but it is rather misleading; most of
> the levels it lists are "you can't get there from here". Would it be
> possible either to make it only list levels that can be reached
> directly, or alternatively to allow you to reach the ones you
> ordinarily couldn't (maybe by forcefully changing u.uz.dnum to yoink
> you into the right branch, and even summarily issuing you with an
> Amulet if you ask to teleport to the endgame).[...]; being able to bamf
> quickly to Minetown from DL 1, for example, would be damn useful in > testing stuff.
Allow fairly free roaming of the dungeon via the wizard mode teleport menu.
> The new ^V wizmode menu is nice, but it is rather misleading; most of
> the levels it lists are "you can't get there from here". Would it be
> possible either to make it only list levels that can be reached
> directly, or alternatively to allow you to reach the ones you
> ordinarily couldn't (maybe by forcefully changing u.uz.dnum to yoink
> you into the right branch, and even summarily issuing you with an
> Amulet if you ask to teleport to the endgame).[...]; being able to bamf
> quickly to Minetown from DL 1, for example, would be damn useful in > testing stuff.
Allow fairly free roaming of the dungeon via the wizard mode teleport menu.
If a Key-down event didn't meet the expected criteria,
the event was ignored in the "peek" loop, but it was
never removed from the input queue either, so it
remained at the top of the queue.
It isn't clear if this fixes the dedicated arrow keys
hanging, but if those were resulting in strange
event values too, it just might.
<Someone> wrote:
> You start bashing monsters with your 2 cockatrice corpses.
> You hit the foo with the cockatrice corpse (note singular).
> The foo is slowing down. The foo turns to stone.
> Also: Your cockatrice corpses rots away.
It appears that vtense() has a problem recognizing "corpses"
as plural. This doesn't fix that, it just switches to using
otense() in this particular case.
Pat verified something I had wondered about, that various tests of mcanmove
in shk.c should have also been testing mcanmove. There may well be other
tests of mcanmove in other files that need fixing.
Allow '*' with control-g to create a random monster species,
or several different monster species if a multi count was specified
on the control-g command.
when msleeping is set, mcanmove is not cleared. mcanmove applies only to
mfrozen. So, mattackm needs to test both mcanmove and msleeping.
mattackm will not wake the defender if the attack misses.
<email deleted> wrote:
> When wielding greyswander and a black light explodes, the
> message is still "You are freaked by a blast of kaleidoscopic
> light!" giving no indication that you are immune to
> hallucination. Maybe something like "You see a blast of color,
> but seem unaffected" would be more appropriate?
return the changed status back to the caller from
make_hallucinated().
From the newsgroup: when invisible and unable to see invisible,
if successful prayer results in being given a spellbook you'll get the
message "an object appears at your feet" but the spellbook won't show on
the map. Add a newsym() to force its location to be updated. (I didn't
try to figure out why spellbooks use place_object() when all other divine
gifts use dropy() but that's why only this case has the display glitch.)
This also fixes up the message vs map update sequencing for a couple
of other "at your feet" cases so that all of them use the same ordering:
first the message is given, then the object drops.
[Timing is the only reason not to put this simple change into 3.4.3.]
- 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
The autocompletion was working, but you couldn't tell
because the text was overwritten with blanks. This was
a recent glitch created during fix for other cursor problems.
the message history saver needs the windows to stick around until save
is completed. This usually the case, but end_of_input() was calling
exit_nhwindows prematurely. This is actually an old bug (calling it early,
but wasn't harmful until other recent changes).
<Someone> discovered that it is possible to
have wins[WIN_MESSAGE] be null during
a hangup, not sure why yet.
Put a guard in to prevent de-referencing a null pointer.
This brings things much closer to correct operation (I hope).
- The shift to only moving the cursor on input (<Someone>'s
changes) had a lot of complications, among them was
that sometimes, there is no more input. When the program was
exiting, or bombing the cursor synch never got done, so the
final messages could end up strewn any place the cursor
happened to be dwelling.
- There were two competing output systems in use: the
wintty stuff for the game, and the msmsg and error stuff
used by the sys/share/pcsys, sys/share/pctty, and
sys/share/pcunix routines. Those were meant to mimic
output to stdout, where stuff just got sent to a sequential
display. Over time, there were calls mixed in that depended
on the cursor tracked stuff from the core game, so you
really couldn't be sure where things were going to display.
It wasn't as much of an issue before, because the cursor
really did get moved around as expected. Everything
now ends up in the same output system.
- I even found a use of the real putchar() because
sys/share/pcunix didn't #include wintty.h the same
as the other files, and the macro never got defined.
Who knows where that character was being put -
the game certainly couldn't track it.
While everything I knew to be wrong yesterday is
now working, there may be some other glitches
lurking that I haven't discovered yet.
Please: test, test, test.
Use a new flush_screen(-1) call to toggle 3rd screen update in goto_level.
This keeps the 3rd screen state unchanged, no matter what happens at higher
levels, ensures the map window cursor stays on the hero, ensures the
hero's showrace colors remains bright white, and so on.
<Someone> wrote:
> Using the MCVS IDE I couldn't compile NetHack any longer, due to a
> misplaced #endif and a library not included in the DSP file.
> Here's a patch for both problems for 3.5.0.
> The 3.4.x verison only suffered from the first problem. Patch also
> attached.
There were still some significant startup message problems
with win32tty.
I've spent a lot of time in the debugger tracing through them all.
I think I've got them all worked out now, certainly the ones that
I was aware of. There may be some I haven't discovered.
Testing welcomed of course!
This patch also attempts to diagnose the error where someone tries
to execute NetHack directly out of a zip file, and provide
them with a (hopefully) helpful message similar to what we
might end up telling them if they wrote in. If you want
to test that part, you can comment out the line in the
Makefile that adds "dungeon" to nhdat, and delete the nhdat
in your binary and src directories, and "make install".
Then add the value of your TEMP environment variable as a
DATADIR statement in defaults.nh (here's mine):
DATADIR=C:\DOCUME~1\ALLISO~1\LOCALS~1\Temp
The diagnostic code engages if the game fails to open
dungeon. It then checks to see if it the game dir is the
TEMP directory for your system, and if so it prints the
message.
the win32 cursor restriction stuff messed up any
messages displayed during abnormal start conditions
where the window system never got initialized properly.
among them:
- messages relating to lock files or games in progress
- dungeon errors
- early panic messages
My cvs tree had the correct code. When I did a cvs update
it didn't pull anything down. When I deleted the include/extern.h
file from my cvs tree, and did an update with the "get the clean copy"
switch, it pulled down an extern.h that was indeed missing the
prototype. In all cases my local cvs reported that it was 1.130.
I applied the prototype change to the cvs copy, did a cvs diff
to ensure nothing else was out of sync and re-committed.
<Someone> suggested and I agree (mostly, if you're a Monk poly'd to a
strict carnivore, I think it should still smell delicious):
> "You smell the odor of meat." (if herbivorous)
> "You smell a delicious smell." (otherwise)
> I think that if your character is a monk or still veg(itari)an, you should
> also get the first message. Even if you're not intentionally vegitarian,
> the first message is still appropriate.
Reported a really long time ago (June 2001) by <Someone>:
- stand on the upstairs and engrave Elbereth with a /oFire
- create Demogorgon and e.g. a tame dragon
- cause conflict
- Dragon will kill Demogorgon and Demogorgon will never ever attack Dragon.
All monsters could still attack Demogorgon without response via fightm().
Modified fightm() to include a bit of code in m_move and dog_move, allowing
response to an attack. Testing this in action, Demogorgon still usually
did things detrimental to the player, mostly summoning nasty monsters.
<email deleted> wrote:
- When polymorphed into a quantum mechanic, it is possible to jump in
the water on a no teleport level and instinctively teleport.
- When an engulfing monster is teleported away on a no teleport level
when the hero is polymorphed into a quantum mechanic, there is no
message displayed like "You are no longer engulfed!" because
u_teleport_mon is passed FALSE for give feedback. But maybe this is
for a good reason...
>Hemmed in by one invisible wererat?
><Someone>: Should I feel hemmed in if I can see that a wererat summons
>zero rats? Can the invisible wererat hem me in all by itself? And
>even if it had summoned anything, wouldn't a different message had
>been clearer (for isntance, "Rats appear around you!"); after all,
>I could see *what* was hemming me in.
>I agree that the current messages (and even the ones aspired to by the
>comment) are non-ideal.
<Someone>'s suggested set-up:
Seen summoner, seen help : "The wererat summons help!"
Seen summoner, unseen help: "The wererat summons help! You feel hemmed in."
Seen summoner, no help: "The wererat summons help! But none comes."
Unseen summoner, seen help: "(A rat appears|Rats appear) from
nowhere!"
Unseen summoner, unseen help: "You feel hemmed in."
Unseen summoner, no help: No message.
Some newsgroup discussion recently pointed out that source comments
for scrolls of charging didn't match the actual charge increase performed
by that magic. This bumps the values a little bit
(uncursed: comment said 5 to 15, actual amount was 10 to 14, now 10 to 20;
blessed: comment said 10 to 25, actual amount was 16 to 25, now 15 to 30)
and adjusts the comments to match the code.