Adds two new configurable keys to the cursor targeting: 'A' (getpos.menu)
and 'a' (getpos.menu.cansee). First one shows a menu of all interesting
glyphs on the map, second one shows only those in sight.
Travel command also now obeys the "request menu" -prefix, showing
the menu with interesting targets in sight, and then traveling there.
Idea via the NetHack accessibility research by Alexei Pepers.
This is a modified version of Jason Dorje Short's key rebinding
patch, and allows also binding special keys, such as the ones
used in getloc and getpos.
One of the ways to play NetHack on nethack.alt.org is via a HTML
terminal in browser. Unfortunately this means several ctrl-key
combinations cannot be entered, because the browser intercepts
those. Similar thing applies to some international keyboard layouts
on Windows. With this patch, the user can just rebind the command
to a key that works best for them.
I've tested this on Linux TTY, X11, and Windows TTY and GUI.
Yet another accessibility feature. When asked for a location
to travel, and autodescribe is on, the location description
has "(no travel path)" appended, if there is no known path
to that location.
farlook was changed (end of December) to use doname instead of xname
to yield more info for items which had already been seen up close,
but it gave away info about ones which hadn't. So doname was changed
(end of April) to use "some" instead of precise quantity (when the
quantity is greater than 1) for the latter, but that doesn't work
well with corpse_xname() when the hero is blind, yielding "a some
<foo> corpses". While testing the first fix attempt, I noticed that
pickup gave "you can only lift some of the some <foo> corpses".
This fix is far from perfect. farlook can still say "some <item>s"
but lookhere and pickup always say "N <item>s". Picking up a stack
while blind will show "N <item>s" in inventory display, but dropping
it while still blind will revert to "some <item>s" for farlook.
drain_item() always assumed player was responsible, so called
costly_alteration() to adjust shop price of disenchanted item.
If it was unpaid and the effect was caused by a disenchanter
attack rather than by the hero, the feedback was nonsensical.
This also lets a disenchanter hit worn rings, amulet, or blindfold
if no armor gets targetted. Amulets, blindfolds, and most rings
have no charge to be drained, but several types of rings do.
This is the Pet ranged attack -patch by Darshan Shaligram,
with the spellcaster parts removed to keep it simpler.
Pets will now throw, spit and breathe at other monsters.
Change most instances of detection to offer the player a chance to
move the cursor around on the map so that the getpos() autodescribe
feature can explain things that might go away as soon as the
current detection completes. The few instances that don't offer
such a chance are the ones where everything which has been revealed
will still be there once the action finishes (such as regular magic
mapping and blessed/persistent monster detection).
There were quite a lot of inconsistencies in things like handling
for detection while swallowed or underwater. I didn't keep track
of them to distinguish between 3.6.0, current dev code, or my patch
in progess. They should be much more consistent now but without a
comprehensive fixes36.1 entry.
Blessed clairvoyance (divination spells at skilled or expert) now
shows monsters as well as terrain. I first had it like that for
any clairvoyance, but having getpos/autodescribe kick in every 15
or 30 turns once you have the amulet--or pay the appropriate amount
to a temple preist--was nearly unplayable. When it only follows an
explicit spell cast it is not intrusive.
When confused gold detection finds a door trap or a chest trap, it
puts a bear trap glyph/tile on the map at that location. (They
disappear once they're within sight.) Those should be given their
own glyphs so that they can have their own tiles, but this doesn't
do that. What it does do is describe such fake bear traps as
"trapped door" or "trapped chest" when examined with far-look.
The '^' command--if used while blind so that '^' hasn't disappeared
yet--needs to catch up: it says "I can't see a trap there" when the
adjacent '^' is a fake bear trap.
When travel fails to reach its destination, it remembers the target
spot to use as default next time. But that spot is only meaningful
on the current level. Discard last travel destination when moving
to a different level.
Also, discard unlocking context when changing level unless the
context is for a container being brought along (after having been
picked up since you can't unlock a carried box). Previously, a
door pointer on the new level could happen to match the last one
being unlocked on the old level.
Discard trap setting context when changing level even if the trap
object is brought along.
Somehow the code for applying a touchstone got inserted in between
two sections of code for applying a trap (ages ago; probably since
touchstone was first introduced however many versions back), so
clean that up.
This ended up being more elaborate than I anticipated. 'Q' will
now accept the wielded weapon as a choice of item to quiver. If
that item is a stack of more than one, it will offer to split N-1
into the quiver and leave 1 wielded. If the offer is declined, or
if there is already just 1, it will require confirmation to move the
item from the weapon slot to the quiver slot. The alternate weapon
is handled similarly, with different phrasing when in twoweapon
combat mode.
Just to be crystal clear: a single object cannot be in more than
one weapon, alt-weapon, or quiver slot at the same time. 'Q's old
behavior of rejecting the wielded weapon was to avoid accidentally
becoming empty-handed, not anything to do with multiple worn/wield
slots.
'Q' will also accept a count when picking an inventory item, then
put 'count'-many into the quiver, leaving N-count in original stack.
Except when the chosen item is already in the quiver; it that case,
it undoes the stack split and leaves things as they were. (That
restriction may not have been necessary but I'm not planning to
revisit it....)
Extend #stats beyond just monsters and objects. Have it display
memory usage for traps, engravings, light sources, timers, pending
shop wall/floor repair, regions, bones tracking, named object types,
and dungeon overview.
No doubt there are other memory consumers that I've overlooked.
Add support for character enclosed within single quotes. Single
character without quotes would work for most characters, but not
'#' and possibly not '^' or '\\'. All the values in dat/symbols
are specified via backslash+digits so it isn't obvious that some
other form of value is allowed.
I think this parsing accepts all valid values. It doesn't reject
all invalid ones: opening quote followed by valid escape sequence
followed by junk followed by closing quote will ignore the junk.
I don't think there's any pressing need to worry about that.
Change the sortloot option to use qsort() instead of naive insertion
sort. After sorting, it reorders the linked list into the sorted
order, so might have some subtle change(s) in behavior since that
wasn't done before.
pickup.c includes some formatting cleanup.
modified:
include/extern.h, hack.h, obj.h
src/do.c, do_wear.c, end.c, invent.c, pickup.c
There have been two or three reports on getting feedback about
amulets rusting. Object formatting doesn't display erosion for
them, so being told about damage then not seeing that damage
feels like a bug. Even if damage was displayed, it has no effect
on them so would still feel somewhat strange. It does display
erosion for wands and rings, which is strange too.
This limits erosion damage--and its feedback--to items which are
actually impacted by erosion: armor, weapons and weapon-tools;
also heavy iron balls and iron chains since they've traditionally
shown rust even though it has little effect.
A side-effect of this change is that flammable items (other than
armor and weapons) which don't burn up immediately will no longer
become burnt, then very burnt, thorougly burnt, and finally be
destroyed. Since the player couldn't see or possibly repair the
erosion state, it seemed incomplete. It could be reinstated by
making other flammable items be subject to erosion and displayed
as such by xname() & co.
Wishing now avoids applying erosion and erosion-proofing to items
that aren't affected by it, regardless of material. It also now
allows wishing for "rusty rustproof <iron-object>" which used to
suppress "rusty" in that combination and triggered a couple of
old bug reports.
Heavy iron balls and iron chains can have rust repaired and can
be made rustproof by wielding, then reading enchant weapon while
confused, as if they were weapons.
"Looting many containers via menu cannot be stopped". When the
player uses #loot command at a location with multiple containers,
a menu of which ones to loot is presented and player can pick any
or all of them. But if you terminate the looting of a particular
container with ESC, it goes on to the next selected one rather than
stopping the loot action because that's what the 'q' choice does.
The simplest fix would be to allow choosing only one container
from the "loot which?" menu, but this retains the ability to loot
multiple containers on a pile in one turn. It makes looting
stoppable by extending the ":iobrsq or ?" prompt, adding 'n' for
"next container" and changing 'q' from "done with this container"
to "done looting" (with ESC still a synonym for 'q'). When just
one container is being looted, or when on the last of N containers,
'n' is not shown but is still accepted (and treated as 'q').
Also, use_container() was using a menu for ":iobrsq" if player had
menustyle set to Full when it was intended to be for Partial (name
confusion...). This switches Partial to use menu for loot action,
and leaves Full with that since that's how 3.6.0 has been behaving.
Traditional and Combination use the prompt string and single char
response.
Let monsters who have a weapon attack for non-physical damage dish
out physical damage instead of doing the drain life or drain
strength they usually do if they happen to be wielding cockatrice
corpses or a couple of particular aritfacts that do more harm
than just level drain. (Other artifacts are candidates, but I
don't think it's worth checking for them since the monsters
involved have such a small chance of acquiring and wielding them.)
Also switch to physical if monster's ability has been cancelled.
Only barrow wight, Nazgul, and erinys are affected. Yeenoghu and
the Master Assassin have a weapon attack for physical damage and
another one for non-physical damage (not necessarily delivered in
that order). They haven't been changed--only the physical damage
attack has a chance to apply their weapon's special damage.
When using a stethoscope or wand of probing on a long worm, report
the number of segments it has in the feedback given.
Some of the extra bhitpos and/or notonhead assigments may not be
necessary. They were added when I was trying to figure out the
question of why probing of a tail segment revealed a long worm's
inventory even though the code explicitly prevents that. (Answer:
it didn't; I had misinterpreted bz 12 to think that that was what
was being reported. You need to use wand of probing--or "insigtful"
Magicbane hit--on the head in order to see its inventory or be told
"not carrying anything".)
Sometimes you can see a hidden monster without bringing it out of
hiding (wand of probing, blessed potion of monster detection) but
look_at wasn't mentioning the fact that the monster was hidden and
probing described mimics accurately but lumped all hiders together
as "concealed". Describe all hidden monsters more consistently.
Changes to be committed:
modified: include/extern.h
modified: src/allmain.c
modified: src/detect.c
modified: src/display.c
Bug bz22 (no corresponding web id) reported quite some time ago.
Reported:
Warning stays on when a "lurker above" is co-located with a
boulder, even when you are adjacent to the spot. Even though
you see the warning symbol and not the boulder, an attempt
to move in that direction tries to move the boulder, rather
than attack the creature you know to be there. What's more,
you can get the
"You hear a monster on the other side of the boulder..."
preventing anything from happening if there is a monster on
the other side of the spot. The player doesn't necessarily
even know there is a boulder there at the time (because
warning trumps the boulder display) so it can all be somewhat
confusing.
Change:
- Split off a section of the search0() code for monsters into
a separately callable function, arbitrarily named mfind0(),
which takes a special arg for this particular scenario.
- If you have Warning and you get adjacent to an unseen hider
such as a lurker above with the Warning glyph still displayed,
a specific search is carried out for the obviously present monster.
- The boulder concerns in the original report should become moot
after this.
Most shop messages use shkname() to give the shopkeeper's accurate
name (or hallucinatory substitute) even if he or she can't be seen.
stolen_value() was using mon_nam(), which calls shkname() if the
monster is a shopkeeper who can be seen, but produces "it" when not
seen. Change it to use shkname() like the rest of the shop routines.
Also, replace Monnam() (quite a few instances) with new Shknam() to
do the same duty when the name is at the start of a sentence.
There was also a very obscure bug where if you could see two
shopkeepers at the same time, you could probe the map one spot at
a time with repeated use of the 'p' command to locate monsters in
general and other shopkeepers in particular. Very tedious and not
very useful, but now fixed.
Attempting to read a cursed spellbook fails with a nasty effect. But
a non-cursed book can become cursed while being read (malignant aura
after Wizard has been killed). Assuming no interruption for other
reasons, the read would finish, the spell be learned, and then the
nasty effect would be given. This changes things so that if the book
being read becomes cursed and the hero notices (book's bknown flag is
set), the read-in-progress will be interrupted. Resuming will take
the attempting-to-read-a-cursed-book path. Unfortunately, if the
hero doesn't notice, the old behavior still applies. Maybe the new
behavior should happen even if bknown isn't set (but then player
won't be told why the interruption occurred).
Globs on the floor used different criteria (anything goes) than globs
in inventory (mostly requiring same ownership when in shops and same
curse/bless state--other stuff generally isn't applicable) when
deciding whether two globs should merge. That was okay as long as
the globs on the floor were from being left behind when a pudding or
ooze was killed, but not if the player had picked some up, dipped
them in holy or unholy water, and dropped them again. This changes
things so that globs on the floor use the same criteria as globs in
inventory when deciding whether to coallesce.
Also, my earlier fix was modifying globs in the mergeable() test (to
make bknown and rknown match) rather than during actual merge, which
would be a problem if the merger didn't take place for some reason.
Instead of just using 'random' as the default choice if the user hits
<return> when picking role, race, gender, or alignment, flag it as
pre-selected in the menu so that it can be seen to be the default.
Someday somebody is going to have to fix up the interaction between
PICK_ONE menu and pre-selected choice....
This is more robust than the previous hack. The issue of whether to
use it in other places is still unexplored. Ultimately it's the user's
fault if overzealous message suppression hides something important.
[For an eerie game, try 'MSGTYPE=hide .'.]
Rename the option for adding coordinates to autodescribe feedback for
the '/' and ';' commands from 'getpos_coord' to 'whatis_coord', after
the '/' command that uses it instead of after the internal routine
that implements it. The 'whatis' name was only in dat/hh as far as I
could find, so this changes it to 'what-is' and also updates dat/help
and the Guidebook to mention the name too.
Add a 'screen' choice to the option to show coordinates as row,column
rather than x,y or compass direction(s). Revise the /m, /M, /o, /O
operations of 'what-is' to honor the whatis_coord option (mostly; a
value of 'none' gets overridden by 'map' to force coordinates).
Also, update the description of the functionality of the '/' command
in the Guidebook. The .mn version is tested, the .tex one isn't.
There have been several comments on IRC how the Wizard is a very
light sleeper now; aggravate cast by monsters makes him wake up
and come out of the tower. So, lets limit aggravate to either
outside or inside of the tower, depending on which side the player is.
Original bug report:
> When killing something that's carrying a potion, or death-drops a potion,
> or stands on top of a potion, with a force bolt or a wand of striking,
> "you hear something shatter" or "a potion of foo shatters" but the corpse
> is inverse as if it's (still) a pile.
Unfortunately the newsym() checks for already existing glyph, and
the gbuf doesn't distinguish between object piles and single items,
so newsym doesn't mark the location for update.
This is a dirty hack to force the newsym to update the glyph.
The glyph buffering should be revisited in a future version.
Allow 'msgtype=show' for messages that nethack uses Norep() for.
I don't know whether anyone will ever want to do that, but if felt
strange to have two different message suppression mechanisms that
were completely disconnected from each other.
For a user with no msgtype filter, there'll be no difference in
behavior.
Fix several warnings. Accept ASCII RUBOUT (aka DELETE) in addition
to backspace. [Should use erase_char (and add support for kill_char)
but that means pushing get_count() into the interface code.] Guard
against user causing the count to wrap if someone ever adds a call to
get_count() which doesn't specifying a maximum value.
This happens when levelporting to the first Sokoban level in wizard mode
before visiting the level, causing the branch stairs to not appear until
the space it is in comes in sight of the player.
The issue was that levels flagged premapped would cause the special
level coder to call sokoban_detect() before fixup_special() had a chance
to place the branch stairs properly.
Fix from Dynahack by Tung Nguyen.
ck_server_admin_msg() is only available for '#if (UNIX && MAIL)' but
moveloop() tried to call it unconditionally. Call if from the UNIX
edition of ckmailstatus() instead.
It's occasionally important for public servers to notify
all the players. Sending a mail is not reliable, as not everyone
wants to break conduct, or have mail on.
This adds a compile-time defined filename, which NetHack
will monitor. The contents of the file are in the same
format as SIMPLE_MAIL: "sender:message" on one line.