More groundwork for overhauling the status display for curses, plus
a few functional changes. It was doing a full status update for
every changed field (except conditions), instead of waiting for a
flush directive after gathering multiple changes at a time. Since
it already does gather every change, the fix to wait is trivial.
This decouples 'hitpointbar' from 'statushilites'. When highlighting
is off, it uses inverse video only. When on, it behaves as before:
using inverse video plus the most recent color used to highlight HP
(which can vary if that has rules to highlight changes or percentage
thresholds) but ignoring any HP attribute(s). This also enables the
latent 'statuslines' option and changes 'windowborders' option from
being settable at startup only to changeable during play.
'statuslines' can have a value of 2 (the default) or 3 and applies to
'align_status:bottom' or 'top'; it's ignored for 'left' and 'right'.
At the moment, setting it to 3 only allows status condition overflow
to wrap from the end of line to 2 to the beginning of line 3, and if
window borders are drawn they'll clobber the last character on line 2
and first one on line 3. There's no point in trying to fix that
because it will go away when the main status overhaul changes go in.
Condition wrapping for vertical orientation (left or right placement)
was already subject to the same phenomenon and will be superseded too.
This also changes the meaning of the 'windowborders' value so could
impact players using source from git (or possibly beta binaries for
Windows, but not for OSX where curses interface wasn't included).
Old:
0 = unspecified, 1 = On, 2 = Off, 3 = Auto (On if display is big
enough, Off otherwise; reevaluated after dynamic resizing);
Unspecified got changed to 3 during curses windowing initialization.
New:
0 = Off, 1 = On, 2 = Auto;
0 gets changed to 2 for default value at start of options processing.
So old value of 2 is changing meaning and explicit old value of 3 is
becoming invalid. Implicit 3 changes to default 2. Explicit 3 could
be the subject of a fixup but there isn't much point since 2 can't
have a similar fix. Users who are using old 2 or explicit 3 will need
to update their run-time config files.
This adds 'statuslines' to the Guidebook and moves some other recently
added documentation of curses options from among the general options
(section 9.4) to "Window Port Customization options" (section 9.5).
None of them have been added to dat/opthelp which seems to be missing
all the wincap options.
Originally I made a lot of changes (mostly moving C99 declarations to
start of their blocks) to the old '#if 0' code at end of cursstat.c,
but have tossed those, except for one subtle bug that assumed 'int'
and 'long' are the same size.
Miscellaenous stuff either groundwork for or noticed while updating
curses status. The status changes themselves need some more testing.
One or two of the comments refer to that revised status which hasn't
been checked in yet.
decode_mixed() writes its output into a 'char *' buffer that's passed
in to it and then returns that buffer. Some excessively paranoid
error checking forced to return 'const char *'. Relax that and use
'char *' so callers can work with the result without extra casts.
The curses interface was ignoring video attributes (bold, inverse, &c)
when color is toggled off or if built with TEXTCOLOR disabled. Honor
attributes regardless of whether color is displayed.
Also, toggling 'hilite_pet' On during play wouldn't do anything if the
curses-specific 'petattr' option had been left as None. (It worked as
intended if set in starting options.)
When setting up an alternate definition for UCHAR_P to accommodate
DEC C's non-ANSI mode(s), leave the default definition to tradstdc.h.
DEC C's VAXC mode will end up expecting 'unsigned char' rather than
either 'int' or 'unsigned int'. Not applicable for Unix but this
makes similar change there as is being made for VMS.
Suppress Isaac64 on VAX were there isn't an easy way to do 64-bit
arithmetic. (Hard way isn't worth it for just an alternate RNG.)
Eliminate or suppress some diagnostics:
1) In strict ANSI mode, DEC C was reporting that '$' in identifier is
an extension (one time for each file in sys/vms/*.c). (It doesn't do
that for the default 'relaxed ANSI' mode.)
2) DEC C uses WIDENED_PROTOTYPES but widens uchar (unsigned char)
differently depending upon the mode it is operating in. (Applies to
Unix as well as VMS; based on documentation rather than testing.)
Update the comment in tradstdc.h about WIDENED vs UNWIDENED_PROTOTYPES.
An old comment in config1.h about a problem with the earliest version
of DEC C was probably based on an incorrect assumption of what was
really going, but I have no way to go back in time to verify that....
The VMS compiler supports C99 and defines __STDC_VERSION__ to the
corresponding value, but it doesn't supply <stdint.h> so isaac64.c
wouldn't compile. It does supply another header containing what is
needed.
Generally, fish should lay their eggs in the water and
not on land, but the game was only allowing the opposite.
Eels are catadromous and lay their eggs in the Sargasso Sea,
not in the dungeon.
This started out as an attempt to document the curses options in the
Guidebook, but I didn't actually get that far. Instead, integrate
the curses options better via more consistent WC/WC2 usage. This
prevents 'guicolor' from showing up as a boolean option for non-curses
interface in curses+other binary.
For curses itself, let 'petattr' be set/reset via 'O'. Also, accept
'Dim' as a possible pet highlight attribute since it already handles
all the other ordinary attributes. I'm not sure what leftline and
rightline highlighting are supposed to do. They were missing for
ncurses (or maybe they're misspelled for PDcurses?) but adding them
didn't produce any visible effect (using TERM=xterm-256color on OSX
with default font/character set).
Not addressed:
1) general confusion about compile-time vs run-time option filtering;
2) curses pet highlighting only works if 'color' option is enabled.
We aren't defining BSD for OSX but we probably should be. This doesn't
go that far, just changes a couple of __APPLE__ for MACOSX (set up in
config1.h) and defines DEV_RANDOM as "/dev/random".
Fixes#177
The monst struct has 'mintrinsics' field which attempts to handle
both mon->data->mresists and extrinsics supplied by worn armor, but
polymorph/shape-change was clobbering the extrinsics side of things.
Potentially fixing that by changing newcham() to use set_mon_data(...,1)
instead of (...,0) solved that but exposed two other bugs. Intrinsics
from the old form carried over to the new form along with extrinsics
from worn armor, and update_mon_intrinsics() for armor being destroyed
or dropped only worked as intended if the armor->owornmask was cleared
beforehand--some places were clearing it after, so extrinsics from worn
gear could persist even after that gear was gone.
So, fixing the set_mon_data() call in newcham() was a no go. This
fixes update_mon_intrinsics() and adopts the suggested code from
github pull request #177 to have mon->mintrinsics only handle worn
gear instead of trying to overload innate intrinsics with that. This
is a superset of that; the flag argument to set_mon_data() is gone
and mon->mintrinsics has been renamed mon->mextrinsics. (The routine
update_mon_intrinsics() ought to be renamed too, but I didn't do that.)
Do late message suppression in a different fashion. Also, there are
more messages than shk taking hero's possessions and guard taking
hero's gold that need to be suppressed if regular message delivery
is no longer possible: "do not pass Go", "you arise from the grave
as a foo", "the corridor disappears", "you are encased in the rock".
Those last two are from vault handling but take place in a convoluted
manner: paygd -> mongone -> grddead -> clear_fcorr.
Extend 'putstr(WIN_MESSAGE, attribute, string)'s attribute so that
'custompline(SUPPRESS_HISTORY, ...)' can work with ^P's message
history like DUMPLOG history, in order to keep autodescribe feedback
and intermediate prompts for multi-digit count ('Count: 12', 'Count:
123') prompts out of recall history. The old autodescribe behavior
could easily push all real messages out of the recall buffer when
moving the cursor around for getpos, and the count behavior looked
silly for a four or five digit gold count if you set the msg_window
option to 'full' or 'combination' and viewed them all at once.
Other interfaces may want to follow suit, but this doesn't force them
to make any changes. I added a hook for "urgent messages" that might
be rendered in bold or red or some such and/or override the use of
ESC at --More-- from suppressing further messages, but there aren't
any custompline(URGENT_MESSAGE, ...) calls (potentially "You die...",
for instance) to exercise it. Other people have implemented similar
feature it different ways and I'm not sure whether this one is really
the way to go since the core needs to categorize each message that it
deems to be urgent. MSG_TYPE:stop may be sufficent, although MSG_TYPE
matching can entail a lot of regexp execution overhead at run-time.
Fixes#101
If you tell the vault guard your name, drop carried gold, wait one
turn, then pick up the gold again, the guard will move a step away
during the wait. If you teleport away, the guard will seal vault
walls and then park himself on the one-square (so far) temporary
corridor adjacent to the vault wall. Periodically he'll say "Move
along!" and the hero will hear it, regardless of location on the
level. Unless you dig a corridor to rescue him, or one or more of
the vault's walls get breached again, he will never move.
The report emphasized that you could use this to steal the vault's
gold, but it relies on being able to teleport beyond the gaurd's
reach and if you can do that, you might as well do so before the
guard comes. The stranded guard, and him saying "Move along!" when
no longer leading hero out of the vault, are more significant bugs.
Bonus fix: if the game ends and the guard seals up the vault while
the hero is in a spot that gets fixed up (vault wall or temporary
corridor) don't give the "You are encased in the rock" message if
game end was due to death rather than quit.
The new code provoked several warnings; this fixes one of them.
Moving the declaration of 'rolecount' would have been sufficient,
but I've gone another way.
GCC doesn't set __STDC_VERSION__ for older versions. It is verified to
be set by default on 5.3.0.
Older versions set __INT64_MAX__ though (oldest version tested is
4.5.4).
If compilation with older GCC versions is required, set -std=c99. Even
3.4.6 is supported with this setting.
This is branched from Alex's hallu-rng-stability branch,
with two build corrections (detect.c, zap.c), and merged
with the isaac64 branch that we have ready to go.
Alex's dual rng is supported by setting up the array
of multiple isaac64 contexts.
I stuck with Alex's approach of passing the rng function
name around as the parameter (rng or rn2_on_display_rng)
for the new additional parameter needed for
set_random(), init_random(), reseed_random(),
and init_isaac64().