When getting a cursor location, and there was no "valid" location
function defined, trying to go to the next or previous valid
location showed null.
Fix this by using the "interesting" locations if no valid ones.
Report suggested that if hero is turning into green slime, genociding
green slime should cure it. I went another direction: if life-saved
while dying due to turning into green slime, you survive polymorphed
into green slime form. If green slimes have been genocided (probably
after becoming infected with slime or hero wouldn't have faced any
slimes to cause infection, but that could be from eating a glob of
green slime created prior to genocide, or from #wizintrinsic), you'll
immediately die again, this time from genocide.
When deciding whether to discard interrupted lock/unlock context while
changing levels, maybe_reset_pick() checks whether xlock.box is being
carried. But it was doing so after the old level had been saved and
memory for non-carried container there had been freed.
That led to a couple of other issues. context.travelcc was using -1
for 'no cached value', but the fields of travelcc have type 'xchar' and
shouldn't be given negative values. 0 should be fine for 'no cache'.
Failed partial restore which occurred after old game's context had been
loaded would begin a new game with old game's stale context. Restoring
goes out of its way to avoid that for 'flags' but didn't for 'context'.
hmon() can destroy the weapon being used, and known_hitum() would
still pass the pointer to the freed object to cutworm(). Remember the
relevant weapon attribute before using and maybe freeing the object,
then pass that attribute instead of the whole weapon. Also pass
'more-likely-to-cut' for axes in addition to blades.
thimonst() behaved similarly, although due to much different code
paths none of the objects that might get to hmon() were then passed to
cutworm(), so it wasn't vulnerable. But pass 'more-likely-to-cut'
for axes instead of for blades when thrown.
Update tty command completion to ignore #shell and #suspend when
they're disabled. (Since they aren't flagged for command completion,
this should be unnoticeable.)
Update X11 extended command selection to not show shell and suspend
in the menu when they're disabled. (Trickier than I expected.)
X11 currently rejects #suspend (at run time, not compile time) but
allows #shell. If it was launched syncronously from a terminal
window, shell escape behaves sanely. Otherwise, that seems like
asking for trouble.
Change the command list to always include #shell and #suspend so that
a user's preferred key bindings can span platforms without worrying
about whether those exist or not. They're still effectively no-ops
when compiled out.
'#?' suppresses them from the list of displayed commands. Interface-
specific extended command handling may want to check new extcmd.flag
value CMD_NOT_AVAILABLE to do the same, but failing to do so shouldn't
pose a problem. They behave sanely if executed when not supported.
Caught by automated build test
../win/curses/cursdial.c:598:9: error: non-void function 'curses_display_nhmenu' should return a value [-Wreturn-type]
return;
^
../win/curses/cursdial.c:605:9: error: non-void function 'curses_display_nhmenu' should return a value [-Wreturn-type]
return;
Some bits from another feature by Tangles had
slipped into our merge of curses a while back.
Remove the partial bits as feature bits should
be complete or not at all, unless foundational
for something to come.
Replace recent "(light blue aura)" with
"(flickering light blue)" if there are 1..4 orcs,
"(glimmering light blue)" if 5..12, or
"(gleaming light blue)" if there are 13 or more, and move its place
in the formatted name.
_3.6.1_: Sting (weapon in hand) (glowing light blue)
_recent: Sting (weapon in hand) (light blue aura)
_now___: Sting (weapon in hand, flickering light blue)
The thresholds for intensity may need to be tweaked. The start
message has been changed from "glows" to "flickers/glimmers/gleams"
and is given when the intensity changes (up or down) as well as when
first glowing. Stop message will usually be "stops flickering" but
some form of mass kill (genocide for sure, maybe explosion, probably
not wand zap) might result in stopping directly from higher intensity.
It still "quivers" if hero is blind when there are orcs on the level,
but no name augmentation shows in inventory for that situation;
describing it as "(weapon in hand, quivering)" would be too silly.
Also, the quiver or glow intermediate message if blindness is toggled
while Sting is active only worked for make_blinded(), not for putting
on and taking off a blindfold. Now fixed. I think becoming blind due
to polymorphing into an eyeless form is still not handled, but there
are no eyeless creatures capable of wielding weapons so that can wait.
Polymorphing from eyeless to sighted is handled but moot for Sting.
My sysconf allows shell escape, and the fuzzer seems fond of that.
Suppress '!' and also '^Z', although I didn't notice it execute the
latter. Without this hack, the sequence '!', sub-shell exit, '&'
causes nethack to be killed via SIGTTOU while fiddling with terminal
settings for introff().
Text popups on OSX could be dismissed with <space> or <return> or
<esc> if user's X resources had 'NetHack*autofocus' set to True, but
for the default of False they ignored all keystrokes even if you
clicked inside the popup window to set focus explicitly. Clicking
on the Close Window button of the popup's title bar was the only way
to get the popup to go away. Fix suggested by Pasi.
Move the curses global variable defininitions to cursmain.c.
Make the references to those global variables extern in
include/wincurs.h
Get rid of a warning:
../win/curses/cursmesg.c:379:9: warning: declaration shadows a
variable in the global scope [-Wshadow] int orig_cursor = curs_set(0);
Kludge for Visual Studio compiler: Add a stub- file for use
in Windows curses port builds to ensure that a needed #pragma
is invoked prior to compiling the file pdcscrn.c in the
PDCurses source distribution. All command line options and
compile of the file. It is unreasonable to expect a NetHack
builder to have to tinker with the PDCurses source files in
order to build NetHack. This kludge means the NetHack builder
doesn't have to.
The file stub-pdcscrn.c contains only two lines:
#pragma warning(disable : 4996)
#include "pdcscrn.c"
Some day, if the PDCurses sources corrects the issue, this
can go away.