I'm not sure whether basic formatting cleanup belongs in 3.6.1, but
there are also a couple of strings that got split and require the
implicit concatenation of adjacent string literals introduced with
C89/C90. The code itself compiles with pre-ANSI compilers, or at
least used to--most of it was developed with one....
Much of it is tabs in comments. But there was one substantive item:
an obsolete reference to "use 'Q' to Quit" after however many years....
I'll push a formatting guide at some point. There may still be
outstanding changes, but please feel free to resolve those as you arrive
a them.
To the best of my knowledge, there is no changes to the actual code
content, but the formatter does have the occasional bug. If you run into
an issue, please fix it!
The preliminary implementation of PANICTRACE on VMS had a "Fixme"
that this fixes, and a "TODO" that this makes moot, but the main reason
for this patch is that vmsmisc.c had been changed to call vms_define(),
which resides in vmsunix.c. Since vmsmisc.obj is linked into progarms
in util/ and vmsunix.obj isn't, enabling PANICTRACE caused linking
problems for those. This moves the code that wants to call vms_define()
into vmsunix.c (despite the fact that it's not even vaguely related to
Unix emulation), so that it only matters to nethack and doesn't impact
the utility programs anymore.
This uses a VMS facility called LIB$INITIALIZE to call code before
main() starts. It's rather messy--at least when written in something
other than assembler or Bliss--and shouldn't be needed for nethack,
but I couldn't figure out how to trap the condition signalled by
lib$signal(SS$_DEBUG) when the debugger isn't available to do so, so I
needed a way to make issuing that signal be conditional upon debugger
availability. One of the arguments passed to LIB$INITIALIZE-invoked
routines contains information that makes if feasible to deduce whether
the debugger is available.
Even when PANICTRACE is disabled, that's useful for handling abort
due to panic while in running in wizard mode.
[See cvs log for src/role.c for a much longer description.]
When picking role, race, and so forth, new menu entries allow you to
pick any of the other items before the one currently being handled. After
picking all four of race, role, gender, and alignment (or if you answered
'y' to "shall I pick for you?"), there is a followup prompt to confirm the
choices. It's a menu which also provides a chance to rename the character.
This has only been implemented in win/tty's player_selection(), with
some support code in the core that might be useful to other interfaces.
And so far, the chance to rename is only presented as a menu choice if
you've given an answer to "who are you?" prompt earlier during startup.
Also, ports that use pcmain.c aren't able to perform hero renaming yet.