Separate out the reformatting from other changes I'm working on
for X11 "fancy status". Splits a few wide lines but mostly just
switches to the X11 idiom of combining
XSetArg(arglist[argcount], ...);
argcount++;
onto one line:
XSetArg(arglist[argcount], ...); argcount++;
combine boolean and compound options into a single allopt[] array for
processing in options.c.
move the definitions of the options into new include/optlist.h file which
uses a set of macros to define them appropriately.
during compile of options.c each option described in include/optlist.h:
1. automatically results in a function prototype for an optfn called
optfn_xxxx (xxxx is the option name).
2. automatically results in an opt_xxxx enum value for referencing
its index throughout options.c (xxxx is the option name).
3. is used to initialize an element of the allopt[] array at index
opt_xxxx (xxxx is the option name) based on the settings in the
NHOPTB, NHOPTC, NHOPTP macros. Those macros only live during the
compilation of include/optlist.h.
each optfn_xxxx() function can be called with a req id of: do_init, do_set,
get_val or do_handler.
req do_init is called from options_init, and if initialization or memory
allocation or other initialization for that particular option is needed,
it can be done in response to the init req.
req do_set is called from parseoptions() for each option it encounters
and the optfn_xxxx() function is expected to react and set the option
based on the string values that parseoptions() passes to it.
req get_val expects each optfn_xxxx() function to write the current
option value into the buffer it is passed.
req do_handler is called during doset() operations in response to player
selections most likely from the 'O' option-setting menu, but only if the
option is identified as having do_handler support in the allopts[]
'has_handler' boolean flag. Not every optfn_xxxx() does.
function special_handling() is eliminated. It's code has been redistributed
to individual handler functions for the option or purpose that they serve.
moved reglyph_darkroom() function from options.c to display.c
Provide a way to communicate additional behaviors and/or appearances
desired from NetHack window port menus.
This is foundation work for changes to follow at a future date.
Performance profiling showed that multiple strcmpi() calls were
occurring each and every time a character was going to the map.
This update:
- honors the WC_COLOR capability
- It allows a window-port to control individual color availability should the window-port wish to do so.
- Makes checking on the individual colors for the active window-port is a straightforward table lookup at the CLR_ offset.
iflags.use_color remains a master on/off switch for use of color, regardless of the capability
compiled into the game (default TRUE).
The has_color() routine, which is now a shared routine in src/windows.c, could likely be made
into a simple macro to eliminate the function call, but this update does not go that far.
This hits a lot of port files due to the window-port interface change, mostly cookie-cutter.
Support for scrolling within menus via first-/previous-/next-/last-
page keystrokes ("^<>|" by default) was added to X11's general menu
handling but the extended commands menu uses a special menu rather
than a general one. This clones the relevant code to add support for
those keys to extended commands.
The expansion of the extended commands list to include every command
has made picking extended commands out of X11's menu become tedious.
This uses the existing 'extmenu' option (previously tty-only) to
control whether all the commands are present or just the traditional
subset not bound to non-meta keystrokes ('adjust', 'chat', 'loot', &c).
If nethack is built to use graphical tombstone but file rip.xpm is
missing from the playground, there would be a crash if the rip output
was shown. My first attempt to fix it prevented the crash but didn't
display any tombstone, just the last couple of lines of output which
follow the tombstone. This keeps that in case of some other Xpm
failure, but checks for rip.xpm via stdio and reverts to genl_outrip
for text tombstone if it can't be opened.
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.
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.
I was experimenting with some potential changes to menu searching but
have not been satisfied with the result. However, this bit of code
consolidation is worthwhile regardless of that.
Some of the items in NetHack.ad were separated from others by "!"
comment line rather than plain blank line and that tended to make it
look like the two items were directly related. For the ones which
aren't, remove '!'.
I also expanded some comments and reordered a couple of resources,
moving 'slow' closer to top and advanced 'translations' farther down.
Restore handling for keystrokes on PICK_NONE menus so that scrolling
via keys works for them. (That handling was disabled as part of the
patch to support MENUCOLORS.)
Enable [cancel] button for all menus. (That had apparently been
grayed out for PICK_NONE menus since day 1 for X11 windowing.)
Previously the code used the ASCII Text Athena widgets for displaying
file contents. Unfortunately, the widget made it impossible to control
scrolling or pretty much anything else.
Use the menu code instead, making the file display window behave properly.
Both the "help" button at top and the "help" extended menu command
were hilighted by the X resources. Make the top buttons have
"btn_" prefix, so they're easily distinguished in the resources.
Set X resource NetHack*fancy_status: False to enable the TTY-style
status lines. Default is the fancy status.
This patch is somewhat unfinished - even though the TTY-style status
allow for status hilites, the colors don't work correctly yet.
Also changes the fancy status to use the windowport notification code.