move the custom color data into its own field in the glyphmap
and disassociate it from the unicode/utf8 stuff.
move the glyphcache stuff during options processing and parsing
into new file glyphs.c and out of utf8map.c, and make it
general, and not part of ENHANCED_SYMBOLS.
Do the groundwork for allowing glyph color customizations to
work when any symset is loaded and not restrict it only to
the enhanced1 H_UTF8 symsets.
The customizations in effect are still affiliated with a particular
symset.
Also closes#1224, but the PR itself references a data structure
made obsolete by this commit. The curses comment from the PR was
added into the code.
The PR also made several suggestions, but only the first
one has been included in this commit (and no longer based on
the handler), that being:
"allow defining colors if other symbol handling modes are used
(possibly limited to the standard 16 colors)."
FredrIQ also wrote the following suggestions in PR#1224:
Something I was also contemplating, unrelated to implementation of this
support in curses, would be the ability for the following:
allow defining colors if other symbol handling modes are used (possibly limited to the standard 16 colors)
allow defining attributes (for example: glyph:G_pet_female_kitten:U+0066/red/underline)
allow specifying glyphs as wildcards for defining global color/attribute changes
Something I also want to see are keywords for "don't change the current defined data". If this
were to be added, you could for example do this:
OPTIONS=glyph:G_*_fox:U+0064/blue
OPTIONS=glyph:G_statue_*:basechar/gray/underline
for "make all foxes use a blue color, make all statues gray with underline" without needing
to specify the relevant character for every statue. This ("basechar", "basefg", etc)
should perhaps also be added for MENUCOLORS and statushilites, so that you can, for
example, underline all items being worn without needing to specify a bunch of
near-duplicate rules for combining BUC colors + underline worn items
as per #1064
Inspired by self-recover, sort of. Enabled for unix by default; can
be disabled by commenting out '#define CHECK_PANIC_SAVE' in unixconf.h.
When starting the game, if there is no save file to restore and no
lock/level files to recover, check whether a panic save file exists.
If there is one, tell the player that it's there and that it might be
viable, then ask whether to start a new game.
It doesn't convert the panic save into a reconverable one (rename by
nethack, then continue trying to restore) or tell the player how to
make it viable (rename to remove ".e" by game admin), just whether it
is present. If player opts to start a new game, the panic save is
left alone and will trigger the "there's a panic save file" situation
again once the new game finishes and player starts another.
The new change to reset discoveries and monster-stats when exiting
the tutorial used dynamic data which wouldn't be freed if player
used #quit and declined to resume the regular game.
It turns out that such a leak was already present for start-of-game
inventory that gets stashed away during the tutorial.
In both cases, it could happen at most once per game so wasn't a big
deal as far as memory leaks go.
When bulk reformatting took place prior to 3.6.0, the
\#if 0 "Palandir of Westernesse" #endif
block was left as-is, making it different from all the ones that
changed. Reformat it manually, a shorten a couple of wide lines.
When processing
|OPTIONS=windowcolors:window-type foreground-color/background-color
parse the color values and use their names rather than the player's
raw options text. Affects the feedback from 'm O' and is essential
for the next feature.
Accept either "gray" or "grey" where colortable[] always uses "gray"
(half a dozen or so instances), and accept dash or underscore where
colortable[] always uses dash (many instances).
Also, complain about 'window-type' if it isn't recognized as one of
menu, message, status, or text. [For curses, the complaint gets
written to stdout and is then immediately erased as it goes into full
screen mode. That's a general problem, not specific to this option.]
Make sure the windowcolors option can be specified more than
once without a config file warning.
Make the struct holding the details a little more extendable.
symbols.c:429:7: warning: integer constant not in range of enumerated type 'enum symparse_range' [-Wassign-enum]
429 | { 0, 0, (const char *) 0 } /* fence post */
| ^
windows.c:1765:32: warning: integer constant not in range of enumerated type 'enum from_core_requests' [-Wassign-enum]
1765 | { 0, 0, { NO_COLOR, ATR_NONE }}};
| ^
new .h files: hacklib.h selvar.h stairs.h
new .c files: calendar.c, getpos.c, report.c, selvar.c, stairs.c,
strutil.c, wizcmds.c
cleanup of hacklib.c and mdlib.c
hacklib contains functions that do not have to link with the core
relocate wiz commands from cmd.c to wizcmds.c
relocate CRASHREPORT stuff to report.c
relocate getpos stuff from do_name.c to getpos.c
remove temporary struct definition from extern.h
cross-compile PRE-section split into cross-pre1.370 and cross-pre2.370
Windows sys/windows/Makefile.nmake and sys/windows/Makefile.mingw32 and
visual studio project file updates
Unix sys/unix/Makefile.src, sys/unix/Makefile.utl
populate selvar.c and selvar.h
build on MS-DOS (not cross-compile) Makefile updates
for sys/msdos/Makefile.GCC (untested)
vms updates for above (untested)
The 0x1000000 bit (NH_BASIC_COLOR bit) was used to mark
CLR_BLACK when storing it in u->ucolor. Now, all of the basic CLR_*
colors are stored that way.
The NH_BASIC_COLOR bit indicates that the value in u->ucolor is
not an rgb value, rather it is one of the 0-15 basic NetHack colors.
The window-ports need to strip the NH_BASIC_COLOR bit off before using
it for color changes.
creates new coloratt.c file
Also, this attempts to fulfill a wish-list item by paxed, to
allow naming colors in symbols file by name as an alternative
to using r-g-b values. The basic color names as well as html
color names are supported.
Don't include the new 'showvers' option in the short 'O' menu.
optlist.h doesn't start with the usual line with substitutable fields
but I haven't attempted to amend that.
Take advantage of today's EDITLEVEL bump, and add yet another to
remove some field placeholders left behind in when two fields were moved
elsewhere in 22e52ee9.
Add options 'showvers' (boolean) and 'versinfo' (numeric mask) to
show nethack's version on the status lines during play. It won't be
particularly interesting to ordinary players but should be useful
when making screenshots or video to be streamed, or for someone who
switches between git branches or between nethack and variants.
I worked on this several months back but it was combined with
unfinished changes to 'hitpointbar'. I've separated it out so that
it can be put into use. When enabled, one or more components of
"<name> <branch> <version>" will be shown right justified after
status conditions. At present the default is "<branch>" if that is
available and overall status isn't 'released', or "<version>" if
'released' or if branch isn't available. That might need some
refinement.
It works as intended for tty and curses, although some abbreviation
mechanism would be useful if/when the program resorts to abbreviating
status conditions to make things narrow enough to fit.
For X11, it works ok for fancy_status:True (the default, controlled
via NetHack.ad settings) but is messed up for tty-style status. The
text is positioned correctly but there are gaps in it, making it
appear garbled, similar to what I saw when I tried and failed to
implement statuslines:3 for X11. [It might be due to having empty
condition widgets be 1 pixel wide instead of being totally removed
but I don't think the situation is that simple.]
For Qt, if the text needs to be truncated in order to fit, the center
portion of the string will be shown, discarding parts from the left
and right. That ought to discard from left and retain rightmost
portion instead.
For win32|mswin|Win GUI, no attempt to support it has been included.
Things should be ok when 'showvers' is left as False (the default)
but I don't know what will happen if that gets toggled to True. At a
minimum, the version info won't be right justified. The information,
or at least some of it, is displayed in the game window's title bar
so there isn't any pressing need to add it to status, but toggling
the option will need to behave sensibly if it doesn't already.
Adds a new extended command #lookaround, which will describe
the map around the hero they can see or remember.
Adds a new boolean option mention_map, which will give a message
when an interesting map location in sight changes.
When makemon was called with all-zero arguments (e.g. for random
monster generation over time), ptr==NULL means "a random monster".
This was being forwarded to mon==NULL in makemon_rnd_goodpos, and
then mtmp==NULL in goodpos, which means "an object, not a monster".
Because objects can be generated under monsters, this meant that an
attempt to create a random monster could end up choosing a location
that already had a monster, which would then cause the monster
generation to fail.
This mostly wasn't noticeable in normal play: it effectively
reduced the monster generation rate depending on how many locations
outside LOS happened to contain a monster. Normally that's a very
small proportion, so the bug had no obvious effects: but when there
are very few locations outside LOS (i.e. the player can see almost
every location on the level), the bug effectively caused monster
generation to stop once those locations became occupied by
non-moving (e.g. hiding) monsters, something that became observable
in games where the player decided to dig out and light almost an
entire level.
This commit fixes the problem by adding a new flag to goodpos that
requests that it not choose a position that already has a monster.
This bug was diagnosed, and this fix committed, by ais523; but
nhmall wrote almost all of the code implementing the fix.
Add a new boolean option showdamage, if on, outputs a message
like "[HP -2, 14 left]" - several variants have something similar,
but I chose the message based on how eSpeak said it, while keeping
it short.
A bunch of routines return a pointer which is never Null but weren't
telling the compiler that such was the case. A couple (strsubst(),
stripchars()) were accepting Null output argument and then returning
Null, but callers had no reason to use them that way, so they've been
changed. (upstart() could have been changed similarly; I've already
forgotten why I left it as-is.)
DUMPLOG requests the DUMPLOG feature as it does now
DUMPLOG_CORE requests the internal buffering only (used for CRASHREPORT)
This allows CRASHREPORT to access recent messages without performing
any file I/O.
Note: Original change is from xNetHack by copperwater <aosdict@gmail.com>,
but this commit comes from HACKEM-MUCHE by Erik Lunna, with
some minor code formatting.
From xNetHack commit a0a6103bea:
'The original goal: nerf item destruction using a method I initially
proposed for SpliceHack, in which the number of items subject to
damage from any single source is limited by the amount of damage the
effect caused. The intent was to be more fair all around and prevent
aggravating situations where, for instance, a chest shock trap zaps
you for 4 damage and immediately ten of your rings and wands blow up.
Problem 1: no easy way to limit the items destroyed without biasing
heavily towards the start of the invent chain. The old code was able
to get away without bias by just indiscriminately destroying
everything eligible with a 1/3 chance. Here, I had to introduce
reservoir sampling in a somewhat more complex form than I've applied
it elsewhere, since there are a pool of potential items.
Problem 2: destroy_item no longer worked remotely like destroy_mitem,
which still destroyed 1/3 of items indiscriminately. Commence the
process of squishing them into one function that handles both the
player and monsters. (Which required making a lot of adjustments to
destroy_one_item, now named maybe_destroy_item, on nits such as
messaging and when to negate damage. An annoying consequence of the
merge is that in the player case, their HP is deducted and they can
be killed directly, but for monsters they need to add up the
destruction damage and return it.)
Unifying destroy_item and destroy_mitem has some advantages: in
addition to the obvious code duplication removal, it ensures monsters
now take the same damage as players for destruction (previously they
took a piddly 1 damage per destroyed item). Now when you hit
something with Mjollnir and their coveted wand of death breaks apart
and explodes, you at least get the satisfaction of knowing they took
the standard amount of damage from it. Monsters also now get
symmetry with players in having extrinsic elemental resistance
protect them from item destruction, and damage negation from item
destruction if they were appropriately resistant.
Problem 3: a lot of callers didn't preserve the "amount of incoming
damage" that this refactor relies on. E.g. if the defender resisted
that element, the local dmg variable would be set to 0. So I had to
do some wrangling with callers to save that original damage
value. The rule of thumb is: all *incoming* damage counts. So that
includes the player's spellcasting bonus if applicable, but not
things like half damage, negation due to resistance, or extra damage
due to being vulnerable to cold/fire.
Then I figured, while I'm here let's get rid of all those silly cases
where destroy_items is called multiple times for various different
object classes, and cut the object class parameter out of it. This
has a few minor effects:
- Places where different object classes previously rolled
independently for destruction to happen at all now roll
once. (Which, by my calculation, generally means less incidences of
destruction - a fire attack now won't have three separate chances
to hit your scrolls, potions, and spellbooks. On the flip side, a
lucky roll will no longer save an entire object class in your
inventory.)
- Callers can no longer specify different probabilities for
destroying different object classes. The only place this was really
used was to call destroy_item with a slightly lower probability on
SPBOOK_CLASS. With the nerf in this commit, less of them ought to
be destroyed anyway.
- A very edge case of where explosion-vs-monster damage was totted up
differently for golems, which could result in differences of a hit
point here or there.
- All object classes being processed in one go means that less items
are destroyed than would be if they were still processed
independently. This is not really visible compared to the old
baseline of just destroying 33% of everything, but would be a
marked difference versus a copy of the game that still called
destroy_items separately for different object classes. To
compensate, I adjusted my planned damage-to-destruction-limit
scaling factor down from 8 to 5.
Not done: merging in ignite_items(), though that would probably be
really easy now.'
Notes from porting from xNetHack:
- It might be necessary to reexamine at all the conditional checks for
calling destroy_items. Because item destruction is much more
restrained and uses the actual damage from an effect, we might now
need to check 'if (!rn2(3))' and similar in all the places item
destruction occurs.
Simplify the valid-position highlighting via '$' by combining the
tmp_at(start) and tmp_at(populate) steps.
Add highlighting for a couple of targetting operations that would
give valid/invalid feedback via autodescribe but weren't displaying
highlight markers for $.
I made several jumping changes, most of them dealing with picking
hero's own spot.
Change the goodpos symbol, which is used to mark valid locations for
some operations when getpos() is having the player pick a spot, from
green question mark to blue dollar sign. Dollar sign is the default
keystroke to toggle those markers off and on.
Add the 'dump' argument to the existing '--version' command-line
option to display the magic numbers used when validating save and
bones files for compatibility.
Nothing exciting, just a line of 5 hex values. I was going to also
list the values for however many save and bones files are specified
on the command line but it seems to need more effort than I care to
expend. And I hadn't made up my mind whether that should be done by
nethack, recover, or some new standalone program. [Single line of
relatively raw output is so that they could be compared more easily.]
nethack --version:bad-argument was writing a message to stdout and
then starting play--which immediately overwrites stdout. Have it
quit instead. Player wasn't trying to start a game and quitting is
what it does with --version:good-argument.
Check the various uarm, uwep, and so forth pointers to make sure that
they point to items in hero's inventory and that those items have the
corresponding W_ARM, W_WEP, &c bit set in their owornmask field.
Also check whether any other items in inventory have the same bit set.
[Some of this is already handled by sanity_check_worn() in mkobj.c.]
Also validate two-weapon combat mode. I don't recall ever seeing any
problems reported about it though.
Does not validate ball and chain. Those should have their own sanity
checks that validate a bunch of other stuff besides just worn slots.
They already get some checking by the normal object tests.
This works ok with 'sanity_check' set and items worn and wielded
normally. The only insane situation tested was by reverting the
confused-looting-with-quivered-gold fix from earlier today. I haven't
used a debugger to force other such problems so this isn't very
thoroughly tested.
I've been building tty-only for a while in order to speed up
builds, so a recent change to the curses interface that broke
compile on older OSX went unnoticed. The <curses.h> on my
OSX 10.11.6 system does not define A_ITALIC.