Instead of returning 0 or 1, we'll now use ECMD_OK or ECMD_TURN.
These have the same meaning as the hardcoded numbers; ECMD_TURN
means the command uses a turn.
In future, could add eg. a flag denoting "user cancelled command"
or "command failed", and should clear eg. the cmdq.
Mostly this was simply replacing return values with the defines
in the extended commands, so hopefully I didn't break anything.
Keep track of the highest value that u.uhpmax and u.uenmax have
attained, in new u.uhppeak and u.uenpeak. They aren't used for
anything yet. u.mhmax (max HP while polymorphed) isn't interesting
enough to track.
Not save and bones compatible so increments EDITLEVEL.
Drinking booze on an empty stomach will amplify its effects
(i.e. increase the duration of the resulting confusion); stuffing
yourself before drinking will have the opposite effect.
potionbreathe() uses obj->in_use as a flag to inhibit wielded unholy
water from being dropped in case that gets broken against a monster
and triggers the hero to change from human were-critter to beast were-
critter. Reset that to zero if caller hasn't already set it to 1.
should cure sliming. Implement the suggestion that quaffing a
burning potion of oil while turning into green slime will cure the
latter.
It's somewhat iffy since the slime is on the outside moving in and
the burning oil ends up on the inside, but the message sequence is
|You burn your face.
|The slime that covers you is burned away!
and it could be that igniting part of the slime quickly spreads to
the rest.
Implemented for monsters as well as for the hero. They will light
and drink the oil in a single turn in the extremely rare situation
where they actually have a potion of oil and need to use it.
The stair handling reorganization changed drinking a cursed potion
of levitation to only check whether stairs up existed on the level
instead of whether the hero drank the potion while at their spot.
That resulted in always attempting to go up and then getting "you
can't go up here" when not at stairs instead of the intended "you
hit your head on the ceiling".
Fixes#527
If monsters see you resist something, generally elemental or magical
attack, or if they see you reflect an attack, they learn that and
will adjust their attack accordingly.
Originally from SporkHack, but this version comes via EvilHack with
some minor changes.
Issue is about monster shape changes being sensed via telepathy
while hero is swallowed, so player gets told about things that
aren't being shown on the map. Similar situation while underwater;
only monsters in adjacent water spots are shown on the screen, but
messages about sensed monsters will continue to be given. It isn't
limited to shape changing; lots of places include telepathy,
extended monster detection, and warning against specific types of
creatures as criteria to decide whether the hero 'sees' something
that isn't directly visible happen.
Change sensemon() to behave as if being swallowed or underwater
blocks telepathy, extended monster detection, and warning. I
consider this to be experimental, but it needs much wider testing
than would take place if put into its own test branch. It can be
tweaked or reversed if that turns out to be necessary.
There should be no change in behavior when not swallowed and not
underwater. But for either of those two situations, some messages
that have been getting delivered may be different (such as using
"it" instead of sensed monster's name) or suppressed.
Fixes#486
Prayer reward can already uncurse a cursed saddle because hero is
stuck on it. Allow scroll/spell of remove curse to do so too.
The original riding implementation in slash'em operated with the
saddle in hero's inventory rather than in the steed's, so it would
have handled this without any extra effort. Presumeably that was
overlooked when incorporating riding into nethack changed it to
have saddle be part of the steed's inventory instead of hero's.
Update some code from four weeks ago. One of two hold_potion()
calls was followed by update_inventory() but the other wasn't.
Have hold_potion() do that itself. I'm not sure that this is
needed and haven't convinced myself that it's not.
Gcc 9 has become more vocal with sprintf buffer overflow
checking. Remove these sprintf warnings by changing the
offending calls to a snprintf wrapper that will explicitly
check the result.
Dipping a unicorn horn to transform a potion causes that potion
to be removed from and re-inserted into inventory. If the hero
was above 'pickup_burden' threshold prior to dipping and
removing the old potion brought encumbrance back under that,
attempting to add the new one back would drop it instead of
re-exceeding the threshold.
This replaces the arcane system previously used by getobj where the
caller would pass in a "string" whose characters were object class
numbers, with the first up to four characters being special constants
that effectively acted as flags and had to be in a certain order.
Because there are many places where getobj must behave more granularly
than just object class filtering, this was supplemented by over a
hundred lines enumerating all these special cases and "ugly checks", as
well as other ugly code spread around in getobj callers that formatted
the "string".
Now, getobj callers pass in a callback which will return one of five
possible values for any given object in the player's inventory. The
logic of determining the eligibility of a given object is handled in the
caller, which greatly simplifies the code and makes it clearer to read.
Particularly since there's no real need to cram everything into one if
statement.
This is related to pull request #77 by FIQ; it's largely a
reimplementation of its callbacks system, without doing a bigger than
necessary refactor of getobj or adding the ability to select a
floor/trap/dungeon feature with getobj. Differences in implementation
are mostly minor:
- using enum constants for returns instead of magic numbers
- 5 possible return values for callbacks instead of 3, due to trying to
make it behave exactly as it did previously. PR #77 would sometimes
outright exclude objects because it lacked semantics for invalid
objects that should be selectable anyway, or give slightly different
messages.
- passing a bitmask of flags to getobj rather than booleans (easier to
add more flags later - such as FIQ's "allow floor features" flag, if
that becomes desirable)
- renaming some of getobj's variables to clearer versions
- naming all callbacks consistently with "_ok"
- generally more comments explaining things
The callbacks use the same logic from getobj_obj_exclude,
getobj_obj_exclude_too and getobj_obj_acceptable_unlisted (and in a few
cases, from special cases still within getobj). In a number of them, I
added comments suggesting possible further refinements to what is and
isn't eligible (e.g. should a bullwhip really be presented as a
candidate for readying a thrown weapon?)
This also removed ALLOW_COUNT and ALLOW_NONE, relics of the old system,
and moved ALLOW_ALL's definition into detect.c which is the only place
it's used now (unrelated to getobj). The ALLOW_ALL functionality still
exists as the GETOBJ_PROMPT flag, because its main use is to force
getobj to prompt for input even if nothing is valid.
I did not refactor ggetobj() as part of this change.
add MALE, FEMALE, and gender-neutral names for individual monster species
to the mons array. The gender-neutral name (NEUTRAL) is mandatory, the
MALE and FEMALE versions are not.
replace code uses of the mname field of permonst with one of the three
potentially-available gender-specific names.
consolidate some separate mons entries that differed only by species into a
single mons entry (caveman, cavewoman and priest,priestess etc.)
consolidate several "* lord" and "* queen/* king" monst entries into
their single species, and allow both genders on some where it makes some
sense (there is probably more work and cleanup to come out of this at some
point, and the chosen gender-neutral name variations are not cast in stone
if someone has better suggestions).
related function or macro additions:
pmname(pm, gender) to get the gender variation of the permonst name. It
guards against monsters that haven't got anything except NEUTRAL naming
and falls back to the NEUTRAL version if FEMALE and MALE versions are
missing.
Ugender to obtain the current hero gender.
Mgender(mtmp) to obtain the gender of a monster
While the code can safely refer directly to pmnames[NEUTRAL] safely in the
code because it always exists, the other two (pmnames[MALE] and
pmnames[FEMALE] may not exist so use:
pmname(ptr, gidx)
where -ptr is a permonst *
-gidx is an index into the pmnames array field of the
permonst struct
pmname() checks for a valid index and checks for null-pointers for
pmnames[MALE] and pmnames[FEMALE], and will fall back to pmnames[NEUTRAL] if
the pointer requested if the requested variation is unavailable, or if the
gidx is out-of-range.
Allow code to specify makemon flags to request female or male (via MM_MALE
and MM_FEMALE flags respectively)to makedefs, since the species alone doesn't
distinguish male/female anymore. Specifying MM_MALE or MM_FEMALE won't
override the pm M2_MALE and M2_FEMALE flags on a mons[] entry.
male and female tiles have been added to win/share/monsters.txt.
The majority are duplicated placeholders except for those that were
separate mons entries before. Perhaps someone will contribute artwork in the
future to make the male and female variations visually distinguishable.
tilemapping via has the MALE tile indexes in the glyph2tile[]
array produced at build time. If a window port has information that the
FEMALE tile is required, it just has to increment the index returned
from the glyph2tile[] array by 1.
statues already preserved gender of the monster through STATUE_FEMALE
and STATUE_MALE, so ensure that pmnames takes that into consideration.
I expect some refinement will be required after broad play-testing puts it to
the test.
consolidate caveman,cavewoman and priest,priestess monst.c entries etc
This commit will require a bump of editlevel in patchlevel.h because it alters
the index numbers of the monsters due to the consolidation of some. Those
index numbers are saved in some other structures, even though the mons[] array
itself is not part of the savefile.
Window Port Interface Change
Also add a parameter to print_glyph to convey additional information beyond
the glyph to the window ports. Every single window port was calling back to
mapglyph for the information anyway, so just included it in the interface and
produce the information right in the display core.
The mapglyph() function uses will be eliminated, although there are still some
in the code yet to be dealt with.
win32, tty, x11, Qt, msdos window ports have all had adjustments done to
utilize the new parameter instead of calling mapglyph, but some of those
window ports have not been thoroughly tested since the changes.
Interface change additional info:
print_glyph(window, x, y, glyph, bkglyph, *glyphmod)
-- Print the glyph at (x,y) on the given window. Glyphs are
integers at the interface, mapped to whatever the window-
port wants (symbol, font, color, attributes, ...there's
a 1-1 map between glyphs and distinct things on the map).
-- bkglyph is a background glyph for potential use by some
graphical or tiled environments to allow the depiction
to fall against a background consistent with the grid
around x,y. If bkglyph is NO_GLYPH, then the parameter
should be ignored (do nothing with it).
-- glyphmod provides extended information about the glyph
that window ports can use to enhance the display in
various ways.
unsigned int glyphmod[NUM_GLYPHMOD]
where:
glyphmod[GM_TTYCHAR] is the text characters associated
with the original NetHack display.
glyphmod[GM_FLAGS] are the special flags that denote
additional information that window
ports can use.
glyphmod[GM_COLOR] is the text character
color associated with the original
NetHack display.
Support for including the glyphmod info in the display glyph buffer
alongside the glyph itself was added and is the default operation.
That can be turned off by defining UNBUFFERED_GLYPHMOD at compile time.
With UNBUFFERED_GLYPHMOD operation, a call will be placed to map_glyphmod()
immediately prior to every print_glyph() call.
Use a linked list to store stair and ladder information, instead
of having fixed up/down stairs/ladders and a single "special" (branch)
stair.
Breaks saves and bones.
Adds information to migrating objects and monsters for the dungeon
and level where they are migrating from.
This is also from SliceHack, but with the odds of enlightenment toned
down a bit, to 4/9 for a blessed potion and 1/6 for an uncursed potion
(SliceHack had it at 50% blessed, 20% cursed, and strangely, 0%
uncursed). It gives a much-needed use to one of the potions that's
commonly blanked or discarded.
Several conditions result in stale data on the status line when
starting or stopping because things which didn't used to affect it
haven't been setting context.botl to force an update. This wasn't
systematic; there are bound to be lots more.
Make wearing a wet towel confer new attribute Half_gas_damage in
addition to the usual blindness. It reduces damage from being inside
a gas cloud region and from being hit by poison gas breath attack.
It also fully blocks breathing of potion vapors.
Might make the Plane of Fire easier although overcoming its blindness
with telepathy won't reveal elementals. Definitely has the potential
to make blind-from-birth conduct easier which wasn't the intent and
probably isn't significant.
From SliceHack. Note that this refers to the description of the physical
bottle; it's a substitute for "phial", "carafe", "flask", etc. such as
are seen when a potion crashes on someone's head. They don't obscure the
randomized appearance or actual potion identity.
The SliceHack version evidently went through several revisions; just
take the current one.
Submitted for 3.7.0; all but one also apply to 3.6.3.
I rewrote the curses terminal-too-small message instead of just
fixing the spelling of "minumum".
Move makeplural(body_part(FINGER)) into its own routine, with option
to substitute gloves when wearing such.
Wearing slippery gloves (ie, wearing gloves while having slippery
fingers) wouldn't let you put on a ring because you can't take the
gloves off, but removing a worn ring lacked the same restriction.
After changing that, teach prayer that slippery gloves is another
reason why a ring of levitation can't be removed.
Slippery fingers would transfer from bare hands to gloved hands if
you put gloves on. The reverse, transfering from gloves to bare
hands when taking gloves off, was already being prevented for
directly taking them off, but still allowed the slipperiness to
transfer when gloves were lost. This prevents putting on gloves
when fingers are slippery and attempts to handle cases where gloves
get unworn by ways other than 'T' (or 'R') or 'A'.
There's no slippery attribute for objects (way too much work for too
little value); slippery gloves is just the combination of wearing
gloves and having slippery fingers (which now has to have happened
while already wearing those gloves). This changes inventory to use
"(being worn; slippery)" when applicable and much of the patch deals
with funnelling Glib changes through new make_glib() to try to make
sure that persistent inventory adds or removes "; slippery" right
away when changes happen.
If gloves are taken off involuntarily (shapechange to a form that
can't wear them, destruction via scroll of destroy armor or monster
spell of same or via overenchantment, theft), slippery fingers ends
right away instead of the usual few turns later.
Something I realized while following up a newsgroup post. If you
knew an item's bless/curse state and dipped it into water while
blind, the bknown flag stayed set and you learned the item's new
bless/curse state without seeing any "glows blue/black/&c" feedback.
Clear the flag unless you know that the potion being dipped into is
water (or is clear if not water has not been discovered) and also
know the water potion's own bless/curse state.
Another part of github issue 229, mixtype() didn't have either 'break'
or '/*FALLTHRU*/' separating healing from extra healing, extra healing
from full healing, and full healing from unicorn horn. So dipping
"bad" potions (sickness, confusion, blindness, hallucination) into
healing/extra healing/full healing or vice versa operated the same as
dipping a unicorn horn into the bad potion (producing fruit juice for
sickness and water for the others). It wasn't clear from the code
whether or not that was intentional. It actually seems reasonable
(albeit suboptimal use of {plain, extra, full} healing), so continue
to allow it and make the code clear that it's intentional.
A recent change to make_slimed() overlooked a different recent change
in how mon->m_ap_type and youmonst.m_ap_type are referenced. In this
case it had no impact; fix on general principles.
Fixes#196
If you didn't die from turning into green slime but then died because
green slimes had been genocided, the message given assumed that you
had just seen "OK, you don't die" from answering No to "Really die?".
Its wording didn't make sense if the reason you didn't die was an
amulet of life-saving. Give a different message for that case.
Also, if you survive turning into slime (via either method) and either
green slimes are still around or you answer No to "Really die?" when
they've been genocided, give a message after "You survived that attempt
on your life" pointing out that you have done so in green slime form.
Useful since prior to 3.6.2 you would have reverted to original form--
despite the Slimed countdown saying you had turned into green slime.
Make healing magic which cures blindness also cure deafness. So,
drinking non-cursed potion of healing or any extra healing or full
healing; breathing fumes from blessed potion of healing or non-cursed
potion of extra healing or any potion of full healing; prayer reward
to cure blindness as a minor trouble. (Doesn't affect unicorn horns
which already treat deafness and blindness as two distinct troubles
that are eligible to be cured.)
More of a missing feature than a bug fix, so I listed it in the new
features section of the fixes file.
Noticed when looking at whether alchemy ought to remove user-assigned
name. Get rid of the potion being dipped into sooner so that it won't
still be present if a perm_invent update takes place.