Instead of just accepting an attribute, it's now possible to
use a color, or both color and attribute, for example:
OPTIONS=menu_headings:inverse
OPTIONS=menu_headings:red
OPTIONS=menu_headings:red&underline
Default is still just inverse.
This lets the player change the menu heading color without
needing to use menu colors for them.
Also makes it so the core uses NO_COLOR instead of 0, for all
the menu lines which don't have any prefedefined color.
Tested for tty, curses, x11, qt, and win32
Reported by entrez, some putstr() to text window got changed to
add_menu_str(). I didn't test with curses; with tty some headers
ended up in limbo: "Artifacts" header for '` a y' (wizard mode show
artifacts, something I had forgotten even existed) and also monster
class headers for 'm #vanquished by-class' (available to everyone).
Qt lost them too, but at least it didn't panic.
Not due to over-simplification: end of game disclosure suppresses
header line highlighting, except when disclosing final inventory.
Change it to do so, although it would be simpler overall to just not
bother with any menu_headings highlight suppression.
The cancellation effect of Magicbane can cause shapeshifters to change
to their base forms. Since the name of the monster being attacked is
cached earlier, the name used for subsequent messages from Mb_hit would
be outdated after this happened. For example, as encountered in a
recent game: "The magic-absorbing blade cancels the vampire bat! The
vampire bat turns into a vampire lord! The vampire bat is confused."
Insert the new name into hittee[] if cancellation caused the targeted
monster to change form.
This should pacify the analyzer. get_artifact(obj) expands to code
which checks whether obj is Null. untouchable() knows that it will
always be non-Null so didn't perform any comparable test and the
analyzer complained.
Using get_artifact() before the 'beingworn' assignment instead of
after would just have shifted the complaint to the assignment's use
of obj->owornmask. Adding a test for Null to that expression should
eliminate the complaint but I haven't verified that.
Reported by Noisytoot: going from level tut-1 to tut-2 returned the
hero's starting equipment too soon, and exiting the tutorial from
tut-2 let the hero keep any equipment acquired within the tutorial.
Entering and leaving the tutorial was being handled by lua code in
the level description of tut-1 and adding a second level messed that
up. I didn't see any way of handing that with level-specific lua
code so I made it become the core's responsibility. gotolevel()
knows when the hero is moving from one dungeon branch to another so
it can recognize entry to or exit from the tutorial easily.
While fixing this, prevent #invoke of the Eye of the Aethiopica from
offering the tutorial as a candidate destination (was feasible if it
had been entered at start of game).
Not fixed: levels visited in the tutorial become part of #overview.
Show location as "Tutorial:1" instead of "Dlvl:1" on status lines.
Only tested with tty; some interfaces handle location themselves and
may need their own fixup for this.
Fixes#1046
I was working on this at the time 3.6.0 was released and set it aside
until later. Later has finally arrived. Redo the Blind, Blinded,
Blindfolded,&c macros to make more complete use of intrinsic property
handling. Blinded was being treated as a number which could be added
to or subtracted from; now that has to be done via TIMEOUT mask
because it has FROMOUTSIDE (OPTIONS:blind) and FROMFORM (poly'd into
!haseyes() form) bits included. Object definitions for blindfold and
towel now specify the BLINDED property; overriding blindness via the
Eyes of the Overworld is accomplished via props[BLINDED].blocked.
Code generated for the scores of Blind and !Blind tests throughout
the program should be smaller.
One bug that has been fixed is that putting on the Eyes of the
Overworld cured permanent blindness (from OPTIONS:blind). The
u.uroleplay.blind flag was cleared and stayed so after taking them
off. Putting the Eyes on still breaks blind-from-birth conduct but
now blindness will resume when they are removed.
This was untested at the time it was set aside and is only lightly
tested now. A large number of the changes here are just to switch
from Blinded to BlindedTimeout for current timed value and to call
set_itimeout() for setting a new value.
To get the Magic Mirror of Merlin to speak, you could apply it in
any direction (or wield it). To get the Master Key of Thievery to
speak, you had to apply it toward an adjacent doorway or down while
on a container (or wield it). Make the key behave like the mirror.
sound_verbal(char *text, int32_t gender, int32_t tone, int32_t vol,
int32_t moreinfo);
-- NetHack will call this function when it wants to pass text of
spoken language by a character or creature within the game.
-- text is a transcript of what has been spoken.
-- gender indicates MALE or FEMALE sounding voice.
-- tone indicates the tone of the voice.
-- vol is the volume (1% - 100%) for the sound.
-- moreinfo is used to provide additional information to the soundlib.
-- there may be some accessibility uses for this function.
It may be useful for accessibility purposes too.
A preliminary implementation has been attempted for macsound to test
the interface on macOS. No tinkering of the voices has been done.
Use of the test implementation requires the following at build time with make.
WANT_SPEECH=1
That needs to be included on the make command line to enable the test code,
otherwise just the interface update is compiled in.
I don't know for certain when AVSpeechSynthesizer went into macOS, but older versions
likely don't support it, and would just leave off the WANT_SPEECH=1.
If built with WANT_SPEECH=1, the 'voices' NetHack option needs to be enabled.
It was a bit strange, when I first started up the test, to hear Asidonhopo,
the shopkeeper, talking to me as I entered his shop and interacted with him.
The consolidation of global variables from scattered source
files into decl.c and declared in decl.h was begun in 3.7.0.
Their placement in common files was done for centralized
initialization and potential re-initialization during a
"play again" scenario.
It wasn't really necessary for all of them to be housed in a
single huge structure to meet the "play again" requirement,
and the single huge structure has been a little unwieldy when
it comes to maintenance.
Following this commit, instead of one single extremely large structure
named 'g' to house all of the relocated global variables, they
are distributed into several ga through gz.
To make things easy for the developer, each variable is placed
into the struct corresponding to the starting letter of the variable.
That way, no lookup is required in order to know which struct houses
a particular variable, it is a simple match to the starting letter
for all the centralized global variables.
A global variable named 'amulets', would be found in ga.
ga.amulets
^ ^
A global varable named 'move', would be found in gm.
gm.moves
^ ^
A global variable named 'val_for_n_or_more' would be found in gv.
gv.val_for_n_or_more
^ ^
A global variable named 'youmonst' would be found in gy.
gy.youmonst
^ ^
Someone asked whether the 'magr' argument to artifact_hit() can be
Null or not since the code sometimes checks whether it is Null and
other times uses it unconditonally. The answer is "it depends."
Can't reply to asker due to forced anonymity when the contact form
was submitted.
Demon lords and princes have a chance to resist the effect.
Demons in quest when nemesis is alive have a very high chance
of resisting.
When invoked in Gehennom, teleports the demons within the same
level.
One of the drivers of this change was that screen coordinates require a
type that can hold values greater than 127. Parameters to the window
port routines require a large type in order to be able to have values
a fair bit larger than COLNO and ROWNO passed to them, particularly for
their use to the right of the map window.
This splits the uses of xchar into 3 different situations, and adjusts
their type and size:
xchar
|
-----------------------
| | |
coordxy xint16 xint8
coordxy: Actual x or y coordinates for various things (moved to 16-bits).
xint16: Same data size as coordxy, but for non-coordinate use (16-bits).
xint8: There are only a few use cases initially, where it was very
plain to see that the variable could remain as 8-bits, rather
than be bumped to 16-bits. There are probably more such cases
that could be changed after additional review.
Note: This first changed all xchar variables to coordxy. Some were
reviewed and got changed to xint16 or xint8 when it became apparent that
their usage was not for coordinates.
This increments EDITLEVEL in patchlevel.h
(user-side decisions really, but as it stands right now
user-side decisions/options are made and processed by the core)
add a parameter to add_menu so color can be passed
Switch to using a macro invocation Verbos(n, s) in place of the
flags.verbose checks.
Provide the mechanics for individual suppression of any of the
existing messages that were considered verbose.
Mechanics only - this code update does not provide any means of
setting the suppression bits.
iflags.verbose = 0
is still a master suppression of all the verbose messages.
iflags.verbose = 1
turns on the verbose messages only for those whose suppression
bit is 0 (not set).
From a reddit thread: NAO's list of causes of death shows
|killed by handling a(n) ring of shock resistance
|killed by handling a(n) wand of fire
along with various other rings and wands and the poster wondered how
that could have killed characters. Someone quickly figured out that
the heroes involved had lycanthropy and the items listed happened
to be silver in those games.
Avoid that sort of confusion in future by specifying "handling a
silver ring" or "handling a silver wand" instead of the specific
type of item when inflicting silver damage. It still uses specific
item for other classes of objects where silver isn't shuffled among
potential items at start of game.
Implement 'untrap' as an 'autounlock' action. Quite a bit more work
than anticipated. The new documentation is rather clumsy; too many
if-this and if-not-that clauses have intruded.
I'll be astonished if all the return values are correct....
[A couple of places were checking for (rx != 0 && ry != 0) to decide
whether they were performating an autounlock action at <rx,ry> but
that erroneously excludes the top line of the map if the current
level extends that far. Just check rx for zero/non-zero.]
Use 'fuzzymatch(,," -",)' when checking whether the name specified
in a player's wish text matches an artifact name so that extra or
omitted spaces and dashes are ignored. Wishing for "firebrand" will
yield "Fire Brand" and "demon bane" will yield "Demonbane".
When a monster hit hero with an artifact with drain-life attack
(Stormbringer or The Staff of Aesculapius), and hero lost a level
and hero had more max hp in the lower xp level, the math made the
attacker lose hp. This could put the monster hp in the negative,
causing "dmonsfree: 1 removed doesn't match 0 pending"
artifact.c: In function 'dump_artifact_info':
artifact.c:1088:37: warning: '%s' directive writing up to 255 bytes into a region of size 218 [-Wformat-overflow=]
1088 | Sprintf(buf, " %-36.36s%s", artiname(m), buf2);
| ^~ ~~~~
In file included from ../include/config.h:652,
from ../include/hack.h:10,
from artifact.c:6:
../include/global.h:255:24: note: 'sprintf' output between 39 and 294 bytes into a destination of size 256
255 | #define Sprintf (void) sprintf
artifact.c:1088:13: note: in expansion of macro 'Sprintf'
1088 | Sprintf(buf, " %-36.36s%s", artiname(m), buf2);
| ^~~~~~~
Redo the recent artifact creation stuff by replacing several nearly
identical routines with one more general one. Also adds a tracking
bit for one or two more creation methods. That changed artiexist[]
from an array of structs holding 8 or less bits to one holding 9, so
bump EDITLEVEL in case the total size changed.
This should have been broken up into multiple pieces but they're
all lumped together. I did ultimately throw away a fourth change.
Implement artiexist[].bones and artiexist[].rndm artifact creation
tracking bits that were added recently. Doesn't need to increment
EDITLEVEL this time.
Add a new wizard mode feature: if you use `a to show discovered
artifacts, it will prompt about whether to show the tracking bits
for all artifacts instead. If not using menustyle traditional,
you need at least one artifact to have been discovered in order to
have 'a' choice available when selecting what class of discovered
objects to show for the '`' command.
artifact_gift(), aritfact_wish(), and so forth return a value that
none of the existing callers use, so cast their calls to (void).
Since the struct used for elements of artiexist[] has a lot of unused
bits, add some new ones to extend it to indicate how artifacts have
been created. It had
| .exists (has been created) and
| .found (hero is aware that it has been created)
introduce
| .gift (divine gift),
| .wish (player wish),
| .named (naming elven weapon Sting or Orcrist)
| .viadip (made Excalibur by dipping long sword into fountain)
| .rndm (randomly created), and
| .bones (from bones file--how it got created in earlier game isn't
tracked). The first four are implemented, fifth and sixth aren't.
Some of the feedback when receiving an artifact or spellbook has been
revised.
When artiexist[] was changed from an array of booleans to an array of
structs a couple of days ago, EDITLEVEL should have been incremented
but I overlooked that at the time. This commit does so now.
Move some code that was used to decide whether to call distant_name
or doname into distant_name so that the places which were doing that
don't need to anymore and fewer places can care about whether an
artifact is being found. There were two or three instances of
distant_name maybe being called, based on distance from hero, and
yesterday's artifact livelog change added two or three more and made
all of them override the distance limit for artifacts.
After that change to distant_name, make sure that conditional calls
to it become unconditional--just not displayed for the cases where
!flags.verbose had been excluding them. That way distant_name can
decide whether an item is up close and arrange for xname to find it
if it as an artifact.
Also, implement an old TODO. Wearing the Eyes of the Overworld
extends the distance that an item can be from the hero and still be
considered near anough to be seen "up close" when monsters pick it
up or drop it. The explicit cases were using distu(x,y) <= 5, the
distance of a knight's jump. Each quadrant around the hero is a 2x2
square with the diagonal corner chopped off. The replacement code in
distant_name calculates a value of 6, which is functionally equivalent
since the next value of interest beyond 5 is 8. Wearing the Eyes
(deduced by having Xray vision) extends that threshold an extra step
in addition to overriding blindness and seeing through walls: 15,
a 3x3 square in each quadrant, still with the far diagonal corner (16)
treated as out of range.
Log artifacts found on the floor, or carried by monsters if hero sees
those monsters do something with them. Shown to player via #chronicle
and included in dumplog.
For most cases, finding is based on having the artifact object be
formatted for display. So walking across one won't notice it if pile
size inhibits showing items at its location, even if the artifact is
on top. Taking stuff out of a container won't notice an artifact if a
subset of the contents chosen by class or BUCX filter doesn't include
it unless player has used ':' to look inside. Seeing an artifact be
picked up by a monster (even if the monster itself is unseen) or being
dropped (possibly upon death) will find an artifact even if beyond the
normal range of having it be treated as seen up close. Random treasure
drop items are excluded since they are placed directly on the floor
rather than going into a dying monster's inventory and then dropped
with its other stuff.
Lay groundwork for generating a log event when finding an artifact
on the floor or carried by a monster. This part should not produce
any change in behavior.
Move g.artidisco[] and g.artiexist[] out of the instance_globals
struct back to local within artifact.c. They are both initialized
at the start of a game (and only used in that file) so don't need
to be part of any bulk reinitialization if restart-instead-of-exit
ever gets implemented.
Convert artiexist[] from an array of booleans to an array of structs
containing a pair of bitfields. artiexist[].exists is a direct
replacement for the boolean; artiexist[].found is new but not put to
any significant use yet. If will be used to suppress the future
found-an-artifact event for cases where a more specific event (like
crowning or divine gift as #offer reward) is already produced.
Remove g.via_naming altogether and add an extra argument to oname()
calls to replace it.
Add an extra argument to artifact_exists() calls.
If you want to declare a pointer which the address pointed to is constant,
you should declare it as like `static const char *const var = "...";`.
This commit supplies missing `const` and prevents some programming
error in the future.
djgpp cross-compiler was griping about several.
This also removes these lines from sys/unix/hints/include/compiler.370.
CFLAGS+=-Wno-format-nonliteral
CCXXFLAGS+=-Wno-format-nonliteral
-Wformat-nonliteral should not be incompatible with the printf
argument-checking capabilities on literal format strings and there
shouldn't be any new warnings created.
-- &< --
artifact.c: In function 'artifact_hit':
artifact.c:1309:23: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1309 | mon_nam(mdef));
| ^~~~~~~
artifact.c:1328:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1328 | pline(behead_msg[rn2(SIZE(behead_msg))], wepdesc, "you");
| ^~~~~
ball.c: In function 'drop_ball':
ball.c:896:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
896 | pline(pullmsg, "pit");
| ^~~~~
ball.c:899:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
899 | pline(pullmsg, "web");
| ^~~~~
ball.c:904:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
904 | pline(pullmsg, hliquid("lava"));
| ^~~~~
ball.c:908:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
908 | pline(pullmsg, "bear trap");
| ^~~~~
dig.c: In function 'liquid_flow':
dig.c:747:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
747 | pline(fillmsg, hliquid(typ == LAVAPOOL ? "lava" : "water"));
| ^~~~~
fountain.c: In function 'floating_above':
fountain.c:28:5: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
28 | You(umsg, what);
| ^~~
invent.c: In function 'hold_another_object':
invent.c:1018:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1018 | pline(drop_fmt, drop_arg);
| ^~~~~
invent.c:1073:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1073 | pline(drop_fmt, drop_arg);
| ^~~~~
invent.c: In function 'silly_thing':
invent.c:1811:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1811 | pline(silly_thing_to, word);
| ^~~~~
lock.c: In function 'pick_lock':
lock.c:375:19: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
375 | pline(no_longer, "hold the", what);
| ^~~~~~~~~
lock.c:379:19: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
379 | pline(no_longer, "reach the", "lock");
| ^~~~~~~~~
lock.c: In function 'pick_lock':
lock.c:375:19: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
375 | pline(no_longer, "hold the", what);
| ^~~~~~~~~
lock.c:379:19: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
379 | pline(no_longer, "reach the", "lock");
| ^~~~~~~~~
mcastu.c: In function 'cast_cleric_spell':
mcastu.c:670:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
670 | pline(fmt, Monnam(mtmp), what);
| ^~~~~
mhitu.c: In function 'hitmsg':
mhitu.c:68:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
68 | pline(pfmt, Monst_name);
| ^~~~~
mkobj.c: In function 'insane_object':
mkobj.c:2848:20: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2848 | impossible(altfmt, mesg, fmt_ptr((genericptr_t) obj), where_name(obj),
| ^~~~~~
mkobj.c:2852:20: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2852 | objnm);
| ^~~~~
mon.c: In function 'mon_givit':
mon.c:1469:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1469 | pline(msg, Monnam(mtmp));
| ^~~~~
mon.c: In function 'mondead':
mon.c:2485:33: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2485 | | SUPPRESS_INVISIBLE), FALSE));
| ^
muse.c: In function 'mon_reflects':
muse.c:2438:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2438 | pline(str, s_suffix(mon_nam(mon)), "shield");
| ^~~~~
muse.c:2445:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2445 | pline(str, s_suffix(mon_nam(mon)), "weapon");
| ^~~~~
muse.c:2450:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2450 | pline(str, s_suffix(mon_nam(mon)), "amulet");
| ^~~~~
muse.c:2458:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2458 | pline(str, s_suffix(mon_nam(mon)), "armor");
| ^~~~~
muse.c:2464:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2464 | pline(str, s_suffix(mon_nam(mon)), "scales");
| ^~~~~
muse.c: In function 'ureflects':
muse.c:2476:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2476 | pline(fmt, str, "shield");
| ^~~~~
muse.c:2483:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2483 | pline(fmt, str, "weapon");
| ^~~~~
muse.c:2487:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2487 | pline(fmt, str, "medallion");
| ^~~~~
muse.c:2493:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2493 | pline(fmt, str, uskin ? "luster" : "armor");
| ^~~~~
muse.c:2497:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2497 | pline(fmt, str, "scales");
| ^~~~~
polyself.c: In function 'polyman':
polyself.c:201:5: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
201 | urgent_pline(fmt, arg);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~
potion.c: In function 'make_hallucinated':
potion.c:423:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
423 | pline(message, verb);
| ^~~~~
potion.c: In function 'peffect_gain_level':
potion.c:1033:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1033 | You(riseup, ceiling(u.ux, u.uy));
| ^~~
potion.c:1044:21: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1044 | You(riseup, ceiling(u.ux, u.uy));
| ^~~
priest.c: In function 'intemple':
priest.c:487:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
487 | You(msg1, msg2);
| ^~~
read.c: In function 'doread':
read.c:522:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
522 | pline(silly_thing_to, "read");
| ^~~~~
shk.c: In function 'shk_names_obj':
shk.c:2576:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2576 | pline(fmtbuf, obj_name, (obj->quan > 1L) ? "them" : "it", amt,
| ^~~~~~
shk.c:2579:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2579 | You(fmt, obj_name, amt, plur(amt), arg);
| ^~~
shk.c: In function 'shk_chat':
shk.c:4506:13: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
4506 | pline(Izchak_speaks[rn2(SIZE(Izchak_speaks))], shkname(shkp));
| ^~~~~
shk.c: In function 'check_unpaid_usage':
shk.c:4633:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
4633 | verbalize(fmt, arg1, arg2, tmp, currency(tmp));
| ^~~~~~~~~
sounds.c: In function 'dosounds':
sounds.c:66:21: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
66 | pline(throne_msg[2], uhis());
| ^~~~~
sounds.c:259:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
259 | You_hear(msg, halu_gname(EPRI(mtmp)->shralign));
| ^~~~~~~~
timeout.c: In function 'choke_dialogue':
timeout.c:269:26: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
269 | body_part(NECK));
| ^~~~~~~~~
timeout.c:274:17: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
274 | urgent_pline(str, hcolor(NH_BLUE));
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~
timeout.c: In function 'levitation_dialogue':
timeout.c:339:26: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
339 | danger ? surface(u.ux, u.uy) : "air");
| ^~~~~~
timeout.c: In function 'slime_dialogue':
timeout.c:379:34: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
379 | urgent_pline(buf, hcolor(NH_GREEN));
| ^~~
timeout.c:381:30: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
381 | urgent_pline(buf, an(Hallucination ? rndmonnam(NULL)
| ^~~
uhitm.c: In function 'hmon_hitmon':
uhitm.c:1398:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1398 | pline(fmt, whom);
| ^~~~~
uhitm.c:1421:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1421 | pline(fmt, whom);
| ^~~~~
uhitm.c: In function 'stumble_onto_mimic':
uhitm.c:5301:9: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
5301 | pline(fmt, what);
| ^~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_clear_nhwindow':
../win/tty/wintty.c:1649:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
1649 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_display_nhwindow':
../win/tty/wintty.c:2339:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2339 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_dismiss_nhwindow':
../win/tty/wintty.c:2432:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2432 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_destroy_nhwindow':
../win/tty/wintty.c:2477:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2477 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_curs':
../win/tty/wintty.c:2503:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2503 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_putsym':
../win/tty/wintty.c:2599:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2599 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_add_menu':
../win/tty/wintty.c:2967:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
2967 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_end_menu':
../win/tty/wintty.c:3032:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
3032 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../win/tty/wintty.c: In function 'tty_select_menu':
../win/tty/wintty.c:3140:15: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral]
3140 | panic(winpanicstr, window);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
Instead of returning ECMD_OK, the commands now return ECMD_CANCEL
when user declined to pick a direction or an object to act on.
Note that this can be ORed with ECMD_TIME, if the command still
took a turn.
For now this has no gameplay meaning.
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.
Fix a segfault when polymorphed into a dragon and using ^X.
One inconsistency I've spotted that I hadn't noticed earlier: if
you wear red dragon scales/mail you obtain infravision ability, but
if polymorph into a red dragon, you don't.
Special abilities conferred by wearing dragon armor was implemented in
a somewhat half-assed fashion; extend it to 3/4-assed. Abilities came
from wearing dragon armor but not from being poly'd into a dragon or
for monsters that were wearing dragon armor or actually were dragons.
This covers much of that.
There are umpteen calls of 'resists_foo(mon)' and some are now
'resists_foo(mon) || defended(mon, AD_FOO)' but the second part ought
to be incorporated into update_mon_intrinics() so that the extra
'|| defended()' doesn't have to be spread all over the place and the
ones being put in now could/should be removed.
While testing, I noticed that a monster wielding Fire Brand did not
resist being hit by a wand of fire. This fixes that and should also
fix various comparable situations for other artifacts. But so far it
has only been done for zapping (and any other actions which use the
zapping code). Folding defended() checks into update_mon_intrinsics()
matters more than that probably sounds.
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.
Reported by entrez: when fruit name is given the name of an artifact
that doesn't use "the" at the start of its name, messages about the
artifact could be altered. Example was fruit=Excalibur causing usual
|You are blased by Excalibur's power!
to unintentionally change to
|You are blased by the Excalibur's power!
because of a false match during special handling for named fruit in
function the().
This fixes that, and also changes basic inventory formatting. Former
|f - an Excalibur
will now be
|f - Excalibur
for a fruit that has been assigned that name. When sort pack in On,
as it is by default, that will be listed under Comestibles rather than
under Weapons so really shouldn't fool anyone. And
|f - 2 Excaliburs
also breaks the illusion.
This formatting change only affects named fruits. User assigned names
for object types or for individual objects behave the same as before.
It's redundant with g.moves, so there is no more need for it.
Way, way back, it looks like g.moves and g.monstermoves can and did
desync, where g.moves would track the amount of moves the player had
gotten (and would therefore increase faster if the player were hasted)
and g.monstermoves would track the amount of monster move cycles, aka
turns. But this has not been the case for a long time, and they both
increment together in the same location in allmain.c. There are no
longer any cases where they will not be the same value.
This is a save-breaking change because it changes struct
instance_globals, but I have not updated the editlevel in this commit.
Add two new monsters and two new objects:
gold dragon
baby gold dragon
gold dragon scale mail
set of gold dragon scales
A couple of variants seem to have added these already, but this came
off my ancient list of monsters to add and was done from scratch.
It's a clone of silver dragon, but instead of having reflection and
breathing cold, a gold dragon emits light and breathes fire; because
of the latter it can be seen with infravision like a red dragon.
Adult gold dragons are lawful as in the AD&D Monster Manual rather
than chaotic as the wiki pages show for the variant versions.
Worn gold dragon scales operate similar to wielded Sunsword: when
blessed, radius is 3 (same as a lamp), if uncursed, radius is 2, and
if cursed, radius is 1 (but functions as 2 when worn by the hero,
otherwise there would be no tangible effect). Gold dragon scale mail
gets an extra +1, making blessed gold DSM have a bigger radius than
lamps. Embedded scales have radius 1 regardless of BUC state; light
for that case comes from the gold dragon monster form the hero is in.
When not worn, gold scales and scale-mail don't emit any light.
The tiles use a mix of yellow (for gold) and red. The two object
tiles seem reasonable variations of the corresponding silver dragon
ones. The two monster tiles definitely need work since the silver
ones were mostly cyan and changing that to red did not produce very
good result; subsequent attempt at a mixture was haphazard at best.
When unlocking a trapped container, any blessed key was behaving
as if it was the rogue's Master Key of Thievery: detecting the
trap, asking whether to untrap, and always succeeding if player
responds with yes. The intended behavior is that the Master Key
will behave that way for a rogue if not cursed and for non-rogue
if blessed; it wasn't supposed to affect ordinary keys at all.
Fixes#503
Change Trollsbane versus troll corpse revival: instead of revival
failing if Trollsbane is wielded at time of revival attempt, mark
the corpse no-revive if killed by Trollsbane (whether by the hero
or a monster).
If a no-revive corpse is within view when time to revive occurs,
give "the troll corpse twitches feebly" even when the hero isn't
responsible. That used to only apply if the hero zapped the
corpse with undead turning, which would have become inoperative
because now being zapped by undead turning clears the no-revive
flag and revives as normal. In other words, undead turning magic
overrides killed-by-Trollsbane or non-ice troll having been in an
ice box.
Player's pet killed a troll with Trollsbane and the corpse later
revived. He assumed that killing a troll with Trollsbane is what
prevents troll corpse revival but that is inhibited by the hero
be wielding Trollsbane at the time revival is attempted.
Having killed-by-Trollsbane be the reason for blocking revival
would be much better but looks like a lot of work for something
which was supposed to be a one-line enhancement to an under-used
artifact. This extends revival inhibition to having anyone on
the level be wielding Trollsbane rather than just the hero.
Not a proper fix but I think it's better than nothing.
Closes#475
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.