Increase weight of giant spider from 100 to 200; leave nutrition at 100.
Increase weight of giant beetle from 10 to 200; increase nutrition from
10 to 50. Both are still size 'large'.
I've left giant ant with weight 10, nutrition 10, size 'tiny' so that
it doesn't become bigger than soldier and fire ants.
Fixes#267
Subtracting one dungeon depth value from another had the subtraction
backwards and that yielded a negative value where a positive one is
expected. If NH_RELEASE_STATUS were to be set to NH_STATUS_RELEASED
then this was at risk of crashing (if the bad subtraction yields -2,
rn2(diff+2) would divide by 0) since rn2()'s argument isn't validated
for released version.
fixes37.0 was confused, listing a couple of things that aren't bugs
in 3.6 as general fixes. I suspect that the DLB one was fixed before
being exposed via git, so shouldn't be there at all.
groundwork only - window port interface change
This changes the last parameter for add_menu() from a boolean
to an unsigned int, to allow additional itemflags in future
beyond just the "preselected" that the original boolean offered.
There shouldn't be any functionality changes with this groundwork-only
change, and if there are it is unintentional and should be reported.
If you're wielding a stack of N items, issuing the command to quiver
them asks whether you want to quiver N-1 of them (implicitly leaving
one wielded). If you answer no then you're asked whether to quiver
all of them. You could also give a count when picking the item to be
quivered and the stack would be split based on that.
However, if you have a stack of N items quivered, issuing the command
to wield them just did so, leaving the quiver empty. And picking an
item ignored any count, so even explicitly asking for 1 (out of N)
wielded the whole stack. Change 'w' to parallel 'Q'; if you try to
wield a quivered stack, you'll be asked whether to wield just 1 of
them. For no, ask whether to wield the whole stack. Or you can give
an explicit count when picking any stack in inventory to wield.
Both 'w' and 'Q' probably ought to handle the alternate/secondary
weapon similarly when it contains a stack. This doesn't address that.
Bite the bullet and add a special purpose boolean option to control
game behavior for random clairvoyance. When objects or monsters are
discovered, it normally issues "you sense your surroundings" and
performs a getpos() operation which allows the player to browse the
map by moving the cursor around and getting 'autodescribe' feedback.
But there have been complaints that once the hero has the Amulet
(which triggers random clairvoyance even though hero isn't flagged
as having that attribute) the message and pause-to-browse become too
intrusive.
This was initially combined with the 'timed clairvoyance' fix because
they both bump EDITLEVEL to invalidate existing save files, but their
details don't interact so I separated them.
When the hero has random clairvoyance, the code used
| (moves % 15) == 0 && rn2(2) != 0
(where 'moves' is actually the turn number) to decide when it would
kick in and show a portion of the map. If the hero was fast enough
to get an extra move when the turn value met the (moves % 15) == 0
condition then clairvoyance could happen twice (or more if poly'd)
on the same turn.
The changes (one new field, reordering a few others) in 'struct
context' invalidate existing 3.7.0-x save files.
Fixes#266
Build feedback filtered by a script which filters out -Dthis -Wthat:
gcc -g -I../include -I../lib/lua-/src -c ../win/share/tilemap.c
The second -I is obsolete or else its bogus value would have caused
build failure. When removing it, I noticed that there was still quite
a bit of obsolete yacc and lex stuff in there. Remove that too.
This adds a boolean option, autounlock, defaulting to true. When this is
set to TRUE, messages stating that some door or container is locked are
automatically followed by a prompt asking if you would like to unlock
it, if you are carrying an unlocking tool (key, lock pick, or credit
card).
Architecturally, this extends the pick_lock function to take three
additional arguments (door coordinates or a box on the ground you are
autounlocking).
The code that selects an unlocking tool will always look first for a
skeleton key, then a lock pick, then a credit card. Since curses, rust,
and other attributes don't really have an effect on the viability of the
unlocking device, it didn't seem to warrant making a more complex
function for that.
Add hallucinatory trap names
This adds many funny, realistic, and nonsensical traps to the game, to
be shown when the player is hallucinating.
Architecturally, the biggest change is merging the what_trap macro and
the "defsyms[trap_to_defsym(ttyp)].explanation" pattern into a single
function "trapname", which returns the name of the trap, handling the
hallucination case. There is also a second parameter used for overriding
hallucination in the occasional cases where the actual trap name should
always be returned.
In addition, the what_trap and random_trap macros are now obsolete and
not used anywhere, so they are removed.
reinstate anti-rng abuse bit on hallucination
updates to hallucinatory trap names and fixes37.0 entry