Changes to be committed:
modified: doc/window.doc
modified: include/qt_win.h
modified: include/trampoli.h
modified: include/winX.h
modified: include/wingem.h
modified: include/winprocs.h
modified: include/wintty.h
modified: src/display.c
modified: src/windows.c
modified: sys/amiga/winami.p
modified: sys/amiga/winfuncs.c
modified: sys/amiga/winproto.h
modified: sys/wince/mswproc.c
modified: sys/wince/winMS.h
modified: win/Qt/qt_win.cpp
modified: win/X11/winmap.c
modified: win/chain/wc_chainin.c
modified: win/chain/wc_chainout.c
modified: win/chain/wc_trace.c
modified: win/gem/wingem.c
modified: win/gem/wingem1.c
modified: win/gnome/gnbind.c
modified: win/tty/wintty.c
modified: win/win32/mswproc.c
modified: win/win32/winMS.h
print_glyph now takes a second parameter.
Tiles on tiled ports always looked odd on places like the plane of air
where the background color of the tile didn't match the general background
of the surrounding area.
3.6 made that even worse and more glaringly noticeable with the introduction
of darkened room tiles.
The code to actually send something useful through the new parameter
for window ports to take advantage if they want will follow.
Changes to be committed:
modified: dat/history
modified: doc/Guidebook.mn
modified: doc/Guidebook.tex
- include new 3.6.0 beta testers in dungeoneers list
MSGTYPE allows the user to define how messages in the message
area behave. For example:
MSGTYPE=stop "You swap places with "
would always make that message prompt for -more-. Allowed types
are "show" (normal message), "hide" (do not show), "stop" (wait
for user), and "norep" (do not repeat message).
Adding this, because it's relatively simple, proven to work, and
it seemed to be the major thing betatesters felt was lacking when
compared to NAO.
The option defaults to on, which is the old-style behaviour.
Turning the option off will never omit the "uncursed" -status
from inventory lines. This is pretty much required if users
want to use menucolors based on the BUC state.
The code that intended to have mimics occasionally take on the form
of "strange object" always produced downstairs instead because
S_MIMIC_DEF is greater than MAXOCLASSES.
This problem was present in 3.4.3. I didn't try to go back to see
how long it's been there, but strange objects used to occur once
upon a time. Either nobody noticed that they'd gone away or there's
an alternate way to produce them.
Fixes a bug reported by ais523. Rather than account for individual
segments, I opted just to make them unleashable, because it's not very
useful behaviour anyhow.
Fix filtering used by the 'D' command, and a few other activities that
allow both object class filtering and bless/curse state filtering, so
that when both class(es) and state(s) are specified, objects need to
match both rather than either. D?C will present the player with cursed
scrolls to drop rather than all scrolls plus all other cursed objects.
This also fixes another instance when gold could end up with its bknown
flag set.
Allow the 'I' command to show inventory of known blessed items via
pseudo object classes B, C, U, and X. That's instead of an showing
inventory of specific object class. The two can't be combined
because 'I' operates on single character input.
I had to modify tty_yn_function to prevent it from forcing a BUCX
character into lower case (simply using lower case would cause a
conflict with 'u' and 'x' for inventory of shopping bill), and did
that by checking whether any of the acceptable response characters
are upper case. Pretty straightforward and shouldn't impact any
other uses that don't specify upper case choices.
I did the same thing for X11. Other interfaces most likely need
to do something similar. If they don't, a response of 'B' or 'C'
(for menustyle:traditional or menustyle:combination) will simply
not work, without causing any problems, same as typing an invalid
choice, and 'U' or 'X' will give shop feedback instead of the
requested subset of inventory.
The Guidebook revisions are untested.
Changes to be committed:
modified: doc/fixes35.0
modified: win/share/gifread.c
modified: win/share/monsters.txt
modified: win/share/objects.txt
modified: win/share/other.txt
modified: win/share/tile2bmp.c
modified: win/share/tilemap.c
The tty code already had the statue patch included, where
statues are represented by stone versions similar in
appearance to their monster likeness.
This extends it to tiles.
A new pass through the monsters.txt file is done
in tile2bmp to include new modified tiles to the output
file that are gray-scaled versions for mapping to the
NetHack statue glyphs.
Any monster with rusting or corrosion attack can eat through
the bars. This includes rust monsters, grey oozes, and black puddings.
Original patch by Malcolm Ryan