Add MG_BW_LAVA to mapglyph() instead of hijacking MG_DETECT. Used
to display lava in inverse video if color is disabled and lava is
using the same display character as water (which is the default).
(The use_inverse option must be enabled for tty to honor it. X11's
text mode doesn't care. Win32 does care but probably shouldn't--it's
not a case like tty where the hardware might not support it.)
This implements both MG_DETECT and MG_BW_LAVA for X11, but only if
the program is built with TEXTCOLOR enabled. Those should work even
when color is not supported, but I suspect that configuration is
unlikely to ever be used so didn't want to spend the time to figure
out how to do it. (The relevant data is overloaded on the color
data, so not available when TEXTCOLOR is disabled.)
The win32 revision is untested.
Umpteenth revision of the X11 extended command menu. Add a new
resource to NetHack.ad to control its initial size.
I still hope there's a better way to do this, but this is my last
shot at it.
When the extended command menu auto-scrolls as the player types in
characters, scroll so that all matching entries come into view rather
than just the first one. For example, it someone types 'w', instead
of just highlighting and showing "wipe", it will highlight "wipe"
(because that has become the default response when <return> is used)
but also show "wiz-this", "wiz-that", and "wmode". It actually shows
one extra entry beyond the last matching one--so you can see that
there aren't any more ambiguous choices--except for 'w' where "wmode"
is the very last extended command.
Previously, on subsequent popups of the extended command menu, the
scrollbar's slider was left drawn in the position it was in during
the previous time even though menu content wasn't scrolled. Now it's
forced back to the top (non-scrolled) position when that menu is
popped up.
When the extended command menu is big enough to need a scrollbar,
leave more elbow room when forcing its height to fit on screen.
The last entry was frequently obscured by OSX's "docking tray"
desktop decoration and the resize hotspot (bottom right corner of
the menu popup) could be hard to access.
I'm not particularly happy with this code. There really has to be
a better way to accomplish what's needed.
Color was only being tracked for locations that had the pile of
objects flag set. And hilite_pile made a monster on a pile take
on the color of the top object of the pile.
This restores the tracking of color for the whole map, and makes
highlighted piles be drawn in inverse like highligted pets. The
drawing routine doesn't know the difference (but could tell, if
necessary, by testing whether the glyph is an object or a monster).
Also, variables 'inbuf', 'inptr', and 'incount' were global; limit
their scope to winmap.c.
The three line change I made previously to implement highlighting for
prompts that ask for single-character input was easy and worked well
for a tiles map, but it didn't look very good for a text map. This
handles both text map and tile map and also adds a configurable
'highlight_prompt' X resource to let the user enable or disable the
feature. The resource template file (win/X11/NetHack.ad, copied to
$HACKDIR during install) now has it enabled by default.
The highlighting--more specifically, the "lowlighting" when no prompt
is active--still looks bad if the map window has a vertical scrollbar
on left edge. I don't have any inspiration about how to fix that up.
If the user hasn't explicitly loaded application defaults (which I
haven't been doing), the X11 interface behaves differently if invoked
via the shell script than if the executable is run directly, because
the script sets up a path so that X can find $HACKDIR/NetHack.ad.
This hides the difference by reading in that file during initialization
and feeding its contents to XtAppInitialize as fallback resources.
The scroll bar on the message window doesn't work for me, just like
the one on the extend commands menu. Moving the pointer to it does
change the cursor, but neither trying to drag the slider nor clicking
above it will make it do anything. However, at some point I managed
to accidentally scroll the message window, and new messages never
restored it to the unscrolled state. New messages were hidden until
enough even newer ones had been delivered to push the hidden ones
into view. So this adds key translations to scroll the message
window via the arrow keys. Clicking on the scroll bar doesn't change
focus to the right place, so I have to click the text display area of
the message window. That triggers a beep (I suspect it's interpreted
as an attempt to move the hero beyond the map.) But then the messages
can be scrolled via the cursor keys. Getting focus back to the map
seems tricky since doing it via pointer is interpreted as a travel
command. Not quite optimal....
Anyway, being able to scroll the message window let me figure out how
to unscroll it when new messages are delivered.
For the 'slow' config (prompting for single-char input done on a
fixed line at the top of the map rather than via a popup window),
invert the background and foreground when creating it so that it
looks like part of the map, then invert again when a prompt is
active in order to highlight that prompt.
Free askname's widgets after use and free getlin's and yn_function's
persistent widgets at end of game.
When loading an entire text file into one long string in memory,
use strcpy on a pointer to the end of the string instead of having
strcat repeatedly churn through the entire string as it grows for
each line. [Since that's only used for small help files (biggest
is dat/history), this optimization is probably not noticeable.]
Also, a handful of new comments and quite a bit of reformatting.
I upgraded from OSX 10.5.8 via 10.6.3 to 10.6.8, plus Xcode to whatever
version was on the 10.6 dvd, and ended up with a more recent version of
gcc that is configured to use 64 bit longs and 64 bit pointers (by
default; presumably that can be changed if necessary). It triggered
several warnings about converting int to pointer of different size or
vice versa even when explicit casts were in use, and a couple of other
things.
The big memory allocation for tiles that was unfreed according to
heaputil was actually freed by X according to a comment in the code.
But free it explicitly for #if MONITOR_HEAP so that the alloc/free
tracking stays accurate.
Also, the cached extended commands menu was not being freed, so take
care of that. I wasn't sure where to handle it; I ended up making it
happen when the map window is torn down.
X11 had been ignoring add_menu(..., MENU_SELECTED) to specify a
pre-selected menu entry. This adds support for that.
Attempt to implement pre-selected entry for PICK_ONE menu sanely by
returning the pre-selected entry instead of toggling it off if the
user chooses it explicitly. Inner workings of menus are convoluted
so I'm not sure it's 100% correct, although testing hasn't found any
problems. (tty currently returns 0 for "nothing picked" when
explicitly picking a pre-selected entry in a PICK_ONE menu, and the
core jumps through hoops to handle it. That can't be cleaned up until
all interfaces which support pre-selected entries achieve sanity.)
Make "random" be chosen for <return> or <enter> during role selection
and highlight it to reflect that. (Role selection for X11 uses its
own code instead of nethack menus, so pre-selection isn't applicable.)
Without this, the keyboard commands don't work in the extended
command window on Linux. If the translations are removed from
menuformview, then the keyboard commands don't work on Mac.
Having the translations in both doesn't seem to hurt.
Make the six buttons (ok, cancel, all, none, invert, search) on
menus for X11 all have the same width.
'ok' should probably be changed to 'okay' to be consistent with
X11_getlin(). (Another inconsistency: the extended commands
menu uses 'dismiss' rather than 'cancel'.)
Two cosmetic changes for the X11 version of the getlin() routine:
1) Make the text entry box big enough to hold 60 characters before
sliding the beginning input off the left edge, instead of just 13,
so that user can see much more of what is being typed;
2) Make the cancel button be a little wider, and the okay button be
the same width as the cancel button so they look a little nicer.
When entering an extended command, allow the user just type
and match a new command immediately, if no match was found,
instead of needing to wait the 2.5 seconds.
Update X11's status display to include the expanded set of status
conditions. This time the order is
Petrifying <hunger> Blind
Slimed <encumbrance> Deaf
Strangled Levitating Stunned
Food Pois Flying Confused
Term Ill Riding Hallucinating
with the application defaults file specifying red text for the first
column and black for the other two. Previously it was all one column
with seven entries. [Slimed was missing along with the six new ones
(deaf, stone, strngl, lev, fly, ride) and both types of sickness were
shown as 'FoodPois' or 'Ill' or 'FoodPois Ill' on one line.]
So now basic bot2, #if STATUS_VIA_WINDOWPORT genl_status_update, and
#if !STATUS_VIA_WINDOWPORT X11 fancy status have three different
orderings. genl_status_update has hunger and encumbrance first
because all the other status conditions are grouped together as one
bitmask item. bot2 has 'lev', 'fly', 'ride' last so that they're
the first things to be sacrificed if the string of status conditions
ends up being truncated. (genl_status_update also has those last.)
In addition to updating status conditions, I reordered the Hp, Pw, &c
section too so that it's closer to tty in organization.
Hit points Maximum HP
Power Maximum Power
Armor Class Alignment
Exp.Level Exp.Points (if 'showexp')
Gold Moves (if 'time')
Score (if 'showscore')
I didn't have SCORE_OR_BOTL set so haven't seen the last one, but
it's in the same position as it was before.
Restore the ability to select extended commands by keystroke.
The key translation stuff had gotten attached to the wrong widget.
When using keys to highlight an entry in the extended command menu,
don't reset the key-by-key handling so quickly. (On second and
subsequent keystrokes, if you waited more than 0.5 second, the new
key started picking an extended command from scratch rather than
continuing the current one, making it pretty hard to disambiguate
commands which have the same initial letter. Now the delay
threshold is 2.5 seconds. In theory that should become a user-
preference resource but I don't think it's worth the effort.)
Display the help choice in response to '?'.
Clean up the formatting of the top two buttons (dismiss + help).
Start with a scroll bar if the menu is too big to fit on the screen.
Prior to this, on OSX, the full menu would be constructed but any
of it that was 'displayed' beneath the bottom of the screen was
inaccessible because it couldn't be dragged higher and couldn't be
resized to get a scroll bar (since the way to resize on OSX is by
dragging the bottom right corner--which was off the screen).
The problems I mentioned recently are still present: when scroll
bar is present, I can click beneath it and it moves down, but
neither dragging it up nor clicking above it will move it back up.
Fortunately the recently implemented up and down arrows both work,
even after clicking/dragging starts failing.
There was a lot of trial and error involved here. Most of it
eventually got phased out, but the mystery of 'defaultDistance'
(which is reported to be 0 but is actually 4) remains. The screen
height stuff at the end ought to be fixed up if someone can figure
out how to get the width of a horizontal scroll bar or the height
of a title bar. (I'm sure I used to know how to do the latter,
but that was 25 or so years ago, and in Fortran with Xlib rather
than Xt or Xaw....)
Update the unix Makefiles and the older OSX hints files to handle the
pile marker tile overlay. I didn't touch hints/macosx10.10 and .11
since I think there's still a merge for them pending.
A couple of formatting tweaks for bemain.c are included, for no
compelling reason. What are the odds that anyone will every build
that again?
One of the steps in the pre-release checklist: make sure the version
number in the X11 icons is up to date. nh32icon and nh56icon both have
the version number (major and minor values only, not patchlevel).
Update it from 3.4 to 3.6 for both. (nh72icon doesn't have any version
info in its design, so doesn't need any update.)
The X11 'bitmap' program strips out the header comments, so I modified
the image, saved it, used 'git diff --patch' to capture the changes,
'git checkout' to revert to the existing file, and edited in the diff
bands pertaining to the changed data. No doubt this could have been
done in some easier fashion, but it was victory just to find the bitmap
utility and achieve results using a one-button mouse--worse, a clumsy
touchpad substituting for one--when it's designed for a three-button one.
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.
I'll push a formatting guide at some point. There may still be
outstanding changes, but please feel free to resolve those as you arrive
a them.
To the best of my knowledge, there is no changes to the actual code
content, but the formatter does have the occasional bug. If you run into
an issue, please fix it!
Suppress close to 400 warnings generated by gcc on the win/X11/*.c code,
most due to -Wwrite-strings which makes string literals implicitly have
the 'const' attribute. (Since modifying a string literal results in
undefined behavior, that is an appropriate check to have enabled, but
it can be troublesome since string literals have type 'char *' and code
that uses them that way is correct provided it avoids modifying them.)
113 warning: initialization discards qualifiers from pointer target type
127 warning: assignment discards qualifiers from pointer target type
29 warning: passing argument discards qualifiers from pointer target type
109 warning: unused parameter
12 warning: comparison between signed and unsigned
The nhStr() hack casts to 'char *', explicitly removing 'const', for
situations where it isn't feasible to make code directly honor const.
The vast marjority of uses are for the second parameter to XtSetArg(),
which is a macro that actually performs an assignment with the second
argument rather than passing it in a function. It takes values like
'XtNtop', which doesn't need to be altered (although in many places I
changed that to nhStr(XtNtop) for uniformity with the surrounding code,
and 'XtNbottom', which does need to have the extra const stripping to
avoid a warning. Go figure.
The nhUse() hack actually uses its argument in a meaningless way if the
code is compiled with FORCE_ARG_USAGE defined. When GCC_WARN is defined,
FORCE_ARG_USAGE will be enabled if it hasn't been already. Example:
/*ARGUSED*/
int foo(arg)
int arg; /* not used */
{
+ nhUse(arg);
return 0;
}
The extra line will expand to ';' when FORCE_ARG_USAGE is not defined
or too
nhUse_dummy += (unsigned)arg;
when it is. I figured direct assignment might lead to a different
warning by some compilers in a situation like
nhUse(arg);
nhUse(otherarg);
where the first assignment would be clobbered by the second, and using
bitwise operations or safer '+= (arg != 0)' would most likely generate
more non-useful code. Some tweaking might turn out to be necessary.
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.
Convert search in tty menus from pmatch to case-insensitive pmatchi;
convert search in X11 menus from substring strstri to wildcard pmatchi.
tty bug: if the menu is full screen, the search prompt and subsequent
user input clobbers the menu header.
Same functionality as was recently implemented for tty. If a
character like ':' is an explicit menu selector and the player
types it, select that menu entry rather than treating it as a
search request. (Same for other menu commands like '>', but
offhand I can't think of anything besides container looting's
': - look inside' that uses any non-letter selectors other
than '$', which isn't used as a menu meta command.)
There is a lot of code affected by this, and Pat Rankin correctly
observes that it would be better to store roguelike as a level flag
rather than just using Is_rogue_level. A note for the future.
Part II of the bones tracking patch. Change umpteen different outrip()
routines to handle its new time_t argument, and use formatkiller() instead
of directly accessing killer.{format,name} and killed_by_prefix[]. The
latter is now static within formatkiller().
The many sys/* and win/* changes are untested....