15 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
9339cff533 Palisade: explicitly use 'signed char' for clues.
Previously, the typedef 'clue' was just 'char', but it was used in the
expectation that it would be signed. So on platforms that default to
unsigned char, such as 32-bit Arm, Palisade would completely fail to
function correctly.
2021-12-11 11:09:29 +00:00
c0da615a93 Centralise initial clearing of the puzzle window.
I don't know how I've never thought of this before! Pretty much every
game in this collection has to have a mechanism for noticing when
game_redraw is called for the first time on a new drawstate, and if
so, start by covering the whole window with a filled rectangle of the
background colour. This is a pain for implementers, and also awkward
because the drawstate often has to _work out_ its own pixel size (or
else remember it from when its size method was called).

The backends all do that so that the frontends don't have to guarantee
anything about the initial window contents. But that's a silly
tradeoff to begin with (there are way more backends than frontends, so
this _adds_ work rather than saving it), and also, in this code base
there's a standard way to handle things you don't want to have to do
in every backend _or_ every frontend: do them just once in the midend!

So now that rectangle-drawing operation happens in midend_redraw, and
I've been able to remove it from almost every puzzle. (A couple of
puzzles have other approaches: Slant didn't have a rectangle-draw
because it handles even the game borders using its per-tile redraw
function, and Untangle clears the whole window on every redraw
_anyway_ because it would just be too confusing not to.)

In some cases I've also been able to remove the 'started' flag from
the drawstate. But in many cases that has to stay because it also
triggers drawing of static display furniture other than the
background.
2021-04-25 13:07:59 +01:00
78bc9ea7f7 Add method for frontends to query the backend's cursor location.
The Rockbox frontend allows games to be displayed in a "zoomed-in"
state targets with small displays. Currently we use a modal interface
-- a "viewing" mode in which the cursor keys are used to pan around
the rendered bitmap; and an "interaction" mode that actually sends
keys to the game.

This commit adds a midend_get_cursor_location() function to allow the
frontend to retrieve the backend's cursor location or other "region of
interest" -- such as the player location in Cube or Inertia.

With this information, the Rockbox frontend can now intelligently
follow the cursor around in the zoomed-in state, eliminating the need
for a modal interface.
2020-12-07 19:40:06 +00:00
5f5b284c0b Use C99 bool within source modules.
This is the main bulk of this boolification work, but although it's
making the largest actual change, it should also be the least
disruptive to anyone interacting with this code base downstream of me,
because it doesn't modify any interface between modules: all the
inter-module APIs were updated one by one in the previous commits.
This just cleans up the code within each individual source file to use
bool in place of int where I think that makes things clearer.
2018-11-13 21:48:24 +00:00
a550ea0a47 Replace TRUE/FALSE with C99 true/false throughout.
This commit removes the old #defines of TRUE and FALSE from puzzles.h,
and does a mechanical search-and-replace throughout the code to
replace them with the C99 standard lowercase spellings.
2018-11-13 21:48:24 +00:00
a76d269cf2 Adopt C99 bool in the game backend API.
encode_params, validate_params and new_desc now take a bool parameter;
fetch_preset, can_format_as_text_now and timing_state all return bool;
and the data fields is_timed, wants_statusbar and can_* are all bool.
All of those were previously typed as int, but semantically boolean.

This commit changes the API declarations in puzzles.h, updates all the
games to match (including the unfinisheds), and updates the developer
docs as well.
2018-11-13 21:34:42 +00:00
60a929a250 Add a request_keys() function with a midend wrapper.
This function gives the front end a way to find out what keys the back
end requires; and as such it is mostly useful for ports without a
keyboard. It is based on changes originally found in Chris Boyle's
Android port, though some modifications were needed to make it more
flexible.
2018-04-22 17:04:50 +01:00
b3243d7504 Return error messages as 'const char *', not 'char *'.
They're never dynamically allocated, and are almost always string
literals, so const is more appropriate.
2017-10-01 16:34:41 +01:00
de67801b0f Use a proper union in struct config_item.
This allows me to use different types for the mutable, dynamically
allocated string value in a C_STRING control and the fixed constant
list of option names in a C_CHOICES.
2017-10-01 16:34:41 +01:00
eeb2db283d New name UI_UPDATE for interpret_move's return "".
Now midend.c directly tests the returned pointer for equality to this
value, instead of checking whether it's the empty string.

A minor effect of this is that games may now return a dynamically
allocated empty string from interpret_move() and treat it as just
another legal move description. But I don't expect anyone to be
perverse enough to actually do that! The main purpose is that it
avoids returning a string literal from a function whose return type is
a pointer to _non-const_ char, i.e. we are now one step closer to
being able to make this code base clean under -Wwrite-strings.
2017-10-01 15:18:14 +01:00
a7dc17c425 Rework the preset menu system to permit submenus.
To do this, I've completely replaced the API between mid-end and front
end, so any downstream front end maintainers will have to do some
rewriting of their own (sorry). I've done the necessary work in all
five of the front ends I keep in-tree here - Windows, GTK, OS X,
Javascript/Emscripten, and Java/NestedVM - and I've done it in various
different styles (as each front end found most convenient), so that
should provide a variety of sample code to show downstreams how, if
they should need it.

I've left in the old puzzle back-end API function to return a flat
list of presets, so for the moment, all the puzzle backends are
unchanged apart from an extra null pointer appearing in their
top-level game structure. In a future commit I'll actually use the new
feature in a puzzle; perhaps in the further future it might make sense
to migrate all the puzzles to the new API and stop providing back ends
with two alternative ways of doing things, but this seemed like enough
upheaval for one day.
2017-04-26 21:51:23 +01:00
59705cccd1 Add missing casts to unsigned char inside ctype functions.
These are necessary because the argument to a ctype function cannot be
a negative value unless it's EOF. Thanks to Cygwin gcc for pointing
out the mistake, and to Patrick Shaughnessy for this patch.
2016-02-01 19:06:36 +00:00
13b67b9d09 Fix loophole in Palisade completion checker.
A user pointed out that if you construct a 'solution' in which no clue
square has too _many_ borders but at least one has too few, and then
bring those clues up to their count by adding extra stray border lines
_inside_ a connected component (avoiding actually dividing any
component completely into two), then the game checker treats that as
solved for victory-flash purposes, on the grounds that (a) the grid is
divided into components of the right size and (b) all clues are
satisfied.

A small example is 4x4n4:22a2b2c33, with the non-solution of dividing
the grid into four 2x2 square blocks and then adding a spurious extra
edge between the two 3 clues. The old Palisade completion check would
flash for victory _at the same time_ as highlighting the spurious edge
in COL_ERROR.

Fixed by enforcing in is_solved() that every border line must separate
two distinct connected components.
2015-11-03 06:59:47 +00:00
d60e348aae Format Palisade solve-type moves in sensible ASCII.
The solve move stored in 'aux' by new_game_desc consists of printable
characters in the range '@' to 'O', each representing a 4-bit bitmap
of edges around a cell. But the one generated on the fly by
solve_game() was missing out the 0x40 bit and just returning
characters in the range ^@ to ^O - which would not only have been
horrible if you found such a string in a save file, but also meant
that a game with any completely borderless square would have a
solution move string terminating early due to the ^@, causing
execute_move() to reject it.

Example: ./palisade --test-solve --generate 1 5x5n5#12345-37 now
succeeds, where previously it failed an assertion.
2015-11-03 06:59:47 +00:00
6860c65bb3 Add a new puzzle: Palisade. 2015-10-18 17:53:28 +01:00