## About The Pull Request
Basically just goes through and adds `mouse_over_pointer =
MOUSE_HAND_POINTER` to a bunch of screen elements (player hud and lobby
menu)
Also adds it to very small wall mounted objects like buttons, fire
alarms, and light switches
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c501cd3d-8efd-4fd0-a486-a53f2102a2cbhttps://github.com/user-attachments/assets/89f7cdcb-b40c-4ef3-b578-fee66ddf1ce2
## Why It's Good For The Game
- Makes interacting with screen elements a bit more tactile
- Makes it a bit easier to click on tiny buttons and such (being able to
know when you're actually hovering the thing)
- Maybe can be expanded to more world objects to indicate they are
clickable vs non-interactable?
## Changelog
🆑 Melbert
qol: Hovering over clickable screen elements will now update your mouse
cursor to indicate they're clickable
qol: Hovering over small wall mounts (light switches, buttons, fire
alarms) will now update to mouse cursor indicating you're hovering them
/🆑
## About The Pull Request
Currently to check for Silicon access, we do:
``if is silicon or is admin ghost or has unlimited silicon privileges or
has machine remote in hand``
What has unlimited silicon privileges? Bots, Drones, and admin ghosts.
To check for AI access, it just checks for AI instead of silicon, and
doesnt check for unlimited silicon privileges.
This was kinda silly, so I thought I should make this a little easier to
understand.
Now all silicon/ai traits come from ``AI_ACCESS_TRAIT`` or
``SILICON_ACCESS_TRAIT``. I made a single exception to keep Admin ghost,
since now instead of being a var on the client, we moved it to using the
same trait but giving it to the client instead, but since we have to
keep parity with previous functionality (admins can spawn in and not
have this on, it only works while as a ghost), I kept previous checks as
well.
No more type checks, removes a silly var on the mob level and another on
the client.
Now while I was doing this, I found a lot of tgui's ``ui_act`` still
uses ``usr`` and the wrong args, so I fixed those wherever I saw them,
and used a mass replace for the args.
Other changes:
- machinery's ``ui_act`` from
https://github.com/tgstation/tgstation/pull/81250 had ``isAI`` replaced
with ``HAS_AI_ACCESS``, this has been reverted. Machine wands and admin
ghosts no longer get kicked off things not on cameras. This was my
fault, I overlooked this when adding Human AI.
- Human AI's wand gives AI control as long as it's in your hand, you can
swap to your offhand. I hope this doesn't end up going horribly,
otherwise I'll revert this part. It should let human AIs not have their
UI closed on them when swapping to eat food or use their door wand or
whatnot.
- Bots previously had special checks to scan reagents and be
unobservant, I replaced this with giving them the trait. I also fixed an
instance of unobservant not being used, so now statues don't affect the
basic creature, whatever that is.
## Why It's Good For The Game
This is an easier to understand way of handling silicon access and makes
these mobs more consistent between eachother.
Other than what I've mentioned above, this should have no impact on
gameplay itself.
## Changelog
🆑
fix: Statues don't count as eyes to creatures.
fix: Human AIs and Admin ghosts no longer get kicked off of machines
that aren't on cameranets.
/🆑
## What's going on here
Kept you waitin huh!
This pr resprites most all walls, windows and other "wall adjacent"
things to a 3/4th perspective, technical term is "tall" walls (we are
very smart).
If you're trying to understand the technical details here, much of the
"rendering tech" is built off the idea of split-vis. Basically, split a
sprite up and render it on adjacent turfs, to prevent seeing "through"
walls/doors, and to support seeing "edges" without actually seeing the
atom itself.
Most of the rest of it is pipelining done to accommodate how icons are
cut.
## Path To Merge
Almost* all sprites and code is done at this point.
There are some things missing both on and off the bounty list, but that
will be the case forever unless we force upstream (you guys) to stop
adding new shit that doesn't fit the style.
I plan on accepting and integrating prs to the current working repo
<https://github.com/wall-nerds/wallening> up until a merge, to make
contribution simpler and allow things like bounties to close out more
easily
This pr is quite bulky, even stripping away map changes it's maybe 7000
LOC (We have a few maps that were modified with UpdatePaths, I am also
tentatively pring our test map, for future use.)
This may inhibit proper review, although that is part of why I am
willing to make it despite my perfectionism. Apologies in advance.
Due to the perspective shift, a lot of mapping work is going to need to
be done at some point. This comes in varying levels of priority. Many
wallmounts are offset by hand, some are stuck in the wall/basically
cannot be placed on the east/west/north edges of walls (posters), some
just don't look great good in their current position.
Tests are currently a minor bit yorked, I thought it was more important
to get this up then to clean them fully.
## What does it look like?






## Credits
<details>
<summary>Historical Mumbojumbo</summary>
I am gonna do my best to document how this project came to be. I am
operating off third party info and half remembered details, so if I'm
wrong please yell at me.
This project started sometime in late 2020, as a product of Rohesie
trying to integrate and make easier work from Mojave Sun (A recently
defunct fallout server) with /tg/.
Mojave Sun (Apparently this was LITERALLY JUST infrared baron, that man
is insane) was working with tall walls, IE walls that are 48px tall
instead of the normal 32. This was I THINK done based off a technical
prototype from aao7 proving A it was possible and B it didn't look like
dogwater.
This alongside oranges begging the art team for 3/4th walls (he meant
TGMC style) lead to Rohesie bringing on contributors from general /tg/,
including actionninja who would eventually take over as technical lead
and Kryson, who would define /tg/'s version of the artstyle. Much of the
formative aspects of this project are their work.
The project was coming along pretty well for a few months, but ran into
serious technical issues with `SIDE_MAP`, a byond map_format that allows
for simpler 3/4th rendering.
Due to BULLSHIT I will not detail here, the map format caused issues
both at random with flickering and heavily with multiz.
Concurrent with this, action stepped down after hacking out the
rendering tech and starting work on an icon cutter that would allow for
simpler icon generation, leaving ninjanomnom to manage the project.
Some time passed, and the project stalled out due to the technical
issues. Eventually I built a test case for the issues we had with
`SIDE_MAP` and convinced lummox jr (byond's developer) to explain how
the fuckin thing actually worked. This understanding made the project
theoretically possible, but did not resolve the problems with multi-z.
Resolving those required a full rework of how rendering like, worked. I
(alongside tattle) took over project development from ninjanomnom at
this time, and started work on Plane Cube (#69115), which when finished
would finally make the project technically feasible.
The time between then and now has been slow, progressive work. Many many
artists and technical folks have dumped their time into this (as you can
see from the credits). I will get into this more below but I would like
to explicitly thank (in no particular order) tattle, draco, arcanemusic,
actionninja, imaginos, viro and kylerace for keeping the project alive
in this time period. I would have curled up into a ball and died if I
had to do this all myself, your help has been indispensable.
</details>
<details>
<summary>Detailed Credits</summary>
Deep apologies if I have forgotten someone (I am sure I have, if someone
is you please contact me). I've done my best to collate from the git
log/my memory.
Thanks to (In no particular order):
Raccoff: Being funny to bully, creating threshold decals for airlocks
aa07: (I think) inspiring the project
ActionNinja: Laying the technical rock we build off, supporting me
despite byond trying to kill him, building the icon cutter that makes
this possible
ArcaneMusic: Artistic and technical work spanning from the project's
start to literally today, being a constant of motivation and positivity.
I can't list all the stuff he's done
Armhulen: Key rendering work (he's the reason thindows render right), an
upbeat personality and a kick in the ass. Love you arm
Azlan: Damn cool sprites, consistently
Ben10Omintrix: You know ben showed up just to make basic mobs work, he's
just fuckin like that man
BigBimmer: A large amount of bounty work, alongside just like, throwing
shit around. An absolute joy to work with
Capsandi: Plaques, blastdoors, artistic work early on
CapybaraExtravagante: Rendering work on wall frames
Draco: SO MUCH STUFF. Much of the spritework done over the past two
years is his, constantly engaged and will take on anything. I would have
given up if not for you
Floyd: Early rendering work, so early I don't even know the details.
Enjoy freedom brother
Imaginos16: A guiding hand through the middle years, handled much of the
sprite review and contribution for a good bit there
Iamgoofball: A dedication to detail and aesthetic goals, spends a lot of
effort dissecting feedback with a focus on making things as good as they
can be at the jump
Infrared: Part of the impetus for the project, made all the xenomorph
stuff in the MS style
Jacquerel: A bunch of little upkeep/technical things, has done so much
sprite gruntwork (WHY ARE THERE SO MANY PAINTING TYPES)
Justice12354: Solved a bunch of error sprites (and worked out how to
actually make prs to the project) Thanks bro!
Kryson: Built the artstyle of the project, carrying on for years even
when it was technically dying, only stopping to casually beat cancer. So
much of our style and art is Kryson
KylerAce: Handled annoying technical stuff for me, built window frame
logic and fully got rid of grilles.
LemonInTheDark: Rendering dirtywork, project management and just so much
fucking time in dreammaker editing sprites
Meyhazah: Table buttons, brass windows and alll the old style doors
Mothblocks: Has provided constant support, gave me a deadline and
motivation, erased worries about "it not being done", gave just SO much
money to fill in the critical holes in sprites. Thanks moth
MTandi: Contributed art despite his own blackjack and hookers club
opening right down the road, I'm sorry I rolled over some of your
sprites man I wish we had finished earlier
Ninjanomnomnom: Consulted on gags issues, kept things alive through some
truly shit times
oranges: This is his fault
Rohesie: Organized the effort, did much of the initial like, proof of
concept stuff. I hope you're doin well whatever you're up to.
san7890: Consulting on mapper UX/design problems, being my pet mapper
Senefi: Offsetting items with a focus on detail/the more unused
canidates
SimplyLogan: Detailed map work and mapper feedback, personally very kind
even if we end up talking past each other sometimes. Thank you!
SpaceSmithers: Just like, random mapping support out of nowhere, and
bein a straight up cool dude
Tattle: A bunch of misc project management stuff, organizing the
discord, managing the test server, dealing with all the mapping bullshit
for me, being my backup in case of bus. I know you think you didn't do
much but your presence and work have been a great help
Thunder12345: Came out of nowhere and just so much of the random
bounties, I'm kind of upset about how much we paid him
Time-Green: I hooked him in by fucking with stuff he made and now he's
just doin shit, thanks for helping out man!
Twaticus: Provided artistic feedback and authority for my poor feeble
coder brain, believed in the project for YEARS, was a constant source of
❤️ and affirmation
unit0016: I have no god damn idea who she is, popped out of nowhere on
the github one day and dealt with a bunch of annoying
rendering/refactoring. Godspeed random furry thank you for all your
effort and issue reports
Viro: A bunch of detailed spriting moving towards 3/4ths, both on and
off the wallening fork. If anyone believed this project would be done,
it was viro
Wallem: Artistic review and consultation, was my go-to guy for a long
time when the other two spritetainers were inactive
Waltermeldon: Cracked out a bunch of rendering work, he's the reason
windows look like not dogwater. Alongside floyd and action spent a TON
of time speaking to lummox/unearthing how byond rendering worked trying
to make this thing happen
ZephyrTFA: Added directional airlock helpers, dealt with a big fuckin
bugaboo that was living in my brain like it was nothing. Love you
brother
And finally:
The Mojave Sun development team. They provided a testbed for the idea,
committed hundreds and hundreds of hours to the artstyle, and were a
large reason we caught issues early enough to meaningfully deal with
them. Your work is a testament to what longterm effort and deep detailed
care produce. I hope you're doing well whatever you're up to. Go out
with a bang!
</details>
## Changelog
🆑 Raccoff, aa07, ActionNinja, ArcaneMusic, Armhulen, Azlan,
Ben10Omintrix, BigBimmer, Capsandi, CapybaraExtravagante, Draco, Floyd,
Iamgoofball, Imaginos16, Infrared, Jacquerel, Justice12354, Kryson,
KylerAce, LemonInTheDark, Meyhazah, Mothblocks, MTandi, Ninjanomnom,
oranges, Rohesie, Runi-c, san7890, Senefi, SimplyLogan, SomeAngryMiner,
SpaceSmithers, Tattle, Thunder12345, Time-Green, Twaticus, unit0016,
Viro, Waltermeldon, ZephyrTFA with thanks to the Mojave Sun team!
add: Resprites or offsets almost all "tall" objects in the game to match
a 3/4ths perspective
add: Bunch of rendering mumbo jumbo to make said 3/4ths perspective work
/🆑
---------
Co-authored-by: Jacquerel <hnevard@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: san7890 <the@san7890.com>
Co-authored-by: = <stewartareid@outlook.com>
Co-authored-by: Capsandi <dansullycc@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: ArcaneMusic <hero12290@aol.com>
Co-authored-by: tattle <66640614+dragomagol@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: SomeAngryMiner <53237389+SomeAngryMiner@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: KylerAce <kylerlumpkin1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: ArcaneMusic <41715314+ArcaneMusic@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Time-Green <7501474+Time-Green@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: lessthanthree <83487515+lessthnthree@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ben10Omintrix <138636438+Ben10Omintrix@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Runi-c <5150427+Runi-c@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Roryl-c <5150427+Roryl-c@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: tattle <article.disaster@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Senefi <20830349+Peliex@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Justice <42555530+Justice12354@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: BluBerry016 <50649185+unit0016@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: SmArtKar <44720187+SmArtKar@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: MrMelbert <51863163+MrMelbert@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: SimplyLogan <47579821+loganuk@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Emmett Gaines <ninjanomnom@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rob Bailey <github@criticalaction.net>
Co-authored-by: MMMiracles <lolaccount1@hotmail.com>
## About The Pull Request
I've seen a few cases in the past where LateInitialize is done cause of
the init return value being set to do so for no real reason, I thought I
should try to avoid that by ensuring LateInitialize isn't ever called
without overriding.
This fixes a ton of machine's LateInitialize not calling parent
(mechpad, door buttons, message monitor, a lot of tram machines,
abductor console, holodeck computer & disposal bin), avoiding having to
set itself up to be connected to power. If they were intended to not
connect to power, they should be using ``NO_POWER_USE`` instead.
Also removes a ton of returns to LateInit when it's already getting it
from parent regardless (many cases of that in machine code).
## Why It's Good For The Game
I think this is better for coding standard reasons as well as just
making sure we're not calling this proc on things that does absolutely
nothing with them. A machine not using power can be seen evidently not
using power with ``NO_POWER_USE``, not so much if it's LateInitialize
not calling parent.
## Changelog
🆑
fix: Mech pads, door buttons, message monitors, tram machines, abductor
consoles & holodeck computers now use power.
/🆑
## About The Pull Request
Removes all arbitrary energy and power units in the codebase. Everything
is replaced with the joule and watt, with 1 = 1 joule, or 1 watt if you
are going to multiply by time. This is a visible change, where all
arbitrary energy units you see in the game will get proper prefixed
units of energy.
With power cells being converted to the joule, charging one joule of a
power cell will require one joule of energy.
The grid will now store energy, instead of power. When an energy usage
is described as using the watt, a power to energy conversion based on
the relevant subsystem's timing (usually multiplying by seconds_per_tick
or applying power_to_energy()) is needed before adding or removing from
the grid. Power usages that are described as the watt is really anything
you would scale by time before applying the load. If it's described as a
joule, no time conversion is needed. Players will still read the grid as
power, having no visible change.
Machines that dynamically use power with the use_power() proc will
directly drain from the grid (and apc cell if there isn't enough)
instead of just tallying it up on the dynamic power usages for the area.
This should be more robust at conserving energy as the surplus is
updated on the go, preventing charging cells from nothing.
APCs no longer consume power for the dynamic power usage channels. APCs
will consume power for static power usages. Because static power usages
are added up without checking surplus, static power consumption will be
applied before any machine processes. This will give a more truthful
surplus for dynamic power consumers.
APCs will display how much power it is using for charging the cell. APC
cell charging applies power in its own channel, which gets added up to
the total. This will prevent invisible power usage you see when looking
at the power monitoring console.
After testing in MetaStation, I found roundstart power consumption to be
around 406kW after all APCs get fully charged. During the roundstart APC
charge rush, the power consumption can get as high as over 2MW (up to
25kW per roundstart APC charging) as long as there's that much
available.
Because of the absurd potential power consumption of charging APCs near
roundstart, I have changed how APCs decide to charge. APCs will now
charge only after all other machines have processed in the machines
processing subsystem. This will make sure APC charging won't disrupt
machines taking from the grid, and should stop APCs getting their power
drained due to others demanding too much power while charging. I have
removed the delays for APC charging too, so they start charging
immediately whenever there's excess power. It also stops them turning
red when a small amount of cell gets drained (airlocks opening and shit
during APC charge rush), as they immediately become fully charged
(unless too much energy got drained somehow) before changing icon.
Engineering SMES now start at 100% charge instead of 75%. I noticed
cells were draining earlier than usual after these changes, so I am
making them start maxed to try and combat that.
These changes will fix all conservation of energy issues relating to
charging powercells.
## Why It's Good For The Game
Closes#73438Closes#75789Closes#80634Closes#82031
Makes it much easier to interface with the power system in the codebase.
It's more intuitive. Removes a bunch of conservation of energy issues,
making energy and power much more meaningful. It will help the
simulation remain immersive as players won't encounter energy
duplication so easily. Arbitrary energy units getting replaced with the
joule will also tell people more meaningful information when reading it.
APC charging will feel more snappy.
## Changelog
🆑
fix: Fixes conservation of energy issues relating to charging
powercells.
qol: APCs will display how much power they are using to charge their
cell. This is accounted for in the power monitoring console.
qol: All arbitrary power cell energy units you see are replaced with
prefixed joules.
balance: As a consequence of the conservation of energy issues getting
fixed, the power consumption for charging cells is now very significant.
balance: APCs only use surplus power from the grid after every machine
processes when charging, preventing APCs from causing others to
discharge while charging.
balance: Engineering SMES start at max charge to combat the increased
energy loss due to conservation of energy fixes.
/🆑
---------
Co-authored-by: SyncIt21 <110812394+SyncIt21@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ghom <42542238+Ghommie@users.noreply.github.com>
## About The Pull Request
Removes INTERACT_MACHINE_SET_MACHINE on machines that don't use a
non-TGUI UI.
Removes set_machine from TGUI things that forgot to remove them
previously.
Decouples advanced camera consoles from UI procs since it doesn't
actually use one.
## Why It's Good For The Game
TGUI machines don't need to be using these procs and vars, and this
makes it more clear what does and doesn't use a TGUI menu from a glance.
I explain it a bit better
[here](https://hackmd.io/XLt5MoRvRxuhFbwtk4VAUA) if you're interested.
## Changelog
No player-facing changes.
## About The Pull Request
Removes all of the duplicate global lists for specific machine types
where the only thing they do is store all machines of that type.
Adds machine tracking to SSmachines in the form of a list for all
machines, and then an associative list for machines by their type.
Previously we have machines in multiple global lists, such as airlocks
being in GLOB.doors, GLOB.airlocks, GLOB.machines.
This makes that not a thing, and also means that iterating through
GLOB.machines looking for a specific type is no longer as expensive.
## About The Pull Request
New malf AI upgrade
Remote safety overrides: Mid-cost, Mid-supply. Allows the AI to remotely
emag things it can see and can access.
1. Very useful for psychological warfare (Emagging APCs to throw the
crew off their trail)
2. Logically makes sense - why, of all things, can the AI not emag
anything when it's fundumentally integrated with the station's
electronics?
3. Generally speaking can only access things that make sense for it to
access - it cannot emag ethereals, sadly
In order for this to work, emag_act now returns a boolean, designating
if the emag had any effect.
While I was in there, I also added args to every single emag_act I could
find and added far more feedback/converted a lot of things to balloon
alerts to allow the AI to see if its emag had any effect.
## Why It's Good For The Game
It just makes sense that the AI, the most electronically-sensitive
entity in the game, would be able to emag things. Plus, more options
given to malf that aren't strictly MURDER KILL MURDER are always a plus,
especially if they allow for fancier plays.
## Changelog
🆑
add: New malf ability: Remote safety overrides. Allows the AI to
remotely emag things it has access to.
code: emag_act() now returns a boolean designating it's success in
emagging
code: All instances of emag_act() now have the proper arguments
qol: Most usecases of emagging now have some kind of feedback, and
existing feedback has been sanity checked and converted to balloon
alerts.
/🆑
## About The Pull Request
Further continous organizing and cleaning the Icons folder. There are
still some minior nitpicks left to do, but I reached my daily sanity
expenses limit again, and the faster these get in the less issues for
both me and others later. Also cleans some mess I caused by my blindness
last PR.
## Why It's Good For The Game
Saner spriters = better sprites
This tracks the seconds per tick of a subsystem, however note that it is
not completely accurate, as subsystems can be delayed, however it's
useful to have this number as a multiplier or ratio, so that if in
future someone changes the subsystem wait time code correctly adjusts
how fast it applies effects
regexes used
git grep --files-with-matches --name-only 'DT_PROB' | xargs -l sed -i
's/DT_PROB/SPT_PROB/g'
git grep --files-with-matches --name-only 'delta_time' | xargs -l sed -i
's/delta_time/seconds_per_tick/g'
# MAINTAINER - USE THE BUTTON THAT SAYS "MERGE MASTER" THEN SET THE PR
TO AUTO-MERGE! IT'S MUCH EASIER FOR ME TO FIX THINGS BEFORE THEY SKEW
RATHER THAN AFTER THE FACT.
## About The Pull Request
Hey there,
This took a while to do, but here's the gist:
Python file now regexes every file in `/code` except for those that have
some valid reason to be tacking on more global defines. Some of those
reasons are simply just that I don't have the time right now (doing what
you see in this PR took a few hours) to refactor and parse what should
belong and what should be thrown out. For the time being though, this PR
will at least _halt_ people making the mistake of not `#undef`ing any
files they `#define` "locally", or within the scope of a file.
Most people forget to do this and this leads to a lot of mess later on
due to how many variables can be unmanaged on the global level. I've
made this mistake, you've made this mistake, it's a common thing. Let's
automatically check for it so it can be fixed no-stress.
Scenarios this PR corrects:
* Forgetting to undef a define but undeffing others.
* Not undeffing any defines in your file.
* Earmarking a define as a "file local" define, but not defining it.
* Having a define be a "file local" define, but having it be used
elsewhere.
* Having a "local" define not even be in the file that it only shows up
in.
* Having a completely unused define*
(* I kept some of these because they seemed important... Others were
junked.)
## Why It's Good For The Game
If you wanna use it across multiple files, no reason to not make it a
global define (maybe there's a few reasons but let's assume that this is
the 95% case).
Let me know if you don't like how I re-arranged some of the defines and
how you'd rather see it be implemented, and I'd be happy to do that.
This was mostly just "eh does it need it or not" sorta stuff.
I used a pretty cool way to detect if we should use the standardized
GitHub "error" output, you can see the results of that here
https://github.com/san7890/bruhstation/actions/runs/4549766579/jobs/8022186846#step:7:792
## Changelog
Nothing that really concerns players.
(I fixed up all this stuff using vscode, no regexes beyond what you see
in the python script. sorry downstreams)
## About The Pull Request
When the ordnance/incinerator burn chamber was cycling to exterior air
lock, it got stuck on depressurizing. Turns out, the issues was that
during a recent refactor, a command that turned on the dual port pump
was missed, so depressurization could never finish. I have fixed this,
and also simplified the similar check during repressurization. I hope I
fixed it correctly.
Furthermore, I have noticed that an old check called by the airlock
sensor was still thinking that the defines were numbers, meaning that if
you got stuck inside the chamber, and hit it to initiate cycling, it did
not work. This has been likewise fixed.
Not in the scope of this PR: burn chambers with sanitize_external set to
true won't let you abort depressurization. In those chambers, hitting
abort while cycling to external airlock means that when depressurization
ends, it won't open the external airlocks. This should be communicated
better to the player, but this is out of scope of this fix.
## Why It's Good For The Game
Fixes#71777
It is good to be able to properly cycle the burn chamber doors, in case
you want to edit the pipes. Using the airlock sensor while trapped
inside the depressurizing chamber should let you.
## Changelog
🆑
fix: burn chambers will not get stuck on depressurizing while cycling to
exterior airlocks
fix: using an airlock sensor will properly cycle the air inside the
chamber
/🆑
More than a decade ago, these were all coded to use a weird dynamic list
radio broadcasting system to communicate with each other. If there was
any depth that they were planning on creating with this, it didn't come
to fruition, and it instead just wasted a lot of init time.
Removing `post_signal` saves 198.41ms, fired 588 times from lots of
different machinery. Its self cost was 81.44ms.
`broadcast_status`, also removed, was taking 218ms.
I'm pretty sure I'm done with this, but it's hard to tell given the
nature of old radio signal code.
A small self cost of 34.9ms was added in the form of /obj/Initialize
checking id_tag to set in a global list. This could be optimized away by
tagging everything that does use id_tag, but it's a loooot and I think
this is just a useful mechanism to have. Not worth it IMO.
The "Check Atmos Chamber Devices" verb has been removed. Everything it
did *should* be replicated by runtimes on Initialize, which is both more
obvious to mappers and shows up in unit tests since we spawn every ruin.
## About The Pull Request
This replaces needless GLOB.machines with more precise lists whenever
one existed, plus adding a new one for CTF machines.
## Why It's Good For The Game
GLOB.machines holds every single /obj/machinery in the game, so checking
the whole list for stuff is pretty big. This aims to cut that down by
using smaller lists whenever possible. I also gave CTF a new list
because it checked machines very often.
## Changelog
Nothing player facing.
Makes the code compatible with 515.1594+
Few simple changes and one very painful one.
Let's start with the easy:
* puts call behind `LIBCALL` define, so call_ext is properly used in 515
* Adds `NAMEOF_STATIC(_,X)` macro for nameof in static definitions since
src is now invalid there.
* Fixes tgui and devserver. From 515 onward the tmp3333{procid} cache
directory is not appened to base path in browser controls so we don't
check for it in base js and put the dev server dummy window file in
actual directory not the byond root.
* Renames the few things that had /final/ in typepath to ultimate since
final is a new keyword
And the very painful change:
`.proc/whatever` format is no longer valid, so we're replacing it with
new nameof() function. All this wrapped in three new macros.
`PROC_REF(X)`,`TYPE_PROC_REF(TYPE,X)`,`GLOBAL_PROC_REF(X)`. Global is
not actually necessary but if we get nameof that does not allow globals
it would be nice validation.
This is pretty unwieldy but there's no real alternative.
If you notice anything weird in the commits let me know because majority
was done with regex replace.
@tgstation/commit-access Since the .proc/stuff is pretty big change.
Co-authored-by: san7890 <the@san7890.com>
Co-authored-by: Mothblocks <35135081+Mothblocks@users.noreply.github.com>
Starts shaving off a lot of less than 0.1s performance killers by, in
nearly every case, just writing better code.
Numbers are amount saved.
- /obj/machinery/bluespace_vendor/LateInitialize -> 29.4ms
Changes a loop over all machines to a specialized list.
- /obj/structure/table/glass/Initialize -> 42.53ms
Stops every table from initializing glass shards and table frames before
any destruction.
- /obj/structure/chair/Initialize -> 24.64ms
Removes an unnecessary addtimer that existed for chairs that weren't
anchored in emergency shuttles. Didn't do anything.
- /datum/orderable_item/New -> 44.3ms
Instead of initializing every item to get its desc, just uses initial.
Added a unit test to make sure none are dynamic.
- /obj/machinery/computer/slot_machine/Initialize -> 26.19ms
Currently goes through every coin subtype, creates it, calls a proc,
then qdels it. Changes that to only run once. Could be optimized further
by making the coin info on a datum to avoid creating the object, but it
currently sits at 7.82ms, far below worth caring about for now.
- /obj/machinery/door_buttons/airlock_controller/findObjsByTag -> 3.51ms
Loops over just doors instead of typechecking airlock in machines.
- /obj/structure/closet/Initialize -> 60.57ms
Moves the code for taking everything on the tile from a next-tick timer
to LateInitialize.
- /obj/machinery/rnd/experimentor/Initialize -> 36.92ms
Changes a list that is generated by going through every item in the game
and getting information from a large amount of them to only run when
needed.
- /obj/structure/tank_dispenser/Initialize -> 20.81ms
No longer initializes every tank in it right away, only when needed.
- /obj/machinery/telecomms/LateInitialize -> 16.63ms
Removes `urange` to instead just loop over telecomms machines and check
distance. There's not that many of them.
- /mob/living/simple_animal/hostile/carp/cayenne/Initialize -> 3.17ms
Defers a GAGS overlay creation until its needed. BTW GAGS is
*horrendous* on init costs, and is the root cause for a lot of pretty
terrible performance. I investigated precompiling but the gains weren't
crazy, but likely could be the more stuff is GAGS'd.
- /turf/open/floor/engine/cult/Initialize -> 14.64ms
Temporary visual effect that is created is no longer done on mapload,
since nobody will see it.
- /datum/techweb/specialized/autounlocking/proc/autounlock -> 5.55ms
Changes some loops to shorter checks. This whole proc is pretty bad and
it's still 14.21ms for 17 calls.
- /matrix/New -> 13.41ms
- /matrix/proc/Translate -> 42.06ms
~~Changed the mineral matrice to only generate once, then take it from a
static.~~ An extra ~0.05s taken off by avoiding setting icon and
transform every Initialize.
About The Pull Request
Simply converts all instances of soundkeys that use get_sfx from strings into defines.
E.g. "sparks" is now SFX_SPARKS
Why It's Good For The Game
It makes life a lot easier when you're looking for a sound effect. You just type SFX_ and you get suggestions in VSC. Plus, it looks better.
image
Changelog
Not player facing.
## About The Pull Request
stop forgetting to include mapload, if you don't include it then every single subtype past it by default doesn't include it
for example, `obj/item` didn't include mapload so every single item by default didn't fill in mapload

## Regex used:
procs without args, not even regex
`/Initialize()`
procs with args
`\/Initialize\((?!mapload)((.)*\w)?`
cleanup of things i didn't want to mapload:
`\/datum\/(.)*\/Initialize\(mapload`
Repaths everything referring to "toxins" while actually meaning either the room in science or plasma gas. While this PR might be disrespectful to our forefathers, given this is (I believe) a holdover from as far back as the Exadv1 days, this has constantly irked me since I started working with the code. None of the player-facing stuff has referred to plasma as toxin since before 4407 hit, besides the Toxins Lab, and yet all of the type-paths are still pointing at toxins, making it a nightmare to search for in a map editor, and making the code needlessly easy to confuse with that of toxin damage. So this just fires it into the sun.
Anything relating to Toxins, the science subdepartment, now makes reference to Ordnance instead. This felt fitting enough given the focus of the subdepartment is around the creation of and testing of explosives.
Anything relating to plasma gas has, fittingly, been made to refer to plasma gas.
Edit: Ah yes, I feel I should probably apologise off the bat for the size of this PR- the code touched is mostly atmos machinery and simplemobs, a few sprites here and there, and of course the station maps + a few offstation maps.
Makes the code more legible and makes mapping less painful.
(The payment has been made)
Converts most spans into span procs. Mostly used regex for this and sorted out any compile time errors afterwards so there could be some bugs.
Was initially going to do defines, but ninja said to make it into a proc, and if there's any overhead, they can easily be changed to defines.
Makes it easier to control the formatting and prevents typos when creating spans as it'll runtime if you misspell instead of silently failing.
Reduces the code you need to write when writing spans, as you don't need to close the span as that's automatically handled by the proc.
(Note from Lemon: This should be converted to defines once we update the minimum version to 514. Didn't do it now because byond pain and such)
Creates update_name and update_desc
Creates the wrapper proc update_appearance to batch update_name, update_desc, and update_icon together
Less non-icon handling code in update_icon and friends
Signal hooks for things that want to change names and descriptions
99%+ of the changes in this are just from switching everything over to update_appearance from update_icon
Done using this command sed -Ei 's/(\s*\S+)\s*\t+/\1 /g' code/**/*.dm
We have countless examples in the codebase with this style gone wrong, and defines and such being on hideously different levels of indentation. Fixing this to keep the alignment involves tainting the blames of code your PR doesn't need to be touching at all. And ultimately, it's hideous.
There are some files that this sed makes uglier. I can fix these when they are pointed out, but I believe this is ultimately for the greater good of readability. I'm more concerned with if any strings relied on this.
Hi codeowners!
Co-authored-by: Jared-Fogle <35135081+Jared-Fogle@users.noreply.github.com>
imo; the ss13 audio-scape is quite barren, you can only hear most things if you can see them, which in my opinion doesn't make much sense. This changes that so you can hear further away, but falloff is much higher, so in reality you will only hear things relatively quietly when they're out of sight.
This PR increases the hearing distance of most sound by 9, excluding sounds such as antag items that are meant to be used stealthily
This PR also replaces Byond's inbuilt falloff system with something I made, (And thanks to potato for helping me throw together a formula for it). This fall-off system makes sound fall off more naturally, with sounds being full volume within a certain range, and then softly falling off until they are completely quiet. This makes for a smoother transition between "This sound is full volume" and "I dont hear this sound".
Co-authored-by: ff <ff>
Implements the ?. operator, replacing code like A && A.B with A?.B
BYOND Ref:
When reading A?.B, it's equivalent to A && A.B except that A is only evaluated once, even if it's a complex expression like a proc call.
overrides weren't detected by should not sleep, i think i've mostly
fixed that with SpaceManiac/SpacemanDMM#214
Some of these are wacky but overall this pr is harmless
signals shouldnt sleep even in weird 1 in a million situations or due
to other people adding bad code
overrides of changeling can_sting() use alert() and input() and that's
just too fucked for me to fix in this pr
* Process procs now properly use deltatime when implementing rates, timers and probabilities
* Review fixes
* Geiger counters cleanup
Made hardsuit geiger code more similar to geiger counter code
Geiger counters are more responsive now
* Moved SS*_DT defines to subsystems.dm
* Rebase fix
* Redefined the SS*_DT defines to use the subsystem wait vars
* Implemented suggested changes by @AnturK
* Commented /datum/proc/process about the deltatime stuff
* Send delta_time as a process parameter instead of the defines
Also DTfied acid_processing
* Dtfied new acid component
Replaces like 70-80% of 0 and such, as a side effect cleaned up a bunch of returns
Edit: Most left out ones are in mecha which should be done in mecha refactor already
Oh my look how clean it is
Co-authored-by: TiviPlus <TiviPlus>
Co-authored-by: Couls <coul422@gmail.com>
Rewrites the asset_cache system to handle sending assets to a CDN via a webroot.
see https://github.com/MrStonedOne/tgstation/blob/asset-cdn/code/modules/asset_cache/readme.md
Fixed a lot of bugs with assets, removed some dead code.
Changes:
Moved asset cache code to transport datums, the currently loaded one is located at SSassets.transport, asset cache calls made before the config is loaded use the simple browse_rsc transport.
Added subsystem call for when the config loads or reloads.
Added a webroot CDN asset transport. assets are saved to a file in a format based on the file's hash (currently md5).
Assets that don't use get_asset_url or get_url_mappings (such as browser assets referred to by static html files like changelog.html or static css files) can be saved to browse_rsc even when in cdn asset mode by setting legacy to TRUE on the datum returned by register_assets
Added a system for saving assets on a cdn in a hash based namespace (folder), assets within the same namespace will always be able to refer to each other by relative names. (used to allow cdn'ing font awesome without having to make something that regenerates it's css files.).
The simple/namespaced asset cache datum helper will handle generating a namespace composed of the combined md5 of everything in the same datum, as well as registering them properly.
Moved external resource from a snowflake loaded file to a config entry, added it to resources.txt
To ensure the system breaks in local testing in any situation that wouldn't work in cdn mode, the simple transport will mutate the filenames of non-legacy and non-namespaced assets and return this with get_asset_url.
Simple transport's passive send of all roundstart assets to all clients is now a config that defaults to off. this is to break race conditions during local testings from devs accidentally relying on this instead of using send() properly.
cl
refactor: Interface assets (js/css/images) can now be managed using an external webserver instead of byond's one at a time file transfer queue.
admin: Adds admin verb toggle-cdn that allows admins to disable the external webserver asset transport and revert to the old system. Useful if the webserver backing this goes down (thanks cloudflare).
config: New config file, resources.txt, (must be loaded by an $include statement from the main config)
server: The external_rsc_urls.txt config has been moved to the main config system.
/cl
Porting notes:
Interface webpages must refer to their assets (css/js/image/etc) by a generated url, or the asset must register itself as a legacy asset. The system is designed to break in localtest (on simple/legacy mode) in most situations that would break in cdn mode.
Requires latest tgui.
The webserver must set the proper CORS headers for font files or font awesome (and other fonts) won't load.
/tg/'s webserver config: https://gist.github.com/MrStonedOne/523388b2f161af832292d98a8aad0eae
* Case of lower
* More changes
* Ruins the nice 420 diff, brainfart when doing the second batch of conversions
* More changes
* Next batch. I think
* Converts even more paths
* Restarts bots
* Capital Free Zone
* Come on travis, do something
* Renames areas
* Bots, please stop dying
* Updates CONTRIBUTING.md and updates a few paths I missed.
* APC recgarftzfvas
/obj/item/computer_hardware/recharger/apc to /obj/item/computer_hardware/recharger/apc_recharger
About The Pull Request
/area/proc/usage() attempts to give list-like access to a bunch of vars. Why not make it a list instead and avoid all the proc calls? Might be room for followup here, to do something to powered(), use_power() etc.
Some legacy machinery was ignoring the default machinery use_power pulling from the machine's power channel by default
Total power usage was unused, APCs ignored it in favor of calculating it themselves :)
I also renamed the defines because they were in the danger zone of being very common words.
Changelog
cl Naksu
code: optimized area power usage calculations.
/cl
Living and machine stat vars are pretty different, one uses flags and other number-defines.
This should make some other mass-replacements and searches a bit easier.
Several of the greps were missing the `-P` switch which caused them to
fail to match things. The EOL grep also wasn't working right so I
replaced it with the one I added to TGMC.
About The Pull Request
Similar to #46485
Now all relevant uses of power_change() call parent, theres a signal sent when a machine changes the NOPOWER flag, all remaining machines that were using power_change() instead of update_icon() have been fixed.
Why It's Good For The Game
code quality, eventually signal stuff. and signal stuff
About The Pull Request
Converts every single usage of playsound's vary parameter to use the boolean define instead of 1 or 0. I'm tired of people copypasting the incorrect usage.
Also changes a couple of places where a list was picked from instead of using get_sfx internal calls
This was done via regex:
(playsound\(.+,.+,.+, ?)1( ?\)| ?,.+\)) to match 1
(playsound\(.+,.+,.+, ?)0( ?\)| ?,.+\)) to match 0
full sed commands:
/(playsound\(.+,.+,.+, ?)1( ?\)| ?,.+\))/\1TRUE\2/ 1 to TRUE
/(playsound\(.+,.+,.+, ?)0( ?\)| ?,.+\))/\1FALSE\2/ 0 to FALSE
I'm not very good with regex and these could probably be optimized, but they worked.
Why It's Good For The Game
Code usability