* Grammar fixes to atom descriptions
- Capitalization and punctuation on most descriptions
- CentCom instead of centcom where appropriate
- Earth instead of earth where appropriate
* Remove spaces before newlines and oneline some strings
In cases where you're creating an image to use as an overlay, it makes more sense to use a mutable_appearance if you can. The image will create a static appearance for not just the image but also each intermediate step if you change vars along the way. The mutable appearance avoids this unnecessary and expensive process. The only situation that requires an image instead of a mutable_appearance is if the overlay is supposed to be directional. MA's ignore direction while images don't. I dunno why, probably another BYOND-ism.
I added a convenience function, mutable_appearance(), designed to emulate image(). Also went ahead and set the default plane of /mutable_appearance to FLOAT_PLANE because it's fucking 0 by default.
Several overlays that were image() calls were changed to just text strings when I could. overlays += "string" has the same result as overlays += image(icon, "string") and saves a proc call.
* Part1
* IT COMPILES!!!!
* Fuck wait this was missing from that last
* Update handlabeler.dm
* Update handlabeler.dm
* Fixes n shit
* Fix this
* Fixes#23310
* Fucking @RemieRichards was right
* Fixes devil unEquip
* WTF ARE BITFLAGS?
* THERES THE FUCKING PROBLEM
* Fixes
* SSthrowing + callbacks!
Throwing is now a subsystem.
It's low priority, but is a ticker subsystem so is ran before most other subsystems.
To allow for shit to run after the throw finishes, throwing now supports a callback.
A callback datum system was created, conversion of addtimer is planned for another PR.
Throwing now has a limit of 2048 turfs (was 600)
Throwing now ticks every world.tick, and properly converts the speed arg from 1ds to what ever tick_lag is.
Throwing now properly accounts for missed ticks.
Throwing no longer uses sleep.
Throwing should no longer lag since it's not filling the sleep queue up
* Smoother tentacles
* Some improvements
* Missed a spot.
* Makes shit quicker.
Inlines the thrownthing.tick() proc.
Raises missed ticks value
Lowers max dist value
Inlines the two sister overrides for /atom/movable/Moved() because that just seemed like a waste
* >PRs open that use procs i'm removing.
* STOP THE PRESSES!
* throw_at now runs the first throw tick() immediately
This will help some with throwing while running.
* Item throwing now imparts the momentum of the user throwing.
(ie, running in the direction you are throwing makes you throw faster, running away from the direction you are throwing makes you throw the item slower)
* Moves throwing momentum from carbon/throw_item to movable/throw_at.
There are other things that cause a mob to "throw" an item, I figured we keep this universal since thrower is already an arg.
* Explosions throw shit faster.
This was stupid, "Hey, lets set the item's throw_speed to 4 so embedding works, but lets make it throw at the base 2 throw speed for no reason."
* Fixes explosion embedding.
This also acts as a nice example of how to override a callback in an override of throw_at properly.
* clickcode + silicons = paper plane folding ???
Fixes a bug where silicons could fold paper.
"but cobby, silicons aren't even in mob/living/carbon" - Yes, you are correct. Clickcode does not discriminate, however.
* Fixes usr, but not issilicon [yet]
* iscarbon check + feedback
* iscarbon to is_type
* C I T R U S
* This doesn't actually matter, because you're dead forever once it happens...
* is this entire pr chaff for something else
* you'll do it? nah, fuck that I'll do it
* stops paper planes from spinning
the comment on it says it's specifically to stop spinning but it fails to do that
* does what oranges says i think
i hope i did this right
* orange's fix again
this one might work better
Please refer to #20867 and #20870 for a easier view of the changes. Those two PRs show all meaningful changes (hopefully) and doesn't show the files changed with just 3 lines changed.
This PR does three things:
It makes all children of /obj/ use the same damage system.
Previously to make your new machine/structure be destroyable you needed to give it a var/health, and its own version of many damage related proc such as bullet_act(), take_damage(), attacked_by(), attack_animal(), attack_hulk(), ex_act(), etc... But now, all /obj/ use the same version of those procs at the /obj/ level in code/game/obj_defense.dm. All these obj share the same necessary vars: obj_integrity (health), max_integrity, integrity_failure (optional, below that health level failure happens), and the armor list var which was previously only for items, as well as the resistance_flags bitfield. When you want your new object to be destroyable, you only have to give it a value for those vars and maybe override one proc if you want a special behavior but that's it. This reorganization removes a lot of copypasta (most bullet_act() version for each obj were nearly identical). Two new elements are added to the armor list var: fire and acid armor values.
How much damage an obj take depends on the armor value for each damage category. But some objects are INDESTRUCTIBLE and simply never take any damage no matter the type.
The armor categories are:
-melee(punches, item attacks, xeno/animal/hulk attacks, blob attacks, thrown weapons)
-bullet
-laser
-energy (used by projectiles like ionrifle, taser, and also by EMPs)
-bio (unused for this, only here because clothes use them when worn)
-rad (same)
-bomb (self-explanatory)
-fire (for fire damage, not for heat damage though)
-acid
For machines and structures, when their health reaches zero the object is not just deleted but gets somewhat forcedeconstructed (the proc used is shared with the actual deconstruction system) which can drops things. To not frustrates players most of these objects drop most of the elements necessary to rebuild them (think window dropping shards). Machines drop a machine frame and all components for example (but the frame can then be itself smashed to pieces).
For clothes, when they are damaged, they get a "damaged" overlay, which can also be seen when worn, similar to the "bloody" overlay.
It refactors acid. See #20537.
Some objects are ACID_PROOF and take no damage from acid, while others take varying amounts
of damage depending on their acid armor value. Some objects are even UNACIDABLE, no acid effect can even land on them. Acid on objects can be washed off using water.
It changes some aspect of damage from fires.
All /obj/ can now take fire damage and be flammable, instead of just items. And instead of having just FLAMMABLE objs that become ON_FIRE as soon as some fire touch them (paper), we now have objects that are non flammable but do take damage from fire and become ashes if their health reaches zero (only for items). The damage taken varies depending on the obj's fire armor value and total health. There's also still obj and items that are FIRE_PROOF (although some might still be melted by lava if they're not LAVA_PROOF).
When a mob is on fire, its clothes now take fire damage and can turn to ashes. Similarly, when a mob takes melee damages, its clothes gets damaged a bit and can turn to shreds. You can repair clothes with cloth that is produceable by botany's biogenerator.
It also does many minor things:
Clicking a structure/machine with an item on help intent never results in an attack (so you don't destroy a structure while trying to figure out which tool to use).
I moved a lot of objects away from /obj/effect, it should only be used for visual effects, decals and stuff, not for things you can hit and destroy.
I tweaked a bit how clothes shredding from bombs work.
I made a machine or structure un/anchorable with the wrench, I don't remember which object...
Since I changed the meaning of the FIRE_PROOF bitflag to actually mean fire immune, I'm buffing the slime extract that you apply on items to make them fire proof. well now they're really 100% fire proof!
animals with environment_smash = 1 no longer one-hit destroy tables and stuff, we give them a decent obj_damage value so they can destroy most obj relatively fast depending on the animal.
Probably a million things I forgot.
If you want to know how the damage system works all you need is the three obj vars "obj_integrity", "max_integrity", "integrity_failure", as well as the armor list var and the resistance_flags bitfield, and read the file obj_defense.dm
This just adds some vars that the refactor will use. Putting this in a separate PR prevent the damage refactor PR from becoming too big (number of files changed) and hard to read and review.
Introduces the resistance_flags bitflag that replaces unacidable and burn_state.
Moves the armor var from item to /obj level and gives specific armor values to many objects, the armor list also gets two new armor types: fire and acid, which will be used in the refactor. the new fire and acid armor values are given to plenty of items.
Added priority overlays to atoms, which will not be removed when overlays are cut and will always remain on top when new overlays are added. This requires everyone to use add_overlay() and cut_overlays() instead of overlays += and overlays.Cut(). These procs are found in __HELPERS/icons.dm, and the priority overlay list is found in game/atoms.dm. Everything else is replacing deprecated overlay manipulation.