* Merge two not-really conflicts
Thanks git, that whitespace conflict was super important?
* DME merge
* Added defines for mobs used by simple animals.
* Lost a slime along the way
* Disable debug settings
* HONK!!!
* Remove redundant hostile decls
* Replace loc= with forceMove in old SA code
I guess I should think of the children.
- Fixes sprite issues with departmental intercoms.
- Tweaks to the random objects dm
- Copies Bay's flora and warning sign list, as well as ports some of their signs.
- Addition of a couple new floor decals.
- New table preset, wooden reinforced.
Trays have no attack cooldown because they have this crazy-long snowflake code for attacks.
Beds (and children like chairs) don't track target for grab-buckle do_after, letting them run away and get teleported back to the chair and buckled regardless of their efforts.
Yes yes. I know.
Anyway, there's no cooldown on this so you can give someone about 800 brute in 10 seconds. A LITTLE UNUSUAL if you ask me. Also reduced it from 8 because what the hell is that toilet seat made out of? Osmium? For an armor-ignoring attack that's a little high. Also the swirlie thing was coded wrong for the do_after.
Features:
- Ctrl-click can deflate inflatables now.
- Using inflatables on adjacent tiles deploys them to that tile. Currently this doesn't care about objects in the way, ie computers or welding tanks, but it does respect glass and imo it works fine this way.
Bugfix:
- Bumping an inflatable door no longer freezes it closed for a few moments.
A lot of new defines are now in inventory_sizes.dm, which contains;
All the size identifiers (the thing that tells the game if something is bulky, or w/e).
Storage costs for all the sizes, which are exponents of two, as previously.
A few constants for inventory size.
Also changes all storage item's capacity definitions by basing it off of how many 'normal slots' exist for it. This allows one to change the definition for all of the defines in the file, and everything will follow along without needing to change 500 files. In testing, I made all ITEMSIZE_COST_* defines doubled, and nothing had broke.
The benefit of doing all of this is that it makes adding new weight classes in the future much simpler, and makes knowing how much space a container has easier, as seeing ITEMSIZE_COST_NORMAL * 7 means it can hold seven normal items.