Contents
The current version of DFHack has extensive support for the Lua scripting language, providing access to:
- Raw data structures used by the game.
- Many C++ functions for high-level access to these structures, and interaction with dfhack itself.
- Some functions exported by C++ plugins.
Lua code can be used both for writing scripts, which are treated by DFHack command line prompt almost as native C++ commands, and invoked by plugins written in c++.
This document describes native API available to Lua in detail. It does not describe all of the utility functions implemented by Lua files located in hack/lua/...
DF structures described by the xml files in library/xml are exported
to lua code as a tree of objects and functions under the df
global,
which broadly maps to the df
namespace in C++.
WARNING: The wrapper provides almost raw access to the memory of the game, so mistakes in manipulating objects are as likely to crash the game as equivalent plain C++ code would be. E.g. NULL pointer access is safely detected, but dangling pointers aren't.
Objects managed by the wrapper can be broadly classified into the following groups:
Typed object pointers (references).
References represent objects in DF memory with a known type.
In addition to fields and methods defined by the wrapped type, every reference has some built-in properties and methods.
Untyped pointers
Represented as lightuserdata.
In assignment to a pointer NULL can be represented either as
nil
, or a NULL lightuserdata; reading a NULL pointer field returnsnil
.Named types
Objects in the
df
tree that represent identity of struct, class, enum and bitfield types. They host nested named types, static methods, builtin properties & methods, and, for enums and bitfields, the bi-directional mapping between key names and values.The
global
objectdf.global
corresponds to thedf::global
namespace, and behaves as a mix between a named type and a reference, containing both nested types and fields corresponding to global symbols.
In addition to the global
object and top-level types the df
global also contains a few global builtin utility functions.
The underlying primitive lua object is userdata with a metatable. Every structured field access produces a new userdata instance.
All typed objects have the following built-in features:
ref1 == ref2
,tostring(ref)
References implement equality by type & pointer value, and string conversion.
pairs(ref)
Returns an iterator for the sequence of actual C++ field names and values. Fields are enumerated in memory order. Methods and lua wrapper properties are not included in the iteration.
WARNING: a few of the data structures (like ui_look_list) contain unions with pointers to different types with vtables. Using pairs on such structs is an almost sure way to crash with an access violation.
ref._kind
Returns one of:
primitive
,struct
,container
, orbitfield
, as appropriate for the referenced object.ref._type
Returns the named type object or a string that represents the referenced object type.
ref:sizeof()
Returns size, address
ref:new()
Allocates a new instance of the same type, and copies data from the current object.
ref:delete()
Destroys the object with the C++
delete
operator. If destructor is not available, returns false.WARNING: the lua reference object remains as a dangling pointer, like a raw C++ pointer would.
ref:assign(object)
Assigns data from object to ref. Object must either be another ref of a compatible type, or a lua table; in the latter case special recursive assignment rules are applied.
ref:_displace(index[,step])
Returns a new reference with the pointer adjusted by index*step. Step defaults to the natural object size.
References of the _kind 'primitive'
are used for objects
that don't fit any of the other reference types. Such
references can only appear as a value of a pointer field,
or as a result of calling the _field()
method.
They behave as structs with one field value
of the right type.
To make working with numeric buffers easier, they also allow
numeric indices. Note that other than excluding negative values
no bound checking is performed, since buffer length is not available.
Index 0 is equivalent to the value
field.
Struct references are used for class and struct objects.
They implement the following features:
ref.field
,ref.field = value
Valid fields of the structure may be accessed by subscript.
Primitive typed fields, i.e. numbers & strings, are converted to/from matching lua values. The value of a pointer is a reference to the target, or nil/NULL. Complex types are represented by a reference to the field within the structure; unless recursive lua table assignment is used, such fields can only be read.
NOTE: In case of inheritance, superclass fields have precedence over the subclass, but fields shadowed in this way can still be accessed as
ref['subclasstype.field']
. This shadowing order is necessary because vtable-based classes are automatically exposed in their exact type, and the reverse rule would make access to superclass fields unreliable.ref._field(field)
Returns a reference to a valid field. That is, unlike regular subscript, it returns a reference to the field within the structure even for primitive typed fields and pointers.
ref:vmethod(args...)
Named virtual methods are also exposed, subject to the same shadowing rules.
pairs(ref)
Enumerates all real fields (but not methods) in memory (= declaration) order.
Containers represent vectors and arrays, possibly resizable.
A container field can associate an enum to the container reference, which allows accessing elements using string keys instead of numerical indices.
Implemented features:
ref._enum
If the container has an associated enum, returns the matching named type object.
#ref
Returns the length of the container.
ref[index]
Accesses the container element, using either a 0-based numerical index, or, if an enum is associated, a valid enum key string.
Accessing an invalid index is an error, but some container types may return a default value, or auto-resize instead for convenience. Currently this relaxed mode is implemented by df-flagarray aka BitArray.
ref._field(index)
Like with structs, returns a pointer to the array element, if possible. Flag and bit arrays cannot return such pointer, so it fails with an error.
pairs(ref)
,ipairs(ref)
If the container has no associated enum, both behave identically, iterating over numerical indices in order. Otherwise, ipairs still uses numbers, while pairs tries to substitute enum keys whenever possible.
ref:resize(new_size)
Resizes the container if supported, or fails with an error.
ref:insert(index,item)
Inserts a new item at the specified index. To add at the end, use
#ref
, or just'#'
as index.ref:erase(index)
Removes the element at the given valid index.
Bitfields behave like special fixed-size containers. Consider them to be something in between structs and fixed-size vectors.
The _enum
property points to the bitfield type.
Numerical indices correspond to the shift value,
and if a subfield occupies multiple bits, the
ipairs
order would have a gap.
Since currently there is no API to allocate a bitfield
object fully in GC-managed lua heap, consider using the
lua table assignment feature outlined below in order to
pass bitfield values to dfhack API functions that need
them, e.g. matinfo:matches{metal=true}
.
Named types are exposed in the df
tree with names identical
to the C++ version, except for the ::
vs .
difference.
All types and the global object have the following features:
type._kind
Evaluates to one of
struct-type
,class-type
,enum-type
,bitfield-type
orglobal
.type._identity
Contains a lightuserdata pointing to the underlying DFHack::type_instance object.
Types excluding the global object also support:
type:sizeof()
Returns the size of an object of the type.
type:new()
Creates a new instance of an object of the type.
type:is_instance(object)
Returns true if object is same or subclass type, or a reference to an object of same or subclass type. It is permissible to pass nil, NULL or non-wrapper value as object; in this case the method returns nil.
In addition to this, enum and bitfield types contain a
bi-directional mapping between key strings and values, and
also map _first_item
and _last_item
to the min and
max values.
Struct and class types with instance-vector attribute in the
xml have a type.find(key)
function that wraps the find
method provided in C++.
The df
table itself contains the following functions and values:
NULL
,df.NULL
Contains the NULL lightuserdata.
df.isnull(obj)
Evaluates to true if obj is nil or NULL; false otherwise.
df.isvalid(obj[,allow_null])
For supported objects returns one of
type
,voidptr
,ref
.If allow_null is true, and obj is nil or NULL, returns
null
.Otherwise returns nil.
df.sizeof(obj)
For types and refs identical to
obj:sizeof()
. For lightuserdata returns nil, addressdf.new(obj)
,df.delete(obj)
,df.assign(obj, obj2)
Equivalent to using the matching methods of obj.
df._displace(obj,index[,step])
For refs equivalent to the method, but also works with lightuserdata (step is mandatory then).
df.is_instance(type,obj)
Equivalent to the method, but also allows a reference as proxy for its type.
df.new(ptype[,count])
Allocate a new instance, or an array of built-in types. The
ptype
argument is a string from the following list:string
,int8_t
,uint8_t
,int16_t
,uint16_t
,int32_t
,uint32_t
,int64_t
,uint64_t
,bool
,float
,double
. All of these exceptstring
can be used with the count argument to allocate an array.df.reinterpret_cast(type,ptr)
Converts ptr to a ref of specified type. The type may be anything acceptable to
df.is_instance
. Ptr may be nil, a ref, a lightuserdata, or a number.Returns nil if NULL, or a ref.
Recursive assignment is invoked when a lua table is assigned to a C++ object or field, i.e. one of:
ref:assign{...}
ref.field = {...}
The general mode of operation is that all fields of the table are assigned to the fields of the target structure, roughly emulating the following code:
function rec_assign(ref,table) for key,value in pairs(table) do ref[key] = value end end
Since assigning a table to a field using = invokes the same process, it is recursive.
There are however some variations to this process depending on the type of the field being assigned to:
If the table contains an
assign
field, it is applied first, using theref:assign(value)
method. It is never assigned as a usual field.When a table is assigned to a non-NULL pointer field using the
ref.field = {...}
syntax, it is applied to the target of the pointer instead.If the pointer is NULL, the table is checked for a
new
field:- If it is nil or false, assignment fails with an error.
- If it is true, the pointer is initialized with a newly allocated object of the declared target type of the pointer.
- Otherwise,
table.new
must be a named type, or an object of a type compatible with the pointer. The pointer is initialized with the result of callingtable.new:new()
.
After this auto-vivification process, assignment proceeds as if the pointer wasn't NULL.
Obviously, the
new
field inside the table is always skipped during the actual per-field assignment processing.If the target of the assignment is a container, a separate rule set is used:
If the table contains neither
assign
norresize
fields, it is interpreted as an ordinary 1-based lua array. The container is resized to the #-size of the table, and elements are assigned in numeric order:ref:resize(#table); for i=1,#table do ref[i-1] = table[i] end
Otherwise,
resize
must be true, false, or an explicit number. If it is not false, the container is resized. After that the usual struct-like 'pairs' assignment is performed.In case
resize
is true, the size is computed by scanning the table for the largest numeric key.
This means that in order to reassign only one element of a container using this system, it is necessary to use:
{ resize=false, [idx]=value }
Since nil inside a table is indistinguishable from missing key,
it is necessary to use df.NULL
as a null pointer value.
This system is intended as a way to define a nested object tree using pure lua data structures, and then materialize it in C++ memory in one go. Note that if pointer auto-vivification is used, an error in the middle of the recursive walk would not destroy any objects allocated in this way, so the user should be prepared to catch the error and do the necessary cleanup.
DFHack utility functions are placed in the dfhack
global tree.
dfhack.print(args...)
Output tab-separated args as standard lua print would do, but without a newline.
print(args...)
,dfhack.println(args...)
A replacement of the standard library print function that works with DFHack output infrastructure.
dfhack.printerr(args...)
Same as println; intended for errors. Uses red color and logs to stderr.log.
dfhack.color([color])
Sets the current output color. If color is nil or -1, resets to default. Returns the previous color value.
dfhack.is_interactive()
Checks if the thread can access the interactive console and returns true or false.
dfhack.lineedit([prompt[,history_filename]])
If the thread owns the interactive console, shows a prompt and returns the entered string. Otherwise returns nil, error.
Depending on the context, this function may actually yield the running coroutine and let the C++ code release the core suspend lock. Using an explicit
dfhack.with_suspend
will prevent this, forcing the function to block on input with lock held.dfhack.interpreter([prompt[,history_filename[,env]]])
Starts an interactive lua interpreter, using the specified prompt string, global environment and command-line history file.
If the interactive console is not accessible, returns nil, error.
dfhack.error(msg[,level[,verbose]])
Throws a dfhack exception object with location and stack trace. The verbose parameter controls whether the trace is printed by default.
qerror(msg[,level])
Calls
dfhack.error()
withverbose
being false. Intended to be used for user-caused errors in scripts, where stack traces are not desirable.dfhack.pcall(f[,args...])
Invokes f via xpcall, using an error function that attaches a stack trace to the error. The same function is used by SafeCall in C++, and dfhack.safecall.
safecall(f[,args...])
,dfhack.safecall(f[,args...])
Just like pcall, but also prints the error using printerr before returning. Intended as a convenience function.
dfhack.saferesume(coroutine[,args...])
Compares to coroutine.resume like dfhack.safecall vs pcall.
dfhack.exception
Metatable of error objects used by dfhack. The objects have the following properties:
err.where
The location prefix string, or nil.
err.message
The base message string.
err.stacktrace
The stack trace string, or nil.
err.cause
A different exception object, or nil.
err.thread
The coroutine that has thrown the exception.
err.verbose
Boolean, or nil; specifies if where and stacktrace should be printed.
tostring(err)
, orerr:tostring([verbose])
Converts the exception to string.
dfhack.exception.verbose
The default value of the
verbose
argument oferr:tostring()
.
dfhack.VERSION
DFHack version string constant.
dfhack.curry(func,args...)
, orcurry(func,args...)
Returns a closure that invokes the function with args combined both from the curry call and the closure call itself. I.e.
curry(func,a,b)(c,d)
equalsfunc(a,b,c,d)
.
dfhack.with_suspend(f[,args...])
Calls
f
with arguments after grabbing the DF core suspend lock. Suspending is necessary for accessing a consistent state of DF memory.Returned values and errors are propagated through after releasing the lock. It is safe to nest suspends.
Every thread is allowed only one suspend per DF frame, so it is best to group operations together in one big critical section. A plugin can choose to run all lua code inside a C++-side suspend lock.
dfhack.call_with_finalizer(num_cleanup_args,always,cleanup_fn[,cleanup_args...],fn[,args...])
Invokes
fn
withargs
, and after it returns or throws an error callscleanup_fn
withcleanup_args
. Any return values fromfn
are propagated, and errors are re-thrown.The
num_cleanup_args
integer specifies the number ofcleanup_args
, and thealways
boolean specifies if cleanup should be called in any case, or only in case of an error.dfhack.with_finalize(cleanup_fn,fn[,args...])
Calls
fn
with arguments, then finalizes withcleanup_fn
. Implemented usingcall_with_finalizer(0,true,...)
.dfhack.with_onerror(cleanup_fn,fn[,args...])
Calls
fn
with arguments, then finalizes withcleanup_fn
on any thrown error. Implemented usingcall_with_finalizer(0,false,...)
.dfhack.with_temp_object(obj,fn[,args...])
Calls
fn(obj,args...)
, then finalizes withobj:delete()
.
This api is intended for storing configuration options in the world itself. It probably should be restricted to data that is world-dependent.
Entries are identified by a string key
, but it is also possible to manage
multiple entries with the same key; their identity is determined by entry_id
.
Every entry has a mutable string value
, and an array of 7 mutable ints
.
dfhack.persistent.get(key)
,entry:get()
Retrieves a persistent config record with the given string key, or refreshes an already retrieved entry. If there are multiple entries with the same key, it is undefined which one is retrieved by the first version of the call.
Returns entry, or nil if not found.
dfhack.persistent.delete(key)
,entry:delete()
Removes an existing entry. Returns true if succeeded.
dfhack.persistent.get_all(key[,match_prefix])
Retrieves all entries with the same key, or starting with key..'/'. Calling
get_all('',true)
will match all entries.If none found, returns nil; otherwise returns an array of entries.
dfhack.persistent.save({key=str1, ...}[,new])
,entry:save([new])
Saves changes in an entry, or creates a new one. Passing true as new forces creation of a new entry even if one already exists; otherwise the existing one is simply updated. Returns entry, did_create_new
Since the data is hidden in data structures owned by the DF world, and automatically stored in the save game, these save and retrieval functions can just copy values in memory without doing any actual I/O. However, currently every entry has a 180+-byte dead-weight overhead.
It is also possible to associate one bit per map tile with an entry, using these two methods:
entry:getTilemask(block[, create])
Retrieves the tile bitmask associated with this entry in the given map block. If
create
is true, an empty mask is created if none exists; otherwise the function returns nil, which must be assumed to be the same as an all-zero mask.entry:deleteTilemask(block)
Deletes the associated tile mask from the given map block.
Note that these masks are only saved in fortress mode, and also that deleting the persistent entry will NOT delete the associated masks.
A material info record has fields:
type
,index
,material
DF material code pair, and a reference to the material object.
mode
One of
'builtin'
,'inorganic'
,'plant'
,'creature'
.inorganic
,plant
,creature
If the material is of the matching type, contains a reference to the raw object.
figure
For a specific creature material contains a ref to the historical figure.
Functions:
dfhack.matinfo.decode(type,index)
Looks up material info for the given number pair; if not found, returs nil.
....decode(matinfo)
,....decode(item)
,....decode(obj)
Uses
matinfo.type
/matinfo.index
, item getter vmethods, orobj.mat_type
/obj.mat_index
to get the code pair.dfhack.matinfo.find(token[,token...])
Looks up material by a token string, or a pre-split string token sequence.
dfhack.matinfo.getToken(...)
,info:getToken()
Applies
decode
and constructs a string token.info:toString([temperature[,named]])
Returns the human-readable name at the given temperature.
info:getCraftClass()
Returns the classification used for craft skills.
info:matches(obj)
Checks if the material matches job_material_category or job_item. Accept dfhack_material_category auto-assign table.
dfhack.random.new([seed[,perturb_count]])
Creates a new random number generator object. Without any arguments, the object is initialized using current time. Otherwise, the seed must be either a non-negative integer, or a list of such integers. The second argument may specify the number of additional randomization steps performed to improve the initial state.
rng:init([seed[,perturb_count]])
Re-initializes an already existing random number generator object.
rng:random([limit])
Returns a random integer. If
limit
is specified, the value is in the range [0, limit); otherwise it uses the whole 32-bit unsigned integer range.rng:drandom()
Returns a random floating-point number in the range [0,1).
rng:drandom0()
Returns a random floating-point number in the range (0,1).
rng:drandom1()
Returns a random floating-point number in the range [0,1].
rng:unitrandom()
Returns a random floating-point number in the range [-1,1].
rng:unitvector([size])
Returns multiple values that form a random vector of length 1, uniformly distributed over the corresponding sphere surface. The default size is 3.
fn = rng:perlin([dim]); fn(x[,y[,z]])
Returns a closure that computes a classical Perlin noise function of dimension dim, initialized from this random generator. Dimension may be 1, 2 or 3 (default).
Thin wrappers around C++ functions, similar to the ones for virtual methods. One notable difference is that these explicit wrappers allow argument count adjustment according to the usual lua rules, so trailing false/nil arguments can be omitted.
dfhack.getOSType()
Returns the OS type string from
symbols.xml
.dfhack.getDFVersion()
Returns the DF version string from
symbols.xml
.dfhack.getDFPath()
Returns the DF directory path.
dfhack.getHackPath()
Returns the dfhack directory path, i.e.
".../df/hack/"
.dfhack.getSavePath()
Returns the path to the current save directory, or nil if no save loaded.
dfhack.getTickCount()
Returns the tick count in ms, exactly as DF ui uses.
dfhack.isWorldLoaded()
Checks if the world is loaded.
dfhack.isMapLoaded()
Checks if the world and map are loaded.
dfhack.TranslateName(name[,in_english,only_last_name])
Convert a language_name or only the last name part to string.
dfhack.gui.getCurViewscreen([skip_dismissed])
Returns the topmost viewscreen. If
skip_dismissed
is true, ignores screens already marked to be removed.dfhack.gui.getFocusString(viewscreen)
Returns a string representation of the current focus position in the ui. The string has a "screen/foo/bar/baz..." format.
dfhack.gui.getCurFocus([skip_dismissed])
Returns the focus string of the current viewscreen.
dfhack.gui.getSelectedWorkshopJob([silent])
When a job is selected in 'q' mode, returns the job, else prints error unless silent and returns nil.
dfhack.gui.getSelectedJob([silent])
Returns the job selected in a workshop or unit/jobs screen.
dfhack.gui.getSelectedUnit([silent])
Returns the unit selected via 'v', 'k', unit/jobs, or a full-screen item view of a cage or suchlike.
dfhack.gui.getSelectedItem([silent])
Returns the item selected via 'v' ->inventory, 'k', 't', or a full-screen item view of a container. Note that in the last case, the highlighted contained item is returned, not the container itself.
dfhack.gui.getSelectedBuilding([silent])
Returns the building selected via 'q', 't', 'k' or 'i'.
dfhack.gui.showAnnouncement(text,color[,is_bright])
Adds a regular announcement with given text, color, and brightness. The is_bright boolean actually seems to invert the brightness.
dfhack.gui.showZoomAnnouncement(type,pos,text,color[,is_bright])
Like above, but also specifies a position you can zoom to from the announcement menu.
dfhack.gui.showPopupAnnouncement(text,color[,is_bright])
Pops up a titan-style modal announcement window.
dfhack.gui.showAutoAnnouncement(type,pos,text,color[,is_bright])
Uses the type to look up options from announcements.txt, and calls the above operations accordingly. If enabled, pauses and zooms to position.
dfhack.job.cloneJobStruct(job)
Creates a deep copy of the given job.
dfhack.job.printJobDetails(job)
Prints info about the job.
dfhack.job.printItemDetails(jobitem,idx)
Prints info about the job item.
dfhack.job.getGeneralRef(job, type)
Searches for a general_ref with the given type.
dfhack.job.getSpecificRef(job, type)
Searches for a specific_ref with the given type.
dfhack.job.getHolder(job)
Returns the building holding the job.
dfhack.job.getWorker(job)
Returns the unit performing the job.
dfhack.job.checkBuildingsNow()
Instructs the game to check buildings for jobs next frame and assign workers.
dfhack.job.checkDesignationsNow()
Instructs the game to check designations for jobs next frame and assign workers.
dfhack.job.is_equal(job1,job2)
Compares important fields in the job and nested item structures.
dfhack.job.is_item_equal(job_item1,job_item2)
Compares important fields in the job item structures.
dfhack.job.listNewlyCreated(first_id)
Returns the current value of
df.global.job_next_id
, and if there are any jobs withfirst_id <= id < job_next_id
, a lua list containing them.dfhack.job.isSuitableItem(job_item, item_type, item_subtype)
Does basic sanity checks to verify if the suggested item type matches the flags in the job item.
dfhack.job.isSuitableMaterial(job_item, mat_type, mat_index)
Likewise, if replacing material.
dfhack.units.getPosition(unit)
Returns true x,y,z of the unit, or nil if invalid; may be not equal to unit.pos if caged.
dfhack.units.getGeneralRef(unit, type)
Searches for a general_ref with the given type.
dfhack.units.getSpecificRef(unit, type)
Searches for a specific_ref with the given type.
dfhack.units.getContainer(unit)
Returns the container (cage) item or nil.
dfhack.units.setNickname(unit,nick)
Sets the unit's nickname properly.
dfhack.units.getVisibleName(unit)
Returns the language_name object visible in game, accounting for false identities.
dfhack.units.getIdentity(unit)
Returns the false identity of the unit if it has one, or nil.
dfhack.units.getNemesis(unit)
Returns the nemesis record of the unit if it has one, or nil.
dfhack.units.isHidingCurse(unit)
Checks if the unit hides improved attributes from its curse.
dfhack.units.getPhysicalAttrValue(unit, attr_type)
dfhack.units.getMentalAttrValue(unit, attr_type)
Computes the effective attribute value, including curse effect.
dfhack.units.isCrazed(unit)
dfhack.units.isOpposedToLife(unit)
dfhack.units.hasExtravision(unit)
dfhack.units.isBloodsucker(unit)
Simple checks of caste attributes that can be modified by curses.
dfhack.units.getMiscTrait(unit, type[, create])
Finds (or creates if requested) a misc trait object with the given id.
dfhack.units.isDead(unit)
The unit is completely dead and passive, or a ghost.
dfhack.units.isAlive(unit)
The unit isn't dead or undead.
dfhack.units.isSane(unit)
The unit is capable of rational action, i.e. not dead, insane, zombie, or active werewolf.
dfhack.units.isDwarf(unit)
The unit is of the correct race of the fortress.
dfhack.units.isCitizen(unit)
The unit is an alive sane citizen of the fortress; wraps the same checks the game uses to decide game-over by extinction.
dfhack.units.getAge(unit[,true_age])
Returns the age of the unit in years as a floating-point value. If
true_age
is true, ignores false identities.dfhack.units.getNominalSkill(unit, skill[, use_rust])
Retrieves the nominal skill level for the given unit. If
use_rust
is true, subtracts the rust penalty.dfhack.units.getEffectiveSkill(unit, skill)
Computes the effective rating for the given skill, taking into account exhaustion, pain etc.
dfhack.units.getExperience(unit, skill[, total])
Returns the experience value for the given skill. If
total
is true, adds experience implied by the current rating.dfhack.units.computeMovementSpeed(unit)
Computes number of frames * 100 it takes the unit to move in its current state of mind and body.
dfhack.units.getNoblePositions(unit)
Returns a list of tables describing noble position assignments, or nil. Every table has fields
entity
,assignment
andposition
.dfhack.units.getProfessionName(unit[,ignore_noble,plural])
Retrieves the profession name using custom profession, noble assignments or raws. The
ignore_noble
boolean disables the use of noble positions.dfhack.units.getCasteProfessionName(race,caste,prof_id[,plural])
Retrieves the profession name for the given race/caste using raws.
dfhack.units.getProfessionColor(unit[,ignore_noble])
Retrieves the color associated with the profession, using noble assignments or raws. The
ignore_noble
boolean disables the use of noble positions.dfhack.units.getCasteProfessionColor(race,caste,prof_id)
Retrieves the profession color for the given race/caste using raws.
dfhack.items.getPosition(item)
Returns true x,y,z of the item, or nil if invalid; may be not equal to item.pos if in inventory.
dfhack.items.getDescription(item, type[, decorate])
Returns the string description of the item, as produced by the getItemDescription method. If decorate is true, also adds markings for quality and improvements.
dfhack.items.getGeneralRef(item, type)
Searches for a general_ref with the given type.
dfhack.items.getSpecificRef(item, type)
Searches for a specific_ref with the given type.
dfhack.items.getOwner(item)
Returns the owner unit or nil.
dfhack.items.setOwner(item,unit)
Replaces the owner of the item. If unit is nil, removes ownership. Returns false in case of error.
dfhack.items.getContainer(item)
Returns the container item or nil.
dfhack.items.getContainedItems(item)
Returns a list of items contained in this one.
dfhack.items.getHolderBuilding(item)
Returns the holder building or nil.
dfhack.items.getHolderUnit(item)
Returns the holder unit or nil.
dfhack.items.moveToGround(item,pos)
Move the item to the ground at position. Returns false if impossible.
dfhack.items.moveToContainer(item,container)
Move the item to the container. Returns false if impossible.
dfhack.items.moveToBuilding(item,building,use_mode)
Move the item to the building. Returns false if impossible.
dfhack.items.moveToInventory(item,unit,use_mode,body_part)
Move the item to the unit inventory. Returns false if impossible.
dfhack.items.remove(item[, no_uncat])
Removes the item, and marks it for garbage collection unless
no_uncat
is true.dfhack.items.makeProjectile(item)
Turns the item into a projectile, and returns the new object, or nil if impossible.
dfhack.items.isCasteMaterial(item_type)
Returns true if this item type uses a creature/caste pair as its material.
dfhack.items.getSubtypeCount(item_type)
Returns the number of raw-defined subtypes of the given item type, or -1 if not applicable.
dfhack.items.getSubtypeDef(item_type, subtype)
Returns the raw definition for the given item type and subtype, or nil if invalid.
dfhack.maps.getSize()
Returns map size in blocks: x, y, z
dfhack.maps.getTileSize()
Returns map size in tiles: x, y, z
dfhack.maps.getBlock(x,y,z)
Returns a map block object for given x,y,z in local block coordinates.
dfhack.maps.isValidTilePos(coords)
, orisValidTilePos(x,y,z)
Checks if the given df::coord or x,y,z in local tile coordinates are valid.
dfhack.maps.getTileBlock(coords)
, orgetTileBlock(x,y,z)
Returns a map block object for given df::coord or x,y,z in local tile coordinates.
dfhack.maps.ensureTileBlock(coords)
, orensureTileBlock(x,y,z)
Like
getTileBlock
, but if the block is not allocated, try creating it.dfhack.maps.getTileType(coords)
, orgetTileType(x,y,z)
Returns the tile type at the given coordinates, or nil if invalid.
dfhack.maps.getTileFlags(coords)
, orgetTileFlags(x,y,z)
Returns designation and occupancy references for the given coordinates, or nil, nil if invalid.
dfhack.maps.getRegionBiome(region_coord2d)
, orgetRegionBiome(x,y)
Returns the biome info struct for the given global map region.
dfhack.maps.enableBlockUpdates(block[,flow,temperature])
Enables updates for liquid flow or temperature, unless already active.
dfhack.maps.spawnFlow(pos,type,mat_type,mat_index,dimension)
Spawns a new flow (i.e. steam/mist/dust/etc) at the given pos, and with the given parameters. Returns it, or nil if unsuccessful.
dfhack.maps.getGlobalInitFeature(index)
Returns the global feature object with the given index.
dfhack.maps.getLocalInitFeature(region_coord2d,index)
Returns the local feature object with the given region coords and index.
dfhack.maps.getTileBiomeRgn(coords)
, orgetTileBiomeRgn(x,y,z)
Returns x, y for use with
getRegionBiome
.dfhack.maps.canWalkBetween(pos1, pos2)
Checks if a dwarf may be able to walk between the two tiles, using a pathfinding cache maintained by the game. Note that this cache is only updated when the game is unpaused, and thus can get out of date if doors are forbidden or unforbidden, or tools like liquids or tiletypes are used. It also cannot possibly take into account anything that depends on the actual units, like burrows, or the presence of invaders.
dfhack.maps.hasTileAssignment(tilemask)
Checks if the tile_bitmask object is not nil and contains any set bits; returns true or false.
dfhack.maps.getTileAssignment(tilemask,x,y)
Checks if the tile_bitmask object is not nil and has the relevant bit set; returns true or false.
dfhack.maps.setTileAssignment(tilemask,x,y,enable)
Sets the relevant bit in the tile_bitmask object to the enable argument.
dfhack.maps.resetTileAssignment(tilemask[,enable])
Sets all bits in the mask to the enable argument.
dfhack.burrows.findByName(name)
Returns the burrow pointer or nil.
dfhack.burrows.clearUnits(burrow)
Removes all units from the burrow.
dfhack.burrows.isAssignedUnit(burrow,unit)
Checks if the unit is in the burrow.
dfhack.burrows.setAssignedUnit(burrow,unit,enable)
Adds or removes the unit from the burrow.
dfhack.burrows.clearTiles(burrow)
Removes all tiles from the burrow.
dfhack.burrows.listBlocks(burrow)
Returns a table of map block pointers.
dfhack.burrows.isAssignedTile(burrow,tile_coord)
Checks if the tile is in burrow.
dfhack.burrows.setAssignedTile(burrow,tile_coord,enable)
Adds or removes the tile from the burrow. Returns false if invalid coords.
dfhack.burrows.isAssignedBlockTile(burrow,block,x,y)
Checks if the tile within the block is in burrow.
dfhack.burrows.setAssignedBlockTile(burrow,block,x,y,enable)
Adds or removes the tile from the burrow. Returns false if invalid coords.
dfhack.buildings.getGeneralRef(building, type)
Searches for a general_ref with the given type.
dfhack.buildings.getSpecificRef(building, type)
Searches for a specific_ref with the given type.
dfhack.buildings.setOwner(item,unit)
Replaces the owner of the building. If unit is nil, removes ownership. Returns false in case of error.
dfhack.buildings.getSize(building)
Returns width, height, centerx, centery.
dfhack.buildings.findAtTile(pos)
, orfindAtTile(x,y,z)
Scans the buildings for the one located at the given tile. Does not work on civzones. Warning: linear scan if the map tile indicates there are buildings at it.
dfhack.buildings.findCivzonesAt(pos)
, orfindCivzonesAt(x,y,z)
Scans civzones, and returns a lua sequence of those that touch the given tile, or nil if none.
dfhack.buildings.getCorrectSize(width, height, type, subtype, custom, direction)
Computes correct dimensions for the specified building type and orientation, using width and height for flexible dimensions. Returns is_flexible, width, height, center_x, center_y.
dfhack.buildings.checkFreeTiles(pos,size[,extents,change_extents,allow_occupied])
Checks if the rectangle defined by
pos
andsize
, and possibly extents, can be used for placing a building. Ifchange_extents
is true, bad tiles are removed from extents. Ifallow_occupied
, the occupancy test is skipped.dfhack.buildings.countExtentTiles(extents,defval)
Returns the number of tiles included by extents, or defval.
dfhack.buildings.containsTile(building, x, y[, room])
Checks if the building contains the specified tile, either directly, or as room.
dfhack.buildings.hasSupport(pos,size)
Checks if a bridge constructed at specified position would have support from terrain, and thus won't collapse if retracted.
Low-level building creation functions;
dfhack.buildings.allocInstance(pos, type, subtype, custom)
Creates a new building instance of given type, subtype and custom type, at specified position. Returns the object, or nil in case of an error.
dfhack.buildings.setSize(building, width, height, direction)
Configures an object returned by
allocInstance
, using specified parameters wherever appropriate. If the building has fixed size along any dimension, the corresponding input parameter will be ignored. Returns false if the building cannot be placed, or true, width, height, rect_area, true_area. Returned width and height are the final values used by the building; true_area is less than rect_area if any tiles were removed from designation.dfhack.buildings.constructAbstract(building)
Links a fully configured object created by
allocInstance
into the world. The object must be an abstract building, i.e. a stockpile or civzone. Returns true, or false if impossible.dfhack.buildings.constructWithItems(building, items)
Links a fully configured object created by
allocInstance
into the world for construction, using a list of specific items as material. Returns true, or false if impossible.dfhack.buildings.constructWithFilters(building, job_items)
Links a fully configured object created by
allocInstance
into the world for construction, using a list of job_item filters as inputs. Returns true, or false if impossible. Filter objects are claimed and possibly destroyed in any case. Use a negativequantity
field value to auto-compute the amount from the size of the building.dfhack.buildings.deconstruct(building)
Destroys the building, or queues a deconstruction job. Returns true if the building was destroyed and deallocated immediately.
More high-level functions are implemented in lua and can be loaded by
require('dfhack.buildings')
. See hack/lua/dfhack/buildings.lua
.
Among them are:
dfhack.buildings.getFiltersByType(argtable,type,subtype,custom)
Returns a sequence of lua structures, describing input item filters suitable for the specified building type, or nil if unknown or invalid. The returned sequence is suitable for use as the
job_items
argument ofconstructWithFilters
. Uses tables defined inbuildings.lua
.Argtable members
material
(the default name),bucket
,barrel
,chain
,mechanism
,screw
,pipe
,anvil
,weapon
are used to augment the basic attributes with more detailed information if the building has input items with the matching name (see the tables for naming details). Note that it is impossible to override any properties this way, only supply those that are not mentioned otherwise; one exception is that flags2.non_economic is automatically cleared if an explicit material is specified.dfhack.buildings.constructBuilding{...}
Creates a building in one call, using options contained in the argument table. Returns the building, or nil, error.
NOTE: Despite the name, unless the building is abstract, the function creates it in an 'unconstructed' stage, with a queued in-game job that will actually construct it. I.e. the function replicates programmatically what can be done through the construct building menu in the game ui, except that it does less environment constraint checking.
The following options can be used:
pos = coordinates
, orx = ..., y = ..., z = ...
Mandatory. Specifies the left upper corner of the building.
type = df.building_type.FOO, subtype = ..., custom = ...
Mandatory. Specifies the type of the building. Obviously, subtype and custom are only expected if the type requires them.
fields = { ... }
Initializes fields of the building object after creation with
df.assign
.width = ..., height = ..., direction = ...
Sets size and orientation of the building. If it is fixed-size, specified dimensions are ignored.
full_rectangle = true
For buildings like stockpiles or farm plots that can normally accomodate individual tile exclusion, forces an error if any tiles within the specified width*height are obstructed.
items = { item, item ... }
, orfilters = { {...}, {...}... }
Specifies explicit items or item filters to use in construction. It is the job of the user to ensure they are correct for the building type.
abstract = true
Specifies that the building is abstract and does not require construction. Required for stockpiles and civzones; an error otherwise.
material = {...}, mechanism = {...}, ...
If none of
items
,filter
, orabstract
is used, the function usesgetFiltersByType
to compute the input item filters, and passes the argument table through. If no filters can be determined this way,constructBuilding
throws an error.
dfhack.constructions.designateNew(pos,type,item_type,mat_index)
Designates a new construction at given position. If there already is a planned but not completed construction there, changes its type. Returns true, or false if obstructed. Note that designated constructions are technically buildings.
dfhack.constructions.designateRemove(pos)
, ordesignateRemove(x,y,z)
If there is a construction or a planned construction at the specified coordinates, designates it for removal, or instantly cancels the planned one. Returns true, was_only_planned if removed; or false if none found.
The screen module implements support for drawing to the tiled screen of the game. Note that drawing only has any effect when done from callbacks, so it can only be feasibly used in the core context.
Basic painting functions:
dfhack.screen.getWindowSize()
Returns width, height of the screen.
dfhack.screen.getMousePos()
Returns x,y of the tile the mouse is over.
dfhack.screen.inGraphicsMode()
Checks if [GRAPHICS:YES] was specified in init.
dfhack.screen.paintTile(pen,x,y[,char,tile])
Paints a tile using given parameters. See below for a description of pen.
Returns false if coordinates out of bounds, or other error.
dfhack.screen.readTile(x,y)
Retrieves the contents of the specified tile from the screen buffers. Returns a pen object, or nil if invalid or TrueType.
dfhack.screen.paintString(pen,x,y,text)
Paints the string starting at x,y. Uses the string characters in sequence to override the
ch
field of pen.Returns true if painting at least one character succeeded.
dfhack.screen.fillRect(pen,x1,y1,x2,y2)
Fills the rectangle specified by the coordinates with the given pen. Returns true if painting at least one character succeeded.
dfhack.screen.findGraphicsTile(pagename,x,y)
Finds a tile from a graphics set (i.e. the raws used for creatures), if in graphics mode and loaded.
Returns: tile, tile_grayscale, or nil if not found. The values can then be used for the tile field of pen structures.
dfhack.screen.clear()
Fills the screen with blank background.
dfhack.screen.invalidate()
Requests repaint of the screen by setting a flag. Unlike other functions in this section, this may be used at any time.
dfhack.screen.getKeyDisplay(key)
Returns the string that should be used to represent the given logical keybinding on the screen in texts like "press Key to ...".
The "pen" argument used by functions above may be represented by a table with the following possible fields:
ch
- Provides the ordinary tile character, as either a 1-character string or a number. Can be overridden with the
char
function parameter.fg
- Foreground color for the ordinary tile. Defaults to COLOR_GREY (7).
bg
- Background color for the ordinary tile. Defaults to COLOR_BLACK (0).
bold
- Bright/bold text flag. If nil, computed based on (fg & 8); fg is masked to 3 bits. Otherwise should be true/false.
tile
- Graphical tile id. Ignored unless [GRAPHICS:YES] was in init.txt.
tile_color = true
- Specifies that the tile should be shaded with fg/bg.
tile_fg, tile_bg
- If specified, overrides tile_color and supplies shading colors directly.
Alternatively, it may be a pre-parsed native object with the following API:
dfhack.pen.make(base[,pen_or_fg,bg,bold])
Creates a new pre-parsed pen by combining its arguments according to the following rules:
- The
base
argument may be a pen object, a pen table as specified above, or a single color value. In the single value case, it is split intofg
andbold
properties, and others are initialized to 0. This argument will be converted to a pre-parsed object and returned if there are no other arguments. - If the
pen_or_fg
argument is specified as a table or object, it completely replaces the base, and is returned instead of it. - Otherwise, the non-nil subset of the optional arguments is used
to update the
fg
,bg
andbold
properties of the base. If thebold
flag is nil, but pen_or_fg is a number,bold
is deduced from it like in the simple base case.
This function always returns a new pre-parsed pen, or nil.
- The
dfhack.pen.parse(base[,pen_or_fg,bg,bold])
Exactly like the above function, but returns
base
orpen_or_fg
directly if they are already a pre-parsed native object.pen.property
,pen.property = value
,pairs(pen)
Pre-parsed pens support reading and setting their properties, but don't behave exactly like a simple table would; for instance, assigning to
pen.tile_color
also resetspen.tile_fg
andpen.tile_bg
to nil.
In order to actually be able to paint to the screen, it is necessary to create and register a viewscreen (basically a modal dialog) with the game.
NOTE: As a matter of policy, in order to avoid user confusion, all interface screens added by dfhack should bear the "DFHack" signature.
Screens are managed with the following functions:
dfhack.screen.show(screen[,below])
Displays the given screen, possibly placing it below a different one. The screen must not be already shown. Returns true if success.
dfhack.screen.dismiss(screen[,to_first])
Marks the screen to be removed when the game enters its event loop. If
to_first
is true, all screens up to the first one will be deleted.dfhack.screen.isDismissed(screen)
Checks if the screen is already marked for removal.
Apart from a native viewscreen object, these functions accept a table
as a screen. In this case, show
creates a new native viewscreen
that delegates all processing to methods stored in that table.
NOTE: Lua-implemented screens are only supported in the core context.
Supported callbacks and fields are:
screen._native
Initialized by
show
with a reference to the backing viewscreen object, and removed again when the object is deleted.function screen:onShow()
Called by
dfhack.screen.show
if successful.function screen:onDismiss()
Called by
dfhack.screen.dismiss
if successful.function screen:onDestroy()
Called from the destructor when the viewscreen is deleted.
function screen:onResize(w, h)
Called before
onRender
oronIdle
when the window size has changed.function screen:onRender()
Called when the viewscreen should paint itself. This is the only context where the above painting functions work correctly.
If omitted, the screen is cleared; otherwise it should do that itself. In order to make a see-through dialog, call
self._native.parent:render()
.function screen:onIdle()
Called every frame when the screen is on top of the stack.
function screen:onHelp()
Called when the help keybinding is activated (usually '?').
function screen:onInput(keys)
Called when keyboard or mouse events are available. If any keys are pressed, the keys argument is a table mapping them to true. Note that this refers to logical keybingings computed from real keys via options; if multiple interpretations exist, the table will contain multiple keys.
The table also may contain special keys:
_STRING
Maps to an integer in range 0-255. Duplicates a separate "STRING_A???" code for convenience.
_MOUSE_L, _MOUSE_R
If the left or right mouse button is being pressed.
_MOUSE_L_DOWN, _MOUSE_R_DOWN
If the left or right mouse button was just pressed.
If this method is omitted, the screen is dismissed on receival of the
LEAVESCREEN
key.function screen:onGetSelectedUnit()
function screen:onGetSelectedItem()
function screen:onGetSelectedJob()
function screen:onGetSelectedBuilding()
Implement these to provide a return value for the matching
dfhack.gui.getSelected...
function.
These functions are intended for the use by dfhack developers, and are only documented here for completeness:
dfhack.internal.scripts
The table used by
dfhack.run_script()
to give every script its own global environment, persistent between calls to the script.dfhack.internal.getAddress(name)
Returns the global address
name
, or nil.dfhack.internal.setAddress(name, value)
Sets the global address
name
. Returns the value ofgetAddress
before the change.dfhack.internal.getVTable(name)
Returns the pre-extracted vtable address
name
, or nil.dfhack.internal.getImageBase()
Returns the mmap base of the executable.
dfhack.internal.getRebaseDelta()
Returns the ASLR rebase offset of the DF executable.
dfhack.internal.adjustOffset(offset[,to_file])
Returns the re-aligned offset, or nil if invalid. If
to_file
is true, the offset is adjusted from memory to file. This function returns the original value everywhere except windows.dfhack.internal.getMemRanges()
Returns a sequence of tables describing virtual memory ranges of the process.
dfhack.internal.patchMemory(dest,src,count)
Like memmove below, but works even if dest is read-only memory, e.g. code. If destination overlaps a completely invalid memory region, or another error occurs, returns false.
dfhack.internal.patchBytes(write_table[, verify_table])
The first argument must be a lua table, which is interpreted as a mapping from memory addresses to byte values that should be stored there. The second argument may be a similar table of values that need to be checked before writing anything.
The function takes care to either apply all of
write_table
, or none of it. An emptywrite_table
with a nonemptyverify_table
can be used to reasonably safely check if the memory contains certain values.Returns true if successful, or nil, error_msg, address if not.
dfhack.internal.memmove(dest,src,count)
Wraps the standard memmove function. Accepts both numbers and refs as pointers.
dfhack.internal.memcmp(ptr1,ptr2,count)
Wraps the standard memcmp function.
dfhack.internal.memscan(haystack,count,step,needle,nsize)
Searches for
needle
ofnsize
bytes inhaystack
, usingcount
steps ofstep
bytes. Returns: step_idx, sum_idx, found_ptr, or nil if not found.dfhack.internal.diffscan(old_data, new_data, start_idx, end_idx, eltsize[, oldval, newval, delta])
Searches for differences between buffers at ptr1 and ptr2, as integers of size eltsize. The oldval, newval or delta arguments may be used to specify additional constraints. Returns: found_index, or nil if end reached.
dfhack.internal.getDir(path)
List files in a directory. Returns: file_names or empty table if not found.
While plugins can create any number of interpreter instances, there is one special context managed by dfhack core. It is the only context that can receive events from DF and plugins.
Core context specific functions:
dfhack.is_core_context
Boolean value; true in the core context.
dfhack.timeout(time,mode,callback)
Arranges for the callback to be called once the specified period of time passes. The
mode
argument specifies the unit of time used, and may be one of'frames'
(raw FPS),'ticks'
(unpaused FPS),'days'
,'months'
,'years'
(in-game time). All timers other than'frames'
are cancelled when the world is unloaded, and cannot be queued until it is loaded again. Returns the timer id, or nil if unsuccessful due to world being unloaded.dfhack.timeout_active(id[,new_callback])
Returns the active callback with the given id, or nil if inactive or nil id. If called with 2 arguments, replaces the current callback with the given value, if still active. Using
timeout_active(id,nil)
cancels the timer.dfhack.onStateChange.foo = function(code)
Event. Receives the same codes as plugin_onstatechange in C++.
An event is a native object transparently wrapping a lua table, and implementing a __call metamethod. When it is invoked, it loops through the table with next and calls all contained values. This is intended as an extensible way to add listeners.
This type itself is available in any context, but only the core context has the actual events defined by C++ code.
Features:
dfhack.event.new()
Creates a new instance of an event.
event[key] = function
Sets the function as one of the listeners. Assign nil to remove it.
NOTE: The
df.NULL
key is reserved for the use by the C++ owner of the event; it is an error to try setting it.#event
Returns the number of non-nil listeners.
pairs(event)
Iterates over all listeners in the table.
event(args...)
Invokes all listeners contained in the event in an arbitrary order using
dfhack.safecall
.
DFHack sets up the lua interpreter so that the built-in require
function can be used to load shared lua code from hack/lua/.
The dfhack
namespace reference itself may be obtained via
require('dfhack')
, although it is initially created as a
global by C++ bootstrap code.
The following module management functions are provided:
mkmodule(name)
Creates an environment table for the module. Intended to be used as:
local _ENV = mkmodule('foo') ... return _ENV
If called the second time, returns the same table; thus providing reload support.
reload(name)
Reloads a previously
require
-d module "name" from the file. Intended as a help for module development.dfhack.BASE_G
This variable contains the root global environment table, which is used as a base for all module and script environments. Its contents should be kept limited to the standard Lua library and API described in this document.
A number of variables and functions are provided in the base global environment by the mandatory init file dfhack.lua:
Color constants
These are applicable both for
dfhack.color()
and color fields in DF functions or structures:COLOR_RESET, COLOR_BLACK, COLOR_BLUE, COLOR_GREEN, COLOR_CYAN, COLOR_RED, COLOR_MAGENTA, COLOR_BROWN, COLOR_GREY, COLOR_DARKGREY, COLOR_LIGHTBLUE, COLOR_LIGHTGREEN, COLOR_LIGHTCYAN, COLOR_LIGHTRED, COLOR_LIGHTMAGENTA, COLOR_YELLOW, COLOR_WHITE
dfhack.onStateChange
event codesAvailable only in the core context, as is the event itself:
SC_WORLD_LOADED, SC_WORLD_UNLOADED, SC_MAP_LOADED, SC_MAP_UNLOADED, SC_VIEWSCREEN_CHANGED, SC_CORE_INITIALIZED
Functions already described above
safecall, qerror, mkmodule, reload
Miscellaneous constants
NEWLINE, COMMA, PERIOD: evaluate to the relevant character strings. DEFAULT_NIL: is an unspecified unique token used by the class module below. printall(obj)
If the argument is a lua table or DF object reference, prints all fields.
copyall(obj)
Returns a shallow copy of the table or reference as a lua table.
pos2xyz(obj)
The object must have fields x, y and z. Returns them as 3 values. If obj is nil, or x is -30000 (the usual marker for undefined coordinates), returns nil.
xyz2pos(x,y,z)
Returns a table with x, y and z as fields.
same_xyz(a,b)
Checks if
a
andb
have the same x, y and z fields.get_path_xyz(path,i)
Returns
path.x[i], path.y[i], path.z[i]
.pos2xy(obj)
,xy2pos(x,y)
,same_xy(a,b)
,get_path_xy(a,b)
Same as above, but for 2D coordinates.
safe_index(obj,index...)
Walks a sequence of dereferences, which may be represented by numbers or strings. Returns nil if any of obj or indices is nil, or a numeric index is out of array bounds.
utils.compare(a,b)
Comparator function; returns -1 if a<b, 1 if a>b, 0 otherwise.
utils.compare_name(a,b)
Comparator for names; compares empty string last.
utils.is_container(obj)
Checks if obj is a container ref.
utils.make_index_sequence(start,end)
Returns a lua sequence of numbers in start..end.
utils.make_sort_order(data, ordering)
Computes a sorted permutation of objects in data, as a table of integer indices into the data sequence. Uses
data.n
as input length if present.The ordering argument is a sequence of ordering specs, represented as lua tables with following possible fields:
- ord.key = function(value)
Computes comparison key from input data value. Not called on nil. If omitted, the comparison key is the value itself.
- ord.key_table = function(data)
Computes a key table from the data table in one go.
- ord.compare = function(a,b)
Comparison function. Defaults to
utils.compare
above. Called on non-nil keys; nil sorts last.- ord.nil_first = true/false
If true, nil keys are sorted first instead of last.
- ord.reverse = true/false
If true, sort non-nil keys in descending order.
For every comparison during sorting the specs are applied in order until an unambiguous decision is reached. Sorting is stable.
Example of sorting a sequence by field foo:
local spec = { key = function(v) return v.foo end } local order = utils.make_sort_order(data, { spec }) local output = {} for i = 1,#order do output[i] = data[order[i]] end
Separating the actual reordering of the sequence in this way enables applying the same permutation to multiple arrays. This function is used by the sort plugin.
utils.assign(tgt, src)
Does a recursive assignment of src into tgt. Uses
df.assign
if tgt is a native object ref; otherwise recurses into lua tables.utils.clone(obj, deep)
Performs a shallow, or semi-deep copy of the object as a lua table tree. The deep mode recurses into lua tables and subobjects, except pointers to other heap objects. Null pointers are represented as df.NULL. Zero-based native containers are converted to 1-based lua sequences.
utils.clone_with_default(obj, default, force)
Copies the object, using the
default
lua table tree as a guide to which values should be skipped as uninteresting. Theforce
argument makes it always return a non-nil value.utils.parse_bitfield_int(value, type_ref)
Given an int
value
, and a bitfield type in thedf
tree, it returns a lua table mapping the enabled bit keys to true, unless value is 0, in which case it returns nil.utils.list_bitfield_flags(bitfield[, list])
Adds all enabled bitfield keys to
list
or a newly-allocated empty sequence, and returns it. Thebitfield
argument may be nil.utils.sort_vector(vector,field,cmpfun)
Sorts a native vector or lua sequence using the comparator function. If
field
is not nil, applies the comparator to the field instead of the whole object.utils.linear_index(vector,key[,field])
Searches for
key
in the vector, and returns index, found_value, or nil if none found.utils.binsearch(vector,key,field,cmpfun,min,max)
Does a binary search in a native vector or lua sequence for
key
, usingcmpfun
andfield
like sort_vector. Ifmin
andmax
are specified, they are used as the search subrange bounds.If found, returns item, true, idx. Otherwise returns nil, false, insert_idx, where insert_idx is the correct insertion point.
utils.insert_sorted(vector,item,field,cmpfun)
Does a binary search, and inserts item if not found. Returns did_insert, vector[idx], idx.
utils.insert_or_update(vector,item,field,cmpfun)
Like
insert_sorted
, but also assigns the item into the vector cell if insertion didn't happen.As an example, you can use this to set skill values:
utils.insert_or_update(soul.skills, {new=true, id=..., rating=...}, 'id')
(For an explanation of
new=true
, see table assignment in the wrapper section)utils.erase_sorted_key(vector,key,field,cmpfun)
Removes the item with the given key from the list. Returns: did_erase, vector[idx], idx.
utils.erase_sorted(vector,item,field,cmpfun)
Exactly like
erase_sorted_key
, but if field is specified, takes the key fromitem[field]
.utils.call_with_string(obj,methodname,...)
Allocates a temporary string object, calls
obj:method(tmp,...)
, and returns the value written into the temporary after deleting it.utils.getBuildingName(building)
Returns the string description of the given building.
utils.getBuildingCenter(building)
Returns an x/y/z table pointing at the building center.
utils.split_string(string, delimiter)
Splits the string by the given delimiter, and returns a sequence of results.
utils.prompt_yes_no(prompt, default)
Presents a yes/no prompt to the user. If
default
is not nil, allows just pressing Enter to submit the default choice. If the user enters'abort'
, throws an error.utils.prompt_input(prompt, checkfun, quit_str)
Presents a prompt to input data, until a valid string is entered. Once
checkfun(input)
returns true, ..., passes the values through. If the user enters the quit_str (defaults to'~~~'
), throws an error.utils.check_number(text)
A
prompt_input
checkfun
that verifies a number input.
A third-party lua table dumper module from http://lua-users.org/wiki/DataDumper. Defines one function:
dumper.DataDumper(value, varname, fastmode, ident, indent_step)
Returns
value
converted to a string. Theindent_step
argument specifies the indentation step size in spaces. For the other arguments see the original documentation link above.
Implements a trivial single-inheritance class system.
Foo = defclass(Foo[, ParentClass])
Defines or updates class Foo. The
Foo = defclass(Foo)
syntax is needed so that when the module or script is reloaded, the class identity will be preserved through the preservation of global variable values.The
defclass
function is defined as a stub in the global namespace, and using it will auto-load the class module.Class.super
This class field is set by defclass to the parent class, and allows a readable
Class.super.method(self, ...)
syntax for calling superclass methods.Class.ATTRS { foo = xxx, bar = yyy }
Declares certain instance fields to be attributes, i.e. auto-initialized from fields in the table used as the constructor argument. If omitted, they are initialized with the default values specified in this declaration.
If the default value should be nil, use
ATTRS { foo = DEFAULT_NIL }
.Declaring an attribute is mostly the same as defining your
init
method like this:function Class.init(args) self.attr1 = args.attr1 or default1 self.attr2 = args.attr2 or default2 ... end
The main difference is that attributes are processed as a separate initialization step, before any
init
methods are called. They also make the directy relation between instance fields and constructor arguments more explicit.new_obj = Class{ foo = arg, bar = arg, ... }
Calling the class as a function creates and initializes a new instance. Initialization happens in this order:
- An empty instance table is created, and its metatable set.
- The
preinit
methods are called viainvoke_before
(see below) with the table used as argument to the class. These methods are intended for validating and tweaking that argument table. - Declared ATTRS are initialized from the argument table or their default values.
- The
init
methods are called viainvoke_after
with the argument table. This is the main constructor method. - The
postinit
methods are called viainvoke_after
with the argument table. Place code that should be called after the object is fully constructed here.
Predefined instance methods:
instance:assign{ foo = xxx }
Assigns all values in the input table to the matching instance fields.
instance:callback(method_name, [args...])
Returns a closure that invokes the specified method of the class, properly passing in self, and optionally a number of initial arguments too. The arguments given to the closure are appended to these.
instance:cb_getfield(field_name)
Returns a closure that returns the specified field of the object when called.
instance:cb_setfield(field_name)
Returns a closure that sets the specified field to its argument when called.
instance:invoke_before(method_name, args...)
Navigates the inheritance chain of the instance starting from the most specific class, and invokes the specified method with the arguments if it is defined in that specific class. Equivalent to the following definition in every class:
function Class:invoke_before(method, ...) if rawget(Class, method) then rawget(Class, method)(self, ...) end Class.super.invoke_before(method, ...) end
instance:invoke_after(method_name, args...)
Like invoke_before, only the method is called after the recursive call to super, i.e. invocations happen in the parent to child order.
These two methods are inspired by the Common Lisp before and after methods, and are intended for implementing similar protocols for certain things. The class library itself uses them for constructors.
To avoid confusion, these methods cannot be redefined.
A number of lua modules with names starting with gui
are dedicated
to wrapping the natives of the dfhack.screen
module in a way that
is easy to use. This allows relatively easily and naturally creating
dialogs that integrate in the main game UI window.
These modules make extensive use of the class
module, and define
things ranging from the basic Painter
, View
and Screen
classes, to fully functional predefined dialogs.
This module defines the most important classes and functions for implementing interfaces. This documents those of them that are considered stable.
USE_GRAPHICS
Contains the value of
dfhack.screen.inGraphicsMode()
, which cannot be changed without restarting the game and thus is constant during the session.CLEAR_PEN
The black pen used to clear the screen.
simulateInput(screen, keys...)
This function wraps an undocumented native function that passes a set of keycodes to a screen, and is the official way to do that.
Every argument after the initial screen may be nil, a numeric keycode, a string keycode, a sequence of numeric or string keycodes, or a mapping of keycodes to true or false. For instance, it is possible to use the table passed as argument to
onInput
.mkdims_xy(x1,y1,x2,y2)
Returns a table containing the arguments as fields, and also
width
andheight
that contains the rectangle dimensions.mkdims_wh(x1,y1,width,height)
Returns the same kind of table as
mkdims_xy
, only this time it computesx2
andy2
.is_in_rect(rect,x,y)
Checks if the given point is within a rectangle, represented by a table produced by one of the
mkdims
functions.blink_visible(delay)
Returns true or false, with the value switching to the opposite every
delay
msec. This is intended for rendering blinking interface objects.getKeyDisplay(keycode)
Wraps
dfhack.screen.getKeyDisplay
in order to allow using strings for the keycode argument.
This class represents an on-screen rectangle with an associated independent
clip area rectangle. It is the base of the Painter
class, and is used by
Views
to track their client area.
ViewRect{ rect = ..., clip_rect = ..., view_rect = ..., clip_view = ... }
The constructor has the following arguments:
rect: The mkdims
rectangle in screen coordinates of the logical viewport. Defaults to the whole screen.clip_rect: The clip rectangle in screen coordinates. Defaults to rect
.view_rect: A ViewRect object to copy from; overrides both rect
andclip_rect
.clip_view: A ViewRect object to intersect the specified clip area with. rect:isDefunct()
Returns true if the clip area is empty, i.e. no painting is possible.
rect:inClipGlobalXY(x,y)
Checks if these global coordinates are within the clip rectangle.
rect:inClipLocalXY(x,y)
Checks if these coordinates (specified relative to
x1,y1
) are within the clip rectangle.rect:localXY(x,y)
Converts a pair of global coordinates to local; returns x_local,y_local.
rect:globalXY(x,y)
Converts a pair of local coordinates to global; returns x_global,y_global.
rect:viewport(x,y,w,h)
orrect:viewport(subrect)
Returns a ViewRect representing a sub-rectangle of the current one. The arguments are specified in local coordinates; the
subrect
argument must be amkdims
table. The returned object consists of the exact specified rectangle, and a clip area produced by intersecting it with the clip area of the original object.
The painting natives in dfhack.screen
apply to the whole screen, are
completely stateless and don't implement clipping.
The Painter class inherits from ViewRect to provide clipping and local coordinates, and tracks current cursor position and current pen.
Painter{ ..., pen = ..., key_pen = ... }
In addition to ViewRect arguments, Painter accepts a suggestion of the initial value for the main pen, and the keybinding pen. They default to COLOR_GREY and COLOR_LIGHTGREEN otherwise.
There are also some convenience functions that wrap this constructor:
Painter.new(rect,pen)
Painter.new_view(view_rect,pen)
Painter.new_xy(x1,y1,x2,y2,pen)
Painter.new_wh(x1,y1,width,height,pen)
painter:isValidPos()
Checks if the current cursor position is within the clip area.
painter:viewport(x,y,w,h)
Like the superclass method, but returns a Painter object.
painter:cursor()
Returns the current cursor x,y in local coordinates.
painter:seek(x,y)
Sets the current cursor position, and returns self. Either of the arguments may be nil to keep the current value.
painter:advance(dx,dy)
Adds the given offsets to the cursor position, and returns self. Either of the arguments may be nil to keep the current value.
painter:newline([dx])
Advances the cursor to the start of the next line plus the given x offset, and returns self.
painter:pen(...)
Sets the current pen to
dfhack.pen.parse(old_pen,...)
, and returns self.painter:key_pen(...)
Sets the current keybinding pen to
dfhack.pen.parse(old_pen,...)
, and returns self.painter:clear()
Fills the whole clip rectangle with
CLEAR_PEN
, and returns self.painter:fill(x1,y1,x2,y2[,...])
orpainter:fill(rect[,...])
Fills the specified local coordinate rectangle with
dfhack.pen.parse(cur_pen,...)
, and returns self.painter:char([char[, ...]])
Paints one character using
char
anddfhack.pen.parse(cur_pen,...)
; returns self. Thechar
argument, if not nil, is used to override thech
property of the pen.painter:tile([char, tile[, ...]])
Like above, but also allows overriding the
tile
property on ad-hoc basis.painter:string(text[, ...])
Paints the string with
dfhack.pen.parse(cur_pen,...)
; returns self.painter:key(keycode[, ...])
Paints the description of the keycode using
dfhack.pen.parse(cur_key_pen,...)
; returns self.
As noted above, all painting methods return self, in order to allow chaining them like this:
painter:pen(foo):seek(x,y):char(1):advance(1):string('bar')...
This class is the common abstract base of both the stand-alone screens and common widgets to be used inside them. It defines the basic layout, rendering and event handling framework.
The class defines the following attributes:
visible: | Specifies that the view should be painted. |
---|---|
active: | Specifies that the view should receive events, if also visible. |
view_id: | Specifies an identifier to easily identify the view among subviews. This is reserved for implementation of top-level views, and should not be used by widgets for their internal subviews. |
It also always has the following fields:
subviews: | Contains a table of all subviews. The sequence part of the
table is used for iteration. In addition, subviews are also
indexed under their view_id, if any; see addviews() below. |
---|
These fields are computed by the layout process:
frame_parent_rect: | The ViewRect represeting the client area of the parent view. |
---|---|
frame_rect: | The mkdims rect of the outer frame in parent-local coordinates. |
frame_body: | The ViewRect representing the body part of the View's own frame. |
The class has the following methods:
view:addviews(list)
Adds the views in the list to the
subviews
sequence. If any of the views in the list haveview_id
attributes that don't conflict with existing keys insubviews
, also stores them under the string keys. Finally, copies any non-conflicting string keys from thesubviews
tables of the listed views.Thus, doing something like this:
self:addviews{ Panel{ view_id = 'panel', subviews = { Label{ view_id = 'label' } } } }
Would make the label accessible as both
self.subviews.label
andself.subviews.panel.subviews.label
.view:getWindowSize()
Returns the dimensions of the
frame_body
rectangle.view:getMousePos()
Returns the mouse x,y in coordinates local to the
frame_body
rectangle if it is within its clip area, or nothing otherwise.view:updateLayout([parent_rect])
Recomputes layout of the view and its subviews. If no argument is given, re-uses the previous parent rect. The process goes as follows:
- Calls
preUpdateLayout(parent_rect)
viainvoke_before
. - Uses
computeFrame(parent_rect)
to compute the desired frame. - Calls
postComputeFrame(frame_body)
viainvoke_after
. - Calls
updateSubviewLayout(frame_body)
to update children. - Calls
postUpdateLayout(frame_body)
viainvoke_after
.
- Calls
view:computeFrame(parent_rect)
(for overriding)Called by
updateLayout
in order to compute the frame rectangle(s). Should return themkdims
rectangle for the outer frame, and optionally also for the body frame. If only one rectangle is returned, it is used for both frames, and the margin becomes zero.view:updateSubviewLayout(frame_body)
Calls
updateLayout
on all children.view:render(painter)
Given the parent's painter, renders the view via the following process:
- Calls
onRenderFrame(painter, frame_rect)
to paint the outer frame. - Creates a new painter using the
frame_body
rect. - Calls
onRenderBody(new_painter)
to paint the client area. - Calls
renderSubviews(new_painter)
to paint visible children.
- Calls
view:renderSubviews(painter)
Calls
render
on allvisible
subviews in the order they appear in thesubviews
sequence.view:onRenderFrame(painter, rect)
(for overriding)Called by
render
to paint the outer frame; by default does nothing.view:onRenderBody(painter)
(for overriding)Called by
render
to paint the client area; by default does nothing.view:onInput(keys)
(for overriding)Override this to handle events. By default directly calls
inputToSubviews
. Return a true value from this method to signal that the event has been handled and should not be passed on to more views.view:inputToSubviews(keys)
Calls
onInput
on all visible active subviews, iterating thesubviews
sequence in reverse order, so that topmost subviews get events first. Returns true if any of the subviews handled the event.
This is a View subclass intended for use as a stand-alone dialog or screen. It adds the following methods:
screen:isShown()
Returns true if the screen is currently in the game engine's display stack.
screen:isDismissed()
Returns true if the screen is dismissed.
screen:isActive()
Returns true if the screen is shown and not dismissed.
screen:invalidate()
Requests a repaint. Note that currently using it is not necessary, because repaints are constantly requested automatically, due to issues with native screens happening otherwise.
screen:renderParent()
Asks the parent native screen to render itself, or clears the screen if impossible.
screen:sendInputToParent(...)
Uses
simulateInput
to send keypresses to the native parent screen.screen:show([parent])
Adds the screen to the display stack with the given screen as the parent; if parent is not specified, places this one one topmost. Before calling
dfhack.screen.show
, callsself:onAboutToShow(parent)
.screen:onAboutToShow(parent)
(for overriding)Called when
dfhack.screen.show
is about to be called.screen:onShow()
Called by
dfhack.screen.show
once the screen is successfully shown.screen:dismiss()
Dismisses the screen. A dismissed screen does not receive any more events or paint requests, but may remain in the display stack for a short time until the game removes it.
screen:onDismiss()
(for overriding)Called by
dfhack.screen.dismiss()
.screen:onDestroy()
(for overriding)Called by the native code when the screen is fully destroyed and removed from the display stack. Place code that absolutely must be called whenever the screen is removed by any means here.
screen:onResize
,screen:onRender
Defined as callbacks for native code.
A Screen subclass that paints a visible frame around its body. Most dialogs should inherit from this class.
A framed screen has the following attributes:
frame_style: | A table that defines a set of pens to draw various parts of the frame. |
---|---|
frame_title: | A string to display in the middle of the top of the frame. |
frame_width: | Desired width of the client area. If nil, the screen will occupy the whole width. |
frame_height: | Likewise, for height. |
frame_inset: | The gap between the frame and the client area. Defaults to 0. |
frame_background: | The pen to fill in the frame with. Defaults to CLEAR_PEN. |
There are the following predefined frame style tables:
GREY_FRAME
A plain grey-colored frame.
BOUNDARY_FRAME
The same frame as used by the usual full-screen DF views, like dwarfmode.
GREY_LINE_FRAME
A frame consisting of grey lines, similar to the one used by titan announcements.
This module implements some basic widgets based on the View infrastructure.
Base of all the widgets. Inherits from View and has the following attributes:
frame = {...}
Specifies the constraints on the outer frame of the widget. If omitted, the widget will occupy the whole parent rectangle.
The frame is specified as a table with the following possible fields:
l: gap between the left edges of the frame and the parent. t: gap between the top edges of the frame and the parent. r: gap between the right edges of the frame and the parent. b: gap between the bottom edges of the frame and the parent. w: maximum width of the frame. h: maximum heigth of the frame. xalign: X alignment of the frame. yalign: Y alignment of the frame. First the
l,t,r,b
fields restrict the available area for placing the frame. Ifw
andh
are not specified or larger then the computed area, it becomes the frame. Otherwise the smaller frame is placed within the are based on thexalign/yalign
fields. If the align hints are omitted, they are assumed to be 0, 1, or 0.5 based on which of thel/r/t/b
fields are set.frame_inset = {...}
Specifies the gap between the outer frame, and the client area. The attribute may be a simple integer value to specify a uniform inset, or a table with the following fields:
l: left margin. t: top margin. r: right margin. b: bottom margin. x: left/right margin, if l
and/orr
are omitted.y: top/bottom margin, if t
and/orb
are omitted.frame_background = pen
The pen to fill the outer frame with. Defaults to no fill.
Inherits from Widget, and intended for grouping a number of subviews.
Has attributes:
subviews = {}
Used to initialize the subview list in the constructor.
on_render = function(painter)
Called from
onRenderBody
.
Subclass of Panel; keeps exactly one child visible.
Pages{ ..., selected = ... }
Specifies which child to select initially; defaults to the first one.
pages:getSelected()
Returns the selected index, child.
pages:setSelected(index)
Selects the specified child, hiding the previous selected one. It is permitted to use the subview object, or its
view_id
as index.
Subclass of Widget; implements a simple edit field.
Attributes:
text: | The current contents of the field. |
---|---|
text_pen: | The pen to draw the text with. |
on_char: | Input validation callback; used as on_char(new_char,text) .
If it returns false, the character is ignored. |
on_change: | Change notification callback; used as on_change(new_text,old_text) . |
on_submit: | Enter key callback; if set the field will handle the key and call on_submit(text) . |
This Widget subclass implements flowing semi-static text.
It has the following attributes:
text_pen: | Specifies the pen for active text. |
---|---|
text_dpen: | Specifies the pen for disabled text. |
disabled: | Boolean or a callback; if true, the label is disabled. |
enabled: | Boolean or a callback; if false, the label is disabled. |
auto_height: | Sets self.frame.h from the text height. |
auto_width: | Sets self.frame.w from the text width. |
The text itself is represented as a complex structure, and passed
to the object via the text
argument of the constructor, or via
the setText
method, as one of:
- A simple string, possibly containing newlines.
- A sequence of tokens.
Every token in the sequence in turn may be either a string, possibly containing newlines, or a table with the following possible fields:
token.text = ...
Specifies the main text content of a token, and may be a string, or a callback returning a string.
token.gap = ...
Specifies the number of character positions to advance on the line before rendering the token.
token.tile = pen
Specifies a pen to paint as one tile before the main part of the token.
token.width = ...
If specified either as a value or a callback, the text field is padded or truncated to the specified number.
token.pad_char = '?'
If specified together with
width
, the padding area is filled with this character instead of just being skipped over.token.key = '...'
Specifies the keycode associated with the token. The string description of the key binding is added to the text content of the token.
token.key_sep = '...'
Specifies the separator to place between the keybinding label produced by
token.key
, and the main text of the token. If the separator is '()', the token is formatted astext..' ('..binding..')'
. Otherwise it is simplybinding..sep..text
.token.enabled
,token.disabled
Same as the attributes of the label itself, but applies only to the token.
token.pen
,token.dpen
Specify the pen and disabled pen to be used for the token's text. The field may be either the pen itself, or a callback that returns it.
token.on_activate
If this field is not nil, and
token.key
is set, the token will actually respond to that key binding unless disabled, and call this callback. Eventually this may be extended with mouse click support.token.id
Specifies a unique identifier for the token.
token.line
,token.x1
,token.x2
Reserved for internal use.
The Label widget implements the following methods:
label:setText(new_text)
Replaces the text currently contained in the widget.
label:itemById(id)
Finds a token by its
id
field.label:getTextHeight()
Computes the height of the text.
label:getTextWidth()
Computes the width of the text.
The List widget implements a simple list with paging.
It has the following attributes:
text_pen: | Specifies the pen for deselected list entries. |
---|---|
cursor_pen: | Specifies the pen for the selected entry. |
inactive_pen: | If specified, used for the cursor when the widget is not active. |
icon_pen: | Default pen for icons. |
on_select: | Selection change callback; called as on_select(index,choice) .
This is also called with nil arguments if setChoices is called
with an empty list. |
on_submit: | Enter key callback; if specified, the list reacts to the key
and calls it as on_submit(index,choice) . |
on_submit2: | Shift-Enter key callback; if specified, the list reacts to the key
and calls it as on_submit2(index,choice) . |
row_height: | Height of every row in text lines. |
icon_width: | If not nil, the specified number of character columns are reserved to the left of the list item for the icons. |
scroll_keys: | Specifies which keys the list should react to as a table. |
Every list item may be specified either as a string, or as a lua table with the following fields:
text: | Specifies the label text in the same format as the Label text. |
---|---|
caption, [1]: | Deprecated legacy aliases for text. |
text_*: | Reserved for internal use. |
key: | Specifies a keybinding that acts as a shortcut for the specified item. |
icon: | Specifies an icon string, or a pen to paint a single character. May be a callback. |
icon_pen: | When the icon is a string, used to paint it. |
The list supports the following methods:
List{ ..., choices = ..., selected = ... }
Same as calling
setChoices
after construction.list:setChoices(choices[, selected])
Replaces the list of choices, possibly also setting the currently selected index.
list:setSelected(selected)
Sets the currently selected index. Returns the index after validation.
list:getChoices()
Returns the list of choices.
list:getSelected()
Returns the selected index, choice, or nothing if the list is empty.
list:getContentWidth()
Returns the minimal width to draw all choices without clipping.
list:getContentHeight()
Returns the minimal width to draw all choices without scrolling.
list:submit()
Call the
on_submit
callback, as if the Enter key was handled.list:submit2()
Call the
on_submit2
callback, as if the Shift-Enter key was handled.
This widget combines List, EditField and Label into a combo-box like construction that allows filtering the list by subwords of its items.
In addition to passing through all attributes supported by List, it supports:
edit_pen: | If specified, used instead of cursor_pen for the edit field. |
---|---|
edit_below: | If true, the edit field is placed below the list instead of above. |
not_found_label: | Specifies the text of the label shown when no items match the filter. |
The list choices may include the following attributes:
search_key: | If specified, used instead of text to match against the filter. |
---|
The widget implements:
list:setChoices(choices[, selected])
Resets the filter, and passes through to the inner list.
list:getChoices()
Returns the list of all choices.
list:getFilter()
Returns the current filter string, and the filtered list of choices.
list:setFilter(filter[,pos])
Sets the new filter string, filters the list, and selects the item at index
pos
in the unfiltered list if possible.list:canSubmit()
Checks if there are currently any choices in the filtered list.
list:getSelected()
,list:getContentWidth()
,list:getContentHeight()
,list:submit()
Same as with an ordinary list.
DFHack plugins may export native functions and events
to lua contexts. They are automatically imported by
mkmodule('plugins.<name>')
; this means that a lua
module file is still necessary for require
to read.
The following plugins have lua support.
Implements extended burrow manipulations.
Events:
onBurrowRename.foo = function(burrow)
Emitted when a burrow might have been renamed either through the game UI, or
renameBurrow()
.onDigComplete.foo = function(job_type,pos,old_tiletype,new_tiletype,worker)
Emitted when a tile might have been dug out. Only tracked if the auto-growing burrows feature is enabled.
Native functions:
renameBurrow(burrow,name)
Renames the burrow, emitting
onBurrowRename
and updating auto-grow state properly.findByName(burrow,name)
Finds a burrow by name, using the same rules as the plugin command line interface. Namely, trailing
'+'
characters marking auto-grow burrows are ignored.copyUnits(target,source,enable)
Applies units from
source
burrow totarget
. Theenable
parameter specifies if they are to be added or removed.copyTiles(target,source,enable)
Applies tiles from
source
burrow totarget
. Theenable
parameter specifies if they are to be added or removed.setTilesByKeyword(target,keyword,enable)
Adds or removes tiles matching a predefined keyword. The keyword set is the same as used by the command line.
The lua module file also re-exports functions from dfhack.burrows
.
Does not export any native functions as of now. Instead, it calls lua code to perform the actual ordering of list items.
This plugin exports some events to lua thus allowing to run lua functions on DF world events.
onReactionComplete(reaction,unit,input_items,input_reagents,output_items,call_native)
Auto activates if detects reactions starting with
LUA_HOOK_
. Is called when reaction finishes.onItemContaminateWound(item,unit,wound,number1,number2)
Is called when item tries to contaminate wound (e.g. stuck in).
onProjItemCheckMovement(projectile)
Is called when projectile moves.
onProjItemCheckImpact(projectile,somebool)
Is called when projectile hits something.
onProjUnitCheckMovement(projectile)
Is called when projectile moves.
onProjUnitCheckImpact(projectile,somebool)
Is called when projectile hits something.
onWorkshopFillSidebarMenu(workshop,callnative)
Is called when viewing a workshop in 'q' mode, to populate reactions, useful for custom viewscreens for shops.
postWorkshopFillSidebarMenu(workshop)
Is called after calling (or not) native fillSidebarMenu(). Useful for job button tweaking (e.g. adding custom reactions)
These events are straight from EventManager module. Each of them first needs to be enabled. See functions for more info. If you register a listener before the game is loaded, be aware that no events will be triggered immediately after loading, so you might need to add another event listener for when the game first loads in some cases.
onBuildingCreatedDestroyed(building_id)
Gets called when building is created or destroyed.
onConstructionCreatedDestroyed(building_id)
Gets called when construction is created or destroyed.
onJobInitiated(job)
Gets called when job is issued.
onJobCompleted(job)
Gets called when job is finished. The job that is passed to this function is a copy. Requires a frequency of 0 in order to distinguish between workshop jobs that were cancelled by the user and workshop jobs that completed successfully.
onUnitDeath(unit_id)
Gets called on unit death.
onItemCreated(item_id)
Gets called when item is created (except due to traders, migrants, invaders and spider webs).
onSyndrome(unit_id,syndrome_index)
Gets called when new syndrome appears on a unit.
onInvasion(invasion_id)
Gets called when new invasion happens.
onInventoryChange(unit_id,item_id,old_equip,new_equip)
Gets called when someone picks up an item, puts one down, or changes the way they are holding it. If an item is picked up, old_equip will be null. If an item is dropped, new_equip will be null. If an item is re-equipped in a new way, then neither will be null. You absolutely must NOT alter either old_equip or new_equip or you might break other plugins.
registerReaction(reaction_name,callback)
Simplified way of using onReactionComplete; the callback is function (same params as event).
removeNative(shop_name)
Removes native choice list from the building.
addReactionToShop(reaction_name,shop_name)
Add a custom reaction to the building.
enableEvent(evType,frequency)
Enable event checking for EventManager events. For event types use
eventType
table. Note that different types of events require different frequencies to be effective. The frequency is how many ticks EventManager will wait before checking if that type of event has happened. If multiple scripts or plugins use the same event type, the smallest frequency is the one that is used, so you might get events triggered more often than the frequency you use here.registerSidebar(shop_name,callback)
Enable callback when sidebar for
shop_name
is drawn. Usefull for custom workshop views e.g. using gui.dwarfmode lib.
Spawn dragon breath on each item attempt to contaminate wound:
b=require "plugins.eventful" b.onItemContaminateWound.one=function(item,unit,un_wound,x,y) local flw=dfhack.maps.spawnFlow(unit.pos,6,0,0,50000) end
Reaction complete example:
b=require "plugins.eventful" b.registerReaction("LUA_HOOK_LAY_BOMB",function(reaction,unit,in_items,in_reag,out_items,call_native) local pos=copyall(unit.pos) -- spawn dragonbreath after 100 ticks dfhack.timeout(100,"ticks",function() dfhack.maps.spawnFlow(pos,6,0,0,50000) end) --do not call real item creation code call_native.value=false end)
Grenade example:
b=require "plugins.eventful" b.onProjItemCheckImpact.one=function(projectile) -- you can check if projectile.item e.g. has correct material dfhack.maps.spawnFlow(projectile.cur_pos,6,0,0,50000) end
Integrated tannery:
b=require "plugins.eventful" b.addReactionToShop("TAN_A_HIDE","LEATHERWORKS")
This plugin overwrites some methods in workshop df class so that mechanical workshops are possible. Although plugin export a function it's recommended to use lua decorated function.
registerBuilding(table)
where table must contain name, as a workshop raw name, the rest are optional:- name -- custom workshop id e.g.
SOAPMAKER
- fix_impassible -- if true make impassible tiles impassible to liquids too
- consume -- how much machine power is needed to work. Disables reactions if not supplied enough
- produce -- how much machine power is produced. Use discouraged as there is no way to change this at runtime
- gears -- a table or
{x=?,y=?}
of connection points for machines - action -- a table of number (how much ticks to skip) and a function which gets called on shop update
- animate -- a table of frames which can be a table of:
- tables of 4 numbers
{tile,fore,back,bright}
OR - empty table (tile not modified) OR
{x=<number> y=<number> + 4 numbers like in first case}
, this generates full frame useful for animations that change little (1-2 tiles)
- tables of 4 numbers
- name -- custom workshop id e.g.
- Animate table also might contain:
- frameLenght -- how many ticks does one frame take OR
- isMechanical -- a bool that says to try to match to mechanical system (i.e. how gears are turning)
Simple mechanical workshop:
require('plugins.building-hacks').registerBuilding{name="BONE_GRINDER", consume=15, gears={x=0,y=0}, --connection point animate={ isMechanical=true, --animate the same connection point as vanilla gear frames={ {{x=0,y=0,42,7,0,0}}, --first frame, 1 changed tile {{x=0,y=0,15,7,0,0}} -- second frame, same } }
Any files with the .lua extension placed into hack/scripts/* are automatically used by the DFHack core as commands. The matching command name consists of the name of the file sans the extension.
If the first line of the script is a one-line comment, it is
used by the built-in ls
and help
commands.
NOTE: Scripts placed in subdirectories still can be accessed, but
do not clutter the ls
command list; thus it is preferred
for obscure developer-oriented scripts and scripts used by tools.
When calling such scripts, always use '/' as the separator for
directories, e.g. devel/lua-example
.
Scripts are re-read from disk every time they are used (this may be changed later to check the file change time); however the global variable values persist in memory between calls. Every script gets its own separate environment for global variables.
Arguments are passed in to the scripts via the ... built-in quasi-variable; when the script is called by the DFHack core, they are all guaranteed to be non-nil strings.
DFHack core invokes the scripts in the core context (see above); however it is possible to call them from any lua code (including from other scripts) in any context, via the same function the core uses:
dfhack.run_script(name[,args...])
Run a lua script in hack/scripts/, as if it was started from dfhack command-line. The
name
argument should be the name stem, as would be used on the command line.
Note that this function lets errors propagate to the caller.
If a save directory contains a file called raw/init.lua
, it is
automatically loaded and executed every time the save is loaded. It
can also define the following functions to be called by dfhack:
function onStateChange(op) ... end
Automatically called from the regular onStateChange event as long as the save is still loaded. This avoids the need to install a hook into the global
dfhack.onStateChange
table, with associated cleanup concerns.function onUnload() ... end
Called when the save containing the script is unloaded. This function should clean up any global hooks installed by the script.
Within the init script, the path to the save directory is available as SAVE_PATH
.