overhaul quickfort alias documentation
- move the alias syntax and usage docs from dfhack-config/quickfort/aliases.txt to a proper guide written in RST. Add examples and more details. - move the alias library docs from data/quickfort/aliases-common.txt to the new guide - reorder aliases in aliases-common to match the order in the docs - factor out the character used to enter the stockpile config screen so we can use the same aliases for stockpiles and hauling routes (use 's' for stockpiles and '{Enter}' for hauling routes) - reference the new guide in the quickfort user guide - do an editorial pass of the quickfort user guide - change name to "Quickfort Blueprint Guide", but only in the text, not the filename, so we don't change the URL - add `quickfort-blueprint-guide` as a label, in addition to the existing `quickfort-user-guide` - changed table-like lists to actual tables - changed "grid" tables into "simple" tables where possible - used ':kbd:' markers whenever we refer to a single character - turned Meta blueprints and Notes blueprints sections into subsections of a new "Other blueprint modes" section, in preparation for a few new modes coming in -r5. - updated out-of date caveat about bookcases, display furniture, and offering places not being supporteddevelop
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@ -1,106 +1,17 @@
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# Aliases for quickfort #query mode blueprints
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# Custom aliases for quickfort query mode blueprints
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#
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# This file defines custom keycode shortcuts for #query mode blueprints.
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# Definitions in this file take precedence over any definitions in the baseline
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# aliases configuration file at hack/data/quickfort/aliases-common.txt. See that
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# file for the many useful aliases that are already defined.
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# This file defines custom key sequence shortcuts for query mode blueprints.
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# Definitions in this file take precedence over any definitions in the
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# baseline aliases configuration file in
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# hack/data/quickfort/aliases-common.txt
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#
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# If possible, build on the baseline aliases when defining your own aliases. If
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# the DF UI screens change, updated baseline aliases may allow your aliases to
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# automatically adapt to the new UI. For example, if you create an alias to
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# modify particular furniture stockpile settings, start your alias with
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# "{furnitureprefix}" instead of manually writing "s{Down 2}". Then, if the
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# location of the furniture setting changes, your alias will automatically
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# inherit the updated position when DFHack is updated.
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# Please see
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# https://docs.dfhack.org/en/latest/docs/guides/quickfort-alias-guide.html
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# or
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# hack/docs/docs/guides/quickfort-alias-guide.html
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# in your DF installation directory for alias syntax documentation and an
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# overview of the DFHack alias standard library.
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#
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# Aliases simplify repetitive tasks, such as configuring workshop profiles or
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# adjusting a food stockpile to accept only seeds. Making new aliases is just a
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# matter of mimicking the keys used to navigate through the menus and select
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# options. Use the aliases in your blueprint spreadsheets by writing an alias by
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# itself in a cell, like "nocontainers", or reference an alias in a larger
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# sequence by enclosing it in curly brackets, like "{nocontainers}{linksonly}"
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#
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# For example, say you have the following build and place blueprints:
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#
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# #build masonry workshop
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# ~, ~,~,`,`,`
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# ~,wm,~,`,`,`
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# ~, ~,~,`,`,`
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#
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# #place stockpile for mason
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# ~,~,~,s,s,s
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# ~,~,~,s,s,s
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# ~,~,~,s,s,s
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#
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# and you want to configure the stockpile to hold only non-economic ("other")
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# stone and to give to the adjacent mason workshop. You could write the
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# keystrokes directly:
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#
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# #query start(4;1;upper left corner of stockpile) configure mason
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# ~,~,~,s{Down 5}deb{Right}{Down 2}p^,`,`
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# ~,~,~,g{Left 2}&, `,`
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# ~,~,~,`, `,`
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#
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# or you could use alias names:
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#
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# #query start(4;1;upper left corner of stockpile) configure mason
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# ~,~,~,otherstone,`,`
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# ~,~,~,give2left, `,`
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# ~,~,~,`, `,`
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#
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# you can combine the two aliases above into a single cell as well, if desired:
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#
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# #query start(4;1;upper left corner of stockpile) configure mason
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# ~,~,~,{otherstone}{give2left},`,`
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# ~,~,~,`, `,`
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# ~,~,~,`, `,`
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#
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# The syntax for defining aliases is:
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# aliasname: keystrokes
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#
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# Where aliasname is at least two letters or digits long (including dashes and
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# underscores) and keystrokes are whatever you would type into the DF UI. A
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# keystroke can also be a named keycode from the DF interface definition file
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# (data/init/interface.txt), enclosed in curly brackets like an alias, like:
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# "{Right}" or "{Enter}". In # order to avoid naming conflicts between aliases
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# and keycodes, the convention is to start aliases with a lowercase letter.
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#
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# Anything enclosed within curly brackets can also have a number after it,
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# indicating how many times that alias or keycode should be repeated. For
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# example: "{togglesequence 9}" or "{Down 5}".
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#
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# Finally, you can specify sub-aliases that will only be defined while the
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# current alias is being resolved by adding them after the alias name (but
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# before the repetition number, if it is specified), for example:
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# {quantumstopfromeast name="Trash Dump"}
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# The value of the sub-alias 'name' is used by quantumstopfromeast (or one of
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# the aliases it calls) to give a useful name to your quantum dump hauling
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# route. You can also use this format to temporarily override the value of an
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# existing regularly-defined alias.
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#
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# Sub-aliases must be in one of the following formats:
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# subaliasname=valwithnospaces
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# subaliasname="val with spaces"
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# subaliasname={someotheralias repetitions}
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#
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# Ctrl, Alt, and Shift modifiers can be specified for the next keycode by adding
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# them into the key sequence. For example, Alt-h is written as "{Alt}h".
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#
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# Some frequently-used keystrokes are assigned shorthand characters. Think of
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# them as single-character aliases that don't need to be surrounded in curly
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# brackets:
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# & expands to {Enter}
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# @ expands to {Shift}{Enter}
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# ~ expands to {Alt}
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# ! expands to {Ctrl}
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# ^ expands to {ESC}
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#
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# There is also a non-standard alias built into the code for the common
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# shorthand for "make room":
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# r+ expands to r+&
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#
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# If you need literal verisons of the shorthand characters, surround them in
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# curly brackets, for example: "{!}"
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#
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#
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# Add your custom aliases here:
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# Add your custom aliases here. Example:
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# food_stash: {foodprefix}b{Right}{Down 11}p^{permitplants}
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@ -0,0 +1,850 @@
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.. _quickfort-alias-guide:
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Quickfort Alias Guide
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=====================
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Aliases allow you to use simple words to represent complicated key sequences
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when configuring buildings and stockpiles in quickfort ``#query`` blueprints.
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For example, say you have the following ``#build`` and ``#place`` blueprints:
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::
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#build masonry workshop
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~, ~,~,`,`,`
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~,wm,~,`,`,`
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~, ~,~,`,`,`
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#place stockpile for mason
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~,~,~,s,s,s
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~,~,~,s,s,s
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~,~,~,s,s,s
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and you want to configure the stockpile to hold only non-economic ("other")
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stone and to give to the adjacent mason workshop. You could write the
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key sequences directly:
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::
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#query configure stockpile with expanded key sequences
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~,~,~,s{Down 5}deb{Right}{Down 2}p^,`,`
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~,~,~,g{Left 2}&, `,`
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~,~,~,`, `,`
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or you could use aliases:
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::
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#query configure stockpile with aliases
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~,~,~,otherstone,`,`
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~,~,~,give2left, `,`
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~,~,~,`, `,`
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If the stockpile had only a single tile, you could also replay both aliases in
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a single cell:
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::
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#query configure mason with multiple aliases in one cell
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~,~,~,{otherstone}{give2left},`,`
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~,~,~,`, `,`
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~,~,~,`, `,`
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With aliases, blueprints are much easier to read and understand. They also
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save you from having to copy the same long key sequences everywhere.
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Alias definition files
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----------------------
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DFHack comes with a library of aliases for you to use that are always
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available when you run a ``#query`` blueprint. Many blueprints can be built
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with just those aliases. This "standard alias library" is stored in
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:source:`data/quickfort/aliases-common.txt`. The aliases in that file are
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described at the `bottom of this document <quickfort-alias-library>`.
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Please do not edit the aliases in the standard library directly. The file will
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get overwritten when DFHack is updated and you'll lose your changes. Instead,
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add your custom aliases to :source:`dfhack-config/quickfort/aliases.txt`.
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Definitions in this file take precedence over any definitions in the standard
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library.
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Alias syntax and usage
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----------------------
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The syntax for defining aliases is:
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::
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aliasname: expansion
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Where ``aliasname`` is at least two letters or digits long (dashes and
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underscores are also allowed) and ``expansion`` is whatever you would type
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into the DF UI.
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You use an alias by typing its name into a ``#query`` blueprint cell where you
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want it to be applied. You can use an alias by itself or as part of a larger
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sequence, potentially with other aliases. If the alias is the only text in the
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cell, the alias name is matched and its expansion is used. If the alias has
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other keys before or after it, the alias name must be surrounded in curly
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brackets (:kbd:`{` and :kbd:`}`). An alias can be surrounded in curly brackets
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even if it is the only text in the cell, it just isn't necesary. For example,
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the following blueprint uses the ``aliasname`` alias by itself in the first
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two rows and uses it as part of a longer sequence in the third row:
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::
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#query apply alias 'aliasname' in three different ways
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aliasname
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{aliasname}
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literaltext{aliasname}literaltext
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For a more concrete example of an alias definition, a simple alias that
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configures a stockpile to have no bins (:kbd:`C`) and no barrels (:kbd:`E`)
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assigned to it would look like this:
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::
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nocontainers: CE
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The alias definition can also contain references to other aliases by including
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the alias names in curly brackets. For example, ``nocontainers`` could be
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equivalently defined like this:
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::
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nobins: C
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nobarrels: E
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nocontainers: {nobins}{nobarrels}
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Aliases used in alias definitions *must* be surrounded by curly brackets, even
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if they are the only text in the definition:
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::
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alias1: text1
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alias2: alias1
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alias3: {alias1}
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Here, ``alias1`` and ``alias3`` expand to ``text1``, but ``alias2`` expands to
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the literal text ``alias1``.
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Keycodes
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~~~~~~~~
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Non-printable characters, like the arrow keys, are represented by their
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keycode name and are also surrounded by curly brackets, like ``{Right}`` or
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``{Enter}``. Keycodes are used exactly like aliases -- they just have special
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expansions that you wouldn't be able to write yourself. In order to avoid
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naming conflicts between aliases and keycodes, the convention is to start
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aliases with a lowercase letter.
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Any keycode name from the DF interface definition file
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(data/init/interface.txt) is valid, but only a few keycodes are actually
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useful for blueprints:
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::
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Up
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Down
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Left
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Right
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Enter
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ESC
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Backspace
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Space
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Tab
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Repetitions
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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Anything enclosed within curly brackets can also have a number, indicating how
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many times that alias or keycode should be repeated. For example:
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``{togglesequence 9}`` or ``{Down 5}`` will repeat the ``togglesequence``
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alias nine times and the ``Down`` keycode five times, respectively.
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Modifier keys
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Ctrl, Alt, and Shift modifiers can be specified for the next key by adding
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them into the key sequence. For example, Alt-h is written as ``{Alt}h``.
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Note that DF does not handle keys that have more than a single modifier, so
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sequences like ``{Ctrl}{Alt}a`` will result in an error.
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Shorthand characters
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Some frequently-used keycodes are assigned shorthand characters. Think of them
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as single-character aliases that don't need to be surrounded in curly
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brackets:
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::
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& expands to {Enter}
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@ expands to {Shift}{Enter}
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~ expands to {Alt}
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! expands to {Ctrl}
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^ expands to {ESC}
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If you need literal versions of the shorthand characters, surround them in
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curly brackets, for example: use ``{!}`` for a literal exclamation point.
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Built-in aliases
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Most aliases that come with DFHack are in ``aliases-common.txt``, but there is
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one alias built into the code for the common shorthand for "make room":
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::
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r+ expands to r+{Enter}
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This needs special code support since ``+`` can't normally be used in alias
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names. You can use it just like any other alias, either by itself in a cell
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(``r+``) or surrounded in curly brackets (``{r+}``).
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Sub-aliases
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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You can specify sub-aliases that will only be defined while the current alias
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is being resolved. This is useful for "injecting" custom behavior into the
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middle of a larger alias. For example:
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::
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{quantumstopfromeast name="Trash Dump"}
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The value of the sub-alias ``name`` is used in the middle of the definition of
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``quantumstopfromeast`` to give a useful name to your quantum dump hauling
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route. Without sub-aliases, we'd have to write something like:
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::
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{quantumstopfromeastprefix}Trash Dump{quantumstopfromeastsuffix}
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which is more difficult to write and more difficult to understand.
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A handy technique is to define an alias with some sort of default
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behavior and then use sub-aliases to override that behavior as necessary. For
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example, here is a simplified version of the standard ``quantum`` alias that
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sets up quantum stockpiles:
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::
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quantum_enable: {enableanimals}{enablefood}{enablefurniture}...
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quantum: {linksonly}{nocontainers}{quantum_enable}
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You can use the default behavior of ``quantum_enable`` by just using the
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``quantum`` alias by itself. But you can override ``quantum_enable`` to just
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enable furniture for some specific stockpile like this:
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::
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{quantum quantum_enable={enablefurniture}}
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Sub-aliases must be in one of the following formats:
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::
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subaliasname=keyswithnospaces
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subaliasname="keys with spaces or {aliases}"
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subaliasname={singlealias}
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If you specify both a sub-alias and a number of repetitions, the number for
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repetitions goes last, right before the :kbd:`}`:
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::
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{alias subaliasname=value repetitions}
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Beyond query mode
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-----------------
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``#query`` blueprints normally do things in DF :kbd:`q`\uery mode, but nobody
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said that we have to *stay* in query mode. ``#query`` blueprints send
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arbitrary key sequences to Dwarf Fortress. Anything you can do by typing keys
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into DF, you can do in a ``#query`` blueprint. It is absolutely fine to
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temporarily exit out of query mode, go into, say, hauling or zone or hotkey
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mode, and do whatever needs to be done.
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You just have to make certain to exit out of that alternate mode and get back
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into :kbd:`q`\uery mode at the end of the key sequence. That way quickfort can
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continue on configuring the next tile -- a tile configuration that assumes the
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game is still in query mode.
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For example, here is the standard library alias for giving a name to a zone:
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::
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namezone: ^i{givename}^q
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The first :kbd:`\^` exits out of query mode. Then :kbd:`i` enters zones mode.
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We then reuse the standard alias for giving something a name. Finally, we exit
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out of zones mode with another :kbd:`\^` and return to :kbd:`q`\uery mode.
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.. _quickfort-alias-library:
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The DFHack standard alias library
|
||||
---------------------------------
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DFHack comes with many useful aliases for you to use in your blueprints. Many
|
||||
blueprints can be built with just these aliases alone, with no custom aliases
|
||||
required.
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||||
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This section goes through all aliases provided by the DFHack standard alias
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library, discussing their intended usage and detailing sub-aliases that you
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can define to customize their behavior.
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If you do define your own custom aliases in
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``dfhack-config/quickfort/aliases.txt``, try to build on the library aliases.
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||||
For example, if you create an alias to modify particular furniture stockpile
|
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settings, start your alias with ``{furnitureprefix}`` instead of
|
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``s{Down 2}``. Using library prefixes will allow sub-aliases to work with your
|
||||
aliases just like they do with library aliases. In this case, using
|
||||
``{furnitureprefix}`` will allow your stockpile customization alias to work
|
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with both stockpiles and hauling routes.
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Naming aliases
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||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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||||
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||||
These aliases give descriptive names to workshops, levers, stockpiles, zones,
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etc. Dwarf Fortress building, stockpile, and zone names have a maximum length
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of 20 characters.
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||||
======== ===========
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Alias Sub-aliases
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||||
======== ===========
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givename name
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namezone name
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======== ===========
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||||
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||||
``givename`` works anywhere you can hit Ctrl-n to customize a name, like when
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||||
the cursor is over buildings and stockpiles. Example:
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||||
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||||
::
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#place
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f(10x2)
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||||
#query
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{booze}{givename name="booze"}
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||||
``namezone`` is intended to be used when over an activity zone. It includes
|
||||
commands to get into zones mode, set the zone name, and get back to query
|
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mode. Example:
|
||||
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||||
::
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||||
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#zone
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||||
n(2x2)
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||||
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||||
#query
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||||
{namezone name="guard dog pen"}
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Quantum stockpile aliases
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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||||
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||||
These aliases make it easy to create :wiki:`minecart stop-based quantum stockpiles <Quantum_stockpile#The_Minecart_Stop>`.
|
||||
|
||||
+----------------------+------------------+
|
||||
| Alias | Sub-aliases |
|
||||
+======================+==================+
|
||||
| quantum | | name |
|
||||
| | | quantum_enable |
|
||||
+----------------------+------------------+
|
||||
| quantumstopfromnorth | | name |
|
||||
+----------------------+ | stop_name |
|
||||
| quantumstopfromsouth | | route_enable |
|
||||
+----------------------+ |
|
||||
| quantumstopfromeast | |
|
||||
+----------------------+ |
|
||||
| quantumstopfromwest | |
|
||||
+----------------------+------------------+
|
||||
| quantumstop | | name |
|
||||
| | | stop_name |
|
||||
| | | route_enable |
|
||||
| | | move |
|
||||
| | | move_back |
|
||||
+----------------------+------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
The idea is to use a minecart on a track stop to dump an infinite number of
|
||||
items into a receiving "quantum" stockpile, which significantly simplifies
|
||||
stockpile management. These aliases configure the quantum stockpile and
|
||||
hauling route that make it all work. Here is a complete example for quantum
|
||||
stockpiling weapons, armor, and ammunition. It has a 3x1 feeder stockpile on
|
||||
the bottom (South), the trackstop in the center, and the quantum stockpile on
|
||||
the top (North). Note that the feeder stockpile is the only stockpile that
|
||||
needs to be configured to control which types of items end up in the quantum
|
||||
stockpile. By default, the hauling route and quantum stockpile itself simply
|
||||
accept whatever is put into them.
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
#place
|
||||
,c
|
||||
,
|
||||
pdz(3x1)
|
||||
|
||||
#build
|
||||
,
|
||||
,trackstopN
|
||||
|
||||
#query message(remember to assign a minecart to the new route)
|
||||
,quantum
|
||||
,quantumstopfromsouth
|
||||
nocontainers
|
||||
|
||||
The ``quantum`` alias configures a 1x1 stockpile to be a quantum stockpile. It
|
||||
bans all containers and prevents the stockpile from being manually filled. By
|
||||
default, it also enables storage of all item categories (except corpses and
|
||||
refuse), so it doesn't really matter what letter you use to place the
|
||||
stockpile. :wiki:`Refuse` is excluded by default since otherwise clothes and
|
||||
armor in the quantum stockpile would rot away. If you want corpses or bones in
|
||||
your quantum stockpile, use :kbd:`y` and/or :kbd:`r` to place the stockpile
|
||||
and the ``quantum`` alias will just enable the remaining types. If you *do*
|
||||
enable refuse in your quantum stockpile, be sure you avoid putting useful
|
||||
clothes or armor in there!
|
||||
|
||||
The ``quantumstopfromsouth`` alias is run over the track stop and configures
|
||||
the hauling route, again, allowing all item categories into the minecart by
|
||||
default so any item that can go into the feeder stockpile can then be placed
|
||||
in the minecart. It also links the hauling route with the feeder stockpile to
|
||||
the South.The track stop does not need to be fully constructed before the
|
||||
``#query`` blueprint is run, but the feeder stockpile needs to exist so we can
|
||||
link to it. This means that the three blueprints above can be run one right
|
||||
after another, without any dwarven labor in between them, and the quantum
|
||||
stockpile will work properly.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, the ``nocontainers`` alias simply configures the feeder stockpile to
|
||||
not have any containers (which would just get in the way here). If we wanted
|
||||
to be more specific about what item types we want in the quantum stockpile, we
|
||||
could configure the feeder stockpile further, for example with standard
|
||||
`stockpile adjustment aliases <quickfort-stockpile-aliases>`.
|
||||
|
||||
After the blueprints are run, the last step is to manually assign a minecart
|
||||
to the newly-defined hauling route.
|
||||
|
||||
You can define sub-aliases to customize how these aliases work, for example to
|
||||
have fine-grained control over what item types are enabled for the route and
|
||||
quantum stockpile. We'll go over those options below, but first, here is an
|
||||
example for how to just give names to everything:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
#query message(remember to assign a minecart to the new route)
|
||||
,{quantum name="armory quantum"}
|
||||
,{quantumstopfromsouth name="Armory quantum" stop_name="Armory quantum stop"}{givename name="armory dumper"} `
|
||||
{givename name="armory feeder"}
|
||||
|
||||
All ``name`` sub-aliases are completely optional, of course. Keep in mind that
|
||||
hauling route names have a maximum length of 22 characters, hauling route stop
|
||||
names have a maximum length of 21 characters, and all other names have a
|
||||
maximum length of 20 characters.
|
||||
|
||||
If you want to be absolutely certain that nothing ends up in your quantum
|
||||
stockpile other than what you've configured in the feeder stockpile, you can
|
||||
set the ``quantum_enable`` sub-alias for the ``quantum`` alias. This can
|
||||
prevent, for example, somebody's knocked-out tooth from being considered part
|
||||
of your furniture quantum stockpile when it happened to land on it during a
|
||||
fistfight:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
#query
|
||||
{quantum name="furniture quantum" quantum_enable={enablefurniture}}
|
||||
|
||||
You can have similar control over the hauling route if you need to be more
|
||||
selective about what item types are allowed into the minecart. If you have
|
||||
multiple specialized quantum stockpiles that use a common feeder pile, for
|
||||
example, you can set the ``route_enable`` sub-alias:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
#query
|
||||
{quantumstopfromsouth name="Armory quantum" route_enable="{enableweapons}{enablearmor}{enableammo}"}
|
||||
|
||||
Any of the `stockpile configuration aliases <quickfort-stockpile-aliases>` can
|
||||
be used for either the ``quantum_enable`` or ``route_enable`` sub-aliases.
|
||||
Experienced Dwarf Fortress players may be wondering how the same aliases can
|
||||
work in both contexts since the keys for entering the configuration screen
|
||||
differ. Fear not! There is some sub-alias magic at work here. If you define
|
||||
your own stockpile configuraiton aliases, you can use the magic yourself by
|
||||
building your aliases on the ``*prefix`` aliases described later in this
|
||||
guide.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, the ``quantumstop`` alias is a more general version of the
|
||||
``quantumstopfrom*`` aliases. The ``quantumstopfrom*`` aliases assume that the
|
||||
feeder stockpile is orthogonally adjacent to your track stop (which is how
|
||||
most people set them up). If your feeder stockpile is somewhere further away,
|
||||
you can use the ``quantumstop`` alias directly. In addition to the
|
||||
``quantumstopfrom*`` sub-aliases, you can also define the ``move`` and
|
||||
``move_back`` sub-aliases, which let you specify the cursor keys required to
|
||||
move from the track stop to the feeder stockpile and back again, respectively:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
#query
|
||||
{quantumstop move="{Right 2}{Up}" move_back="{Down}{Left 2}"}
|
||||
|
||||
Farm plots
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Sets a farm plot to grow the first or last type of seed in the list of
|
||||
available seeds for all four seasons. The last seed is usually Plump helmet
|
||||
spawn, suitable for post-embark. But if you only have one seed type, that'll
|
||||
be grown instead.
|
||||
|
||||
+------------------+
|
||||
| Alias |
|
||||
+==================+
|
||||
| growlastcropall |
|
||||
+------------------+
|
||||
| growfirstcropall |
|
||||
+------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
Instead of these aliases, though, it might be more useful to use the DFHack
|
||||
`autofarm` plugin.
|
||||
|
||||
Stockpile configuration utility aliases
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
=============== ===========
|
||||
Alias Sub-aliases
|
||||
=============== ===========
|
||||
linksonly
|
||||
nocontainers
|
||||
give2up
|
||||
give2down
|
||||
give2left
|
||||
give2right
|
||||
give10up
|
||||
give10down
|
||||
give10left
|
||||
give10right
|
||||
give move
|
||||
togglesequence
|
||||
togglesequence2
|
||||
=============== ===========
|
||||
|
||||
``linksonly`` and ``nocontainers`` set the named basic properties on
|
||||
stockpiles. ``nocontainers`` sets bins and barrels to 0, but does not affect
|
||||
wheelbarrows since the hotkeys for changing the number of wheelbarrows depend
|
||||
on whether you have the DFHack `stockpiles` plugin active. It is better to set
|
||||
the number of wheelbarrows via the `quickfort` ``stockpiles_max_wheelbarrows``
|
||||
setting. It is set to ``0`` by default.
|
||||
|
||||
The ``give*`` aliases set a stockpile to give to a workshop or another
|
||||
stockpile located at the indicated number of tiles in the indicated direction
|
||||
from the current tile. For example, here we use the ``give2down`` alias to
|
||||
connect an ``otherstone`` stockpile with a mason workshop:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
#place
|
||||
s,s,s,s,s
|
||||
s, , , ,s
|
||||
s, , , ,s
|
||||
s, , , ,s
|
||||
s,s,s,s,s
|
||||
|
||||
#build
|
||||
`,`,`,`,`
|
||||
`, , , ,`
|
||||
`, ,wm,,`
|
||||
`, , , ,`
|
||||
`,`,`,`,`
|
||||
|
||||
#query
|
||||
, ,give2down
|
||||
otherstone
|
||||
|
||||
and here is a generic stone stockpile that gives to a stockpile that only
|
||||
takes flux:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
#place
|
||||
s(10x1)
|
||||
s(10x10)
|
||||
|
||||
#query
|
||||
flux
|
||||
,
|
||||
give2up
|
||||
|
||||
If you want to give to some other tile that is not already covered by the
|
||||
``give2*`` or ``give10*`` aliases, you can use the generic ``give`` alias and
|
||||
specify the movement keys yourself in the ``move`` sub-alias. Here is how to
|
||||
give to a stockpile or workshop one z-level above, 9 tiles to the left, and 14
|
||||
tiles down:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
#query
|
||||
{give move="<{Left 9}{Down 14}"}
|
||||
|
||||
``togglesequence`` and ``togglesequence2`` send ``{Down}{Enter}`` or
|
||||
``{Down 2}{Enter}`` to toggle adjacent (or alternating) items in a list. This
|
||||
is useful when toggling a bunch of related item types in the stockpile config.
|
||||
For example, the ``dye`` and ``tallow`` aliases in the standard alias library
|
||||
need to select specific items from long lists:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
dye: {foodprefix}b{Right}{Down 11}{Right}{Down 28}{togglesequence 4}^
|
||||
tallow: {foodprefix}b{Right}{Down 13}{Right}{Down}{togglesequence2 811}^
|
||||
|
||||
.. _quickfort-stockpile-aliases:
|
||||
|
||||
Stockpile adjustment aliases
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
For each stockpile item category, there are three standard aliases:
|
||||
|
||||
* ``*prefix`` aliases enter the stockpile configuration screen and position
|
||||
the cursor at a particular item category in the left-most column, ready for
|
||||
further keys that configure the elements within that category. All other
|
||||
stockpile adjustment aliases are built on these prefixes. You can use them
|
||||
yourself to create stockpile adjustment aliases that aren't already covered
|
||||
by the standard library aliases. Using the library prefix instead of
|
||||
creating your own also allows your stockpile configuration aliases to be
|
||||
used for both stockpiles and hauling routes. For example, here is the
|
||||
library definition for ``booze``:
|
||||
|
||||
::
|
||||
|
||||
booze: {foodprefix}b{Right}{Down 5}p{Down}p^
|
||||
|
||||
* ``enable*`` aliases enter the stockpile configuration screen, enable all
|
||||
subtypes of the named category, and exit the stockpile configuration screen
|
||||
* ``disable*`` aliases enter the stockpile configuration screen, disable all
|
||||
subtypes of the named category, and exit the stockpile configuration screen
|
||||
|
||||
==================== ==================== =====================
|
||||
Prefix Enable Disable
|
||||
==================== ==================== =====================
|
||||
animalsprefix enableanimals disableanimals
|
||||
foodprefix enablefood disablefood
|
||||
furnitureprefix enablefurniture disablefurniture
|
||||
corpsesprefix enablecorpses disablecorpses
|
||||
refuseprefix enablerefuse disablerefuse
|
||||
stoneprefix enablestone disablestone
|
||||
ammoprefix enableammo disableammo
|
||||
coinsprefix enablecoins disablecoins
|
||||
barsprefix enablebars disablebars
|
||||
gemsprefix enablegems disablegems
|
||||
finishedgoodsprefix enablefinishedgoods disablefinishedgoods
|
||||
leatherprefix enableleather disableleather
|
||||
clothprefix enablecloth disablecloth
|
||||
woodprefix enablewood disablewood
|
||||
weaponsprefix enableweapons disableweapons
|
||||
armorprefix enablearmor disablearmor
|
||||
sheetprefix enablesheet disablesheet
|
||||
==================== ==================== =====================
|
||||
|
||||
Then, for each item category, there are aliases that manipulate interesting
|
||||
subsets of that category:
|
||||
|
||||
* Exclusive aliases forbid everthing within a category and then enable only
|
||||
the named item type (or named class of items)
|
||||
* ``forbid*`` aliases forbid the named type and leave the rest of the
|
||||
stockpile untouched.
|
||||
* ``permit*`` aliases permit the named type and leave the rest of the
|
||||
stockpile untouched.
|
||||
|
||||
Note that for specific item types (items in the third stockpile configuration
|
||||
column), you can only toggle the item type on and off. Aliases can't know
|
||||
whether sending the ``{Enter}`` key will enable or disable the type. The
|
||||
``forbid*`` aliases that affect these item types assume the item type was
|
||||
enabled and toggle it off. Likewise, the ``permit*`` aliases assume the item
|
||||
type was disabled and toggle it on. If the item type is not in the expected
|
||||
enabled/disabled state when the alias is run, the aliases will not behave
|
||||
properly.
|
||||
|
||||
Animal stockpile adjustments
|
||||
````````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
=========== =========== ============
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid Permit
|
||||
=========== =========== ============
|
||||
cages forbidcages permitcages
|
||||
traps forbidtraps permittraps
|
||||
=========== =========== ============
|
||||
|
||||
Food stockpile adjustments
|
||||
``````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
=============== ==================== ====================
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid Permit
|
||||
=============== ==================== ====================
|
||||
preparedfood forbidpreparedfood permitpreparedfood
|
||||
unpreparedfish forbidunpreparedfish permitunpreparedfish
|
||||
plants forbidplants permitplants
|
||||
booze forbidbooze permitbooze
|
||||
seeds forbidseeds permitseeds
|
||||
dye forbiddye permitdye
|
||||
tallow forbidtallow permittallow
|
||||
miscliquid forbidmiscliquid permitmiscliquid
|
||||
=============== ==================== ====================
|
||||
|
||||
Furniture stockpile adjustments
|
||||
```````````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
+-----------+
|
||||
| Exclusive |
|
||||
+===========+
|
||||
| pots |
|
||||
+-----------+
|
||||
| bags |
|
||||
+-----------+
|
||||
| buckets |
|
||||
+-----------+
|
||||
| sand |
|
||||
+-----------+
|
||||
|
||||
Notes:
|
||||
|
||||
* Because of the limitations of Dwarf Fortress, ``bags`` cannot distinguish
|
||||
between empty and filled bags
|
||||
|
||||
Refuse stockpile adjustments
|
||||
````````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
=========== ================== ==================
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid Permit
|
||||
=========== ================== ==================
|
||||
bodyparts forbidbodyparts permitbodyparts
|
||||
rawhides forbidrawhides permitrawhides
|
||||
tannedhides forbidtannedhides permittannedhides
|
||||
skulls forbidskulls permitskulls
|
||||
bones forbidbones permitbones
|
||||
shells forbidshells permitshells
|
||||
teeth forbidteeth permitteeth
|
||||
horns forbidhorns permithorns
|
||||
hair forbidhair permithair
|
||||
craftrefuse forbidcraftrefuse permitcraftrefuse
|
||||
=========== ================== ==================
|
||||
|
||||
Notes:
|
||||
|
||||
* ``bodyparts`` includes remains/corpses and rotten rawhdes.
|
||||
* ``craftrefuse`` includes everything a craftsdwarf can use: skulls, bones,
|
||||
shells, teeth, horns, and hair.
|
||||
|
||||
Stone stockpile adjustments
|
||||
```````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
============= ==================== ====================
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid Permit
|
||||
============= ==================== ====================
|
||||
metal forbidmetal permitmetal
|
||||
iron forbidiron permitiron
|
||||
economic forbideconomic permiteconomic
|
||||
flux forbidflux permitflux
|
||||
plaster forbidplaster permitplaster
|
||||
coalproducing forbidcoalproducing permitcoalproducing
|
||||
otherstone forbidotherstone permitotherstone
|
||||
bauxite forbidbauxite permitbauxite
|
||||
clay forbidclay permitclay
|
||||
============= ==================== ====================
|
||||
|
||||
Ammo stockpile adjustments
|
||||
``````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
=============== ====================
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid
|
||||
=============== ====================
|
||||
bolts
|
||||
\ forbidmetalbolts
|
||||
\ forbidwoodenbolts
|
||||
\ forbidbonebolts
|
||||
=============== ====================
|
||||
|
||||
Bar stockpile adjustments
|
||||
`````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
=========== ==================
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid
|
||||
=========== ==================
|
||||
bars forbidbars
|
||||
metalbars forbidmetalbars
|
||||
ironbars forbidironbars
|
||||
steelbars forbidsteelbars
|
||||
pigironbars forbidpigironbars
|
||||
otherbars forbidotherbars
|
||||
coal forbidcoal
|
||||
potash forbidpotash
|
||||
ash forbidash
|
||||
pearlash forbidpearlash
|
||||
soap forbidsoap
|
||||
blocks forbidblocks
|
||||
=========== ==================
|
||||
|
||||
Gem stockpile adjustments
|
||||
`````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
=========== ================
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid
|
||||
=========== ================
|
||||
roughgems forbidroughgems
|
||||
roughglass forbidroughglass
|
||||
cutgems forbidcutgems
|
||||
cutglass forbidcutglass
|
||||
cutstone forbidcutstone
|
||||
=========== ================
|
||||
|
||||
Finished goods stockpile adjustments
|
||||
````````````````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
+-----------+
|
||||
| Exclusive |
|
||||
+===========+
|
||||
| jugs |
|
||||
+-----------+
|
||||
|
||||
Cloth stockpile adjustments
|
||||
```````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
+------------------+
|
||||
| Exclusive |
|
||||
+==================+
|
||||
| thread |
|
||||
+------------------+
|
||||
| adamantinethread |
|
||||
+------------------+
|
||||
| cloth |
|
||||
+------------------+
|
||||
| adamantinecloth |
|
||||
+------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
Weapon stockpile adjustments
|
||||
````````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
================= ======================== ====================
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid Permit
|
||||
================= ======================== ====================
|
||||
\ forbidweapons permitweapons
|
||||
\ forbidtrapcomponents permittrapcomponents
|
||||
metalweapons forbidmetalweapons permitmetalweapons
|
||||
\ forbidstoneweapons permitstoneweapons
|
||||
\ forbidotherweapons permitotherweapons
|
||||
ironweapons forbidironweapons permitironweapons
|
||||
copperweapons forbidcopperweapons permitcopperweapons
|
||||
steelweapons forbidsteelweapons permitsteelweapons
|
||||
masterworkweapons forbidmasterworkweapons permitmasterworkweapons
|
||||
artifactweapons forbidartifactweapons permitartifactweapons
|
||||
================= ======================== ====================
|
||||
|
||||
Armor stockpile adjustments
|
||||
```````````````````````````
|
||||
|
||||
=============== ====================== ====================
|
||||
Exclusive Forbid Permit
|
||||
=============== ====================== ====================
|
||||
metalarmor forbidmetalarmor permitmetalarmor
|
||||
otherarmor forbidotherarmor permitotherarmor
|
||||
ironarmor forbidironarmor permitironarmor
|
||||
copperarmor forbidcopperarmor permitcopperarmor
|
||||
steelarmor forbidsteelarmor permitsteelarmor
|
||||
masterworkarmor forbidmasterworkarmor permitmasterworkarmor
|
||||
artifactarmor forbidartifactarmor permitartifactarmor
|
||||
=============== ====================== ====================
|
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Reference in New Issue