I am having some trouble when executing this piece of code:
#include <iostream>
#using <mscorlib.dll>
#include <string>
#include <fstream>
#include <windows.h>
using namespace std;
using namespace System;
void tokenizar(char *arquivo){
ifstream NTok(arquivo);
of...
Which used to be sort of a running joke as the complexity requirements make it pretty obvious how to implement the average string. Not sure if std::deque<charT> is a good fit though.
@RMartinhoFernandes btw, did you ever continue work on that bit-torrent client? ...just curious how big a of project that is (probably bigger than it looks from the surface)...
nice - at one time, I got all curious about how microTorrent managed to create such a tiny binary... ...dug around a little myself, but didn't really pursue too much (found it interesting that they avoided stdlibs, and I think they may have even written their own GUI lib...)
Anyway, this time around I have metal shields, so we'll see how it goes. Also, admittedly I gave them a very, very bad order. I only meant for them to 'bait' the goblins into the traps, except the dorfs decided to charge. Whoops!
I really have no experience with the military besides marksdwarves. Those guys can disengage from combat.
@RMartinhoFernandes Haha, I think my very first invasion/encounter was one of those. After shooting a bit at it with no effect, I decided to use that trick (exploit?) where you put all your dorfs on one square and have them wrestle. That went pretty well.
@RMartinhoFernandes Unfortunately I still have issues with food supplies management. I managed to ran out of booze and plump helmets somehow. No biggies (except for the booze, but nothing to be done with that), but less diversity.
@RMartinhoFernandes I can't get the heart to do it for 160 dorfs. Still, I only smoothed the one individual rooms I have, I could engrave those.
I guess I should smash fresh immigrants tbh. They're very, very useless.
I've never done that out of a self-imposed challenge. Immigrants bring chaos into your well-oiled plans.
@RMartinhoFernandes That doesn't sound like a good idea morale-wise.
Still have issues with troops morale, too.
I had one guy get ecstatic from bloodshed (the goblin encounter), but at the same time annoyed from long patrols, and annoyed from being relieved from duty. Wtf.
But I've gathered that 'best practices' for the micro-management obsessed that want a 'perfect' fortress is to effectively kill off useless immigrants.
@kfmfe04 The wiki is very well done. I'm a second-time DF learner from one year ago, and I was very, very impressed by the quality of the quickstart guide. It's the strict minimum of information to start, read it carefully, every detail is planned.
@RMartinhoFernandes As I said, up until now I've let the immigrants come in as a self-imposed challenge. However, I'm seeing the same patterns as when I used to play: spend time designing rooms (well this time I deliberately avoided that), spend time assigning labours, but at the end of the day one half of the fortress consists of useless loafers hanging in the meeting hall having parties until there's something to haul.
Considering that one quarter of the population is already made up of useless infants and children.
It's not that I've a fundamental problem with it, it's that I've done that too much. I'd like alternatives (to designing individual rooms all the time).
Next fortress is going to be a commune of hard-grit ranchers with a martial spirit.
I realised that with burrows, you can 'stage' qualities and end up percolating tons of insane furniture.
@RMartinhoFernandes So that trades pathfinding for ease of design, right?
Perhaps some of my anger towards putting down individual rooms is related to how it used to be important to have a 'compact' and fluid design. That's not an issue anymore these days, is it?
@LucDanton It's not the pumps per se, but the game spends a lot of time "moving" the fluids around (I'm talking gigantic pump stacks that go down to the magma sea below).
> Major hallways should be at least two tiles wide, maybe even three tiles. Otherwise your dwarves will be constantly running into each other and productivity will be slowed.
But if you don't pierce it, you're stuck with the layers above it, and those are mostly sediment layers: no metal for you. (note: you can find metal at the surface if you're lucky, though)
The game strives to be a simulation so not everything is a gameplay element. Some of the things are here for verisimilitude, even if, well, they're not fun.
@RMartinhoFernandes Ah, I was wondering about that. The border between the two should be weird.
user406009
We should get rep for comments. Did someone make a Meta question about that yet?
No trick to it, right? The burrow extends from the living quarters to a part of the industry quarters that only have 'input' stockpiles with quality prerequites.
What happens in case of alerts? Does the civilian burrow override specific settings?
@RMartinhoFernandes I actually went ahead and remade my meeting hall from my well instead of a table. I saw dorfs actually drinking from it.
@RMartinhoFernandes Nope. I have one guy that has been accused three times now, and accused someone else on one occasion, but he has food/drinks thoughts and preferences. So I don't know.
I'm definitively going to work my industry area around quality stages with burrows from now on, so that works nicely. Leave a set of workshops for unskilled workers, i.e. partition workshops across skill levels.
I forgot how the 'take from stockpile' option for stockpiles work though.
I'd like to think that the way to go is to put a big stockpiles for all quality levels, and then put the 'staged' stockpile with quality restrictions to take from it.
That way you don't waste time trying to gauge how big stockpiles for so-and-so quality is going to be. The quality stockpiles can be small and are just here to give burrowed, skilled workers their materials, haulers deal with the logistics.
Man, this makes me want to start a manufacturing fortress.
If I give merchants tons of free stuff, I export wealth and create interest from intruders right?
Haha, I could see the fortress dystopia where the guards and military are drafted from the meat shields, so they have to deal with the tantrums internally. Meaning it can spiral out while the skilled workers are behind their (legendary) strong doors.
Well, a nice idea that requires a ton of micromanagement in the beginning though. I'll put it on the backburner, I want martial ranchers first.
Fuck this. I have to finish my code and get to DF.