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Difference between revisions of "40d:Flow"

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:''If looking for information on powering [[waterwheel]]s, see [[water flow]].''
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'''Flow''' is the direction in which liquids will move or "spill over" under the effects of gravity. [[Water]] and [[Magma]] are both liquids that are likely to be constantly on the move until either contained (such as in a [[Lake]]) or until they become far too stretched out. In the latter event, water will evaporate quickly and magma will cool down (both mechanisms work in the same way).
 
'''Flow''' is the direction in which liquids will move or "spill over" under the effects of gravity. [[Water]] and [[Magma]] are both liquids that are likely to be constantly on the move until either contained (such as in a [[Lake]]) or until they become far too stretched out. In the latter event, water will evaporate quickly and magma will cool down (both mechanisms work in the same way).
  

Revision as of 22:45, 7 November 2009

If looking for information on powering waterwheels, see water flow.

Flow is the direction in which liquids will move or "spill over" under the effects of gravity. Water and Magma are both liquids that are likely to be constantly on the move until either contained (such as in a Lake) or until they become far too stretched out. In the latter event, water will evaporate quickly and magma will cool down (both mechanisms work in the same way).

In the game world, most liquids are represented with a and ~ tile of appropriate color (blue, in this case, is water). Smaller amounts of liquids, such as Blood and Vomit, can be represented with other, smaller tiles.

Amounts of liquid are measured in sets of 7 layers per tile. You can see an exact amount of liquid per tile by switching your SHOW_FLOW_AMOUNTS to YES. A layer of 1 can be imagined as ankle-deep for a dwarf, while 7 layers is completely full. All liquids will spill into a nearby tile when there is more than one layer of liquid in a tile and the liquid is not contained.

Each type of liquid has their own properties, which means they're going to do their thing in different ways. It is reccomended you read up on individual liquids to see precisely what you can and cannot do with them. In addition, liquids do not exactly mimic real life conditions. Expect to see quirks such as a lack of consideration for air pressure in certain situations.

Flowing liquids will push items (stones, logs, goblin corpses) around. This effect depends on item weight, speed of the flow and possibly the type of the flow (water or magma). Flow with speed of about (1/7)/step (water depth increases by 1 per every step) will push light items (clothing, light food). Power of the flow increases with its speed, but it's unlikely that rocks (and other things of similar weight) will be pushed (magma pushes melted rocks, but they don't count as rocks anymore). Pumped water or water directly from river (water directly connected to river or brook that doesn't drain fast enough) will NOT push items since the water doesn't "flow" but is instead created on the tile. This makes designs such as "dwarven water gun" impossible.