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Difference between revisions of "v0.34:Utilities"

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Revision as of 13:28, 28 September 2013

This article is about an older version of DF.

Utilities are third party applications useful for Dwarf Fortress players and modders, and this page serves as a list of them. Dwarf Fortress is a difficult game to play, and any help that can be had in the task is welcome help. This page lists utilities useful for modders and player alike. If you would like to add an article on a specific game utility to the wiki, please do so under the Utility namespace. Not included on this page: tileset repositories and graphics set repositories have been given their own, separate page. Mods have also been listed under their own Modification namespace. To avoid namespace clutter websites are considered utilities, though they really aren't, and have been included.

A subsection of the Bay12 forums is devoted to such third party programs, and contains development threads for most of them.

The Lazy Newb Pack is an effort to make Dwarf Fortress more accessible for new players by bundling and configuring utilities, graphics and tilesets, and extras such as reference material or more intuitive controls.

Lazy Newb Pack

A commonly-used software bundle with a nice launcher. Allows to start playing DF really quickly on a new machine - no need to download and integrate tilesets and tools like Dwarf Therapist, SoundSense, etc - or even know what you need to get. The newer packs also include many third-party fixes for common bugs, which work automatically, and a large number of significant user interface improvements. The launcher makes changing settings or graphics options much easier (press button, instead of editing files) and can even remember to launch selected utilities whenever you open a game of Dwarf Fortress.

Current versions

Legacy versions

The older versions have not been updated in more than a year. While they are still available, they're also incompatible with more recent tools and bug fixes.

3D Visualizers

Stonesense

Stonesense is a third party visualizer, implemented as a DFHack plugin, that lets you view your fortress in a classic isometric perspective. It runs alongside Dwarf Fortress, and can follow the main game's view, updating in real time. It is included in dfhack, and can be opened by typing 'stonesense' or 'ssense' into the console window.

Fortress Overseer

Fortress Overseer has been the only 3d visualizer since DF 2010. It has been completely rewritten and is currently updated to support DF 2012 (currently supporting versions 34.11 and 31.25). Overseer works indirectly, by using dfhack to 'mapexport' a file which can then be rendered in 3D. DirectX 9 must be installed, though this requirement is not documented.

Isoworld

Isoworld is an isometric world map viewer, which can display each of the detailed maps exported from Legends Mode. It also has a pictographic view which makes finding waterfalls easy.

Isoworld can link with DFhack to display a game view at full spatial resolution in wider context, including tracking the game view. This is particularly useful for adventure mode.

Music and Sounds

SoundSense

SoundSense is a tool that parses game logs and reacts to game events with sound effects, incidental music and dwarfy comments.

forum thread, download at homepage.

Game manipulation tools

DFHack

DFHack is an advanced Dwarf Fortress memory access library and a set of tools and scripts using this library, providing direct object-oriented access to Dwarf Fortress's internals as if it were compiled into the game itself. Releases support versions up through 0.34.11 (as of June 22nd, 2012). Runs on Windows, Linux, and MacOS X.

DFHack has an official forum thread. Code and binary releases are available from the Github site.

Falconne's UI plugins work through DFHack, as do automation tools such as Autolabor, Workflow, Autobutcher, and many others.

DFHack User Interface Plugins

A collection of DFHack plugins that improve the in-game interface with features such as:

  • Search function in screens with big lists.
  • Ability to place furniture before it's built and have it automatically allocated when available.
  • Ability to place constructions with box select (like laying designations), including easier material selection and open space placement (without having to wait till adjacent constructions are built).
  • Easier pasturing, live happiness monitor, mouse support, stocks dashboard.

Dwarf Therapist

Dwarf Therapist gives you an advanced GUI to manage and check dwarf job allocations, military assignments, statistics (such as attributes, personality traits and happiness), sort dwarves by various criteria (eg. profession, migration wave, happiness, number of assigned jobs etc.) and generally manage the Dwarven Resources of your fortress in a very convenient way. This version contains the "labor optimizer" semi-automatic labor management system.

Splinterz' fork of Dwarf Therapist is the currently updated version, and available for Windows. A Mac version is available, and is being integrated into the main codebase for a future version. Besides the Bay12 forum thread, there's more information on the google code page.

Fortress layout tools

DF Designator

DF Designator helps you build fortresses from either image files or Quickfort .CSV files. It also has a user interface that allows you to assign hotkeys to blueprints and to combine blueprints in multi z-level designs. Windows, Mac and Linux versions are available.

Quickfort

Quickfort is a utility for Dwarf Fortress that helps you build fortresses from "blueprint" .CSV files (comma separated values). These files are easily created and edited in an app like Excel. Most building-oriented DF commands are supported through the use of multiple .CSV files to describe the different phases of DF construction (designation, building, stockpiles, and making adjustments. Also see Quickfort Community Blueprints.

Modding tools

Blast

A raw compiler and assembler that helps with compatibility. It also has a more minimalistic, lighter (but less hand-holding) fork called Rubble.

Raw Explorer

Raw files manager.

World Map / World Gen Tools

Perfect World DF

requires an additional (tiny) download to be funtional for current versions (34.#): http://dffd.wimbli.com/file.php?id=5491 . generate worlds to your liking easier or faster than df's ingame map maker. easy access to world settings too to modify. forum thread

Fortress World Generator

A bash script for automating world generation of large numbers of worlds on GNU/Linux. Available on pastebin.

Dwarf Map Maker

A photoshop action script which turns legends mode exported maps into a much prettier fantasy map. There is also a version available for GIMP.

Filesharing websites

Dwarf Fortress File Depot

The Dwarf Fortress File Upload Service - an excellent place to store mods, community games, tilesets and other files. Courtesy of Janus; for files related to Dwarf Fortress only.

Dwarf Fortress Map Archive

The Dwarf Fortress Map Archive is a large collection of user-submitted maps and videos and a nice flash viewer for perusing them. Maps are uploaded, stored, and downloaded in a special compressed format created by the DF Map Compressor; videos are stored in a compressed version of Toady One's own video-recording format.

Other/miscellaneous

dfterm3

Dfterm3 is a remote Dwarf Fortress playing software for multiple users through a web interface. It is a successor to dfterm2, which does exactly the same on telnet instead of a web browser.

Exita

Exita is a python program that takes your DF world map exports and dump them into several different text outputs.

Legends Viewer

Legends Viewer loads up the legends you can export in a much more usable format than the legends mode of DF itself. Legends viewer can open pages in new tabs, filter information on a wide range of criteria, and displays information on the map as well.

It takes four files as input: the legends xml file, the sites and pops text, world history text, and a map image. It can load these separately, but it is recommended to load them as a single compressed archive (folder) - the xml can be multiple GB uncompressed for long histories, and reduce to less than 5% of its size.

If you have played a fortress and then exported legends, you may get an error about unreadable HEX characters. This is caused by Workflow, which saves it's settings as unreadable historical figures. There are several ways to fix this:

  • Clear the workflow settings in fortress mode before exporting legends
  • Edit the xml by hand, as described here (any platform)
  • Use the Legends Processing script (windows only), which fixes the xml and also creates a compressed folder as described above

DFMon

An announcement monitoring/filtering program, useful to get rid of job cancellation spam.