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Difference between revisions of "v0.31:Reactions"
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− | Reactions are modular, editable formulas that take specific ingredients, or reagents, and use them to produce a desired item. A lot of reactions are hardcoded - building beds or creating glass, for example - but a few are freely editable, and it's quite simple to add additional ones. | + | {{quality|Masterwork|08:00, 22 May 2010 (UTC)}}Reactions are modular, editable formulas that take specific ingredients, or reagents, and use them to produce a desired item. A lot of reactions are hardcoded - building beds or creating glass, for example - but a few are freely editable, and it's quite simple to add additional ones. |
== Reaction differences between modes == | == Reaction differences between modes == |
Revision as of 16:55, 14 July 2010
Reactions are modular, editable formulas that take specific ingredients, or reagents, and use them to produce a desired item. A lot of reactions are hardcoded - building beds or creating glass, for example - but a few are freely editable, and it's quite simple to add additional ones.
Reaction differences between modes
In Fortress mode, reactions are linked to specific buildings, and must be added to a civilizations entity file to be useable by that civilization. This has the useful effect of limiting new items and materials (such as special wood or metal) to civilizations that have the requisite reaction - meaning that if you give your custom civilization a reaction to produce star metal or some other custom material, only they will be use it.
In Adventure mode, reactions are freely available via x > create, and any adventurer character can make free use of them. Reagents may be held in the hands or dropped on the ground, but cannot be stored within a backpack or quiver. As of .10, there are several bugs with Adventure mode reactions, chief of which is the fact that the [HAS_MATERIAL_REACTION_PRODUCT] token is completely ignored, leading to dragon eye tissue tanned hides, among other things.
Prior to version 31.10, a reaction could only result in an object of base quality. However, in .10 items produced via reactions have been observed to have quality modifiers. The way skill factors into them has yet to be determined.
Anatomy of a reaction
Reactions are found within reaction_x files (such as reaction_smelter or reaction_other). Generally speaking they adhere to the following structure:
[REACTION:<REACTION IDENTIFIER>] [NAME:<REACTION NAME>] [BUILDING:<BUILDING NAME>:<BUILDING KEY>] The building that the reaction uses, and the relevant keyboard shortcut. [REAGENT:A:150:BAR:NONE:POTASH:NONE] The ingredients required for the reaction. [PRODUCT:100:1:BAR:NONE:PEARLASH:NONE][PRODUCT_DIMENSION:150] The exact item produced by the reaction. [FUEL] Whether or not the reaction requires charcoal, coke or a magma-powered workshop. [#SKILL:<SKILL TOKEN>] The skill required and trained by the reaction. [AUTOMATIC]
The <REACTION IDENTIFIER> may be anything, so long as it is unique within the raws - a good habit to get into is to append a short term to the end of each name related to the name of your mod, to ensure nobody else is going to make an identical reaction and thereby mess up the game if their mod is run alongside yours.
The <REACTION NAME> can be anything at all, and is usually used to describe the reaction - 'tan a hide', for example, is the name of the default leather-producing reaction.
The BUILDING NAME is the name of the building that will house this reaction, and the building key is the keyboard shortcut that will queue up the reaction. If two reactions have the same key, then one of them will be assigned a different key, the first alphabetically available at the building.
Reagents
REAGENTs are a little bit complicated. They are the ingredients that the reaction will use. You can define as many as you like within a reaction so long as they all have unique names.
[REAGENT:<name>:<quantity>:<item token>:<item subtype>:<material token>:<material subtype>]
The name field is just a small string used to refer to the reagent within the reaction; 'A' or 'B' work, as do words like 'toolstone' or 'flux' - remember not to use apostrophes, though.
The quantity differs between item types - generally speaking, cloth, thread, powder and globs use numbers representing the size of material within one item, and everything else uses a static quantity. For example, 10 thread is one extremely tiny unit of thread, but 10 toy is ten unique, solid toy items.
The item token is the type of item you require - WEAPON, TOY or SKIN_TANNED, for example.
The item subtype is the exact item that you require - ITEM_WEAPON_SPEAR or ITEM_TOY_PUZZLEBOX, as examples. Some items, like quivers or backpacks, or chunks of stone or metal, only require the item token to be filled in, so if you're asking for those you can leave this blank.
The material token and material subtype are frequently related. The first indicates the category of material you want, such as INORGANIC. The second indicates the specific subtype of material you want, such as OBSIDIAN or STEEL.
Reagents may also have extra tokens added on afterwards. A list of them follows:
Token | Meaning |
---|---|
[PRESERVE_REAGENT] | Reagent is not destroyed, which is the normal effect, at the completion of the reaction. Typically used for containers. |
[REACTION_CLASS:X] | Detailed below the reaction anatomy section. |
[HAS_MATERIAL_REACTION_PRODUCT:X] | Detailed below the reaction anatomy section. |
[UNROTTEN] | Reagent must not be rotten, mainly for organic MATGLOSS types. |
[BUILDMAT] | Reagent is able to be used to build structures (Stone, Wood, Blocks, Bars?). |
[GLASS_MATERIAL] | Reagent has a one of the glass MATGLOSS types. |
[WORTHLESS_STONE_ONLY] | The reagent respects allowed and forbidden economic stones from the Stone menu. |
[FIRE_BUILD_SAFE] | Reagent must be considered fire safe - ie. not wood, and not coal. |
[MAGMA_BUILD_SAFE] | Reagent must have a melting point greater than the temperature of Magma. |
[CAN_USE_ARTIFACT] | Reagent can be an Artifact. Using [PRESERVE_REAGENT] with this is strongly advised. |
[ANY_PLANT_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a plant subtype. |
[ANY_SILK_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a silk type. |
[ANY_SOAP_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a soap type. |
[ANY_LEATHER_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a leather type. |
[ANY_BONE_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a bone type. |
[ANY_SHELL_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a shell type. |
[ANY_TOOTH_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a tooth type. |
[ANY_HORN_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a horn type. |
[ANY_PEARL_MATERIAL] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be of a pearl type (Excretion from sea creatures?) |
[USE_BODY_COMPONENT] | Reagent MATGLOSS must come off a creature's body. |
[METAL_ORE] | Reagent MATGLOSS must be a metal ore. |
[NOT_WEB] | States that the material cannot be web (For making only plant/adamantine thread?). |
[WEB_ONLY] | States that the material has to be web (For making only silk thread?). |
[POTASHABLE] | The reagent must be able to be turned into pot ash. |
[EMPTY] | If the reagent is a container, it must be empty. |
[CONTAINS_LYE] | If the reagent is a container, it must contain LYE. |
[NOT_CONTAIN_BARREL_ITEM] | If the reagent is a Barrel, it must not contain an item that has to reside in a barrel (Such as alcohol?). |
[BAG] | Reagent has to be a bag. Intended to be used with an item type of BOX, to prevent chests, coffers, and other containers from being used instead. |
Generally speaking, if you set a field in a reagent to NONE, the reaction won't discriminate when it comes to that particular field. For example, if you require a BOULDER reagent but leave the matgloss fields as NONE:NONE, it will grab any available BOULDER-type item irrespective of matgloss.
Products
Products are the end product of the reaction. A reaction can have as many products as it likes.
Products are almost identical to reagents, except that they do not need to be named, can't have fields undefined, and don't use the quantity field to determine the product size. Instead, the token PRODUCT_DIMENSION:X is tacked on after the PRODUCT token, determining the size of the product. Products also don't use tokens like USE_ANY_BONE_MATERIAL.
Products can be produced directly to a container using the [PRODUCT_TO_CONTAINER:<IDENTIFIER>] token, where the IDENTIFIER is the name of a reagent. This requires the reagent to have the PRESERVE_REAGENT token.
Other tokens
The [FUEL] token means that the reaction requires coke or charcoal to be performed, or theoretically magma, if we could build magma workshops.
The [SKILL:X] token determines what skill the reaction requires and what skill it trains. Multiple skills can be listed but only one will be used.
The [AUTOMATIC] token means that the reaction will be queued automatically if the reaction reagents are all present.
Material reaction products and reaction classes
You can get a certain measure of control over very specific materials using reaction classes and material reaction products - the tokens look like this:
[REACTION_CLASS:FAT] [HAS_MATERIAL_REACTION_PRODUCT:RENDER_MAT]
Reaction classes represent different classes of material - basically, the matgloss subtype of the reagent must have a REACTION_CLASS the same as the one in the reaction.
Material reaction products are similar, but are generally used more for things like different kinds of creature materials than universal materials like stone. This token is how skin can be tanned into leather, which are two separate materials - the skin material has leather as a MATERIAL_REACTION_PRODUCT.
In short, they require the material to have a token such as
[MATERIAL_REACTION_PRODUCT:X:Y:Z]
...where X is the name of the reaction product that will be referred to in the reaction (RENDER_MAT, in the reaction class example, or TAN_MAT for leather), Y is the matgloss type of the desired product (such as INORGANIC or LOCAL_CREATURE_MAT) and Z is the specific material, like LEATHER or OBSIDIAN.
Reactions and world generation
There are several things to keep in mind when you're adding reactions to a game that already exists.
- Most entity changes require a regen, but adding PERMITTED_REACTION tokens for reactions that existed at the time of world generation to a the entity file in the save directory do not. - Adding reactions to the raws in a save directory requires you to regen the world. - You can alter an existing reaction in any way you like without regenning the world, so long as you don't alter the reaction identifier.