- v50 information can now be added to pages in the main namespace. v0.47 information can still be found in the DF2014 namespace. See here for more details on the new versioning policy.
- Use this page to report any issues related to the migration.
Difference between revisions of "Inorganic material definition token"
(moving to material definition token) |
|||
Line 48: | Line 48: | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[GENERATED]||Indicates that this is a generated material. Cannot be specified in user-defined raws. | |[GENERATED]||Indicates that this is a generated material. Cannot be specified in user-defined raws. | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |[DIVINE]||Found on random-generated metals and cloth. Marks this material as usable by [[Deity]]-created generated entities. | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |[SPHERE:sphere]||Found on divine materials. Presumably links the material to a god of the same sphere. | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 15:46, 10 July 2014
This article was migrated from DF2014:Inorganic material definition token and may be inaccurate for the current version of DF (v50.14). See this page for more information. |
The following tokens can be used in inorganic material definitions, generally those for stones, gems, and metals. They cannot be used with materials attached to plants or creatures.
Token | Description |
---|---|
[WAFERS] | Used on metals, causes the metal to be made into wafers instead of bars. |
[DEEP_SPECIAL] | Causes the stone to form hollow tubes leading to Hell. Used for raw adamantine. When mined, stone has a 100% yield. |
[METAL_ORE:metal:chance] | Allows the ore to be smelted into metal. Multiple tokens allow multiple types of metal to be smelted from a single ore. |
[THREAD_METAL:metal:chance] | Allows strands to be extracted from the metal at a craftsdwarf's workshop. |
[DEEP_SURFACE] | Causes the stone to line the landscape of Hell. Used for slade. When mined (if it's mineable), stone has a 100% yield. |
[AQUIFER] | Allows the stone to support an aquifer. |
[METAMORPHIC] | Causes the material to form metamorphic layers. |
[SEDIMENTARY] | Causes the material to form sedimentary layers. |
[SOIL] | Causes the material to form soil layers, allowing it to appear in (almost) any biome. Mining is faster and produces no stones. |
[SOIL_OCEAN] | Causes the material to form pelagic sediment layers beneath deep oceans. Mining is faster and produces no stones. |
[SOIL_SAND] | Causes the material to form sand layers, allowing it to appear in sand deserts and shallow oceans. Mining is faster and produces no stones. Sand layers can also be used used for making glass. Can be combined with [SOIL]. |
[SEDIMENTARY_OCEAN_SHALLOW] | Permits an already [SEDIMENTARY] stone layer to appear underneath shallow ocean regions. |
[SEDIMENTARY_OCEAN_DEEP] | Permits an already [SEDIMENTARY] stone layer to appear underneath deep ocean regions. |
[IGNEOUS_INTRUSIVE] | Causes the material to form igneous intrusive layers. |
[IGNEOUS_EXTRUSIVE] | Causes the material to form igneous extrusive layers. |
[ENVIRONMENT:class:type:freq] | Specifies what types of layers will contain this mineral. See below. |
[ENVIRONMENT_SPEC:stone:type:freq] | Specifies which specific minerals will contain this mineral. See below. |
[LAVA] | Specifies that the stone is created when combining water and magma, also causing it to line the edges of magma pools and volcanoes. If multiple minerals are marked as lava stones, a different one will be used in each biome or geological region. |
[SPECIAL] | Prevents the material from showing up in certain places. Explicitly set by all evil weather materials and implied by [DEEP_SURFACE] and [DEEP_SPECIAL]. |
[GENERATED] | Indicates that this is a generated material. Cannot be specified in user-defined raws. |
[DIVINE] | Found on random-generated metals and cloth. Marks this material as usable by Deity-created generated entities. |
[SPHERE:sphere] | Found on divine materials. Presumably links the material to a god of the same sphere. |
ENVIROMENT and ENVIRONMENT_SPEC
Format:
- [ENVIRONMENT:<class>:<inclusion type>:<frequency>]
Possible values for class:
Environment class token | Description |
---|---|
ALL_STONE | Will appear in every stone. |
IGNEOUS_ALL, IGNEOUS_INTRUSIVE, IGNEOUS_EXTRUSIVE | Will appear in igneous layers, either igneous intrusive, igneous extrusive, or both. |
SOIL, SOIL_OCEAN, SOIL_SAND | Will appear in soil. SOIL_OCEAN is oceans specifically and SOIL_SAND is sand specifically. |
METAMORPHIC | Will appear in metamorphic layers. |
SEDIMENTARY | Will appear in sedimentary layers. |
ALLUVIAL | Will appear in alluvial layers. |
Possible values for inclusion type:
Inclusion type token | Description |
---|---|
CLUSTER | Large ovoids that occupy their entire 48x48 embark tile. Microcline is an example. When mined, stone has a 25% yield (as with layer stones). |
CLUSTER_SMALL | Blobs of 3-9 tiles. Will always be successfully mined. Red pyropes are an example. When mined, stone has a 100% yield. |
CLUSTER_ONE | Single tiles. Will always be successfully mined. Clear diamonds are an example. When mined, stone has a 100% yield. |
VEIN | Large streaks of stone. Native gold is an example. When mined, stone has a 33% yield instead of the usual 25%. |
An inclusion may be contained within a larger inclusion. For example, diamond small clusters are found within kimberlite veins.
The frequency number varies from 1 to 100 and determines the relative frequency at which the stone will be chosen to appear - if all frequency values are the same, then all stones will be equally likely to appear.
ENVIRONMENT_SPEC follows much the same format, but takes a specific stone material ID where ENVIRONMENT would take a class token. What you can use will depend on what inorganic raws are around.