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Difference between revisions of "40d Talk:Stone management"
m (moved Talk:Stone management to [[Talk:40d:Stone management]]: 40d namespace migration) |
m (moved Talk:Broken/40d\x3aStone management to 40d Talk:Stone management: Fixing talk page name (618/738)) |
Latest revision as of 21:53, 8 March 2010
What is considered dated on this page? Does it still deserve the category/template? --Markavian
- I applied the tag because of the information regarding dumping multiple stones into one tile, because it may be regarded as an exploit that could be removed somewhere down the line. I'm not sure if that's the right way to use that template. If not, just kill it. -- EighenIndemnis 16:32, 5 November 2007 (EST)
- You can expand the stonedumping trick to all sorts of other things. If you just mark every ore you dig up as "dump," and have your dump near where your metal industry is to be formed, then you can just undesignate all the ore at once and have a huge pile of raw materials RIGHT THERE for your smelters. Kefkakrazy 17:27, 5 November 2007 (EST)
- Even better miasma will not travel along diagonals. so you can put a hole in the roof just above one of the tiles past the corner of your craftdwarfs shop and choose dwarves chasm bones, skulls, shells, and all. Then set your fisherdwarves loose. Your dwarves will collect all that rotting fish, and dump it all down that hole where it will rot into bones and shells. Then unforbid it and make tons of crafts from the bones and shells. --Ikkonoishi 21:37, 15 November 2007 (EST)
- You can expand the stonedumping trick to all sorts of other things. If you just mark every ore you dig up as "dump," and have your dump near where your metal industry is to be formed, then you can just undesignate all the ore at once and have a huge pile of raw materials RIGHT THERE for your smelters. Kefkakrazy 17:27, 5 November 2007 (EST)
what happened here?[edit]
Something went wrong somewhere... I'm sorry, I don't know how i managed to screw up this page... :(
I'll leave it alone now... -Uberubert
- Don't worry, wikis are built to be reverted to older copies when needed. Vanan 12:01, 15 November 2007 (EST)
- Avoid using the <pre> </pre> tags when possible. This causes editing of sections to look correct in previews, but to screw up horribly when saved. If you want to do fixed-width formatting, prefix lines with a space " ". Julius 18:27, 15 November 2007 (EST)
Bookkeeper skill and dumping[edit]
Does it require a certain bookkeeper skill to dump from the status screen? -Noctune9
- It seems like "per item" stocks screen commands require that you have enough precision to prevent quantity rounding for that item class (stones). So if your bookkeeper hasn't done enough work, or your bookkeeper's precision setting isn't high enough, you probably can't browse a list of every stone in your fortress, which means you can't dump 'em. Is that consistent with your situation? --Marble Dice 12:55, 19 March 2008 (EDT)
Minor Edit[edit]
I changed the "not really necessary" section to reflect that scheduling a rock for a task will make it immovable and block construction, whereas an ignored rock will simply be shoved aside. As such, the only bad rock is a rock the player has a grudge against.--Shadow archmagi 23:08, 22 July 2008 (EDT)
- The problem is that you can't bump the priority of item hauling - so inevitably, the rock in the way is the last one on the job queue not the first one. If you could get to the jobs screen from the map page and then move items up or down the order list that would go a long way toward fixing the problem with stones being in the way because some dwarf is waiting to haul it to the right spot.GarrieIrons 21:37, 18 September 2008 (EDT)
efficiency[edit]
has anyone actually worked out... is it more efficient for wall building (quality doesn't matter) to just make your masons do all the walking, or to use a skilled mason (who builds walls quickly) and a bunch of haulers to bring stone a distance of (x)? I get that there is a distance where you just get the mason to move the stone... beyond that using a high skilled mason is "intuitively" inefficient. But what is the furthest I should have my skilled mason walking to pick up a stone? GarrieIrons 21:40, 18 September 2008 (EDT)
- It's more efficient to have all your haulers with masonry enabled and the workshop assigned to the skilled mason. He continues to make masterpiece tables, while when you designate an area for construction each hauler grabs a rock, walks up, and DROPS your building into place more or less in one massive step and then goes about their business. Rkyeun 00:03, 25 September 2008 (EDT)
Fixing the 'farthest haul' problem...[edit]
Does anyone else find the dwarf habit of picking the furthest stone to be a game killer? Around year two, all progress just stops as my experienced dwarfs are insisting on running down to the mining sites to pick up one stone. I can manually lock and unlock doors while dumping, but the game takes really takes a nosedive in terms of fun.
The right solution would be to have a 'dwarves use nearest/farthest item' option. --Gizbot 09:27, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
- Actually, and I just tested it. The dwarf use the closest one. If a stone is underneath the mason workshop, it's at a distance of 1. Even if the dwarf have to walk 30 squares, then go down, and walk again 30 squares to come underneath is shop. So a quick trick is to dig stair near his shop, or don't mine under it, and the dwarf will use the "true" closest stone--Karl 14:58, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
Magma melting[edit]
...Any stone disposed of will be chucked into the magma, melt ... and
be gone from your fortress forever.
Not true (any more?) I have stones in my magma that have been there for years. I remember someone claiming these would disappear with the change of seasons (like some above ground rubbish), but it seems this is not (no longer?) the case. Anyone confirm, or does this need deleting?--Albedo 00:54, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- Temperature enabled? Are the stones magma-safe (perhaps from a mod)? --Quietust 05:14, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- No such luck. Trust me when I say it's vanilla 40d, and everything is turned on. And it's not bauxite (alunite, granite & obsidian, iirc.)--Albedo 08:28, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- I just did the test, with a plain vanilla 40d14. Which is like 40d but with a custom graphic engine (I did check if they did change to the raw file, most of them are dated from 2007-2008, so basically, no change). I started right away with an Andesite channel, dug till I hit the magma pipe, then I dumped some more Andesite stone inside the channel, just to be sure. They all become molten andesite soon enough. Then with the summer come the cleaning, all my molten andesite stones were cleaned away from memory, both the dumped one and the channeled one. It was done under subterranean condition, if it ever change anything for testing purpose. This information reflect what the people have said in the forum too. --Karl 11:53, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- (Responses redacted to remove clutter. Any discussion below this point was based on my confusion and my mistaken use of corrupted/non-vanilla RAW files, and so adds nothing to this article unless you share my corrupted files. DF wiki does not (as a rule) address modifications or customized game material. Thanks to user:Shardok for slapping me awake and NOT trusting me. --Albedo 20:42, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
- I just did the test, with a plain vanilla 40d14. Which is like 40d but with a custom graphic engine (I did check if they did change to the raw file, most of them are dated from 2007-2008, so basically, no change). I started right away with an Andesite channel, dug till I hit the magma pipe, then I dumped some more Andesite stone inside the channel, just to be sure. They all become molten andesite soon enough. Then with the summer come the cleaning, all my molten andesite stones were cleaned away from memory, both the dumped one and the channeled one. It was done under subterranean condition, if it ever change anything for testing purpose. This information reflect what the people have said in the forum too. --Karl 11:53, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- No such luck. Trust me when I say it's vanilla 40d, and everything is turned on. And it's not bauxite (alunite, granite & obsidian, iirc.)--Albedo 08:28, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
These comments can be found commented out in the edit page of this talk for anyone looking to find more information as to what the comments were in such a case as they may have possible usefulness to you.)– unsigned comment by shardok