- 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.
40d:Door
Doors are furniture which can be built from rock (at a mason's workshop), wood (at a carpenter's workshop), or metal (at a metalsmith's forge). You can also make glass doors (called portals) at a glass furnace. The symbol for a stone door is that of a solid tile, the color of its material, with a cross of a different color across it (e.g. ┼) Doors of different materials use different tiles, because Toady hates tileset makers. Glass doors (or portals) use the symbol O. Metal doors use the symbol ╪. Wood doors use the symbol ║.
Doors made of all materials function identically, although doors made of more valuable material will increase the "value" of a room it is used in. High-quality doors give a happy thought to any dwarf seeing them, especially when a door is part of a room that the dwarf personally owns.[Verify] Items made of a material a dwarf has a preference for will give an even happier thought.
Doors, when closed, will prevent the passage of fluid (water and magma). However, if a dwarf opens the door, the fluid will come spilling through.
Door settings
There are three options one can specify on a door from the q menu:
- l Forbid/Permit Passage
- A door set to Forbidden is impassable to everyone in the game. A door cannot be set Forbidden if the door is open. Invading thieves may lock-pick and bypass a Forbidden door.
- o Keep Tightly Closed/Make Pet-Passable
- A door that is pet-passable allows through traffic of pets. A pet can still pass through a door that is tightly closed if it does so while it is being held open by an object or dwarf. This also affect the door's permeability to wild animals - a tightly closed door is a good way to keep wild animals from blundering into your fort.
- s Set as Internal/External
"Building" doors
After constructing a door at any of the above workshops, they must be "built" (placed) like all other furniture. Doors can now be placed on any open square adjacent to a wall. Locked doors and statues do not count as walls for door-building purposes anymore. For the same result of the statue-door-move statue trick in previous versions to build an infinite line of doors, instead use a constructed wall segment. Doors will not "fall down" when the constructed wall is removed. They will, however, fall down if a non-constructed wall they are attached to is mined out and they have no other support.
Door construction
A door built will not create a floor above it the way a wall will. If construction is to be done above a door, walls, fortifications and floors can be built on top of doors. Doors cannot be built on top of other doors – there must be a floor. Stairs and ramps, of course, cannot be built on top of doors either.
Door strength
Trolls and most megabeasts can destroy doors.
Doors ajar
Sometimes dwarves will leave items in doors, propping them open. Having an door open when it should be closed can lead to all sorts of disasters with water, magma and hostile creatures.
To remove an item from a doorway designate a garbage dump nearby and then look at the item and designate it for dumping. A dwarf with the refuse hauling labour enabled will come along and shift it.
Alternately, if you don't want to designate the item for dumping (or can't, if it's owned by an individual dwarf) you can clear the door by dismantling and rebuilding it. Select the door with q and then press x to order the door dismantled. When the door is reconstructed with b-d the dwarves will move any objects that were left behind into an adjacent space before placing the door.