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Savefile block can't be read
Ubuntu 13.10
I had gone to the Ubuntu software center and downloaded Angband3.3, played for a bit, then removed it completely. I then downloaded, compiled, installed v3.5. It opens up fine and asks me to press any key to continue. So I do! Immediately I receive the error: Code:
Savefile block can't be read I do not care about the savefile, if it happens to still exist somewhere I do not want it. I just want to play the new version from the beginning. Unless its referring to savefile.c/savefile.h. Which I know little about, but having read them, they appear to be necessary for creating save data. Those however seem both present and intact. |
On Linux, the saves are actually kept in a different place - probably ~/.angband/Angband/save. If you delete your old savefile from there, everything should be fine.
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Would it be at all feasible for the game to default to create-a-new-character if loading a save fails for whatever reason? Ideally you shouldn't have to track down the savefile in the filesystem and delete it.
Actually it's kind of weird that the Linux version (apparently?) automatically tries to load your savefile when it starts. Shouldn't it give you the opportunity to save vs. load, and support multiple active savefiles like the OSX and Windows versions do? |
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I guess I missed that, it launches just fine now and moves into character creation. Thanks, I'l see if i can track down the save location now as well
UPDATE: cannot find the new save file. Created a character dump to a txt file, looked for that too but with no luck. My only theory is that the save is going somewhere hidden, a place I can't see or access without root priviledge. |
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When Nick used ~/.angband/Angband/save he was using shorthand for /home/yourusername/.angband/Angband/save - apologies if you already know this, but it does seem like you haven't yet found where Angband is storing your saves and dumps. If you use "ls -a" in your home directory you should see the .angband directory. Please let us know if it isn't there - and paste a screenshot of your ls output. |
Btw when I run vanilla Angband on linux it did wierd things, dont remember exactly what, but I had to create .angband folder manually and modify some path strings in the source to get it working.
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