The multiplayer state object and dialogs hold a (modified) game list model, but it isn't updated when the actual game list changes. This updates the multiplayer dialogs with the new game list when it got repopulated.
Allows updating the credentials of the announce session, thus allowing credentials changes to be reflected before citra restart. To avoid race conditions and web errors (you can only update the room that you created, i.e. changing credentials halfway will make it break), now you can only use the Citra Web Services settings when not hosting a public room.
In these cases the system object is nearby, and in the other, the
long-form of accessing the telemetry instance is already used, so we can
get rid of the use of the global accessor.
MSVC does not seem to like using constexpr values in a lambda that were declared outside of it.
Previously on MSVC build the hotkeys to inc-/decrease the speed limit were not working correctly because in the lambda the SPEED_LIMIT_STEP had garbage values.
After googling around a bit I found: https://github.com/codeplaysoftware/computecpp-sdk/issues/95 which seems to be a similar issue.
Trying the suggested fix to make the variable static constexpr also fixes the bug here.
Allows capturing screenshot at the current internal resolution (native for software renderer), but a setting is available to capture it in other resolutions. The screenshot is saved to a single PNG in the current layout.
* Add CheatEngine; Add support for Gateway cheats; Add Cheat UI
* fix a potential crash on some systems
* fix substr with negative length
* Add Joker to the NonOp comp handling
* Fixup JokerOp
* minor fixup in patchop; add todo for nested loops
* Add comment for PadState member variable in HID
* fix: stol to stoul in parsing cheat file
* fix misplaced parsing of values; fix patchop code
* add missing break
* Make read_func and write_func a template parameter
* Initial implementation
* Various fixes and new features
* Address some review comments
* Fixes
* Address more comments
* Use g_hle_lock
* Add more state checking, remove unneeded include
* Minor changes
Lets us keep the generic portions of the compatibility list code
together, and allows us to introduce a type alias that makes it so we
don't need to type out a very long type declaration anymore, making the
immediate readability of some code better.
Depending on whether or not USE_DISCORD_PRESENCE is defined, the "state"
parameter can be used or unused. If USE_DISCORD_PRESENCE is not defined,
the parameter will be considered unused, which can lead to compiler
warnings. So, we can explicitly mark it with [[maybe_unused]] to inform
the compiler that this is intentional.
We can utilize QStringList's join() function to perform all of the
appending in a single function call.
While we're at it, make the extension list a single translatable string
and add a disambiguation comment to explain to translators what %1
actually is.
This adds a Game List configuration group box which is similar to yuzu's, with features including icon size setting, row 1/2 text, and ability to hide invalid titles (those without a valid SMDH). I also added a UI tab and moved the language and theme settings there.
Frame advancing is a commonly used TAS feature which basically means running the game frame by frame. TASers use this feature to press exact buttons at the exact frames. This commit added frame advancing to the framelimiter and two actions to the Movie menu. The default hotkey is `\` for advancing frames, and `Ctrl+A` for toggling frame advancing. The `Advance Frame` hotkey would automatically enable frame advancing if not already enabled.
This adds a clock init time field to the CTM header. The clock settings would be overridden when playing a movie. And when recording a movie, if the clock is set to System Time, it would be set to fixed init time at the current moment as well. In this way this keeps consistency with the RNG even if the user does just no setting.
Instead of using an unsigned int as a parameter and expecting a user to
always pass in the correct values, we can just convert the enum into an
enum class and use that type as the parameter type instead, which makes
the interface more type safe.
We also get rid of the bookkeeping "NUM_" element in the enum by just
using an unordered map. This function is generally low-frequency in
terms of calls (and I'd hope so, considering otherwise would mean we're
slamming the disk with IO all the time) so I'd consider this acceptable
in this case.