fmt::format() returns a std::string instance by value, so calling
.c_str() on it here is equivalent to doing:
auto* ptr = std::string{}.c_str();
The data being pointed to isn't guaranteed to actually be valid anymore
after that expression ends. Instead, we can just take the string as is,
and provide the necessary formatting parameters.
Based off RE, the backing code only ever seems to use 0-2 as the range
of values 1 being a generic log enable, with 2 indicating logging should
go to the SD card. These are used as a set of flags internally.
Given we only care about receiving the log in general, we can just
always signify that we want logging in general.
Amends it with missing values deduced from RE (ProperSystem being from
SwitchBrew for naming)
(SdCardUser wasn't that difficult to discern given it's used alongside
SdCardSystem when creating the save data indexer, based off the usage of
the string "saveDataIxrDbSd" nearby).
Original reason:
As Windows multi-byte character codec is unspecified while we always assume std::string uses UTF-8 in our code base, this can output gibberish when the string contains non-ASCII characters. ::OutputDebugStringW combined with Common::UTF8ToUTF16W is preferred here.
This was only ever public so that code could check whether or not a
handle was valid or not. Instead of exposing the object directly and
allowing external code to potentially mess with the map contents, we
just provide a member function that allows checking whether or not a
handle is valid.
This makes all member variables of the VMManager class private except
for the page table.
These auto-deduce the result based off its arguments, so there's no need
to do that work for the compiler, plus, the function return value itself
already indicates what we're returning.
Similarly, here we can avoid doing unnecessary work twice by retrieving
the file type only once and comparing it against relevant operands,
avoiding potential unnecessary object construction/destruction.
While GetFileType() is indeed a getter function, that doesn't mean it's
a trivial function, given some case require reading from the data or
constructing other objects in the background. Instead, only do necessary
work once.
No implementations actually modify instance state (and it would be
questionable to do that in the first place given the name), so we can
make this a const member function.
This allows the array to be constexpr. std::function is also allowed to
allocate memory, which makes its constructor non-trivial, we definitely
don't want to have all of these execute at runtime, taking up time
before the application can actually load.