Other overloads of start() are considerably much safer to use if we ever
need this in the future and need to pass arguments to the program, given
it contains separate parameters for the program path and the arguments
themselves, whereas this unsafe overload contains both as a single
string.
Given the alternatives are much safer, we can disable this.
We can make this message more meaningful by indicating the location the
screenshot has been saved to. We can also log out whenever a screenshot
could not be saved (e.g. due to filesystem permissions or some other
reason).
Treating it as a u16 can result in a sign-conversion warning when
performing arithmetic with it, as u16 promotes to an int when aritmetic
is performed on it, not unsigned int.
This also makes the interface more uniform, as the layout interface now
operates on u32 across the board.
We can just pass a pointer to GMainWindow directly and make it a
requirement of the interface. This makes the interface a little safer,
since this would technically otherwise allow any random QWidget to be
the parent of a render window, downcasting it to GMainWindow (which is
undefined behavior).
Stays consistent in our code with using Qt's provided mechanisms, and
also properly handles Unicode paths (which file streams on Windows don't
do very well).
Qt uses a signed value to represent indices. We should follow this
convention where applicable to avoid unnecessary sign-conversion
warnings, as well as making it easier to interoperate with other aspects
of Qt.
While we're at it, we can also make a sign-conversion explicit.
critical() is intended for critical/fatal errors that threaten the
overall stability of an application. A user entering a conflicting key
sequence is neither of those.
1. This is something that should be solely emitted by the hotkey dialog
itself
2. This is functionally unused, given there's nothing listening for the
signal.
The previous code was all "smushed" together wasn't really grouped
together that well.
This spaces things out and separates them by relation to one another,
making it easier to visually parse the individual sections of code that
make up the constructor.
A checkbox is able to be tri-state, giving it three possible activity
types, so in the connect call here, it would actually be truncating an
int into a bool.
Instead, we can just listen on the toggled() signal, which passes along
a bool, not an int.
Given the array is a private static array, we can just make it
internally linked to hide it from external code. This also allows us to
remove an inclusion within the header.
SMDH is a metadata format used in some executable formats for the
Nintendo 3DS. Switch executables don't utilize this metadata format, so
this just a holdover from Citra and can be corrected.
Allows the loading screen code to compile with implicit string
conversions disabled.
While we're at it remove unnecessary const usages, and add it to nearby
variables where appropriate.
Renames the members to more accurately indicate what they signify.
"OneShot" and "Sticky" are kind of ambiguous identifiers for the reset
types, and can be kind of misleading. Automatic and Manual communicate
the kind of reset type in a clearer manner. Either the event is
automatically reset, or it isn't and must be manually cleared.
The "OneShot" and "Sticky" terminology is just a hold-over from Citra
where the kernel had a third type of event reset type known as "Pulse".
Given the Switch kernel only has two forms of event reset types, we
don't need to keep the old terminology around anymore.
Nvidia's proprietary driver creates a real OpenGL compatibility profile
without this option, meanwhile Intel (and probably AMD, I haven't tested
it) require that QSurfaceFormat::FormatOption::DeprecatedFunctions is
explicitly enabled.
For similar reasons to the previous change, we move this to a single
function, so we don't need to duplicate the conversion logic in several
places within main.cpp.
Specifies the conversions explicitly to avoid implicit conversions from
const char* to QString. This makes it easier to disable implicit QString
conversions in the future.
In this case, the implicit conversion was technically wrong as well. The
implicit conversion treats the input strings as ASCII characters. This
would result in an incorrect conversion being performed in the rare case
a branch name was created with a non-ASCII Unicode character, likely
resulting in junk being displayed.
Over time our config values have grown quite numerous in size.
Unfortunately it also makes the single functions we have for loading and
saving values more error prone.
For example, we were loading the core settings twice when they only
should have been loaded once. In another section, a variable was
shadowing another variable used to load settings from a completely
different section.
Finally, in one other case, there was an extraneous endGroup() call used
that didn't need to be done. This was essentially dead code and also a
bug waiting to happen.
This separates the section loading code into its own separate functions.
This keeps variables only visible to the code that actually needs it,
and makes it much easier to visually see the end of each individual
configuration group. It also makes it much easier to visually catch bugs
during code review.
While we're at it, this also uses QStringLiteral instead of raw string
literals, which both avoids constructing a lot of QString instances, but
also makes it much easier to disable implicit ASCII to QString and
vice-versa in the future via setting QT_NO_CAST_FROM_ASCII and
QT_NO_CAST_TO_ASCII as compilation flags.
This option allows picking the compatibility profile since a lot of bugs
are fixed in it. We devs will use this option to easierly debug current
problems in our Core implementation.:wq
This is a holdover from Citra, where the 3DS has both
WaitSynchronization1 and WaitSynchronizationN. The switch only has one
form of wait synchronizing (literally WaitSynchonization). This allows
us to throw out code that doesn't apply at all to the Switch kernel.
Because of this unnecessary dichotomy within the wait synchronization
utilities, we were also neglecting to properly handle waiting on
multiple objects.
While we're at it, we can also scrub out any lingering references to
WaitSynchronization1/WaitSynchronizationN in comments, and change them
to WaitSynchronization (or remove them if the mention no longer
applies).
The default constructor will always run, even when not specified, so
this is redundant.
However, the context member can indeed be initialized in the constructor
initializer list.
This is a compile definition introduced in Qt 4.8 for reducing the total
potential number of strings created when performing string
concatenation. This allows for less memory churn.
This can be read about here:
https://blog.qt.io/blog/2011/06/13/string-concatenation-with-qstringbuilder/
For a change that isn't source-compatible, we only had one occurrence
that actually need to have its type clarified, which is pretty good, as
far as transitioning goes.
Without passing in a parent, this can result in focus being stolen from
the dialog in certain cases.
Example:
On Windows, if the logging window is left open, the logging Window will
potentially get focus over the hotkey dialog itself, since it brings all
open windows for the application into view. By specifying a parent, we
only bring windows for the parent into view (of which there are none,
aside from the hotkey dialog).
Avoids dumping all of the core settings machinery into whatever files
include this header. Nothing inside the header itself actually made use
of anything in settings.h anyways.
In our error console, when loading a game, the strings:
QString::arg: Argument missing: "Loading...", 0
QString::arg: Argument missing: "Launching...", 0
would occasionally pop up when the loading screen was running. This was
due to the strings being assumed to have formatting indicators in them,
however only two out of the four strings actually have them.
This only applies the arguments to the strings that have formatting
specifiers provided, which avoids these warnings from occurring.
This doesn't actually work anymore, and given how long it's been left in
that state, it's unlikely anyone actually seriously used it.
Generally it's preferable to use RenderDoc or Nsight to view surfaces.
- Use QStringLiteral where applicable.
- Use const where applicable
- Remove unnecessary precondition check (we already assert the pixbuf
being non null)
Fills in the missing surface types that were marked as unknown. The
order corresponds with the TextureFormat enum within
video_core/texture.h.
We also don't need to all of these strings as translatable (only the
first string, as it's an English word).
Rather than scream that the file doesn't exist, we can clearly state
what specifically doesn't exist, to avoid ambiguity, and make it easier
to understand for non-primary English speakers/readers.