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2099 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
N00byKing
adf2e5e3bd Build out-of-tree in workflows 2022-02-14 12:32:59 -08:00
Misa
f3797ff866 Allow spaces and capitals in script names when loading
This lets any script name use capitals and spaces all they want, while
still being able to jump to them via iftrinkets() or similar.

The issue is that whenever tokenize() is ran, all spaces are stripped
and every argument is lowercased before being put into `words`. So, the
solution here is to create a raw_words array that doesn't perform space
stripping or lowercasing, and to refer to that whenever there's a script
command that loads a script. We keep the lowercasing and space removal
elsewhere to be more forgiving to newcomers.

This is technically a forwards compatibility break, but it's only a
minor one, and all levels that utilize it can still be easily modified
to work on older versions anyway.
2022-02-12 14:56:27 -08:00
Misa
e93d8989d3 Revert "Fix Secret Lab Time Trial trophies having wrong colors"
As reported by Dav999, Victoria and Vermilion's trophy colors are
swapped again in 2.4. He points to
37b7615b71, the commit where I fixed the
color masks of every single surface to always be RGB or RGBA.

It sounded plausible to me, because it did have to do with colors, after
all. However, it didn't make sense to me, because I was like, I didn't
touch the trophy colors at all after I originally fixed them.

After I ruled out the RGBf() function as a confounder, I decided to see
whether intentionally reversing the color order in RGBf() to be BGR
would do anything, and to my surprise it actually swapped the colors
back around and it didn't actually look bad.

And then I realized: Swapping the trophy colors between RGB and BGR
ordering results in similar colors that still look good, but are simply
wrong, but not so wrong that they take on a color that no crewmate uses,
so it'd appear as if the crewmates were swapped, when in reality the
only thing that was swapped was actually the color order of the colors.

Trying to fix this by swapping the colors again, I actively confused
colors 33 and 35 (Vermilion and Victoria) with colors 32 and 34
(Vitellary and Viridian), so I was confused when Vermilion and Victoria
weren't swapping. Then as a debugging step, I only changed 34 to 32
without swapping 32 as well, and then finally noticed that I was
swapping Vitellary and Viridian, because there were now two Vitellarys.
And then I was reminded that Vitellary and Viridian were also wrongly
swapped since 2.0 as well.

And so then I finally realized: The original comments accompanying the
colors were correct after all. The only problem was that they were fed
into a function, RGBf(), that read the colors backwards, because the
codebase habitually changed the color order on a whim and it was really
hard to reason out which color order should be used at a given time, so
it ended up reading RGB colors as BGR, while it looked like it was
passing them through as-is.

So what happened was that in the first place, RGBf() was swapping RGB to
BGR. Then I came and swapped Vermilion and Victoria, and Vitellary and
Viridian around. Then later I fixed all the color masks, so RGBf()
stopped swapping RGB and BGR around. But then this ended up swapping the
colors of Vermilion and Victoria, and Vitellary and Viridian once again!

Therefore, swapping Vermilion and Victoria, and Vitellary and Viridian
was incorrect. Or at least, not the fix to the root cause. The root
cause would be to swap the colors in RGBf(), but this would be sort of
confusing to reason about - at least if I didn't bother to just type the
RGB values into an image editor. But that doesn't fix the real issue,
which is that the game kept swapping RGB and BGR around in every corner
of the codebase.

I further confirmed that there was no more RGB or BGR swapping by
deleting the plus-one-divide-by-three transformation in RGBf() and
seeing if the colors looked okay. Now with the colors being brighter, I
could see that passing it straight through looked fine, but
intentionally reversing it to be BGR resulted in colors that at a
distance looked okay, but were either washed out or too bright. At least
finally I could use my 8 years of playing this game for something.

So in conclusion, actually, 37b7615b71
("Fix surface color masks") was the real fix, and
d271907f8c ("Fix Secret Lab Time Trial
trophies having wrong colors") was the real regression. It's just that
the regression came first, but it wasn't really a regression until I did
the other fix, so the fix isn't the regression, the regression is...
this is hurting my brain. Or the real regression was the friends we made
along the way, or something like that.

This is the most trivial bug ever caused by the technical debt of those
god-awful reversed color masks.

---

This reverts commit d271907f8c.

Fixes #862.
2022-02-12 00:41:02 -08:00
Misa
23f91005d6 Windows CI build: Ditch vcpkg
This replaces vcpkg with simply downloading the pre-compiled
dependencies from official upstream releases. The rationale is that
vcpkg is sometimes really slow to update to the latest SDL version when
it releases, and also that it requires the runner to compile SDL every
single time it's instantiated, which is slow and wasteful.

Instead, download the pre-compiled binaries of SDL from its release page
on GitHub. This way, we don't have to compile it ourselves, and we
aren't waiting on vcpkg whenever SDL releases a new version. And for
good measure, cache it so we aren't downloading it _every_ time, which
is even more efficient.

The same can't be done for SDL_mixer, though, because it doesn't have a
GitHub release page with pre-compiled binaries. Instead, we'll download
them from libsdl.org, which is an infrastructure that takes more strain
than if we used GitHub instead. But, it shouldn't matter anyways,
because we cahe this too. And we are going to ditch SDL_mixer for FAudio
in 2.4 anyways, so it's a moot point either way.
2022-02-11 23:49:02 -08:00
Misa
a43f5e1140 Update CI to CentOS container with SDL 2.0.20
I just built and pushed a new CentOS container that has SDL 2.0.20, so
updating it now.
2022-02-11 17:31:41 -05:00
Misa
cb8ce4d487 Update Dockerfile to SDL 2.0.20
Now that it is the minimum version, our CentOS container needs this
updated version too.
2022-02-11 17:31:41 -05:00
Misa
1d3ff5fbba Update README.md to refer to SDL 2.0.20
It's now the minimum version, so it needs to be updated.
2022-02-11 17:31:41 -05:00
Misa
ef03c2a54a Remove clamp in favor of SDL_clamp
For the same reasons as I removed VVV_min/max in favor of SDL_min/max in
aa7b63fa5f, I'm doing the same thing here.
2022-02-11 17:31:41 -05:00
Misa
e40f54f06b Remove temporary SDL fallthrough
We don't need a temporary fallback if we just start using SDL 2.0.18 or
later.
2022-02-11 17:31:41 -05:00
Misa
aa343bc334 Remove SDL_GetTicks64() ifdefs
We can now use the function that doesn't wrap after ~49 days since
SDL 2.0.18 released.
2022-02-11 17:31:41 -05:00
Misa
470a4358ef Remove VSync toggle ifdefs
These ifdefs can go away now that our minimum SDL version is 2.0.20.
2022-02-11 17:31:41 -05:00
Misa
38d25c0850 Update LodePNG to 20220109
This updates LodePNG to the commit pushed on January 9, 2022.
2022-02-11 11:55:39 -08:00
Misa
ed4d3d0fa8 Update TinyXML2 to 9.0.0
This updates TinyXML2 to the major release tagged on June 6, 2021.
2022-02-11 11:55:39 -08:00
Ethan Lee
84f9bb6dd6 Point to SDL_LoadWAV for SoundTrack FAudio suggestion 2022-01-15 01:02:24 -05:00
Ethan Lee
3b18a475dd Move MusicTrack below SoundTrack.
It's very likely that MusicTrack will be pulling from the SoundTrack FAudio
context, so make it so forward declarations are unnecessary.
2022-01-14 17:24:22 -05:00
Ethan Lee
adcabb9483 Add notes for FAudio implementation 2022-01-14 17:11:16 -05:00
Ethan Lee
5202b80a3d Remove unused m_isValid value from MusicTrack 2022-01-14 16:56:00 -05:00
Ethan Lee
d36741fa07 Move the Mix_OpenAudio call to SoundTrack, from MusicTrack.
In hindsight, the FAudio pointer will likely be in SoundTrack since we will
want to keep the mastering voice closer to the sounds and their source voice
arrays, while the MusicTrack will likely just be one source voice that gets
PCM from different streams.
2022-01-14 16:52:52 -05:00
Ethan Lee
df618e6d22 Isolate all SDL_mixer references to SoundTrack/MusicTrack.
This looks redundant but will actually help in the transition to FAudio; we
mostly want to keep the game logic the same while reimplementing the current
mixer, weirdness and all. Once that's done and confirmed to be stable and
consistent we can start cutting out the workarounds and quirks.
2022-01-14 16:46:04 -05:00
Misa
017d54adb0 Don't use function pointer to print room name
This improves the readability of the code.
2021-12-26 10:08:21 -08:00
Ethan Lee
81aa02e29b SDL_mixer is now entirely contained in Music.cpp.
This meant making the track vectors static, but that's kind of what we do with musicclass anyway?

In any case, this will make the transition to FAudio MUCH less invasive.
2021-12-26 08:57:38 -05:00
Ethan Lee
1eda3647ff Move the mute logic to musicclass.
This moves the last of the SDL_mixer calls to Music.cpp.
2021-12-26 08:48:23 -05:00
Ethan Lee
579f0f763a Update docs for MusicTrack/SoundTrack 2021-12-26 08:41:57 -05:00
Ethan Lee
230859f8f9 Inline SoundSystem into musicclass constructor 2021-12-26 08:41:01 -05:00
Ethan Lee
c87f0e1a0c Consolidate SoundSystem into Music.
It's just some small wrappers, and SoundSystem can be inlined trivially.
2021-12-26 08:38:19 -05:00
Ethan Lee
f723e03871 Remove unused MusicTrack constructor.
This wouldn't work anyway since music would need to be loaded via physfs.
2021-12-26 08:31:40 -05:00
Misa
dfb1e31d78 Optimization: Don't outline if room name BG opaque
This is quite simple. Just use a function pointer that switches out
which function we're going to use.

...Or not. C++ syntax makes this a bit awful since the function is a
member of a class. Did I mention how much I don't like C++?
2021-12-26 00:04:20 -08:00
Misa
8f226ced84 De-duplicate finalmode glitchname printing
Instead of copy-pasting the call twice, just use a variable to switch
between the two names.
2021-12-26 00:03:18 -08:00
Misa
276aab1209 Default to integer scaling mode
Issue #849 suggested making integer be the default on Big Picture and
Steam Deck, but after thinking about it more, I think it's better and
more simple to just default to integer mode in general.

Reason being that people in Big Picture shouldn't expect the picture to
look different if they're out of Big Picture but still in fullscreen, or
have the picture look different in fullscreen depending on if they
launched the game for the first time in Big Picture or not. And besides,
the less lines of code, the better. So I'm just making integer mode the
default.
2021-12-25 23:14:43 -08:00
Misa
550e76a6dc Add and use scaling mode enum
This enum is to just make each mode be readable, instead of mysterious
0/1/2 values. It's not a strictly-typed enum because we still have to
serialize it as ints in the XML, but it's better than just leaving them
as ints.

This also adds a NUM_SCALING_MODES enum, so we don't have to hardcode
that 3 when cycling scaling modes anymore.
2021-12-25 23:14:12 -08:00
Misa
f5166c437e Add forced fullscreen mode
This is mainly to make sure the game is definitely set to fullscreen in
Big Picture and on the Steam Deck, and to also remove windowed options
that wouldn't make sense if you're not on a desktop (toggling
fullscreen, resize to nearest). Those options would also be removed on
console and mobile too.

There's a bit of an annoying bug where if you launch the game in forced
fullscreen mode, but then exit and relaunch in normal mode, your game
will have fullscreen window sizes but it won't be fullscreen. This is
because forced fullscreen mode tries to preserve your non-forced
fullscreen setting, but due to the way window sizes are stored and
queried, it can't preserve the non-forced window size. This is a bit
difficult to work around, so I'm just putting in a FIXME here because we
can fix it later and I'd rather have a slightly buggy forced fullscreen
mode than not have one at all.

Closes #849.
2021-12-25 23:01:45 -08:00
Dav999-v
3e36bfd56f Simplify time formatting functions
Here's my notes on all the existing functions and what kind of time
formats they output:

- Game::giventimestring(int hrs, int min, int sec)
	H:MM:SS
	MM:SS

- Game::timestring()
// uses game.hours/minutes/seconds
	H:MM:SS
	MM:SS

- Game::partimestring()
// uses game.timetrialpar (seconds)
	MM:SS

- Game::resulttimestring()
// uses game.timetrialresulttime (sec) + timetrialresultframes (1/30s)
	MM:SS.CC

- Game::timetstring(int t)
// t = seconds
	MM:SS

- Game::timestringcenti(char* buffer, const size_t buffer_size)
// uses game.hours/minutes/seconds/frames
	H:MM:SS.CC
	MM:SS.CC

- UtilityClass::timestring(int t)
// t = frames, 30 frames = 1 second
	S:CC
	M:SS:CC

This is kind of a mess, and there's a lot of functions that do the same
thing except using different variables. For localization, I also want
translators to be able to localize all these time formats - many
languages use the decimal comma instead of the decimal point (12:34,56)
maybe some languages really prefer something like 1時02分11秒44瞬...
Which I don't know to be correct, but it's good to be prepared for it
and not restrict translators arbitrarily to only changing ":" and "."
when we can start making the system better in the first place.

I added a new function, UtilityClass::format_time. This is the place
where all time formats come together, given the number of seconds and
optionally frames. I have simplified the above-mentioned functions
somewhat, but I haven't given them a complete refactor or renaming -
I mainly made sure that they all use the same backend so I can make the
formats consistent and properly localizable.

(And before we start shoving more temporary char buffers everywhere
just to get rid of the std::string's, maybe we need to think of a
globally used working buffer of size SCREEN_WIDTH_CHARS+1, as a
register of sorts, for when any line of text needs to be made or
processed, then printed, and then goes unused. Maybe help.textrow,
or something like that.)

As for this commit, the available time formats are now more consistent
and changed a little in some places. Leading zeroes for the first unit
are now no longer included, time trial results and the Super Gravitron
can now display hours when they went to 60 minutes before, and we now
always use .CC instead of :CC. These are the formats:
- H:MM:SS
- H:MM:SS.CC
- M:SS
- M:SS.CC
- S.CC  (only used when always_minutes=false, for the Gravitrons)

Here's what changes to the current functions:
- Game::partimestring() is removed - it was used in two places, and
  could be replaced by game.timetstring(game.timetrialpar)
- Game::giventimestring(h,m,s) and Game::timestring() are now wrappers
  for the other functions
- The four remaining functions (Game::resulttimestring(),
  Game::timetstring(t), Game::timestringcenti(buffer, buffer_size)
  and UtilityClass::timestring(t)) are now wrappers for the "central
  function", UtilityClass::format_time.
- UtilityClass::twodigits(int t) is now unused so it's also removed.
- I also added int UtilityClass::hms_to_seconds(int h, int m, int s)
2021-12-25 11:38:12 -08:00
Misa
dd24343141 Use LoadImage in LoadIcon
This de-duplicates the code, simplifying the codebase and reducing the
number of code paths that needs to be maintained. It also adds
robustness checks to LoadIcon that weren't there before (checking that
loading the file succeeded and that decoding the file also succeeded).

Now, you might think that loading the image with alpha will change
things in some way. But actually, I tested it, and I'm pretty sure it
doesn't. Since my window manager, i3, doesn't display icons, I've had to
resort to this hacky multi-liner
( https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/48866 ) to dump the icon to a PAM
file. I don't know what a PAM file is and all my various attempts to
convert it into something readable failed. But what I did instead was
just grab the icon of the game before this commit (on 2.3, just to be
extra sure), and `diff`ed it with the grabbed icon now, and they end up
being the exact same file. So there's literally no difference.

The only other consideration is that LoadImage needs to be exported,
since it's implemented in GraphicsResources.cpp. I just opted to
forward-declare it right before LoadIcon in Screen.cpp, since it's
really the only other time it's used. No need to create a new header
file for it or anything.
2021-12-25 01:29:24 -08:00
Misa
a5c3bd97a0 Remove noAlpha argument from LoadImage
This is just to simplify the function. I really don't see any point in
taking away the alpha for some images, other than to disappoint people
who mod the game assets. It just complicates loading the image with no
real gain. To reduce maintenance costs, let's remove this alternate code
path.

Also it's a default argument and I don't like default arguments.
2021-12-25 01:29:12 -08:00
Misa
3108178c53 Remove noBlend argument from LoadImage
This argument... doesn't do anything.

First off, setting it to true explicitly enables blending on the
resulting surface, which is kind of the exact opposite of the variable
name and is misleading to say the least? And secondly, SDL surfaces have
blending enabled by default anyways, so it still doesn't even do
anything.

It's also a default argument, and I'm not one to shy away from removing
such default arguments.
2021-12-25 01:26:42 -08:00
Misa
a6b076e234 Explicitly zero declared struct ScreenSettingss
Performance cost is negligible and well worth being safe in case there
are more members added in the future but we forget to initialize them.
2021-12-25 00:30:10 -08:00
Misa
1e157f3cc9 De-C++-ify struct ScreenSettings
This includes:
- Removing the constructor in favor of actually being able to see that
  there's an actual function called being made initializing the struct
- Removing the use of a reference in Screen::init() in favor of using a
  pointer
- Adding the struct qualifier everywhere (it's not much typing),
  although technically you could typedef it in C, but I'd rather much
  not typedef just to remove a tag qualifier
2021-12-25 00:30:10 -08:00
Misa
d0ffafe117 Extern gameScreen, remove screenbuffer
I know earlier I removed the gameScreen extern in favor of using
screenbuffer, but that was only to be consistent. After further
consideration, I have found that it's actually really stupid.

There's no reason to be accessing it through screenbuffer, and it's
probably an artifact of 2.0-2.2 passing stack-allocated otherwise-global
classes everywhere through function arguments. Also, it leads to stupid
bugs where screenbuffer could potentially be NULL, which has already
resulted in various annoying crashes in the past. Although those could
be fixed by simply initializing screenbuffer at the very top of main(),
but, why not just scrap the whole thing anyway?

So that's what I'm doing.

As a nice side effect, I've removed the transitive include of Screen.h
from Graphics.h. This could've been done already since it only includes
it for the pointer anyway, but it's still good to do it now.
2021-12-25 00:29:28 -08:00
Misa
b7cbdfe8f9 Fix char overflow in Analogue Mode
In aa7b63fa5f, I didn't notice that the
result was implicitly being converted to int by the min/max from before.
I instead added it to the existing char, but that resulted in a char
overflow (it's unsigned, so thankfully not undefined behavior).

But of course the entire point of that commit is to make it explicitly
clear when you are converting between types, intentionally or otherwise,
in min/max comparisons. So despite causing a regression (which I have
now fixed), at least it did its job.
2021-12-22 21:49:08 -08:00
Misa
816a0b9eb7 Move filterSubrect off of Screen
It's only used in FlipScreen.
2021-12-22 20:39:11 -08:00
Misa
f7b4ac8322 Rename stretch mode to scaling mode internally
It's been long overdue that this variable be named properly. 2.2 added
integer scaling mode (thanks Ethan), 2.3 renamed it to scaling mode. Now
2.4 will properly call it what it is so people won't be confused by it.

The ScreenSettings struct member is renamed from stretch to scalingMode
along with the Screen class member being renamed, as well as the
toggleStretchMode function being renamed to toggleScalingMode as well.
Unfortunately, due to compatibility, we can't change the <stretch> XML
tag.
2021-12-22 19:54:59 -08:00
Misa
aa7b63fa5f Remove VVV_min/max in favor of SDL_min/max
VVV_min/max are functions that only operate on ints, and SDL_min/max are
macros that operate on any type but double-evaluate everything.

I know I more-or-less said earlier that SDL_min/max were dumb but I've
changed my mind and think it's better to use them, taking care to make
sure you don't double-evaluate, rather than trying to generate your own
litany of functions with either your own hand-rolled generation macros,
C++ templates, C11 generics, or GCC extensions (that last one you'd
technically use in a macro but it doesn't really matter), all of which
have more downsides than just not double-evaluating.

And the upside of not double-evaluating is that you're disencouraged
from having really complicated single-line min/max expressions and
encouraged to precompute the values beforehand anyway so the final
min/max is more readable. And furthermore you'll notice when you
yourself end up doing double-evaluations anyway. I removed a couple
instances of Graphics::len() being double-evaluated in this commit (as
well as cleaned up some other min/max-using code). Although the only
downside to those double-evaluations was unnecessary computation,
rather than checking the wrong result or having multiple side effects,
thankfully, it's still good to minimize double-evaluations where
possible.
2021-12-22 16:43:31 -08:00
Misa
f7454baffa Hide level path by default
You will now need to go through another confirm menu in order to print
your level path. The confirm menu warns you may leak sensitive
information if you are streaming.

Screenshots:
https://i.imgur.com/0Dc9jsZ.png
https://i.imgur.com/UhDgXqj.png
https://i.imgur.com/Z0ftQnH.png

Fixes #853.
2021-12-22 00:58:27 -08:00
Misa
8ba1325d0f Fix regression with wall stuck flipping behavior exactly reversed
The reason why the wall stuck flipping behavior happened in the first
place was because the code went like this:

    if (jumppressed)
    {
        if (onground && gravitycontrol == 0)
        {
            gravitycontrol = 1;
        }
        if (onroof && gravitycontrol == 1)
        {
            gravitycontrol = 0;
        }
    }

Basically, if you were both on ground and on a roof (i.e. stuck in a
wall), you would flip, but then due to code order and the fact that the
statement is not connected to the previous one, you would immediately
unflip afterwards. But if you were already flipped then the only path
that can be taken is to unflip you, since it's the statement that
appears last.

52fceb3f69 replaces the onground/onroof
conditionals with any_onground/any_onroof, so any player entity would
allow you to flip. But otherwise the code is the same. So is that the
problem?

No; tracing it through with GDB reveals that when you flip,
gravitycontrol is being set to 1, but never being set to 0. And it turns
out that's because any_onroof is not getting set. And that happens
because of another thing that 52fceb3f69
did - which was to set any_onground/any_onroof to true if indeed any
player entity was on ground or on a roof.

Unfortunately, the way Leo did it was to make the two statements
mutually exclusive - an 'if'-'else if' instead of two separate
statements. So a single entity could not mark both any_onground and
any_onroof as true (and the majority of the time, you will be a single
entity).

Thus, the solution is to just drop that 'else'.

Fixes #855.
2021-12-22 00:25:19 -08:00
Misa
caebde9e33 Fix warp sprites of big sprites sometimes not being drawn
I noticed when going frame-by-frame in Vertigo that sometimes the
wrapping enemies at the top sometimes just "popped" in frame. This is
because the sprite warp code only draws the warping sprite of sprites at
the bottom of the screen if they're below y=210. However, the warp point
starts at y=232, and warp sprites can be at most 32x32, which is exactly
the case with the Vertigo sprites, which are exactly 32x32. So the warp
code should start warping sprites if they're below y=200 (232 - 32)
instead.

Horizontal warping also has this problem; it warps at x=320 and
starts drawing warp sprites at x=300, even though it should start
drawing at x=288 (320 - 32). I've gone ahead and fixed that as well.
2021-12-20 20:18:24 -08:00
Misa
44ebb19d77 Outline "NO SIGNAL"
This is just in case the background gets changed by a custom level or
something to be something that would otherwise result in bad contrast.
Also if it needs to go outside the box for some reason. And I just like
the look of the outline.
2021-12-20 20:07:38 -08:00
Misa
9cddae8cc3 Outline trophy text
Whew, look at all those copy-pasted print statements!

Doing this because of the in-game timer feature. The text would
otherwise clash harshly with the timer otherwise. Even with the outline
it still clashes, but at least there's an outline so it's not as harsh.
2021-12-20 20:02:07 -08:00
Misa
1d6a808cbd Add centiseconds to timer overlays
This adds centiseconds to the in-game timer, as well as the time trial
timer.

This is to aid speedrun moderators in determining when exactly a run was
completed, which they can't easily do if the timer only has a precision
up to a second.
2021-12-20 19:26:01 -08:00
Misa
51fac68d3a Fix in-game timer going away after playing Super Gravitron
The problem was that it also needed to check that game.swnmode was true,
in addition to game.swngame being 1, to actually check that the Super
Gravitron was being played.
2021-12-20 17:44:34 -08:00
Misa
b7b9caacfc Remove unused game-gamestates
These were `CLICKTOSTART` and `FOCUSMODE`.
2021-12-18 00:01:32 -08:00