-Line count: 583.
TODO: The one I really didn't want to deal with...Gameboy. Why did you have to make this a NESControllerTemplate instead of a GameboyControllerTemplate[]?
--As it'd be obnoxious to make CONTROLS a string, object dictionary and have casts all over the place, I just made a TI83Controls string array to match CONTROLS["TI-83"].
--Positioned the fields as well as I could.
--The config for ( and ) were switched. Fixed. Yet another example of redundant code failing! :)
-Line count: 741.
-Started merging TI-83 to Do:
--This is going to be difficult because the field names are not the same as the label names, meaning that I'm going to have to use a dictionary for TI-83, if not for all of the controls.
--I have to create a formula that calculates the proper row / column for a given field to be placed. Sounds like fun.
-Because I have been advised not to convert the objects to dictionaries, and because using the equivalent of typedef seems confusing if it isn't outright impossible, I had to implement switch statements to handle certain aspects on a platform to platform basis.
-These will end up being much bigger than I would have hoped, but the entire file will be much, much smaller.
TODO: Implement all of the other platforms using these functions.
Note: It seems that the Enabled checkbox doesn't do anything other than persist its state. I checked the latest release, and the same issue was there, so I didn't break it!
--Created CONTROLS constant which contains all of the controls in one dictionary.
--Shrunk DoNES significantly.
TODO:
-Shrink UpdateNES.
-Generalize both functions and apply to NES.
-Have all of the platform specific functions utilize these generalized functions.
-Combine all of the platforms.
while true do
joypad.set("Up", true)
local buttons = joypad.get()
local result = {}
for index, value in pairs(buttons) do
table.insert(result, index .. ": " .. tostring(value))
end
gui.text(0, 36, table.concat(result, "\n"))
emu.frameadvance()
end
For some bizarre reason, after a while, the ordering of the buttons goes from stable to chaotic, making it impossible to read the buttons pressed. adelikat says not to worry about this because order is meaningless in Lua. Still, this is very curious...
TODO: Set using a ClickyVirtualPadController and Global.StickyXORAdapter.SetSticky(Controller + " Up", false)...whatever that means.