The names attached to the BadgeStatus object are obsolete and unneeded and are removed from everything that uses them. All BadgeStatus references are updated to just Badge.
Achievement badges/icons are refactored into the type CustomTextureData::ArraySlice::Level as that is the data type images loaded from the filesystem will be. This includes everything that uses the badges in the Qt UI and OnScreenDisplay, and similarly removes the OSD::Icon type because Level already contains that information.
Was informed by the RetroAchievements team that this isn't an option in most emulators, and as the next commits will be to enable default icons, there will always be something to display.
On Windows:
wsi.render_window being set will set/save the initial geometry, which will cause sizing bugs until it's set again by the user resizing/repositioning.
If achievements were disabled but a player token is in settings, prior to this change the Achievement Manager dialog would show a box with no player name and score zero, which is unnecessary.
Bugfix for hardcore-disabled items being disabled when hardcore was true but achievement integration was false, which should mean hardcore is effectively disabled. Now everything checks the IsHardcoreModeActive method in AchievementManager which processes the setting AND the game state to determine if hardcore mode is actually active.
Spectator Mode is a new mode added by rc_client that allows for achievement and leaderboard functionality, but does not submit this data to the site, partially allowing for offline achievements. It effectively replaces the former settings for disabling achievements, leaderboards, and RP, which are now always active internally as long as the client is active.
The client can take care of itself and handle its own hardcore status when it toggles, so I can tell the settings widget to contact the manager directly to set it.
Also, gradually reorganizing the settings dialog over the next handful of commits.
The client can handle media changes natively so disabling can take place internally. This code uses the same external calls to load data, but will call either BeginLoad or BeginChangeMedia based on whether any media is already loaded.
Due to the client's handling of media changes (it simply disables hardcore if an unknown media is detected) the existing functionality for "disabling" the achievements is no longer necessary and can be deleted.
Two portions of this need updating.
Anything related to points and unlock counts and scoring uses game_summary now instead of the TallyScore method. Unfortunately this comes with the drawback that I cannot easily at this time access the number of points/unlocks from the other hardcore mode, so things like the second progress bar have been deleted.
Rich presence, which no longer needs to be stored, but can be calculated at request. As the AchievementHeader can now update just the Rich Presence, DoFrame can now simply call a header update with .rp=true and the current Rich Presence will be calculated immediately.
As the two items above are the last remaining things to use a number of the components in AchievementManager, this also deletes: Request V1 (V2 is renamed accordingly), ResponseType, PointSpread, TallyScore, UnlockStatus, and the RP generation and ping methods.
UpdateData in AchievementsWindow now only updates the components being requested, massively improving the window's performance. The parameter is UpdatedItems in AchievementManager, which tracks which portions of the system have been updated for every update callback.
Similarly to the Progress widget (though without the separate object for each box, because each Leaderboard unit is just three text fields stacked vertically), AchievementLeaderboardWidget.UpdateData will now accept three options: destroy all and rebuild, update all, or update a set of rows.
As part of this, AchievementManager::GetLeaderboardsInfo has been refactored to GetLeaderboardInfo to return a single leaderboard for the ID passed in.
AchievementProgressWidget maintains in memory a map of AchievementBox pointers so that UpdateData can operate on them individually. UpdateData is overhauled for three options: UpdateData(true) will destroy the entire list and re-create it from scratch as before, to be used if the game or player changes/closes/logs out. UpdateData(false) will loop through the map and call UpdateData on every achievement box, to be used for certain settings changes such as enabling badges or disabling hardcore mode. UpdateData(set<IDs>) will call UpdateData on only the IDs in the set, to be used when achievements are unlocked.
AchievementBox is an extension of QGroupBox that contains the data for a single achievement, initialized with the achievement data and able to reference AchievementManager to update itself.
This change was primarily made to refactor the badge fetching to use the client instead of the runtime, but in the process I also refactored the code to cut down on complexity and duplication. Now the FetchBadge method is passed a function that generates the badge name; this is used to ensure that once the badge is loaded that it is still the desired badge to avoid race conditions.
HashGame has become LoadGame, similar structure with the file loaders but using the client instead. LoadGameCallback has been created to handle the results. The old LoadGameSync has been deleted as have
several hash and load methods that it called.
Deletes AchievementManager::Login, renames LoginAsync to Login, and replaces the one synchronous call in the AchievementSettingsWidget with the async call. There is a minor usability regression in that the UI currently does not notify the user when a login has failed; this will be addressed in a later change (possibly in a different PR).
On Windows 11, when playing windowed in a separate window/widget from the main emulator window, we don't want the window to have rounded corners, as it prevents the corner pixels from being visible
Move CheatManager's child widgets into scroll areas to allow making the
window smaller than the default.
In CheatSearchWidget, enable word wrapping for the label describing the
address space and search type to help it fit better inside a narrower
window.
There were three distinct mechanisms for signaling symbol changes in DolphinQt: `Host::NotifyMapLoaded`, `MenuBar::NotifySymbolsUpdated`, and `CodeViewWidget::SymbolsChanged`. The behavior of these signals has been consolidated into the new `Host::PPCSymbolsUpdated` signal, which can be emitted from anywhere in DolphinQt to properly update symbols everywhere in DolphinQt.
With this, I intend to make it clearer that Auto, Force 4:3, Force 16:9
and Custom are really the same thing, just with the aspect ratio of the
simulated TV being selected in a different way. I also extended the
introduction in a way I feel will clarify things but which you are
welcome to bikeshed :)
I was thinking of this during the review of 41b19e262f, but wanted to
put it in a separate PR as to avoid blocking it on bikeshedding.
I'm a bit unsure what to do about the word "analog" in "analog TV". I
felt that repeating it for each of these options would be too
repetitive. I suppose there's a reason why we used the word originally,
but digital TVs do give you basically the same aspect ratio for GC/Wii
games as analog TVs. (Of course, whether it's 4:3-like or 16:9-like
depends on what aspect ratio you set in the TV's settings, but that's
the case for widescreen CRTs too.)