std::function is allowed to heap allocate in order to store captured
variables, etc, so std::function isn't a trivial type. We can std::move
here in order to avoid potential reallocating.
While we're at it, make the definition's parameter name match the
declaration's parameter name for consistency.
If the parameter is const, then a move won't actually be able to occur,
making the std::move non-functional. We can remove the const qualifier
to remedy this.
This is a giant hack which was previously removed because it causes
broken rendering. However, it seems that some devices still do not
support logical operations (looking at you, Adreno/Mali). Therefore, for
a handful of cases where the hack actually makes things slightly better,
we can use it.
... but not without spamming the log with warnings. With my warning
message PR, we can inform the users before emulation starts anyway.
PARTITION_NONE technically has a runtime static constructor otherwise.
This allows compile-time instances of Partition to be created without
the use of a static constructor.
Introduced in a995e2f5ba
We need to be performing a bitwise AND on the flags and not a logical
AND, otherwise we could end up counting device objects that don't
support forced feedback.
Previously, the constructor of GameConfigEdit wasn't doing anything with
the passed in parent pointer. This is dangerous because it can result in
memory being leaked in certain scenarios. It can also affect layout
decisions made by the parent. Instead, pass it through to the base class.
Current usages of the class pass in nullptr as the parent, so this is a
safe change to make with regards to the class hierarchy.
While we're at it, we can std::move the passed in QString into the class
member, allowing calling code to move strings into the constructor,
avoiding copies.
Previously code assumed that if DX11.1 runtime is supported, logic ops will,
but Windows 7 SP1 with a Platform Update supports DX11.1 runtime without logic ops.
This created pretty jarring visual artifacts, which now should be gone OR replaced
with much less jarring errors.
Removes constructors and destructors that don't actually provide any
behavior (i.e. doesn't constain generated code related to non-trivial
members in a cpp file, etc).
Lessens the amount of code present.
This is already provided in the base class, which performs the same
exact behavior. Given the function in the base class isn't virtual, this
also essentially resolves an instance of shadowing.