This changes the Host Input Authority and Golf Mode checkboxes into a
set of radio buttons, consisting of Fair Input Delay, Host Input
Authority, and Golf Mode. This represents the 3 network modes we have.
Although Golf Mode is just an extension of Host Input Authority, it's
more logical to the user to present it as a separate option, rather
than enabling the Golf Mode checkbox only when Host Input Authority is
enabled. This also eliminates the need to first enable Host Input
Authority before Golf Mode can be enabled.
This also adds tooltips to provide brief descriptions of the options,
as well as reintroducing tooltips that were previously removed.
We can use u32 instead of unsigned int to shorten up these definitions
and make them much nicer to read.
While we're at it, change the size array to house u32 elements
to match the return value of the function.
We can use u32 instead of unsigned int to shorten up these definitions
and make them much nicer to read.
While we're at it, change the size array to house u32 elements to match
the return value of the function.
This is only ever used to retrieve a raw view of the given UID data
structure, however it's already valid C++ to retrieve a char/unsigned
char view of an object for bytewise inspection.
u8 maps to unsigned char on all platforms we support, so we can just do
this directly with a reinterpret cast, simplifying the overall
interface.
Zero-initialization zeroes out all members and padding bits, so this is
safe to do. While we're at it, also add static assertions that enforce
the necessary requirements of a UID type explicitly within the ShaderUid
class.
This way, we can remove several memset calls around the shader
generation code that makes sure the underlying UID data is zeroed out.
Now our ShaderUid class enforces this for us, so we don't need to care about
it at the usage sites.
Now that we utilize C++17, we can simply return an optional containing
the code instead of using an out variable and a boolean result,
essentially combining them into one.
This provides a much more straightforward interface.
Greatly simplifies the overall interface when it comes to compiling
shaders. Also allows getting rid of a std::string overload of the same
name. Now std::string and const char* both go through the same function.
Makes VertexLoader_Normal completely stateless, eliminating the need for
an Init() function, and by extension, also gets rid of the need for the
FifoAnalyzer to have an Init() function.
Many of the arrays defined within this file weren't declared as
immutable, which can inhibit the strings being put into the read-only
segment. We can declare them constexpr to make them immutable.
While we're at it, we can use std::array, to allow bounds conditional
bounds checking with standard libraries. The declarations can also be
shortened in the future when all platform toolchain versions we use
support std::array deduction guides. Currently macOS and FreeBSD
builders fail on them.
The vector is only ever queryied and it's contents aren't modified, so
there's no reason to take the vector by value. We can take a constant
reference to it to avoid unnecessary allocating.
In these cases, the given string is only ever compared against other
string, so std::string can be turned into a std::string_view to allow
non-allocating inputs.