With 12 uses of `JoinStrings` in the codebase vs 36 uses of `fmt::join`, fmtlib's range adapter for string concatenation with delimiters is clearly the preferred option.
Enable emulator hotkeys and controller input (when that option is
enabled) when a TAS Input window has focus, as if it was the render
window instead. This allows TASers to use frame advance and the like
without having to switch the focused window or disabling Hotkeys Require
Window Focus which also picks up keypresses while other apps are active.
Cursor updates are disabled when the TAS Input window has focus, as
otherwise the Wii IR widget (and anything else controlled by the mouse)
becomes unusable. The cursor continues to work normally when the render
window has focus.
For some reason Linux is surprisingly slow at closing file descriptors
of event devices. This commit improves GUI startup times on my computer
by about 1.5 seconds.
Because the last commit made us use separate folders for GCPad and
GCKey profiles, we should also use separate game INI keys for them.
Otherwise setting e.g. PadProfile1 in a game INI will make both GCPad
and GCKey try to load it, typically with one of them succeeding and the
other one showing a panic alert due to the profile not existing in its
folder.
Better do this breaking change for GCKeys in the same PR as the other
breaking change rather than later.
After reading the previous commit, you might think "hold on, what's the
difference between GetProfileName and GetProfileDirectoryName"? These
two are being used for the exact same thing - figuring out where
profiles are stored - yet they return different values for certain
controllers like GC keyboards! As far as I can tell, the existing code
has been broken for GC keyboards since they were introduced a decade
ago. The GUI (and more recently, also InputCycler) would write and read
profiles in one location, and our code for loading profiles specified in
a game INI file would read profiles in another location.
This commit gets rid of the set of values used by the game INI code in
favor of the other set. This does breaking existing setups where a
GCKey profile has been configured in a game INI, but I think the number
of working such setups is vanishingly small. The alternative would make
existing GCKey profiles go missing from the profile dropdown in the GUI,
which I think would be more disruptive. The alternative would also force
new GCKey profiles into the same directory as GCPad profiles.
This commit also fixes a regression from d6c0f8e749. The Android GUI was
using GetProfileName to figure out what key to use in the game INI,
which made it use incorrect game INI entries for GameCube controller
profiles but not Wii Remote profiles. Now the Android GUI uses
GetProfileKey for this, fixing the problem.
By having getters for this information, other code that needs access to
the same information can call the getters instead of duplicating the
information.
This specific issue was already addressed by https://github.com/dolphin-emu/dolphin/pull/11635
though I felt like there was something more we could do, and wasn't too happy with the
likelihood of devices update calls being skipped (due to `m_devices_population_mutex` being locked).
These aren't necessarily cheap to copy, since a control qualifier will
have around 3 std::strings inside of it, so passing by value can churn
allocations a little bit.
Fix -WSwitch warning about unhandled enum value SDL_NUM_LOG_PRIORITIES.
log_level is initialized to LNOTICE right before the switch statement so
this doesn't cause any behavior changes.
I've received a report from an Android user with a gamepad (a "BSP-D3")
where one physical trigger is controlling two analog axes at the same
time. This was causing RemoveSpuriousTriggerCombinations to delete both
axes, which is clearly not a desireable outcome.
With this change, now the axis with the greatest smoothness is kept,
or both in case they have the same smoothness.
A comment removed by this commit gives two reasons for listening to
slave devices, both of which no longer apply:
- "Only slaves emit raw motion events": perhaps this was true when the
comment was written, but now master devices provide raw motion events
along with the other raw events.
- "Selecting slave keyboards avoids dealing with key focus": we get raw
key events regardless of the focus.
Listening to both master and slave devices results in duplicate raw
events. For button and key events, that's a tiny waste of time setting
the update flag a second time, but for raw mouse events the raw motion
will be processed twice. That makes this commit a user-facing change.