Ideally Common.h wouldn't be a header in the Common library, and instead be renamed to something else, like PlatformCompatibility.h or something, but even then, there's still some things in the header that don't really fall under that label
This moves the version strings out to their own version header that doesn't dump a bunch of other unrelated things into scope, like what Common.h was doing.
This also places them into the Common namespace, as opposed to letting them sit in the global namespace.
Same as the previous commit, except I'm copying strings
in the other direction because the DolphinWX variants
of these strings could use some improvement.
Only remaining issue is that clicking on the titlebar of the window, to give it focus, is already interpreted as input. But clicking on the window in the task bar, or using alt tab works to get back, without causing an input event.
Since these button names are printed on all real controllers,
we should show them in the same way as they are printed on
the controllers, regardless of the user's language. It seems
like this was intended all along (except for "Start"), but the
_ markers in TASInputDlg.cpp (accidentally?) led to the button
names in the controller configs also becoming translatable.
I'm making exceptions for "L" and "R" because translators
may want to mark them in some way (for instance "L-Digital")
to clarify the difference from "L-Analog" and "R-Analog".
I'm also making an exception for START/PAUSE because it's
referred to as スタート in Japanese games.
I'm changing "Home" and "Start" to uppercase for consistency
with how Nintendo refers to those buttons, and because someone
who isn't familiar with the Latin script might not know the
connection between the lowercase and uppercase letters (most
users likely do know the connection, but we shouldn't assume it),
and because leaving "Start" as "Start" makes it "collide" with
unrelated strings, such as the string for the button that starts
a netplay session.
To rename "Start" and "Home" without breaking INI
compatibility, I added a ui_name variable like in f5c82ad.
It only marks a string for translation. It doesn't actually do anything
at runtime, so the string will always be displayed in English. Even if
we would've had a way to make the translation work, we shouldn't
translate this, because OSD doesn't support non-ASCII characters.
Some strings were marked with _trans in some places but not
others. This commit adds extra _trans markers so that the
usage of _trans is consistent.
This shouldn't have any effect on which strings actually get
translated. (Note that _trans doesn't do anything at runtime.)
I also added a few new i18n comments.
This is only ever queried and not set outside of the Core.cpp, so this
should just be hidden internally and just have a function exposed that
allows querying it.
This clashes with X11's preprocessor define named Success (because using
non-prefixed lowercase identifiers in C was apparently a fantastic idea
at some point), causing compilation errors.
Places all of the SI code under the SerialInterface namespace instead of
only the main source file. This keeps all SI code under a common name,
as well as out of the global namespace
Gets some constants out of the ControllerEmu namespace, and modifies
ControlGroup so that it uses the enum type itself to represent the
underlying type, rather than a u32 value.
4bd5674 changed "Wiimote" to "Wii Remote" in the GUI
(intentionally) but also did the same change for two INI
keys (seemingly unintentional, breaks backwards compatibility,
and is inconsistent with the INI's filename). This commit
reverts the INI keys but not the GUI strings.
This commit uses the same approach as cbd539e used for GameCube
sticks (but I made sure to avoid the bug that 56531a0 fixed).
ControllerEmu::Control instances have a unique_ptr<ControlReference>
member, which is passed either an InputReference or OutputReference.
Without this virtual destructor, deleting a derived class through a
pointer to the base class is undefined behavior.
ControllerEmu, the class, is essentially acting like a namespace for
ControlGroup. This makes it impossible to forward declare any of the
internals. It also globs a bunch of classes together which is kind of a
pain to manage.
This splits ControlGroup and the classes it contains into their own source
files and situates them all within a namespace, which gets them out of
global scope.
Since this allows forward declarations for the once-internal classes, it
now requires significantly less files to be rebuilt if anything is changed
in the ControllerEmu portion of code.
It does not split out the settings classes yet, however, as it
would be preferable to make a settings base class that all settings derive
from, but this would be a functional change -- this commit only intends to
move around existing code. Extracting the settings class will be done in
another commit.
The three parameter AnalogStick constructor takes an internal name, a
display name, and a default radius argument. The delegated constructor is
the one that calls the ControlGroup constructor, setting the group type,
so passing the group type here is a logic bug.
The only reason this appeared to work despite this bug is because
GROUP_TYPE_STICK has a value of 1, and the default radius value used for
attachment sticks is 1.0.
Better separation of concerns. Relegates `ControllerInterface` to
enumerating input controls, and the new `ControlReference` deals with
combining inputs and configuration expression parsing.
ControllerEmu is a massive class with a lot of nested public classes.
The only reason these are nested is because the outer class acts as a
namespace. There's no reason to keep these classes nested just for that.
Keeping these classes nested makes it impossible to forward declare them, which leads to quite a few includes in other headers, making compilation take
longer.
This moves the source files to their own directory so classes can be
separated as necessary to their own source files, and be namespaced under the
ControllerEmu namespace.
libusb on Windows is limited to only a single context. Trying to open
more than one can cause device enumerations to fail randomly.
libusb is thread-safe and we don't use the manual polling support (with
`poll()`) so this should be safe.
GetName() creates a new evdev device which calls tons of ioctls. But the
main culprit is close() which for input devices appears to be a slow
path in the kernel.
This commit reduces PopulateDevices() by 50% on my laptop, but ~730 ms
is still ridiculously slow for something that isn't needed right away.
The SDL backend crashes when you close a joystick after SDL_Quit has
been called. Some backends don't need to be shutdown and
re-initialized everytime, we can just ask to enumerate devices again.