This results in the list of available antialiasing modes being updated; before, it would only show the modes available for the adapter that was selected when the graphics window was opened (or the backend was last changed).
The list of available modes is updated by `GraphicsWindow::OnBackendChanged`'s call to `VideoBackendBase::PopulateBackendInfoFromUI`, and then `EnhancementsWidget::LoadSettings` updates the UI. Both of these are connected to the `GraphicsWindow::BackendChanged` signal.
SPDX standardizes how source code conveys its copyright and licensing
information. See https://spdx.github.io/spdx-spec/1-rationale/ . SPDX
tags are adopted in many large projects, including things like the Linux
kernel.
The name was confusing as changing it at runtime would not change the window to fullscreen, as it effectively only affects the start of the emulation.
Also blocked the ability to change it when the emulation is running, to be more inline with other similar settings, like "Render to main Window".
Replace it with a function-local static that is initialized on first
use. This gets rid of a global variable and removes the need for
manual initialization in UICommon.
This commit also replaces the weird find_if that looks for a non-null
unique_ptr with a simple "is vector empty" check considering that
none of the pointers can be null by construction.
These were marked as translatable in DolphinWX but not DolphinQt,
yet both DolphinWX and DolphinQt tried to fetch translations for them.
This meant that translations worked in both DolphinWX and DolphinQt
back when DolphinWX existed, but that translations stopped working
in DolphinQt once DolphinWX was removed (because the removal of
DolphinWX triggered the removal of the strings from the .po files).
QStringLiterals generate a buffer so that during runtime there's very
little cost to constructing a QString. However, this also means that
duplicated strings cannot be optimized out into a single entry that gets
referenced everywhere, taking up space in the binary.
Rather than use QStringLiteral(""), we can just use QString{} (the
default constructor) to signify the empty string. This gets rid of an
unnecessary string buffer from being created, saving a tiny bit of
space.
While we're at it, we can just use the character overloads of particular
functions when they're available instead of using a QString overload.
The characters in this case are Latin-1 to begin with, so we can just
specify the characters as QLatin1Char instances to use those overloads.
These will automatically convert to QChar if needed, so this is safe.