The Setting class was used for both numeric values and booleans, and
other parts of the code had hacks to make it work with booleans.
By splitting Setting into NumericSetting and BooleanSetting, it is
clear which settings are numeric, and which are boolean, so there is
no need to guess by checking the default values or anything like that.
Also, booleans are stored as booleans in config files, instead of 1.0.
Removes the requirement for stack allocated InputConfigDialogs to call Destroy. This shouldn't be necessary for wxDialog derivatives.
This also fixes a leak that would occur every time an InputConfigDialog is opened and closed. wxWindow subclasses (this includes wxDialog) only destroy child windows and sizers (including things in the sizers). So every wxTimer allocation would have resulted in a leak.
Added the option to handle whether the user wants to iterate through the
assignment of button mappings or assign them one at a time.
fixed formatting issues and code style.
I excluded this option from the config file. This stopped the check box value and the boolean from becoming offset. Since the option should always start as false.
This still causes an issue with the Wiimote input, since the class variable that keeps the state will be wiped, but the check box value will stay the same after closing/reopening without closing the entire Wiimote configuration. I am looking for a way to resolve this.
I also reduced wait time to 2.5 seconds vs. the 5 seconds previously. Seemed to be a little long.
These changes apparently did not go through.
This should fix the Wiimote issue.
Allows user to map all inputs seamlessly without having to
click on each button.
Also increased button timeout to 5 seconds from 1.5 due to pita.
Motion controls are not included since they will be special cases.
It substantially complicates the code and doesn't really provide any
functionality. According to the forums, the Android app is out of date
and has been broken for quite a while.
If we want to add this back, I'd write an app that speaks a more native
Wiimote protocol, and we can hook that up to the backend quite easily.
It could even be over our NetPlay protocol!