This moves all the byte swapping utilities into a header named Swap.h.
A dedicated header is much more preferable here due to the size of the
code itself. In general usage throughout the codebase, CommonFuncs.h was
generally only included for these functions anyway. These being in their
own header avoids dumping the lesser used utilities into scope. As well
as providing a localized area for more utilities related to byte
swapping in the future (should they be needed). This also makes it nicer
to identify which files depend on the byte swapping utilities in
particular.
Since this is a completely new header, moving the code uncovered a few
indirect includes, as well as making some other inclusions unnecessary.
On startup, wxWidgets pops up an assertion error:
> ./src/osx/menu_osx.cpp(648): assert ""IsAttached()"" failed in
> Refresh(): can't refresh unatteched menubar
Starting in #4916, upon startup wxWidgets pops up an assertion error:
> ./src/common/cmdline.cpp(527): assert ""Assert failure"" failed in
> FindOptionByAnyName(): Unknown option verbose
Fix this by overriding wxApp::OnCmdLineParsed to disable the default
handling (since we also disable the default options in
DolphinApp::OnInitCmdLine).
We already have a TMDReader, so let's actually use it.
And move ESFormats to IOS::ES, since it's definitely part of IOS.
This adds a DiscIO dependency on Core which will be fixed in a
follow-up PR.
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.
Instead, the JitInterface namespace functions should be used instead. This
gets rid of all usages of the JIT global from the wxWidgets UI code.
The null check isn't needed as the JIT core would already need to be
initialized in order to be within a paused state. The null check is just a
remnant from 2011 that existed before the check for a paused state was
added.
What we actually care about is whether it's a GCZ file,
not whether it's compressed. (This commit doesn't change
the behavior, since the beginning of CompressSelection
discards items that aren't BlobType::GCZ or BlobType::PLAIN.)
- There's no clear definition of what it means for a GC/Wii game
to be compressed. GC games in GCZ are obviously compressed,
but what about formats like WBFS and CISO that just discard data?
- Hardcoded colors might have bad contrast with the used theme.
- It feels Windows XP to me.
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).
We (the Microsoft C++ team) use the dolphin project as part of our "Real world code" tests.
I noticed a few issues in windows specific code when building dolphin with the MSVC compiler
in its conformance mode (/permissive-). For more information on /permissive- see our blog
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/vcblog/2016/11/16/permissive-switch/.
These changes are to address 3 different types of issues:
1) Use of qualified names in member declarations
struct A {
void A::f() { } // error C4596: illegal qualified name in member declaration
// remove redundant 'A::' to fix
};
2) Binding a non-const reference to a temporary
struct S{};
// If arg is in 'in' parameter, then it should be made const.
void func(S& arg){}
int main() {
//error C2664: 'void func(S &)': cannot convert argument 1 from 'S' to 'S &'
//note: A non-const reference may only be bound to an lvalue
func( S() );
//Work around this by creating a local, and using it to call the function
S s;
func( s );
}
3) Add missing #include <intrin.h>
Because of the workaround you are using in the code you will need to include
this. This is because of changes in the libraries and not /permissive-
wxWidgets headers don't play well with some of the macros defined in
Windows headers and perform their own magic to fix things, as long as
they're included entirely either before or after any Windows headers.
This file can cause a conflict in other DolphinWX files because NetPlay
headers directly include ENet headers, which leak Windows header macros.
To fix this, explicitly tell wxWidgets here that it needs to re-clean
macros.