Makes the enum strongly typed. A function for retrieving the string
representation of the enum is also added, which allows hiding the array
that contains all of the strings from view (i.e. we operate on the API,
not the exposed internals). This also allows us to bounds check any
querying for the strings.
Export and ExportAll now open a directory picker (that defaults to the
previous default directory, i.e. the Dolphin user dir).
Also removes the need to return the path in the export functions since
the user knows which path they chose.
This moves the result dialogs to DolphinQt2, since WiiSave should not
really be responsible for interacting with the user as a simple
Wii save importing/exporting class.
This also fixes Wii save import/export showing result dialogs twice,
once from WiiSave, and another time from DolphinQt2.
Move the import/export operation into separate functions, as it doesn't
really make sense for the constructor to do *everything*, including
printing success/failure message boxes.
The existing constructor was split into two: one that takes a path,
and another taking a title ID. This makes it more obvious what is
actually done when a path/TID is passed and also clarifies what
parameters should be passed. (No more magic 0 or "" value.)
It only needs to be updated when we changes the symbols, not every time the code widget updates and it does take a while to update them so this fixes some delay when updating the code window.
Putting the columns to resizeToContents causes way too much resizes per updates which can cause severe lags and even crashes. This only does one resize at the end of the columns.
One, which was also possible in Wx is to add an mbp after the core stopped which shouldn't be possible as it needs to add the memcheck on the core thread which wouldn't be running. The other fix is Qt specific where it doesn't clear the breakpoints on stop.
The items were editable while you cannot edit the breakpoints at the moment and the last breakpoint deleted would not cause the row count to change to 0.
This allows avoiding two copies of the executable data being created in
the following scenario (using pseudocode):
some_function()
{
std::vector<u8> data = ...;
DolReader reader{data};
...
}
In this scenario, if we only use the data for passing it to DolReader,
then we have to perform a copy, as the constructor takes the std::vector
as a constant reference -- you cannot move from a constant reference,
and so we copy data into the DolReader, and perform another copy in the
constructor itself when assigning the data to the m_bytes member
variable. However, we can do better.
Now, the following is allowable as well:
some_function()
{
std::vector<u8> data = ...;
DolReader reader{std::move(data)};
...
}
and now we perform no copy at any point in the reader's construction, as
we just std::move the data all the way through to m_bytes.
In the case where we *do* want to keep the executable data around after
constructing the reader, then we can just pass the vector without
std::move-ing it, and we only perform a copy once (as we'll std::move
said copy into m_bytes). Therefore, we get a more flexible interface
resource-wise out of it.