Since files from Data/Sys are collected and added to a built macOS .app
bundle using GLOB, any new files won't get picked up until the next time
CMake is run. Tell CMake it should re-run itself every time the directory
is touched.
Instead of using install() commands, we use the MACOSX_PACKAGE_LOCATION
property, which will allow the files to be identified and updated individually
by the build system without having to remove the entire folder and copy it
each time.
deploy-mac.py is now idempotent and should be working properly, so we'll
call it all the time from now on.
On macOS, we want them copied in the bundle directly, otherwise we will
install them later in the system folder.
Obviously not working for Windows, but that's not any different from before!
This is more logical as the mic is plugged into an EXI slot so it should be configured via the GameCube config dialog. This also allows to pass the right port number for the new dialog.
Makes the information panel self-contained.
This was done first, as opposed to isolating the GameConfig panel--the
first panel in the group--as this panel had code all over the place in
ISOProperties, so I figured it'd be best to fix this one up first.
Hotkeys
Make a new class that inherits from InputConfigDialog with a specialised constructor. The changes are mainly the top portion and it now uses tabs to categorise the hotkeys.
Redo the GCPad configuration dialog
The layout is similar, but it now allows flexibility to change it more easily.
Redo the GC Keyboard configuration dialog
Same layout.
Redo completely the Wiimote configuration dialog
Separated the controls into 2 tabs to make them less imposing overall.
Redo the Nunchuk configuration dialog
Similar layout, except for 2 control group sizers.
Redo the Classic controller configuration dialog
Same layout.
Redo the Guitar input configuration dialog
Stacked 2 sets of group together.
Redo the Turntable configuration dialog
More stacked groups and the window is much less wide.
Removed the unecessary forced tabbed layout, removed the layout part of the constructor and remade some method in preparation for tabbed styled input dialog such as the new hotkey configuration one. It breaks every inputconfigDialog, but this will get fixed in the next commits.
Also moved to a folder since there will be many more files created in the next commits so it gives better separation.
Add a context menu entry in main game list to host a netplay game
based on saved settings.
Original commit:
commit 91aaa958e6
Author: Aestek <thib.gilles@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Jul 24 14:51:37 2016 +0200
The Wii U Gamecube controller adapter setup has always been a bit weird. It tries to be as automatic as possible to make the user experience as easy
as possible.
The problem with this approach is that it brings a large disconnect in the user experience because you have the Gamecube controller setup with regular
gamepads and then for some reason below that you have a "direct connect" option which will cause the Gamecube Adapter to overwrite the regular inputs
if something was connected.
While this works and allows the user to only click one checkbox to get the device working, it breaks the user's experience because they don't really
know what "direct connect" means and won't look it up to figure out what it is. Just expecting the device to work (At least one occurence of this in
the IRC channel in the last week).
This way around also had the terrible nature of making the code more filthy than it needed to be. The GCAdapter namespace was parasitic and hooked in
to the regular GC Controller SI class to overwrite the data that it was getting from the default configuration.
Now instead we have a specific SIDevice class for the Wii U Gamecube adapter. This class is fairly simple and is a child of the regular SI Gamecube
Pad device and only reimplements what it needs to.
This also gives the ability to configure controllers individually, which allows the user to configure rumble individually per pad input.
Overall the code is cleaner, and it fits more in line with how the rest of Dolphin works.
Prior to this, ConfigMain.cpp was a large (52KB) cpp file that contained all of the UI setting code.
This breaks up the config code into subclasses of wxPanel, which are then just instantiated to add to the settings wxNoteBook. This keeps all the settings categories separated from one another and also cleans up the code in general.