Add a function that safely returns whether a character is printable
i.e. whether 0x20 <= c <= 0x7e is true.
This is done in several places in our codebase and it's easy to run
into undefined behaviour if the C version defined in <cctype>
is used instead of this one, since its behaviour is undefined
if the character is not representable as an unsigned char.
This fixes MemoryViewWidget.
Begins the transition to using fmt for string formatting where
applicable. Given fmt supports formatting std::string instances out of
the box, we can remove now-unnecessary calls to .c_str() and .data().
Note that this change does not touch the actual logging subsystem aside
from converting the final StringFromFormat call in the process over to
fmt::format. Given our logging system is heavily used throughout the
entire codebase, and converting that over will be quite a large change
by itself, this will be tackled near the end of the conversion process.
No code is relying on this unexplained null byte check, since
the only code that calls UTF16ToUTF8 on non-Windows systems
is UTF16BEToUTF8, which explicitly strips null bytes.
The earlier code always tried to use TitleDatabase for getting
title names, but that didn't work for disc-based games, because
there was no way to get the maker ID.
Prevents path traversal without needing an absolute path
function, and also improves accuracy (character sequences
like ../ appear to have no special meaning in IOS).
This removes the creation and usage of /sys/replace,
because the new escapes are too complicated to all
be representable in its format and because no other
NAND handling software seems to use /sys/replace.
The Windows implementations of CharArrayFromFormatV() and
StringFromFormat() use the "C"/".1252" locale instead of the user
locale (using _vsnprintf_l). On non-Windows, the user locale was used.
This leads to bugs on non-Windows: the Overclock parameter was
serialised with the user locale ("0,279322" in some locale) and was
interpreted back as "0" (because the C locale is used for parsing the
string).
Make non-Windows CharArrayFromFormatV() and StringFromFormat()
consistent with their Windows counterpart.
The locale code is not enables for Android:: uselocale is only
available since API 21 and API 21 only supports C and C.UTF-8.