There were three distinct mechanisms for signaling symbol changes in DolphinQt: `Host::NotifyMapLoaded`, `MenuBar::NotifySymbolsUpdated`, and `CodeViewWidget::SymbolsChanged`. The behavior of these signals has been consolidated into the new `Host::PPCSymbolsUpdated` signal, which can be emitted from anywhere in DolphinQt to properly update symbols everywhere in DolphinQt.
With this, I intend to make it clearer that Auto, Force 4:3, Force 16:9
and Custom are really the same thing, just with the aspect ratio of the
simulated TV being selected in a different way. I also extended the
introduction in a way I feel will clarify things but which you are
welcome to bikeshed :)
I was thinking of this during the review of 41b19e262f, but wanted to
put it in a separate PR as to avoid blocking it on bikeshedding.
I'm a bit unsure what to do about the word "analog" in "analog TV". I
felt that repeating it for each of these options would be too
repetitive. I suppose there's a reason why we used the word originally,
but digital TVs do give you basically the same aspect ratio for GC/Wii
games as analog TVs. (Of course, whether it's 4:3-like or 16:9-like
depends on what aspect ratio you set in the TV's settings, but that's
the case for widescreen CRTs too.)
This implements the GameCube modem adapter. This implementation is stable but not perfect; it drops frames if the receive FIFO length is exceeded. This is probably due to the unimplemented interrupt mentioned in the comments. If the tapserver end of the connection is aware of this limitation, it's easily circumvented by lowering the MTU of the link, but ideally this wouldn't be necessary.
This has been tested with a couple of different versions of Phantasy Star Online, including Episodes 1 & 2 Trial Edition. The Trial Edition is the only version of the game that supports the Modem Adapter and not the Broadband Adapter, which is what made this commit necessary in the first place.
This expands the tapserver BBA interface to be available on all platforms. tapserver itself is still macOS-only, but newserv (the PSO server) is not, and it can directly accept local and remote tapserver connections as well. This makes the tapserver interface potentially useful on all platforms.
Window icon was missing from QDialog lacking a parent.
Giving the QDialog a parent revealed I had failed to make it properly non-modal, necessitating further changes.
Settings save less often, now only upon destruction.
Construction of BranchWatchDialog is now deferred.
* Fix irregularly shaped corners
* Remove extra space for BalloonTips with no message or no title
* When the target tip location is not on a screen, put the tooltip on
the mouse's screen instead of the primary screen
* Fix description getting cut off when the title was too long
* Expose border width as a parameter
* Fix spacing and sizing issues with larger border widths
Most obviously, there is no longer a warning message to the player in the achievement window that achievements are disabled if a game is not currently running.
Adds a setting field under the hood to retain which folder the player last saved/loaded a state to/from, so that the dialog box to select a state to save/load reopens at that folder.
After reading the previous commit, you might think "hold on, what's the
difference between GetProfileName and GetProfileDirectoryName"? These
two are being used for the exact same thing - figuring out where
profiles are stored - yet they return different values for certain
controllers like GC keyboards! As far as I can tell, the existing code
has been broken for GC keyboards since they were introduced a decade
ago. The GUI (and more recently, also InputCycler) would write and read
profiles in one location, and our code for loading profiles specified in
a game INI file would read profiles in another location.
This commit gets rid of the set of values used by the game INI code in
favor of the other set. This does breaking existing setups where a
GCKey profile has been configured in a game INI, but I think the number
of working such setups is vanishingly small. The alternative would make
existing GCKey profiles go missing from the profile dropdown in the GUI,
which I think would be more disruptive. The alternative would also force
new GCKey profiles into the same directory as GCPad profiles.
This commit also fixes a regression from d6c0f8e749. The Android GUI was
using GetProfileName to figure out what key to use in the game INI,
which made it use incorrect game INI entries for GameCube controller
profiles but not Wii Remote profiles. Now the Android GUI uses
GetProfileKey for this, fixing the problem.
Core::RunAsCPUThread is obsoleted by CPUThreadGuard reference already passed into the function. The nonsense lambda in CheatSearchWidget is from changes in fdb7328c73.
This reverts the parts of commit c8c9928eb1 that made translatability
worse rather than better. Changing "Error in column %2" to "%1 in column
%2" not only means that the translators have to check the i18n comments
to know what word hides behind %1, but there's also the problem that
the translator might need to translate "Error" in this context
differently from the standalone string "Error". Having to copy-paste
some HTML tags may be annoying for translators, but it's a far less
serious problem.
This fixes an issue where the game specific graphics backend would be saved as the global setting after playing a game.
This also now displays the currently running graphics backend when looking in the graphics configuration window.
Given how many member functions make use of the system instance,
it's likely just better to pass the system instance in on construction.
Makes the interface a little less noisy to use.
Previously we were always taking the buffer by value, even if it wasn't
being stored anywhere and only read from.
We can use a std::span for the same thing.
The Disabled state sits between Game Closed and completely Shutdown - stronger than the former, as it refuses to let a game be opened again until AchievementManager is restored (which only happens upon a fresh core boot) but it isn't completely shut down and will still allow the player to be logged in and access the achievement settings and their (global) achievement header.
This adds the actual switch to turn on Hardcore Mode to the settings tab of the Achievements dialog. It is accompanied by a large tooltip warning explaining what it does and when it can be enabled.
The switch is only enabled to be turned on when no game is running, so that games are started in hardcore mode and can only be loaded via the console's memory card, as in the original hardware. Hardcore may be turned off while a game is running, but cannot be turned back on until the game is disabled.
The toggle trigger for hardcore mode also automatically disables the settings that are not allowed during hardcore mode.
Finally, the original flag in AchievementSettingsWidget to set whether things are enabled in hardcore mode (primarily Leaderboards) is replaced with the actual Hardcore Mode setting.
Play Input Recording would potentially unlock achievements without any player input and needs to be disabled. If a recording is already playing, hardcore mode cannot be enabled.
The player getting a better view of their surroundings than the game would normally allow could possibly give the player an advantage over the original hardware, so Freelook is disabled in hardcore mode. To do this, I disable the config flag for Freelook when it is accessed, to make sure that it is disabled whether it was enabled before or after hardcore mode was enabled.
Memory patches would be an easy way to manipulate the memory needed to calculate achievement logic, so they must be disabled. Riivolution patches that do not affect memory are allowed, as they will be hashed with the game file.
Debug Mode gives players direct read and write access to memory, which could be used to completely manipulate RetroAchievements logic and therefore is not allowed in hardcore mode.
Frame advancing is easily exploitable for slowing down a game and artificially improving reaction times and is not allowed in RetroAchievements hardcore mode.
While saving states is allowed (especially for the purpose of debugging), RetroAchievements does not allow loading saved states when hardcore mode is on.
This widget will be used in several places to notify the player that a feature has been disabled because hardcore mode is on. It includes a button to open the Achievement Settings so that Hardcore Mode may be turned off. Also included is the framework required to open AchievementsWindow specifically on the Settings tab.
Some state changes are meant to be near instantanoues, before switching to something else. By reporting ithe instant switch, the UI will flicker between states (pause/play button) and the debugger will unnecessarily update. Skipping the callback avoids these issues.
This makes it so that if you just want to reload the current style (eg. on program start, or in response to a system event), you don't need to know the name of the currently selected user style. It's also more consistent with the way the 'userstyle/enabled' flag works.
At the end of each frame automatically update the Current Value for
visible table rows in the selected and visible CheatSearchWidget (if
any). Also update all Current Values in all CheatSearchWidgets when the
State changes to Paused.
Only updating visible table rows serves to minimize the performance cost
of this feature. If the user scrolls to an un-updated cell it will
promptly be updated by either the next VIEndFieldEvent or the State
transitioning to Paused.
The table only needs to be recreated when the displayed addresses might
change. If we're just refreshing the current values then update those
table cells and leave the rest of the table alone.
A new tab is added to the Achievements dialog to chart out the leaderboards in a table. Each row of the table contains the leaderboard information and up to four relevant entries, varying based on how many entries are in the leaderboard, whether or not the player has a submitted score, and where in the leaderboard the player's score is.
The achievement badges will now have a blue or gold border to identify whether they have been unlocked in softcore or hardcore mode. Similarly, the game badge will have a blue border if all achievements have been unlocked in either mode or a gold border if all achievements have been unlocked in hardcore mode.
Provided the badges are turned on in the settings, each achievement will have a badge next to it on the progress tab. There are different badges for locked and unlocked (usually locked is grayscale while unlocked is in color but not necessarily) and the badge chosen depends on the player's current unlock and hardcore status.
Provided badges are turned on, if there's a player logged in their RetroAchievements icon will appear next to their player info in the header of the Achievements dialog. If they're playing a game, so will the icon for the game. Also performed some refactoring and reorganizing to the header as a whole so that it looks consistent whether a game is running or not.
This refactors the Rich Presence generation to store to a member field that can be exposed to the UI to display the Rich Presence in the achievement header. It still updates at its original rate of once per two minutes, but calls an update on the dialog when that ticks.
Moved AchievementManager Init further down in the MainWindow constructor; its original position was because it had an impact on the contents of the menu bar, and this is no longer the case.
Because CPU thread config changed callbacks are no longer instant,
g_Config.iEFBScale doesn't yet contain the new value when the hotkey OSD
code tries to read it.
Should fix https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/13343.
There's no reason not to allow this now that these settings are
cleanly integrated into the new config system. (Actually, maybe
we could even have done this before the previous commit...)
This fixes a problem where changing the JIT debug settings on
Android while a game was running wouldn't cause the changed settings
to apply to code blocks that already had been compiled.
The previous list had some issues. A lot of variant id's were set to 0x0000. Althought this works for some figures, on a technicallity implemented into the games, they are technically wrong and don't result in exactly the same experience as the real figures. For example, the previous small fry got a "series 1" text in the summon screen. The real small fry does not have this. I also added figure types so I can add seperate generation logic later.
The Kaos element only applies to 3 items. So, I decided to throw it under others since it's not listed as an element in the manual and you can easily search for Kaos
GCAdapter::UseAdapter() reads s_is_adapter_wanted, which gets
initialized by config_guard.~ConfigChangeCallbackGuard(). So we must
wait until after destroying the config guard to know whether we have any
controllers set to GC Adapter.
Expanded the use of the lock mutex already used for loading the player's existing unlock status to guard against races involving the Achievements dialog window reading from data AchievementManager might be in the process of updating. The lock has been exposed publicly and the AchievementsWindow uses it in its UpdateData method, and anywhere else that might modify data used to render that window has also been wrapped with it.
AchievementManager now has a SetUpdateCallback method for providing a single universal callback for anytime something important changes in the achievement state, such as logging in/out, game load/close, or events such as achievement unlocks. AchievementsWindow sets this callback in its own init to its UpdateData method so that the AchievementsWindow gets updated when one of these changes takes place.
This widget is a tab in the AchievementsWindow that displays the player's current achievement progress: which achievements are locked or unlocked, and the progress of achievements that have progress metrics.
This widget displays a header on the AchievementsWindow dialog above the tabs that shows the currently logged in user (if there is one) and the game they are playing (if there is one).
1 ) When first opened, the (user selected) post process shader config widget would print the wrong values on the text label next to int range sliders. For example if the range was from 1 to 6, and the value loaded from the config was 1, the label would print 0 when first opened, to then start showing the correct value once the slider was first moved.
This mirrors the behaviour of the float slider code below:
```auto* const value_box = new QLineEdit(QString::asprintf("%f", m_config_option->m_float_values[i]));```
2 ) The defautl int slider value would also be set wrong on first load, as it was being divided by the slider max instead of the slider step amount (again, just like for the float implementation). This is a mistake I had made with my previous submission.
This doesn't need to be handled by translators, since they're not
user-displayed text or just don't need to be translated.
While we're at it, we don't need to copy each entry of the resulting
list.
Mesa (llvmpipe) only reports 4x MSAA, and doesn't report 2x (or 1x, but we implicitly add that). The old logic did not handle this correctly, causing selecting 4x to fail and fall back to None.
This also removes VideoUtils::GetAvailableAntialiasingModes, and thus VideoUtils entirely, as its only other function was removed in 1f74653501.
We can move the construction of the Diff instance into the body of the
if statement, so that we only construct this if the condition is true.
While we're at it, we can move the symbol description string into the
instance, getting rid of a copy. The function itself can also be const
qualified.
Adds features to improve navigation of Skylanders portal menu, includes:
-List of Skylanders and filters for searching
-Improved buttons for faster loading options
-Added default user folder for storing .sky files
AchievementSettingsWidget is a dialog widget in AchievementsWindow for handling RetroAchievements settings in the user interface. This class contains the physical layout, widget connections, load/save functions and button responses. AchievementsWindow now has a tabbed list that this is inserted into; other tabs will be in a later pull request.
AchievementsWindow is the dialog box that will eventually contain the settings and progress data for RetroAchievements on Dolphin. This adds the barebones dialog, and connects it to MainWindow's MenuBar.
Adds two new hotkeys to open the menus for emulated USB devices- Skylanders Portal of Power and the Infinity Base. (Hotkeys only active when game is running).
Portal menu: Default is <Ctrl+P>.
Infinity base: Default is <Ctrl+I>
-The float sliders initial value wasn't calculated correctly
-Fix the checkbox dependencies not being applied until a setting was changed for the first time
ESCore implements the core functionality that can also be used outside of emulation. ESDevice implements the IOS device and is only available during emulation.
This reverts commit cfe3683668.
On Windows systems with 125% DPI scaling, this was causing both icons
and the OSD to be upscaled by 25% using nearest neighbor scaling, which
looks really bad. shuffle2 has said that this will be improved later,
but we should revert it for now for the sake of the upcoming beta build.
The old tooltip description box used GraphicsWidget to provide shared
code to the Graphics config panes for adding descriptions to their
settings.
The description box has been replaced by BalloonTips and serves no
further purpose, so remove it and have the Graphics panes derive from
QWidget instead.