255.0f / 128.0f gives us 1.9921875.
128.0f / 255.0f gives us 0.50196078431.
Which are more accurate.
Fixes regression in dbz bt3 where characters appeared darker.
Code was never hit on D3D11. D3D11 uses stencil operations.
Also Remove VS_RTCOPY which was used only by d3d9.
Remove RTCopy Sampler from the shader.
tfx rtcopy
And the time has come to say good bye (good riddance?), this build removes Direct3D9 entirely from GSdx. D3D9 is/was holding us back in some D3D11 fixes that we want to further implement.
The last build that supports D3D9 is v1.5.0-dev-2779-g1a61148b0 for anyone still interested.
"Press F to pay respect.
Some values were incorrect, now I'm no expert but looking at the code
and behavior seemed a bit wrong compared to gl.
Improves d3d rendering on Sonic Unleashed, the purple screen is gone
matching it with gl visuals.
Re add point sampler to OpenGL. Fixes graphical issues when
Allow 8-bit textures is enabled on AMD gpus.
Issue: https://forums.pcsx2.net/Thread-GSDX-Hardware-mode-Bug-Report-Allow-8-bit-Texture
Adjust the code to be easier to read, and execute the gl code only on amd - suggested by Gregory.
Remove useless ATI_SUCKS define in tfx shader.It wasn't used anywhere outside of the shader.
Port from commit b0af54d3
Fixes shadows in Star Ocean 3.
Note: It works properly on native res only just like on GL.
Upscaling will cause some issues.
Only Direct3D10/11 supports it, D3D9 doesn't support integer operations
so we can't reuse the code.
Ports the "Unscale Point and Line" hack to the Direct3D11 Hardware renderer.
And enables the "Unscale Point and Line" hack for Custom Resolutions with Direct3D11 and OpenGL.
This may make gsdx slightly slower for everyone (I don't know an easy way to restrict this to affected systems), especially if using 8-bit textures.
git-svn-id: http://pcsx2.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@5341 96395faa-99c1-11dd-bbfe-3dabce05a288
So, in the end I only properly understood the old code after finding all the problems with my version. I'm not sure whether any changes I've made are improvements any more, I'll need to review it with what I've learned in mind. This effort might've been a big waste of time.
git-svn-id: http://pcsx2.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@5329 96395faa-99c1-11dd-bbfe-3dabce05a288
Explanation, because this gives me a headache and this might save someone else one (or I might be wrong and they might see why): in D3D10, 0.0 points to the centre of the leftmost texel and 1.0 points one texel to the right of the rightmost texel, so to map a UNORM uniformly across a texel we need to multiply the input by (w-1)/w. In D3D9 0.0 points to the left edge of the leftmost texel and 1.0 to the right edge of the rightmost texel so after the multiplication we add 1/2w.
Actual texture sampling is probably not right for at least one of D3D9 and D3D10, but this headache is killing me.
git-svn-id: http://pcsx2.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@5279 96395faa-99c1-11dd-bbfe-3dabce05a288
Another refinement to the Wild Arms hack by KrossX.
The hack now only applies to one kind of geometry (sent using the unpacked UV handler).
This works nicer in Wild Arms as it fixes "jumpy" characters.
git-svn-id: http://pcsx2.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@5124 96395faa-99c1-11dd-bbfe-3dabce05a288
Adding KrossX's Wild Arms text alignment hack to the new dialog box. This hack is actually very interesting for a number of games. It should work well in cases where game designers adjusted everything pixel perfect for the GS, that usually breaks with upscaling.
It should be generalized and renamed later.
git-svn-id: http://pcsx2.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@5120 96395faa-99c1-11dd-bbfe-3dabce05a288
Committing a hack KrossX prepared (thanks) ;)
It can be used to fix bad character sprites in Gust games.
git-svn-id: http://pcsx2.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@5101 96395faa-99c1-11dd-bbfe-3dabce05a288