this snowballed into a massive search+destroy of the hodgepodge of
mostly equivalent types we had in use (int, uint, unsigned, unsigned
int, i32, u32, ulong, uintN).
it is more efficient to use 64-bit types in 64-bit mode, so the
preferred default is size_t (for anything remotely resembling a size or
index). tile coordinates are ssize_t to allow more efficient conversion
to/from floating point. flags are int because we almost never need more
than 15 distinct bits, bit test/set is not slower and int is fastest to
type. finally, some data that is pretty much directly passed to OpenGL
is now typed accordingly.
after several hours, the code now requires fewer casts and less
guesswork.
other changes:
- unit and player IDs now have an "invalid id" constant in the
respective class to avoid casting and -1
- fix some endian/64-bit bugs in the map (un)packing. added a
convenience function to write/read a size_t.
- ia32: change CPUID interface to allow passing in ecx (required for
cache topology detection, which I need at work). remove some unneeded
functions from asm, replace with intrinsics where possible.
This was SVN commit r5942.
close#141
The problem was that the shadow matrices were setup in BeginFrame, but
GraphicsView calls SetCamera after BeginFrame. The solution was to move
the shadow matrix setup into CRenderer::SetCamera.
This caused a second problem because RenderReflections/RenderRefractions
used SetCamera to change the OpenGL matrices. Solved this problem by
distinguishing explicitly between the camera used for the scene as a
whole and the camera used to configure OpenGL. The latter can be a
virtual camera for shadow or reflection rendering and similar
render-to-texture effects.
This was SVN commit r4330.
Also fixed sectorDivs so it's always initialised, since the complaints
were annoying.
Camera: Added a const.
Super cavalry: Added required(?) aura attributes.
This was SVN commit r3906.
calculations) internally. Use ?gameView.lockCullCamera = true in the
console
to move around while the CullCamera stays in place
- add CCamera::Render to visualize a camera's frustum
- use ?renderer.debugFrustum = true in the console to visualize the
frustum
of the CullCamera
This was SVN commit r3405.