This was regressed by ART.
Prior to ART, the screenshots were saved at the title's framebuffer resolution. A misunderstanding of the existing logic led to screenshot dimensions becoming dependent on the host render window size.
This changes the behavior to match how it was prior to ART at 1x, with screenshots now always being the title's framebuffer dimensions scaled by the resolution scaling factor.
Confirm means that the text has already been checked by the application to be correct, but is asking the user for confirmation.
The confirmation text itself seems to be corrupted though, this needs to be investigated.
Fixes the software keyboard in Famicom Detective Club: The Missing Heir
Creates a new BasicSettings class in common/settings, and forces setting
a default and label for each setting that uses it in common/settings.
Moves defaults and labels from both frontends into common settings.
Creates a helper function in each frontend to facillitate reading the
settings now with the new default and label properties.
Settings::Setting is also now a subclass of Settings::BasicSetting. Also
adds documentation for both Setting and BasicSetting.
Now that we have most of core free of shadowing, we can enable the
warning as an error to catch anything that may be remaining and also
eliminate this class of logic bug entirely.
The URL string was being deleted before being used, leading to a use-after-free occurring when it is used afterwards.
Fix this by taking the string by const ref to extend its lifetime, ensuring it doesn't get deleted before use.
We reset all the button states to 0 except the first index (which has all the buttons as pressed) to prevent a button hold being interpreted as a button that was pressed once on the first poll.
The InputInterpreter class interfaces with HID to retrieve button press states. Input is intended to be polled every 50ms so that a button is considered to be held down after 400ms has elapsed since the initial button press and subsequent repeated presses occur every 50ms.
Co-authored-by: Chloe <25727384+ogniK5377@users.noreply.github.com>
EmuWindow::PollEvents was called from the GPU thread (or the CPU thread
in sync-GPU mode) when swapping buffers. It had three implementations:
- In GRenderWindow, it didn't actually poll events, just set a flag and
emit a signal to indicate that a frame was displayed.
- In EmuWindow_SDL2_Hide, it did nothing.
- In EmuWindow_SDL2, it did call SDL_PollEvents, but this is wrong
because SDL_PollEvents is supposed to be called on the thread that set
up video - in this case, the main thread, which was sleeping in a
busyloop (regardless of whether sync-GPU was enabled). On macOS this
causes a crash.
To fix this:
- Rename EmuWindow::PollEvents to OnFrameDisplayed, and give it a
default implementation that does nothing.
- In EmuWindow_SDL2, do not override OnFrameDisplayed, but instead have
the main thread call SDL_WaitEvent in a loop.
A vibration device is an input device that returns an unsigned byte as status.
It represents whether the vibration device supports vibration or not.
If the status returns 1, it supports vibration. Otherwise, it does not support vibration.
Sending too many state changes in a short period of time can cause massive performance issues.
As a result, we have to use several heuristics to reduce the number of state changes to minimize/eliminate this performance impact while maintaining the quality of these vibrations as much as possible.
Makes our error coverage a little more consistent across the board by
applying it to Linux side of things as well. This also makes it more
consistent with the warning settings in other libraries in the project.
This also updates httplib to 0.7.9, as there are several warning
cleanups made that allow us to enable several warnings as errors.