and scale the breakpoint dots accordingly - now they don't looked all
squashed anymore.
I think ResizeImageList() is more correct now, at least this helped with
the breakpoint dots.
but it's still a bit wonky with DPI-scaling
I also made the rect calculations a bit more intuitive
and removed a misleading comment in my breakpoint list code
Double-clicking an entry opens the script at the correct line.
Single-clicking the breakpoint symbol in the list removes the breakpoint,
and so does selecting the breakpoint in the list and pressing the Del key.
the script paths were wrong, on Linux they were like
"pak000.pk4/script/doom_util.script" while on Windows it's only
"script/doom_util.script".
Fixed idFileSystemLocal::OSPathToRelativePath() to skip ...pk4/
also fixed GCC compile error in Common.cpp
only override cmd->viewDef in RB_DrawView() if we're drawing the
primary view (which for several calculations before actual drawing
was set to the saved/locked render view)
Note that r_lockSurfaces is more useful with r_useScissor 0 (otherwise
there's black bars over the screen when moving) and r_shadows 0 (otherwise
areas that weren't visible when locking are black because the lights
there are skipped)
remaining bug: gui surfaces move around the screen when looking around
set(CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES backtrace) tells our custom libbacktrace
availability check that it needs to link against libbacktrace.
Seems like it also tells other unrelated compiler-checks like for
-fvisibility=hidden to link against libbacktrace, so if it's not
available they fail as well.
Fixed by unsetting CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES after the backtrace check.
While debian-based distros ship libbacktrace as part of libgcc,
apparently in Arch Linux and openSUSE (and possibly others) it's a
separate package, so I mantion it in the README as an (optional)
dependency now and made CMake print a warning if it's not found.
according to https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=100839
the real compiler flag enabling this bullshit isn't
-fexpensive-optimizations but -ffp-contract=fast which for some(*)
reason is default in optimized builds.
I think it's best to disabled that optimization globally in case it
also breaks other code (I really don't want to spend several days to
hunt such an idiot bug again). I really doubt it makes any measurable
performance difference.
As https://twitter.com/stephentyrone/status/1399424911328874499 says
that clang might also enable this in the future (though to =on instead
of =fast which should be a bit saner but would still break our code),
just set this option for all GCC-ish compilers incl. clang.
(*) the reason of course is that GCC developers don't develop GCC for
their users but to win idiotic SPEC benchmarks