What was the point of this strange setup anyway? MoveFloor and MoveCeiling were inlines calling the universal MovePlane, which had nothing better to do than a switch/case with two cases - floor and ceiling!
Normally this will adjust relative to the actual direction to the target, but with arbitrary portals that cannot be calculated so using the actual attack angle is the only option.
Sadly the mappers cannot be trusted to use a feature correctly. Despite repeatedly telling that portals on one-sided lines are problematic, everybody seems to do it this way - and then report bugs if it doesn't work. Under such circumstances the only safe option is to block such portals entirely.
See http://forum.zdoom.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=51511&p=898522#p898522 for a typical example of the problems this might cause.
This code was ported from the 2005 floating point version, at one point it replaced 128 with 0.5, but 128 as a fixed point value needs to be 1/512. as a floating point value.
This will fail when a trace starts directly on a block boundary in which case x is a whole number. It should always use 'floor(x)+1' to ensure that the calculated point is at the right or upper edge of a block.
* we do not really need compatibility PointOnLineSide here. Unlike the movement code it'd only affect some extreme edge cases.
* removed the special case for very short traces. This was a result of the original and very imprecise PointOnLine functions. Since those no longer get used here and floating point precision is a lot higher there is no need for this kind of treatment.
* PointOnLine checks for the sides of an actor's bounding box don't need a full PointOnLineSide call, a simple coordinate comparison is fully sufficient, and this can easily be done in the existing switch/case block.
This was accidentally deleted during one round of portal refactoring but is essential to prevent multiple teleport activations in one move.
Fixing this also allowed removing the fudging that was added to work around the issue in P_TryMove.
- This reverts commit c90a1c0c96.
- DECORATE looks to be very dependant on functions that take strings as
parameters receiving those strings as constants and not as expressions,
so being able to declare string variables with DECORATE is pretty much
useless.
- This is "support" in the very most basic sense. You can declare them,
but you can't actually do anything with them, since the decorate parser
can't handle expressions when it's parsing string arguments. However,
they seem to be getting properly initialized and destroyed, which is
what this was added to test. If it doesn't look like too much trouble, I
might try to turn them into something actually worth something.