example. Do not modify the window class pointer. I still had an instance where I was left with
an invisible pointer no matter where I moved it, so hopefully this takes care of that. (edit:
it doesn't.)
SVN r2496 (trunk)
- Two tweaks to raw mouse input to make it better behaved when the window suddenly has focus
removed (e.g. because of a debugger break):
* Keep the pointer centered in the window, as for Win32Mouse. Even though it's not generating
any traditional input events, it's still moving all over the screen. e.g. If we have focus
yanked away and you're pressing the right mouse button as it happens, you can suddenly find
yourself with a popup menu open.
* Use SetCursorState() like the other mouse modes instead of ShowCursor() to hide the
pointer. This way, we don't need to worry about being stuck with trying to use the system
with an invisible pointer, because only the game window will be pointer-less.
SVN r2495 (trunk)
the sector. Note that this contrasts with sound sequence things in that it takes a name and
not a number. Also, placing a sound sequence thing in a sector will override this property.
SVN r2492 (trunk)
* 0. Do not clear. This is the standard behavior.
* 1. Clear to black.
* 2. Clear to white.
* 3. Alternate between black and white every 128 ms.
* 4. Step through the palette one color at a time every 32 ms.
* 5. Epileptic seizure inducing random colors every frame.
SVN r2491 (trunk)
does not include xtoviewangle[centerx] in the mirroring so that the two columns at the center
of the screen do not map to the same angle. (BTW, this array is only used for the sky drawing.)
SVN r2487 (trunk)
CHAN_LOOP so that the higher level sound code knows they loop and can handle them accordingly.
- Added support for a LOOP_BIDI tag. Set it to "1", "On", "True", or "Yes" to use a
bidirectional loop. This only works with sounds and not music, because music is streamed
so does not support them.
- Extended custom loop support to work with samples as well as music.
SVN r2434 (trunk)
way MP3 obfuscates custom tags. Vorbis and FLAC are fine. (I could make it work with MP3,
but you should be using Vorbis instead.) They are:
* LOOP_START: Start time for the loop. If omitted, the song repeats from the beginning.
* LOOP_END: End time for the loop. If omitted, the song loops at the end. (If you need to specify this, why aren't you using a shorter song.)
You only need to specify one of these tags to set the custom loop. Naturally, you can set
them both, as well. The format for each tag is the same:
* If it contains a colon (:), it specifies by time. This may be of the form 00:00:00.00
(HH:MM:SS.ss) to specify by play. Various parts may be left off. e.g. To start the loop
at 20 seconds in, you can use ":20", 0:20", "00:00:20", ":20.0", etc. Values after the
decimal are fractions of a second and accurate to one millisecond.
* If you don't include a colon but just have a raw number, then it's the number of PCM
samples at which to loop.
* Any characters other than digits (0-9), colons (:), or a single decimal point for the
seconds portion will result in the tag being ignored.
SVN r2424 (trunk)
- "Give artifacts" and "give puzzlepieces" now use the amount value to decide how much of each
item to give you. 0 means to give you the max. The old behavior can be obtained by explicitly
stating 1. (Since "give all" encompasses these as well, this also applies to that.)
- Added "give everything" cheat to give everything. This is like "give all" but ignores the
WIF_CHEATNOTWEAPON flag. (Note that this flag has valid uses, but that doesn't stop people
from abusing it anyway.)
SVN r2418 (trunk)
* the unaltered floating point version is 10% faster than the 64 bit integer version.
* using doubles instead of floats increases performance by another 25%.
* another 15% can be gained by manually optimizing the code.
- P_InterceptVector now uses the optimized floating point version which is almost twice as fast as the 64bit integer version.
SVN r2395 (trunk)