* Fixes for Door_AnimatedClose
- Fixing that Door_AnimatedClose would be activated on an already closed door (playing the sound and the 1st frame of the animation)
- There was no check if the Door is already Animated when a tag was used with Door_AnimatedClose
* Removed doubled "door->StartClosing();".
Having everything lumped together made this a maintenance hassle because it affected how the level has to be stored.
This hasn't been tested yet, so it may not work as intended!
I think these were the last two still missing it, all remaining uses of the global level variable are in code that doesn't get run through a level tick and are supposed to access the primary level.
Two files were split:
g_level.h contained both the game data definitions and some prototypes belonging to the game logic. These were split up.
decallib.cpp contained both the data and the animation thinkers. The thinkers are now in their own file.
The playsim really has no idea what the renderer is supposed to do here and the current system has some serious issues that eventually need addressing. So it is better to just set a flag that an actor needs to have its view interpolation reset if being used as a camera and let the render code deal with it.
This will keep the playsim clean of future changes to this feature.
This is supposed to be come the place where all pure play code should be placed, but for that all CVARs and CCMDs and other things that do not directly handle play data should be taken out to make code reviewing easier. These now get collected in two separate files, g_cvars.cpp and g_dumpinfo.cpp respectively.
The sole ZScript property in here has also been moved - to thingdef_properties.cpp.
The Map loader may not access any global state at all - everything it can touch must be exchangable.
Furthermore, if we want to sandbox each level, there may be no direct access to any kind of global state whatsoever from the play code.
Since currently there is only one level, this will obvciously only run once on that level for the time being.
This is mainly used for CCMDs and CVARs which either print some diagnostics or change some user-settable configuration.
This was done to ensure that this code only runs when the thinker itself is fully set up.
With a constructor there is no control about such things, if some common initialization needs to be done it has to be in the base constructor, but that makes the entire approach chosen here to ensure proper linking into the thinker chains impossible.
ZDoom originally did it that way, which resulted in a very inflexible system and required some awful hacks to let the serializer work with it - the corresponding bSerialOverride flag is now gone.
The only thinker class still having a constructor is DFraggleThinker, because it contains non-serializable data that needs to be initialized in a piece of code that always runs, regardless of whether the object is created explicitly or from a savegame.
This was yet another piece of code that lived or died with the assumption that there can only be one level, stored in global variables.
# Conflicts:
# src/p_saveg.cpp
I have to wonder why it had to use such a complicated implementation that provided no advantages whatsoever.
The new code is just 1/5th of the old one's size and much closer to Hexen's original implementation which also was a simple array but with no means to resize the queue.