There are a few quite specific steps to reproduce this issue:
* 640x480 video resolution
* -iwad ... -warp ... command line parameters
* OS X 10.4 or 10.5 PowerPC, maybe performance related
When all these requirements are met, content view doesn't show up sometimes
The simplest solution for this issue is to set initial window size to non-existent video resolution
- The error "You cannot pass parameters to..." used the most recent token,
which was always ( and not the function name. (Note that this was
already fixed in the scripting branch, so this is probably going to be a
conflict. Meh.)
- Added A_Warp flags:
- WARPF_BOB: Gets the bob offset of actor pointer with the FLOATBOB flag.
- WARPF_MOVEPTR: The function is inversed to move the pointed actor with applied flags, but only the original caller will make the success/jump.
This feature helps a lot with buggy gamepads that constantly generate events from "sticky" hats/sticks
Polling is enabled by default, use joy_axespolling CVAR to turn it on/off
- Fixed: TicSpecial::CheckSpace() never thought it ran out of space due to
unsigned math.
- Fixed: TicSpecial::GetMoreSpace() assumed only relatively small amounts
of data would be written at a time so made no effort to ensure it
actually got enough space. This assumption could be violated by writing
a very long string, which can happen when replicating a string cvar.
- The definition of FxGlobalFunctionCall_CheckClass was big and scary. I
would say this is a big improvement, since now it gets to leverage the
same framework that action functions use.
- The definition of FxGlobalFunctionCall_IsPointerEqual was not so big and
scary, so this can't be called so much of an improvement as
CheckClass was. (Which is not to say that it isn't better anyway.)
- This replaces the general extensibility that had existed formerly
in thingdef_function.cpp. Parameter parsing for function calls is
shared with state parameter parsing. Functions are defined exactly in
the same way as action functions, but without the 'action' keyword.
- Rippers will rip through anything with an equivalent ripper level, or if their level is between or on the min and max ranges.
- If no min or max is defined, it simply checks if the monster's ripper level is lower than the missiles.
- Functions: A_SetRipperLevel(int level), A_SetRipMin(int min), A_SetRipMax(int max)
- Properties: RipperLevel, RipLevelMin, and RipLevelMax.
- RipperLevel: Applicable to monsters and projectiles.
- RipLevelMin and RipLevelMax are only useful on monsters.
- By default, all are 0.
- removed the mCameraPos variable in FGLRenderer because it was only used in one place where it is just as easy to use the global viewx/y/z variables directly.