Since this deletes the resolved elements one by one and needs to start at the front to ensure consistency, it is better to reverse the order so that the deletions take place at the end of the list which requires a lot less data movement.
On Total Chaos this slowed down texture setup to the point where the mod was basically unlaunchable.
Since unfortunately this cannot be set as a general default, let's at least make it as easy as possible to disable that panning+scaling madness without having to edit the texture data.
This particular case incorrectly factored in the sidedef's scaling factor for how to calculate the offset.
Fortunately this is a very rare case - a quick check yielded no maps depending on it.
Should any map surface that depends on this bug a compatibility option may be needed but it doesn't seem likely that this may be the case.
This particular case incorrectly factored in the sidedef's scaling factor for how to calculate the offset.
Fortunately this is a very rare case - a quick check yielded no maps depending on it.
Should any map surface that depends on this bug a compatibility option may be needed but it doesn't seem likely that this may be the case.
Between creation and resolving the texture manager will resort the textures and after that the old ids are no longer valid. The textures themselves have the correct one, so that should be used.
This was leaking memory with being handled like a regular image texture and also would prevent further changes to the in-game texture handling because the savegame picture was imposing some limitations on FPNGTexture's implementation
FDummyTexture had a big problem: Whenever it was accessed by accident it crashed the app because it wasn't fully implemented.
What it should do is return empty pixels of the given size, and an unextended FImageTexture is doing just that.
This will mostly ensure that each patch used for composition is only loaded once and automatically unloaded once no longer needed.
So far only for paletted rendering, but the same logic can be used for true color as well.
* split up FMultiPatchTexture into a builder class and the actual image source.
* since images can now be referenced by multiple textures the old redirection mechanism has been removed. It can be done better and less intrusive now. Simple single patch textures already directly reference the underlying patch image now.
* allocate all image source related data from a memory arena. Since this is all static this makes it a lot easier to free this in bulk.
In ZDoom this would affect everything using a patch that got used in a front sky layer, even if the texture was totally unrelated. It is only owed to the low usability of such patches for other purposes that this hasn't caused problems.
Previously it tried to copy all patches of composite sub-images directly onto the main image.
This caused massive complications throughout the entire true color texture code and made any attempt of caching the source data for composition next to impossible because the entire composition process operated on the raw data read from the texture and not some cacheable image. While this may cause more pixel data to be processed, this will be easily offset by being able to reuse patches for multiple textures, once a caching system is in place, which even for the IWADs happens quite frequently.
Removing the now unneeded arguments from the implementation also makes things a lot easier to handle.