- Fixed: Don't assume operator new will return a pointer with 16-byte
alignment when allocating a block for the VMFrameStack. Because it seems
it's actually guaranteed to be 8-byte aligned. Don't know where I got
the idea it would always be 16-byte aligned.
- So now you can do something like this for an action:
{
if (health > 1000)
{
A_Scream;
}
else
{
A_XScream;
}
}
Yes, the braces are required. Because I see too many instances where
somebody writes an if statement in ACS and doesn't understand why it
doesn't work right because they forgot braces.
- Fixed: Not actually putting an action between { and } would crash.
- You can now call several actions from one frame by grouping them between
curly braces. i.e. :
POSS G 3 { A_Pain; A_Log("Ow! That hurt!"); }
I will probably add an `if (something) { blah; blah; } else { wah; wah; }`
construct later, but that's the extent of the munging I plan for DECORATE. The
real work goes to the scripting language, not here. But if this branch is
getting merged to master sooner than later, here's an immediate benefit
from it right now.
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.