Genesis of Descent E1M2 is impossible to complete on ITYTD/HNTR. I had to decompile the ACS script to figure out what was going on, basically at one point you get locked into a room and have to kill exactly 3 enemies with TID 215 for the door to unlock. One of these is a Baron tagged for only Medium and Hard, in his place is an Imp #1184 that has all the right script setups but is not set to appear on any difficulty. The fix is to simply have this imp appear on Easy.
Thanks to brick' for the fix.
This adds ViewBobSpeed to PlayerPawn that is passed in CalcHeight() instead of the value of 20 and can be adjusted with the Player.ViewBobSpeed variable. This will let modders dynamically adjust how to only how far the camera bobs up and down, but also how *quickly* it does that, which allows to easily convey a feeling of a heavy, slow-moving character whose view might bob a lot but would do it slowly.
This discrepancy is ancient, so the approach used for the shotgunner does not work here and some hacks are needed to remap the function only for Dehacked.
Localized reflection code to a single function. Fixed an error where NOSHIELDREFLECT was being checked on the wrong Actor. Fixed an oversight where MIRRORREFLECT was checking for valid target despite not needing one.
These properties allow to specify how much an actors' aim is degraded when shooting at a shadow actor. And how much the shadow actor itself affects the shooters' aim, respectively.
GZDoom used to have hardcoded MessageBox menu selector, 0x0d character
of console font, while the other menu is displayed is SmallFont.
It looked too ugly if SmallFont and ConFont heights are different,
and also there was no method of modifying the selector.
Now, the selector is 0x0d from SmallFont, if SmallFont contains this glyph
(its height is greater than zero), otherwise it falls back to previous
behavior (using ConFont as a source of this glyph).
To define custom MessageBox menu selector, just define 0x0d glyph for
SmallFont, and it will be displayed in the menu.
The gap between selector and menu options text is 3 pixels (as before), and
if you wish to enlarge this gap, just add some transparent columns at the
right side of 0x0d glyph.
This implements a bruteforce approach for 2D line antialiasing.
It's not perfect by any means, but it seems to do its job well enough.
Since it draws 9 lines instead of 1 line per segment, it's significantly
more expensive but should still be usable on modern hardware (except
on very complex maps).
Automap line antialiasing is disabled by default and can be enabled
with the `am_lineantialiasing 1` cvar.
The minimum value was increased from 30 to 35 to reflect the lowest
value you can actually use in `vid_maxfps`. Values lower than 35
are silently clamped to 35.
The maximum value is chosen to cater to the fastest commercially
available display as of writing (500 Hz).
Being able to specify maximum FPS with a more precise slider has
several benefits:
- This adds support for monitors with less common refresh rates
(138 Hz, 165 Hz, ...).
- This adds support for monitors with very high refresh rates
(240 Hz or more).
- This allows catering to variable refresh rate setups with a FPS cap
chosen to avoid V-Sync input lag, while also avoiding tearing.
For example, choosing a FPS cap of 117 on a 120 Hz display will prevent
the display from reaching its maximum refresh rate.
More information: https://blurbusters.com/howto-low-lag-vsync-on/
- The value no longer displays a "Unknown" if customized in the console
using the `vid_maxfps` cvar.
* Key.ValidLock: returns whether a lock number is valid (can be unlocked) or belongs to a "does not work" door.
* Key.GetMapColorForLock: returns the automap color for a lock number (or -1 if the lock isn't valid).
* Key.GetMapColorForKey: likewise, but for a specific key.
This works similar to MAPINFO: The first definition in a file declares the format, all later ones must be the same.
This change in syntax increases robustness significantly because it avoids the problems with the original syntax not being able to detect badly formatted names.
Changed SendConsoleEvent to SendInterfaceEvent to make functionality clearer. Added InterfaceProcess virtual to EventHandlers. Added CCMD for sending interface events.
This is mainly for new games which have been designed for hardware rendering.
Note that this does not remove the software renderer's code - all it does is to disable the vid_rendermode CVAR by turning it into a static constant with the value 4.
* deleting some unused code
* turned several class methods into static local functions in cases where they never were used outside this file.
* inlined the dangerous assignment operator in the only place where it was used.
There was one special case allowing to let an actor die on spawn, but this could call script code on an incompletely set up map which resulted in crashes.
- Removed bone manipulation code
- Implemented an index in calculateBones to optimize multi-armature actors
- Moved the bone storage object's creation to RenderModels so that the armature array can be sized there
- Implemented Animation parameters for A_ChangeModel
- Made a modeldef flag to treat additional model indices as just attachments, meaning they will use armature data from index 0
- Fixed an issue with A_ChangeModel where generated indices lower than smf frame amounts could not actually generate anything
Due to undefined downconversion rules from double to int, there is no way to safely downcast the return from MSTimef, meaning the function is completely useless for retrieving integral time stamps.
The old version is essential for these cases and must be kept around.
* Emit a warning when relational comparisons are made between signed and unsigned ints.
* Handle shift operators so that they do not fail for constant definitions.
* changed return type of Array::Size() to signed int as most code out there is using it this way and would otherwise drown in warnings.
* fixed a few deprecation warnings.
- To really take advantage of this function, I thought it would be useful to be able to add additional models if the user wants to. Let's say you got a player model at index 0. Your gun model has the same frames, but you don't want to duplicate the modeldef data. With generator index, you don't need to duplicate the data, just tell generator index to clone frame data from index 0.
- Implemented a little something to check if a negative skin or model index were passed, and prevent modders from pulling that off.
- Made it so when rendering a model, it clones an smf to use so that data isn't overwritten
- Reimplemented the skin index property. This changes the behavior of this index if CMDL_USESURFACESKIN is activated
- Let's fill the holes of serialized data so it can properly be removed instead of leaving undefined behavior behind.
- Added CMDL_HIDEMODEL flag. This makes a model index invisible.
- Made the 2 TArrays into a class called DActorModelData.
- Removed the skinindex and now just uses one index
- Replaced a bunch of nullptr for modelDef checking with NAME_None
- Added some garbage cleanup to A_ChangeModel itself, as well as removing memory of modelData that is no longer needed
- Attempted serialize code, putting up for review
-Added A_ChangeModelDef
A_ChangeModel(modeldef, modelpath, model, modelindex, skinpath, skin, skinid, flags)
This can change the modeldef, model and skins of an actor.
Currently, modelindex and skinindex accept indices from 0-15.
An actor MUST have a modeldef in order to use this function, either defined from modeldef, or given one through the modeldef parameter. You can pass "" to use the same modeldef. Likewise, passing "" for model or skin will just revert to the default model.
Available flags:
CMDL_WEAPONTOPLAYER - If used on a weapon, this instead change's the model on the player instead.
One issue I am aware of right now is that clearing a model by "" sort of works but is buggy. For now you can just manually set the model back using the names explicitly. However, I am stumped and I think getting more eyes on it would help.