- Setting an actor's Crash state has the potential to destroy the actor if
the Crash state has one or more 0-tic states that end with Stop. This
was not taken into account when the object's Z velocity was 0, but it
was under the floor anyway.
For the random functions this class only handles the default-RNG version. The one with an explicit RNG needs to be done separately because the parser produces different output for them.
- added a truncation warning to FxIntCast, which only occurs with ZScript, not with DECORATE. FxBoolCast is intentionally left out because it would defeat the reason for this cast type.
- removed Self parameter from FxFunctionCall. Actual member function calls through an object require quite different handling so lumping these two together makes no sense.
- added a workaround to deal with ACS_NamedExecuteWithResult to both the compiler and FindClassMemberFunction. The way the ZScript compiler sets this up means that it will call the builtin, not the actual action function, so the parser needs to do some explicit check to get past the same-named action function.
- pass a proper self pointer to FxActionSpecial. Although it's still not being used, propagating design shortcuts through several function levels is a very, very bad idea.
* explicitly require passing the owning class when creating it.
* extract self pointer class when adding a variant.
* put the flags on the single variants, we can not fully rule out that they will be 100% identical, if variants ever get allowed.
* Allow PFunction to work without a VMFunction being attached.
* The Variant for a function must store the prototype itself instead of relying on the VMFunction it points to. Otherwise it would not be possible to reference a prototype during compilation of the function because it does not exist yet.
* Give the variant a list of the function's argument's names, because these are also needed to compile the function.
* create an anonymous function symbol when the function gets registered to the builder. At this point we have all the needed information to set it up correctly, but later this is no longer the case. This is the most convenient info to have here because it contains everything that's needed to compile the function in the proper context, so it has to be present when starting compilation.
* added some preparations to implement special handling for weapons and custom inventory items, which can run action functions in another actor's context. This part is not active yet but the basics are present in SetImplicitArgs.
- use FScriptPosition's error counter throughout the compiler so that there is only one counter for everything, not two.
Parts of the compiler use FScriptPosition, so this is easier to handle than having a separate counter in the compiler class. It also avoids having to pass the compiler object to any function where an error may be output. The TreeNodes contain sufficient data to be converted to an FScriptPosition and using that for error message formatting.
It looks like the setup of the action function and the adding of the states got inverted by something I tried, leaving the ActionFunc member empty on the real states.
- fixed a few problems that were encountered during conversion:
* action specials as action functions were not recognized by the parser.
* Player.StartItem could not be parsed.
* disabled the naming hack for PowerupType. ZScript, unlike DECORATE will never prepend 'Power' to the power's name, it always needs to specified by its full name.
* states and defaults were not checked for empty bodies.
* the scope qualifier for goto labels was not properly converted to a string, because it is an ENamedName, not an FName.
- Every update rolled into one, because I'm pretty sure I missed some while
updating lemon.c (not counting today's commits), since it wasn't always
updated at the same time as lemon.c.
- In particular, I think this check-in from 2016-06-06 was very important to
us after commit 3d5867d29e (For the
Lemon-generated parser, add a new action type SHIFTREDUCE and use it to
further compress the parser tables and improve parser performance.):
* Fix lempar.c so that the shift-reduce optimization works for error
processing.
- started with the AST converter. So far it only deals with direct function calls with simple constants as parameters.
- added an error condition for the defaults block to get rid of some asserts.
- fixed uninitialized counter variable in DECORATE parser.
- allow dottable_id of xxx.color so that the property parser can parse 'powerup.color'.
- fixed crash with actor replacement in script compiler.
- add the lump number to tree nodes because parts of the property parser need that to make decisions.
- removed test stuff.
- converted inventory.txt, player.txt and specialspot.txt to ZSCRIPT. These were the minimal files required to allow actor.txt to parse successfully.
- removed the converted files from the DECORATE include list so that these are entirely handled by ZSCRIPT now.
- split FinishActor into several functions. While DECORATE can, ZSCRIPT cannot do all this in one go.
- split the state finalization into several class-specific virtual functions.
* everything related to scripting is now placed in a subdirectory 'scripting', which itself is separated into DECORATE, ZSCRIPT, the VM and code generation.
* a few items have been moved to different headers so that the DECORATE parser definitions can mostly be kept local. The only exception at the moment is the flags interface on which 3 source files depend.
To do the rest, some cleanup is needed first, to untangle the DECORATE parser from the actual code generation so that the low end stuff can actually be reused here instead of having to be redone.
Ultimately, thingdef should only contain code that is directly related to the DECORATE parser, but that's not the case with this file. It's only function definitions which get used during gameplay and will also be accessed by ZScript.
The change is intentionally on master so that pull requests can adjust to it now instead of creating conflicts later.
* Goto did not support the class scope operator '::'. Like in DECORATE, this cannot be done with a simple '.' because it creates semantic problems with first part of a state label. This requires different syntax so that it can unambiguously distinguish between a scope identifier and the actual label
* Goto used the incorrect token PLUS for '+' instead of ADD.
* The state's duration was not stored in the AST.
* Truncating the sprite name inside the parser is probably not the best idea because it used a simple Printf to report this. Let's do this during processing of the AST where this can be properly handled as an error.
- Sets the absolute amount of an inventory actor.
- Limits itself to the range [0, MaxAmount]. Setting beyondMax to true disregards the MaxAmount. Default is false.
- switched the types of the internal 'self' and 'stateowner' parameters so that they get assigned correctly. I can't tell if this will error out if fields get accessed from the caller with the wrong class, but for actual scripting to work these must be correct.
The committed 'actor.txt' can be parsed successfully, with the exception of a few subclass references that cannot be resolved yet.
This adds:
* builtin types color, state and sound.
* ending a parameter list with an ellipsis to declare a varargs list. (A_Jump uses this.)
* allowing to declare optional arguments by giving them a default value.
* adding an 'action' qualifier for function declarations.
This uses the same property and flag tables as DECORATE with a few changes:
* it sets the parse mode to strict, so that several DECORATE warnings are now errors.
* trying to change a deprecated flag will print a warning.
* setting of editor numbers, spawn and conversation ID id not possible. Use MAPINFO to do this.
* all subclass flags must use the qualified name now (e.g. +ALWAYSPICKUP will print an error.)
* the scriptable Damage property is not yet implemented. This will require a special case with a differently named property in the processing function because in the AST it is no longer possible to distinguish between a damage value and a constant damage function.
This had been defined as a regular compound statement but in the context this will be used in, that makes very little sense, because all it can do is set some constant values.
The most important thing here is that it doesn't provide an unnecessary learning curve to its users and doing it this way will not only ensure that but also avoid redundant documentation.
To allow initialization of other user-defined properties it will require some extensions but that's a job for later and can just as easily be done in the current framework, rather than throwing everything out and start from zero.
- added checks for duplicate field names.
- moved the tree node symbol tables out of PSymbolTreeNode to the worker data. That symbol is a bad location because it restricts the usefulness of the symbol class which is also needed for variables which use different AST structs.
- fixed some memory management issues with the work classes for the compiler that became apparent after moving the symbol tables in there. In several places these were copied around, possibly losing data.
- fixed: The tree nodes for classes and struct members were stored in the global tree nodes table.
- sort variable declarations into their own list for processing.
This uses a different algorithm as the old implementation - instead of recursively resolving unknown symbols it will first collect all constants from all scopes and then process them in one operation, doing multiple passes over the list until no more constants can be resolved anymore.
- fixed class creation. There was an infinite loop and some missing checks for native classes.
- do not write the compiler's symbols to the same symbol table as the output. The output must go to GlobalSymbols but the internal symbols must go to a namespace specific table that can be discarded after compilation.
This is the first thing the compiler has to do to get access to the class's symbol table. Of course at this point the final size of a class is not known yet so these are currently all treated as tentative.
- place generated symbols into GlobalSymbols instead of a scratch table that will be discarded right away.
- allow the state object to change source file scanners (I hope this works, but the old implementation was unable to do more than one with with a parse state so I had to change it.)
- It can now parse constants.txt and insert everything in it into the global symbol table and make subsequent DECORATE compile properly.
Instead of replacing the original, the second class will get renamed now, using the originating file as an identifier. In the vast majority of cases this should do exactly what is needed: Create an unconflicting second class that can coexist with the original. Unless the class is used by name this should eliminate all problems with this, but so far I haven't seen anything that used them by name.
This is choosing the lesser of two evils. While some mod out there may get broken, the old setup meant that the first class of a given name could not be written out to a savegame because it was not retrievable when loading it back.
Ultimately we may have to get a fully qualified name out of this, so Outer should be a type that can handle this feature. The new class for this is currently used as base for PType and PSymbol so that PNamedType inherits from it and maybe later a namespace symbol can, too.
There have been reports about crashes in here with Linux that point to some of the code that gets called here doing unwanted things on the owner, so with these links cleared that should no longer be possible.
- This was fine with fixed point numbers, since they could never be
outside of short range when converted to regular ints. With floating
point numbers now, that condition no longer holds.
- allow recursive linking of $random definitions (as long as they do not link back, see above.)
- fixed the sound precaching which did not handle $alias inside $random. Normally this went undetected but in cases where the random sound index was the same as a sound index in the current link chain this could hang the function.
The slot had been there forever to address this same problem but only one of the two constructors actually set it, too bad that it was the wrong one...
This is something that normally won't be noticed. But if some actor is spawned on a moving platform, with both thinkers on the same statnum it means that the order of execution is not correct with the platform being done first, resulting in the actor to 'jump' while the platform is moving. To prevent this it is necessary that all sector movers only tick after all actors have completed their thinking turn.
We have to be extremely careful with the player data, because there's just too much code littered around that has certain expectations about what needs to be present and what not.
Obviously, when travelling in a hub, the player_t should be retained from the previous level. But we still have to set player_t::mo to the PlayerPawn from the savegame so that G_UnsnapshotLevel doesn't prematurely delete it and all associated voodoo dolls, because it checks player_t::mo to decide whether a player is valid or not.
The actual deletion of this redundant PlayerPawn should only be done in G_FinishTravel, after the actual player has been fully set up
* do not skip the player_t init when travelling in a hub. The old player may still be needed in some edge cases. This applies only to singleplayer for now. The multiplayer version still needs reviewing. I left it alone because it may shuffle players around which is not wanted when doing hub travelling.
* do not spawn two temp players in G_FinishTravel. Instead handle the case where no player_t::mo can be found gracefully by adding a few nullptr checks. This temp player served no real purpose except for having a valid pointer. The actual start position was retrieved from somewhere else.
- Fixed properties not having the proper indices.
- Use ViewPos-to-actor instead of measuring actor-to-actor.
- Use the actual camera instead of the actor so camera textures can work.
I wish I had realized this the last time it came up - it would have saved me a lot of trouble.
But as it turns out, the more recent travelling code makes all of this completely unnecessary, working perfectly fine with deleting the player pawns along with the rest of the thinkers before loading the stored ones from the savegame (and getting rid of those in G_FinishTravel.)
And with a sane savegame format that does not depend on side effects from how the thinker serializing handled linking into the lists the old code was even harmful, leaving voodoo dolls behind.
I had the exact same effect when I tried to reshuffle some things for reliably restoring portals, but did not make the connection to interference between two mutually incompatible player travelling mechanisms that just worked by sheer happenstance with the original order of things.
- changed S_GetMusic to return a const pointer to the actual music name instead of a copy. The only thing this is used for is the savegame code and it has no use for a copy, it can work far more efficiently with a const pointer.
After testing with a savegame on ZDCMP2 which is probably the largest map in existence, timing both methods resulted in a speed difference of less than 40 ms (70 vs 110 ms for reading all sectory, linedefs, sidedefs and objects).
This compares to an overall restoration time, including reloading the level, precaching all textures and setting everything up, of approx. 1.2 s, meaning an increase of 3% of the entire reloading time.
That's simply not worth all the negative side effects that may happen with a method that highly depends on proper code construction.
On the other hand, using random access means that a savegame version change is only needed now when the semantics of a field change, but not if some get added or deleted.
- do not I_Error out in the serializer unless caused by a programming error.
It is better to let the serializer finish, collect all the errors and I_Error out when the game is known to be in a stable enough state to allow unwinding.
It turned out this may not be done automatically when opening the savegame - it has to be done later, after the pre-spawned map thinkers and all connected objects have been destroyed.
The object deserializer also has to be rather careful about dealing with parse errors, because if something goes wrong a whole batch of uninitialized or partially initialized objects will be left behind to destroy.
This means that no object class may assume that anything but the default constructor has been run on it and needs to check any variable it may reference.
- always make the top level object randomaccess when opening a JSON file for reading. Some things won't work right if this is opened for sequential access.
- Several mods were able to just take advantage of A_SetRipperLevel and the likes, essentially bypassing this gate so there really is no point in doing this anymore.
This is so that PNGs can be written to memory, not just to an external file. stdio's FILE cannot be easily redirected but a C++ class can.
The writer is very simple and primitive right now, allowing no seeking, but for the job at hand it is sufficient.
Note that large parts of savegame creation have been disabled, because they are about to be rewritten and it makes no sense to adjust them all before.
- converted sound and canvas texture serialization.
- refactored file_zip, so that it can be used to load loose zip files and extract their compressed data directly.
- added handling to FSerializer to generate and consume compressed Zip file entries.
If all goes well this will allow saving savegames as Zips when the rework is done, which will make analyzing them a lot easier.
- fixed a few errors in the ACS module serializer.
- reordered a few things to how they were in the old code.
- optimized serialization of the level.Scrolls array to happen within the sector. This is to allow skipping 0-entries which normally constitute the vast majority of them.
- added sanity checks to prevent a savegame from being loaded with an incompatible map
- refactored a few things to simplify serialization.
- started work on main level serializer function.
The way this was done was a major headache inducer, requiring reconstruction of the function each time the value was changed and in general made actor damage a major hassle.
There was a DECORATE wrapper to mimic the original behavior but this looked quite broken because it completely ignored the different semantics of both damage calculation types.
It also made it impossible to determine if damage was a function or a value.
This accessor has been reverted to what it should be, only returning the constant, which now is -1 for a damage function. I am sorry if this may break the odd mod out but a quick look over some DECORATE-heavy stuff showed that this was never combined in any of them so that accessing 'damage' in DECORATE code depended on an actual damage function.
To get proper damage, a future commit will add a DECORATE function which calls AActor::GetMissileDamage.
actorlist, actornum, monsternum, itemsnum, countitemsnum
Modified the following ccmds:
monster, items, countitems
All commands with "num" at the end simply print a count of their respective filters, all other listed commands now print a list and a count.
TabCommands use an FName to store the command's name so once the NameManager is destroyed its data will become invalid.
This is a problem because C_RemoveTabCommand is being called from FBaseCVar's destructor and most CVARs are global variables.
- Trails now copy pitch, and set the projectile as the target.
- Added GETOWNER flag. Using it sets the owner of the fast projectile as the target instead, if it has an owner.
int SetActorFlag(int tid, str flagname, bool value);
- Mimics DECORATE's A_ChangeFlag
- Returns number of actors affected (number of things with the flag)
- Affects activator if TID is 0
# Conflicts:
# src/p_acs.cpp
It could only work with right to left function argument processing, but with left to right it failed because the ParseExpressionA call altered sc.TokenType.
Note that with register-based arguments on 64 bit platforms this is a very critical issue!
The fixed point version had a mostly useless check that excluded ANGLE_MAX, this got incorrectly converted to floating point.
Note that this version will clamp the angle to 360°, not merely overflow like it did with the fixed point code
The reason for this is that the macOS version uses a deprecated API and in order to correct this, the file needs to be compiled as Objective-C++ which requires a different extension.
It acts as a simple wrapper around P_DamageMobj which can damage a
single actor, but can also set the actor inflicting the damage. It
returns the amount of damage actually done, or -1 if the damaging was
cancelled.
- Crashes occurred if a particular actor was a tracer to the player and the actor was not gone by the time the player unmorphs.
- Failed unmorphs occur if tracer was manipulated through means like A_RearrangePointers, etc.
- Use with FMOD Studio 1.06.x. 1.07 and 1.08 compile but for some reason produce a lot of noise on vanilla Doom sounds.
- Crashes when used with fluidsynth provided by Ubuntu 16.04, but a self compiled version of the library works just fine.
- Reverbs are mostly untested, but implemented.
- Debug waveform drawing is not implemented as it requires a non-trivial amount of work.
- It will still show as FMOD Ex in the menus since I'm too lazy at the moment to make it a "separate" backend.
Since this list is excluded from regular thinker cleaning, anything that may survive through the end of G_FinishTravel will endlessly multiply and severely break the following savegames or just simply crash on broken pointers.
This reverts commit 5ff0abe568.
- use STAT_INVENTORY only for held items.
Seems this was causing some strange issues with hubs, but for items placed in the world it still cannot be allowed to have them in a different statnum.
This addresses a very strange crash I encounteded while travelling in a hub, and ended up with a NULL pointer after the 'Serialize' call which means that some code cleared the variable that is currently being deserialized. I was completely unable to find out what caused this because there is so much recursion going on in the deserializer. All actions on the deserialized actor are now being done with a local copy of that variable so that altering the actual one won't have any adverse effects.
bool CheckActorState(int tid, str statename, bool exact = false);
- Same parameter order as SetActorState
- Returns true if actor has the state; else returns false
This was causing issues with sprite sorting. For this to work as intended, all actors in the world that display sprites need to remain in spawn order, including inventory items.
The only thing this statnum was used for were some bot related search actions which are simply not worth breaking actual maps for some very minor performance gain.
Now Scroll_Texture_Model is working properly again. (Note: Whoever designed this function must have been on drugs - its use of the source data in Boom is completely insane.)
This fix is still incomplete, it should really discard everything outside the polyobject, not outside its bounding box, but at least it eliminates the most severe occurences of dislocated items.
So something like 'return ++user_x;' is now possible
Admittedly this needed quite a bit of refactoring mainly due to the fact that return types now have to be checked after resolving the function rather than before
The same characters as in stdout are now used to draw bars in console window on macOS
All messages are treated as in ISO Latin 1 encoding and bars looked like garbage output
break and continue were added but are not yet useable anywhere
This was made general enough so that loops and switch statements that accept breaks/continues can be done without much difficulty as well as goto statements with explicit labels if those are ever wanted
- Includes four functions, A_SetSprite(Angle/Rotation) and GetSprite(Angle/Rotation).
- SpriteRotation offsets the angle of the sprite, allowing for actors to move backwards or sideways for example.
- SpriteAngle requires +SPRITEANGLE and sets the actor's sprite to the absolute rotation found at that angle. Overrides SpriteRotation once the flag is on.
The state is undefined by default to preserve the original behavior of having the weapon layer deleted which modders can now avoid by defining it properly
This is different from the original "Death Scripts" idea. This tackles
some issues I've found with the original idea (now you can have as many
scripts as you want, not just global and actor-defined). Also takes care
of other complaints about the original idea and push request. Flags and
their use are in code comments.
The reason this is not set by default is because before that anyone could call A_WeaponReady within their Deselect state which would have allowed players to fire even when dead
Fixes compilation error with Xcode 8:
cannot initialize a parameter of type 'id<NSApplicationDelegate> _Nullable' with an lvalue of type 'ApplicationController *'
In this case the PSprite animation won't be changed, only the ReadyWeapon. But in order to work, the PSprite's caller needs to change as well so that the next weapon check does not fail.
Simply using FindPSprite in those functions wouldn't be enough because if a mod is using the firehands layer when they are called this would go very wrong
This will get rid of useless casts like 'if (isPointerEqual(x))'
It will also allow for proper casting in parameters like using a state as a boolean which is allowed in if statements for example
This is necessary to prevent moving sectors from altering the bridge's z-position. The bridge should remain at its current z, even if the sector change would cause floorz or ceilingz to be changed in a way that would make P_ZMovement adjust the bridge.
The bad code was taken from the 2005 floating point rewrite that, by comparing the value with '> -EQUAL_EPSILON', returned 1 for any value close to 0 (as 'on the line') so it was mistakenly reported as 'behind the line'.
- Clears a set of overlays in ranges [start,stop]. If unspecified, wipes all non-hardcoded layers. Safety determines whether to affect core layers or not (i.e. weapon). Returns the number of layers cleared.
Added no override boolean to A_Overlay and a boolean return type.
- If true, and a layer already has an active layer, the function returns false. Otherwise, sets the layer and returns true.
The old method does not work as expected with the higher precision of doubles, so instead just average the 3 vertex positions to get the triangle's center.
This was incorrectly spawning splashes when shooting inside a deep water sector, but in most cases the splash just was not visible. It could become visible if its position got clipped by a nearby one-sided wall.
SPF_NOTIMEFREEZE processes particles with this flag regardless of time freeze. The endsize parameter changes the scale of the particle to that size throughout its lifetime linearly.
- fixed: DECORATE allowed a silent conversion from names to integers.
In old versions the name was converted to 0, since the scripting branch to the name index. Reverted to the old behavior but added a warning message.
* many calls didn't use TELEFOGHEIGHT, mostly those coming from external code submissions that never were tested on anything but Doom. Addressed by adding this value inside P_SpawnTeleportFog and making the distinction between projectiles and non-projectiles from P_Teleport also part of this function.
* there were still a few places which spawned the teleport fog directly, skipping all the added features of P_SpawnTeleportFog.
- By default, when viewing a flat sprite from behind, the image is flipped around on the X axis. This may not always be desired, so this flag disables it.
Note that even with this change it is still not possible to unarchive any thinker pointers before the thinker list has been loaded as it would create broken lists.
Dynamic loading is enabled by default, set DYN_OPENAL to OFF to link with static or dynamic library
# Conflicts:
# src/sound/oalsound.cpp
# src/sound/oalsound.h
- Source is the actor to blame for the cause of damage (monster infighting for example). For missiles, modders should consider setting to AAPTR_TARGET.
- Inflictor is the actor doing the damage itself. Note that by changing this, it will take into account the flags on the pointed actor.
Windows version uses ANSI_CHARSET to handle the corresponding text
This solves the problem like in https://github.com/alexey-lysiuk/gzdoom/issues/63:
*** Assertion failure in -[NSTextFieldCell _objectValue:forString:errorDescription:], /Library/Caches/com.apple.xbs/Sources/AppKit/AppKit-1404.47/AppKit.subproj/NSCell.m:1684
Invalid parameter not satisfying: aString != nil
Fullscreen window was incorrectly placed on the main screen instead of the current one
Honestly I have no idea what was the reason behind that [NSWindow setFrameOrigin:] call
Apparently it's redundant and moreover it's incorrect for multi-monitor configuration
- Places the weapon offset by the defined x and y. Both are floats. This stacks with weapon bobbing.
- WOF_KEEPX: Don't change the X offset.
- WOF_KEEPY: Don't change the Y offset.
- WOF_ADD: Add onto instead of replacing the coordinates.
- don't let P_PushUp move any actors with the same z as the pushing actor. This should solve most monster pile-ups, but the entire logic here needs some serious rethinking. The only reason this doesn't cause more problems is some fudging in several other places.
- removed the sector loop for deleting skybox references in ASkyViewpoint::Destroy. Since this only refers to the sectorPortals array it is completely redundant as the following code will clear them just as well.
- float GetZAt(x, y, angle, flags, pick_pointer);
- Gets the floor z at x distance ahead and y distance to the side in relative form from the calling actor pointer. Flags are as follows (GZF_ prefix):
- CEILING: Returns the ceiling z instead of floor.
- ABSOLUTEPOS: x and y are absolute positions.
- ABSOLUTEANG: angle parameter does not add the pointer's angle to the angle parameter.
At least with KDevelop4, macros like this interefere with contextual info by
causing it to show information about the macro itself (where it's defined and
what it defines to), rather than the function (parameters, comments, etc). It
also gets in the way of auto-completion.
As it turned out this has been broken for many, many years, so one can assume that most content using this function depends on this special case not working. I could track it down to at least 2008.
- If the two strings compared both point to the same location in memory,
then we know they are the same string without having to bother actually
comparing their contents. Note that the opposite is not neccessarily
true: If they point to two different locations, they could still match a
case-sensitive comparison because there are still two ACS string tables:
the one that belongs to the map's script and the one that belongs to
everything else.
- some reorganization of texture precaching so that the renderer can decide what to do with actors.
Just marking the sprite textures loses too much info if more is needed than just loading the images into memory.
'give item' stopped working because commit 7b35f32f3d and 6aca7604eb didn't take account that give cheat with zero amount should not touch the item amount.
- FLATSPRITE: An actor becomes flat as if they were a decal on the floor.
- PITCHFLATSPRITE: A flat sprite tilts up and down based on pitch.
- WALLSPRITE: Similar to a Y billboarded sprite. The degree of the flattening is determined by the FlatAngle property.
- ROLLSPRITE: The sprite of the actor is affected by the Roll property.
Ideally the warping shouldn't be a property of the texture class itself but an effect processor that can get added to a texture. Unfortunately the current setup will not allow this, requiring some significant refactoring of texture access first.
Since decals may have thinkers attached this will crash when such a savegame gets loaded, because the thinker lists get reset in P_SerializeThinkers, deleting any thinker that already was processed.
I also added an error message that immediately aborts the save process if such an out-of-sequence thinker is attempted to be written out.
This obviously breaks savegame compatibility again...
- ALLOWTHRUFLAGS must be used on the puffs, added for the sake of compatibility with older mods. This applies to the following:
-- Bullets: THRUACTORS, THRUSPECIES
-- Rails: Same as bullets, but includes THRUGHOST.
- restored the original 3D floor code to retrieve the current floor in P_CheckPosition. The portal aware version was a bit too strict and could place the actor on the wrong side when moving at high speeds.
They didn't do anything anyway, and can clash with other compilers since they
may be used internally (macros and keywords starting with __ are for compiler
use).
- For most cvars, this is equivalent to calling GetGenericRep() to get a
string.
- For float cvars, it uses %g instead of %H, because %H is generally more
information than is needed.
- GCC is pickier than Visual C++. GCC requires that structs with constructors, etc that are
used in a union must be defined outside the union. VC++ lets you do it inline.