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