This reverts commit 668f8f2cf6.
Revert "- added a proper error message when '--' or '++' gets used on 8 or 16 bit values."
This reverts commit a94f5dd1b3.
None of this was necessary - the triggered assert was bogus and had to be removed.
This requires SDL >= 2.0.4.
Since <https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2464> was fixed in
SDL 2.0.4, SDL behaves as a CMake "config-file package", even if it was
not itself built using CMake: it installs a sdl2-config.cmake file to
${libdir}/cmake/SDL2, which tells CMake where to find SDL's headers and
library, analogous to a pkg-config .pc file.
As a result, we no longer need to copy/paste a "find-module package"
to be able to find a system copy of SDL >= 2.0.4 with find_package(SDL2).
Find-module packages are now discouraged by the CMake developers, in
favour of having upstream projects behave as config-file packages.
This results in a small API change: FindSDL2 used to set SDL2_INCLUDE_DIR
and SDL2_LIBRARY, but the standard behaviour for config-file packages is
to set <name>_INCLUDE_DIRS and <name>_LIBRARIES. Use the CONFIG keyword
to make sure we search in config-file package mode, and will not find a
FindSDL2.cmake in some other directory that implements the old interface.
In addition to deleting redundant code, this avoids some assumptions in
FindSDL2 about the layout of a SDL installation. The current libsdl2-dev
package in Debian breaks those assumptions; this is considered a bug
and will hopefully be fixed soon, but it illustrates how fragile these
assumptions can be. We can be more robust against different installation
layouts by relying on SDL's own CMake integration.
When linking to a copy of CMake in a non-standard location, users can
now set the SDL2_DIR or CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH environment variable to point
to it; previously, these users would have used the SDL2DIR environment
variable. This continues to be unnecessary if using matching system-wide
installations of CMake and SDL2, for example both from Debian.
This is based on the patch written by Simon McVittie for OpenJK:
52030235f0
The wiki currently says they should be fixed point but the code
currently treats them as integers. Given that they are placed with
double precision horizontally, it is odd that the same precision
cannot be applied vertically. Changing this would break existing maps
so add two flags to support both types.