The main bulk of this is the new start screen code. To make this work in Raze some more work on the startup procedure is needed.
What this does provide is support for the DOS end-of-game text screens in Duke and SW on non-Windows systems.
We need this to merge the game specific sector/wall extensions with the base but still allow the engine to access such arrays. For that they need a runtime settable stride.
Since everything uses the same warning number, the old setup resulted in [[deprecated]] being silenced.
So this explicitly adds the needed #defines to silence the very noisy warning from the MSVC headers but leaves warning 4996 active otherwise.
In particlular this does:
* silence all warnings in the subprojects
* do not derive TIterator from std::iterator anymore as C++17 deprecates this.
* silence the above for RapidJSON because altering that code is not desirable.
* explicitly disable warning 4996 in some Windows files that call the deprecated (but still needed) GetVersionEx function.
* define _CRT_SECURE_NO_DEPRECATE, _CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS and _CRT_NONSTDC_NO_WARNINGS through CMake to disable the CRT's deprecation and security warnings.
Currently this will print several (intended) deprecation warnings about 'updatesector' that point to code that needs to be changed but cannot yet without other refactorings being done first.
Need to get rid of all those unmanaged allocations and present game data in an easily serializable form.
This adds a managed TPointer class that replicates the useful parts of std::unique_pointer but steers clear of its properties that often render it useless.
This fixes#175
include\algorithm(7419,1): error C2678: binary '=': no operator found which takes a left-hand operand of type 'const T' (or there is no acceptable conversion) (compiling source file source\common\scripting\jit\jit.cpp)
include\algorithm(7419,17): error C3892: '_First': you cannot assign to a variable that is const (compiling source file source\core\searchpaths.cpp)
Having this grouped in a single object will make refactoring a lot easier.
Access functions have been provided to avoid changing client code for the reorganization.