Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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svn-id: r19587
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reported by Crilith.
To elaborate a bit, the engine no longer accesses resource data through
packed structs. Instead it uses memory streams and the READ/WRITE
functions.
If data is mainly read, not written, I have replaced the old struct with a
new one with a read() function to read the whole thing from memory into the
struct's variables, and a write() function to dump the struct's variables
to memory. In fact, most of these write() functions remain unused.
If data is both read and written, I have replaced the struct with a class
with individual get/set functions to replace the old variables. This
manipulates memory directly.
Since I'm fairly sure that these structs are frequently stored as local
variables for a script, all script variables (both local and global) are
stored as little-endian and accessed through the READ/WRITE functions,
rather than being treated as arrays of 32-bit integers.
On a positive note, the functions for doing endian conversion of resources
and save games have been removed, and some general cleanups have been made
to assist in the rewrite.
Initial reports indicate that this patch indeed fixes alignment issues, and
that I have not - surprisingly - broken the game on big-endian platforms.
At least not in any immediately obvious way. And there's still plenty of
time to fix regressions before 0.9.0, too.
svn-id: r19366
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svn-id: r19142
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Screen. I've also added an unused "splash screen" function that displays
the image that used to be shown by CacheNewCluster() while copying a data
file from CD to hard disk. ScummVM doesn't do that, but it's a nice image
that I wish we could do something useful with, and it's easier to have the
code here for reference than having to dig through old revisions of the
resource manager.
svn-id: r17894
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svn-id: r17477
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In this first step, I have moved all opcode functions into functions.cpp,
instead of having them scattered all over the place.
To get things to compile again, I had to rewrite the overly complicated
sound effects handling. It's much simpler now.
The next step will be to move any non-trivial code out of the opcode
functions and into the appropriate object. This, I hope, will make it
easier to create well-separated objects, instead of the current mess.
I also want to tear down the artificial boundary between the main directory
and the "driver" directory. We already have a cross-platform layer; there's
no need to have yet another one. (Actually, the rewriting of the sound
effects code took one first step in this direction.)
At the final stage, I'd like to get rid of the "drivers" directory
completely, but I'll probably need some help with that if I want to
preserve the CVS history of the code.
Things will probably be a bit bumpy along the way, but I seem to have
reached a point of relative stability again, which is why I'm commiting
this now.
svn-id: r16668
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svn-id: r16580
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svn-id: r16397
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svn-id: r13806
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it's Logic::_scriptVars[ID] instead of just ID. Apart from looking cool, it
makes it much easier to tell the difference between variables and constants
when looking at the code.
Of course, this sort of sweeping changes is jolly good for introducing
truly weird regressions, which is why I waited until after 0.6.0.
svn-id: r13331
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svn-id: r12739
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svn-id: r12279
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svn-id: r12181
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over the past few weeks, except for g_sword2. (Of course, this doesn't
necessarily make the code any prettier, but we can work on that later.)
svn-id: r11309
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svn-id: r11209
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and removed some of the references to global variables.
At this point I believe everything in the main game engine has been moved
into classes - not necessarily the correct ones, but still... However,
there is some stuff in the driver directory that need to be taken care of
as well.
svn-id: r11207
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svn-id: r11175
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svn-id: r10997
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svn-id: r10885
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svn-id: r10728
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headers. Most (all?) of the ones we need should probably come from stdafx.h
instead.
svn-id: r10588
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svn-id: r10581
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message functions with our own.
We still need to go through them and assign sensible debug levels to them.
svn-id: r10422
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but say who added what when. (No disrespect intended, but this information
means very little to us.)
svn-id: r10413
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svn-id: r10267
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svn-id: r9240
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svn-id: r9222
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svn-id: r9211
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