This is done entirely through interpreter fallbacks. It would
probably be possible to implement this using host exception
handlers instead, but I think it would be a lot of complexity
for a rarely used feature, so let's not do it for now.
For performance reasons, there are two settings for this feature:
One setting which does enables just what True Crime: New York City
needs and one setting which enables it all. The latter makes
almost all float instructions fall back to the interpreter.
Instead of having a single GUI checkbox for "Always Hide Mouse Cursor",
I have instead opted to use radio buttons so the user can swap between
different states of mouse visibility. "Movement" is the default
behavior, "Never" will hide the mouse cursor the entire time the game is
running, and "Always" will keep the mouse cursor always visible.
There are two reasons for this.
1. Using Dolphin's logging system lets the user decide whether
the printout should go to the terminal, the GUI, or a file.
fmt::print always prints to stdout... unless you're on Android, in
which case it does nothing at all, because Android disables stdout.
2. The Windows version of Dolphin crashes when you use fmt::print.
Yes, really. The crash happens because a call to std::fprint in
fmt::v7::detail::fwrite_fully returns that less characters were
written than requested, which fmt handles by throwing an exception.
(As always, Dolphin does not use exception handling.)
I'm not sure why std::fprint is doing this, but since switching
away from using fmt::print is a good idea due to the previous point
anyway, I'd say it's best to just switch.
Previously, s_temp_input was being used for BOTH the savestate's and the movie's input printout in the panic alert.
This commit simply performs memcpy from the correct vector for the movInput printout.
Previously, only the number of total input polls would be shown in the window title when playing back a movie. This simply adds the VI / frame count total as well, which is a much more relevant number to look at while TASing.
Previously, using TAS Input to activate the digital L and R buttons would not show these inputs in the Input Display. This commit adds the digital L and R presses to the Input Display, and also displays just "L" or "R" if the analog is set to 255.
Now that we have enum helpers for inserting values into packets and have
migrated all other enumerations over, there's no need to keep this alias
around any longer.
Over time OnData() has become a huge function-long case statement that
attempts to manage numerous packet-related behaviors, which makes it a
little difficult to reliably ensure certain handling doesn't interfere
with another case's. It's also mildly annoying to navigate due to its
size.
To make it a little easier to read and find the specific behavior, we
can break the relevant pieces of code out into their own functions.
If W0 is locked when fpr.RW is called, the indirectly called
ConvertSingleToDoubleLower may need to emit a push+pop, so it's
better for fresx/frsqrtex to call RW before locking W0 than after.