classes: Screen and Mouse. Screen handles most of the drawing, except the
mouse cursor and in-game menus.
The old Graphics class is no more.
I've also fixed some "reverse stereo" regressions from the first part of
the restructuring.
I'm not sure what the next step will be, but hopefully it will be smaller
than this one was.
svn-id: r16812
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
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
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
etc. to the different opcodes. Until now it has done so by casting the
pointer to an int32 (opcode parameters are represented as arrays of int32)
and then the opcode function casts it back to whatever pointer it needs.
At least in C there is no guarantee that a pointer can be represented as an
integer type (though apparently C99 may define such a type), so this has
struck me as unsafe ever since I first noticed it.
However, since all such pointers appear to point to the memory block owned
by the memory manager, we can easily convert them to integers by treating
them as offsets into the memory block. So that's what I have done. I hope I
caught all the occurences in the opcode functions, or we're going to have
some pretty interesting regressions on our hands...
svn-id: r11241
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
Renamed the resource manager's open/close methods openResource() and
closeResource() to avoid confusion. (It was I who originally shortened
their names to open() and close(), but I've changed my mind now.)
Moved more stuff into Sword2Engine.
svn-id: r11088
console from the SCUMM engine. I decided that would be easier than to clean
up the original console code.
Unfortunately there's a bunch of code that I just copied - a pretty lousy
form of code-reusal. It'd be nice if the console could be made part of the
Engine class, or something like that.
Most of the debug commands seem to be working. Some aren't relevant for
ScummVM, and some are a bit obscure so I'm not quite sure what they're
supposed to be doing.
svn-id: r10978
touches a lot of the code, of course, and adds yet another global variable
(temporarily, I hope), but everything still seems to work.
Knock on wood.
svn-id: r10806