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
the same thing as one for each music stream. If both music streams are
playing music from the same CD, they will both take turns at using the same
file handle.
The only case where both file handles are used is when music from one CD is
fading in while music from the other CD is fading out. Which of course can
only happen if you play the game from hard disk. If the game has to ask for
the other CD, it kills the music immediately.
The reason for doing this is that there was some concern about whether
having two file handles open to the same file was portable or not. I don't
think that question was ever fully answered, so I avoid the situation.
svn-id: r16753
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
to keep its own copy of the sound data. It could be even further simplified
(I don't really see any reason for having two different sound queues), but
I seem to have reached a point of stability here and I don't want to jinx
it by making further changes yet.
svn-id: r13705
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