Consolidate the include statements scattered across the code in accordance
with the comment in C4Include.h. The advantages are listed in the same
comment.
Furthermore, it follows llvm-include-order which is the logical
extrapolation of the project's style guideline wherever possible
(C4Include.h being the most-frequent exception).
The optimizer is going to remove dead code anyway, and has the
additional advantage of doing syntax checking, so the code won't
silently break when someone changes something.
The C++ standard library comes with perfectly fine implementations of
these functions, so there's no point in reimplementing them just for the
hell of it.
As discussed in http://forum.openclonk.org/topic_show.pl?tid=2917, I
have merged all copyright notices into a single file and referenced that
merged file from each source file.
For the updated source files, the timeline has been split into three
parts:
1. Pre-RWD code (before 2001)
2. RWD code (2001 through 2009)
3. OpenClonk code (2009 and later)
All pre-RWD copyright notices have been left intact, as have RWD-era
copyright notices where the file did not have a RedWolf design copyright
notice but only individual author ones. All copyright notices of the
OpenClonk era have been replaced by a single notice ranging from the
first recorded year to the current year (2013). Mape code did not get a
OpenClonk Team copyright notice because it is somewhat separate from the
main OpenClonk codebase and has only been touched by Armin Burgmeier.
This fixes the lightbulb symbol from floundering around back and forth when
zoomed in and scrolling. Since C4Facets can be used to specify a target area
to draw into (such as in C4DefGraphics::Draw), and since this area can be
zoomed, sub-pixel precision can be achieved this way in such drawing
operations.
This time with more manual checking and using git blame -M -C, so that
a few cases of copied code get a copyright notice corresponding to
their initial introduction.
Hardcode the few remaining palette references instead. We might want to
include some method to customize some colors again, but not for debug
display and such things.
This is a whitespace-only patch. Hopefully, it'll only affect rarely-changed
parts of the engine, since all regularly maintained pieces should already
use tabs.
All C4IDs are now stored in auto-created global constants with the same name
as the ID itself. There is no special parsing of IDs anymore; this means that
you need to use the C4Id function if you aren't sure whether an ID exists.
IDs in portrait strings aren't working, since I expect portrait support to be
removed from the engine.