so hopefully not too much breaks). New syntax features:
1. Call-by-name function arguments. You can specify a hash literal in
place of ordered function arguments, and it will become the local
variable namespace for the called function, making functions with many
arguments more readable. Ex:
view_manager.lookat(heading:180, pitch:20, roll:0, x:X0, y:Y0, z:Z0,
time:now, fov:55);
Declared arguments are checked and defaulted as would be expected:
it's an error if you fail to pass a value for an undefaulted argument,
missing default arguments get assigned, and any rest parameter
(e.g. "func(a,b=2,rest...){}") will be assigned with an empty vector.
2. Vector slicing. Vectors (lists) can now be created from others
using an ordered list of indexes and ranges. For example:
var v1 = ["a","b","c","d","e"]
var v2 = v1[3,2]; # == ["d","c"];
var v3 = v1[1:3]; # i.e. range from 1 to 3: ["b","c","d"];
var v4 = v1[1:]; # no value means "to the end": ["b","c","d","e"]
var i = 2;
var v5 = v1[i]; # runtime expressions are fine: ["c"]
var v6 = v1[-2,-1]; # negative indexes are relative to end: ["d","e"]
The range values can be computed at runtime (e.g. i=1; v5=v1[i:]).
Negative indices work the same way the do with the vector functions
(-1 is the last element, -2 is 2nd to last, etc...).
3. Multi-assignment expressions. You can assign more than one
variable (or lvalue) at a time by putting them in a parenthesized
list:
(var a, var b) = (1, 2);
var (a, b) = (1, 2); # Shorthand for (var a, var b)
(var a, v[0], obj.field) = (1,2,3) # Any assignable lvalue works
var color = [1, 1, 0.5];
var (r, g, b) = color; # works with runtime vectors too
This eliminates jitter and other rendering problems.
For the moment this is dependent on an osg fix.
Also, don't read wind properties from FlightGear; provide a mechanism
for fg to set the wind.
It is not safe to call this function from the database pager thread;
in any event, state sets and textures created in the database pager
will get passed through the SharedStateManager anyway.
- this exposed a bizarre issue on Mac where dragging in <AGL/agl.h> in
extensions.hxx was pulling in all of Carbon to the global namespace
- very scary. As a result, I now need to explicitly include CoreFoundation
in fg_init.cxx.
- change SG_USING_STD(x) to using std::x
Issues:
- the logic for X11 and Win32 in RenderTexture and extensions is tortured,
please see if you agree I got all the ifdefs correct.
the MSVC and MipsPro warning stuff).
As a result of this patch, simgear/sg_traits.h can be deleted. So can SGCMath.h,
but I'll do that separately.
There is one more 'mechanical' change to come - getting rid of SG_USING_STD(X),
but I want to keep that separate from everything else. (There's another mechnica
l change, replacing <math.h> with <cmath> and so on *everywhere*, but one step a
t a time)
PLETE_FUNCTIONAL from SimGear and FlightGear.
As a result, SG_HAVE_STD_INCLUDES is now *always* set, so I will get the boring
fixes for that done, but separately. I'm still auditing the other things in comp
ilers.h - there's a lot that can die now BORLAND is gone.
<iostream> sucks in expensive initialization of the standard streams
and isn't appropriate in a header file. Use <istream> and <ostream>
instead.
using declarations should never appear at global scope in a header
file; source files get to decide what they want to use in their
namespace.