("In member function 'T SGPersonalityParameter<T>::shuffle()':
28: error: there are no arguments to 'sg_random' that depend on a template
parameter, so a declaration of 'sg_random' must be available")
Fix bug with break/continue inside of a foreach or forindex: Don't pop
the vector/index inside OP_EACH, do it at the end of the loop.
In the process, discovered and fixed a scary corruption issue with
continue; it never really worked right, although simple usage was
likely to get away without crashing. Both the continue's OP_BREAK and
the cleanup code at the end of a loop would pop the "mark" stack,
leading to an underflow. Introduced an OP_CONTINUE which adjusts
stack but doesn't change markTop
Re-inline the PUSH macro. This thing is called all over the place
from the inner loop. If the problem is intra-expression side effects,
then just use another expression in the macro.
Return an empty vector when requesting zero-length subvec, not nil
Have call() return the call stack in the error vector; see docs on
plausible.org/nasal or ask Andy about this feature.
Default closure()'s level argument to zero, not nil
Add an optional "file name" argument to compile()
simgear/scene/material/mat.cxx simgear/scene/material/mat.hxx
simgear/scene/material/matlib.cxx
simgear/scene/material/matlib.hxx simgear/scene/tgdb/leaf.cxx
simgear/scene/tgdb/obj.cxx
Attach userdata to groundtile scenegraph leafs that contains
a SGMaterial reference to the material of that leaf.
Add (physical) material properties to the material definitions.
Plug a memory leak with GlyphSigns.
specify the same texture in the "foo.lighted" and "foo.unlighted" material
entry. This also allows to drop the state cloning and thereby solves the
most urgent apt_signs.cxx TODO. :-)
states from material.xml (separate <material> entries for now)
- clone state less often: not once per sign element, but once per material
switch (TODO: clone only once per material)
got plib's lowres red-white chequer-board pattern along with an error
message, and not ours ... which is much prettier, but also bigger.
(Should we downscale it?)