This lets us change things like this...
if (Failed) {
SDL_SetError("We failed");
return -1;
}
...into this...
if (Failed) {
return SDL_SetError("We failed");
}
Fixes Bugzilla #1778.
- Fixes bug 1712 by not overwriting SDL_SubsystemRefCount in SDL_Init.
- Removes the SDL_initialized variable, and makes SDL_SubsystemRefCount
the canonical source of truth for whether or not a subsystem has been
initialized.
- Refactors SDL_InitSubSystem and SDL_QuitSubSystem to use helper
functions to manage refcount.
- Adds automated tests for SDL_Init/Quit*.
- Adds SDL_bits.h which contains SDL_MostSignificantBitIndex.
Pallav Nawani 2012-09-14 03:23:02 PDT
Looking through the code for SDL_GetPlatform(), it is obvious that the case for
Android platform doesn't exist. And hence SDL_GetPlatform() doesn't return a
useful string on Android Phones.
It's a long-dead platform, and we don't have any way to build for, test, or
maintain it, so there's no sense in doing acrobatics to support it.
If you need Windows CE support, use SDL 1.2. If you need Windows Phone support,
send SDL 2.0 patches for the newer Windows Mobile platform.
The trick is that if you're using configure and you don't want to have SDL_config.h and SDL_revision.h to show up as modified, you need to configure and build from a separate directory.
You also need to include SDL_revision.h directly if you want to use the SDL_REVISION constant, as a side effect of these changes.
The following patch fixes some of the bitrot for the Nintendo DS port.
The support is still basic at the moment, but it allows to run the "general"
test under the current head of tree (parent: 5269:11bd1585efb5 tip).
Most of the patch is mine, but I integrated a couple changes that John
Magnotti posted on Feb 1st.
Patrice Mandin
Hello,
I originally added pth support for threads in SDL 1.2 because on the Atari
platform we did not have any thread library.
I think pth support could be removed from SDL 1.3 for two reasons:
- Atari platform removed
- pth does not provides real (preemptive) threads, because it is user space,
and expect the application to call one of its function to give CPU to another
thread. So it is not exactly useful for applications, that expect threads to
run simultaneously.
FIXME:
Change #include <stdlib.h> to #include "SDL_stdlib.h"
Change #include <string.h> to #include "SDL_string.h"
Make sure nothing else broke because of this...