When using the default setting (layer 1 set only) nothing is stored in the tscn file for a Light2D, hence it relies on the value in the constructor.
The problem is the constructed value is 1 in Light2D, and -1 in RasterizerCanvas::Light. -1 results in all bits being set so all occluders are shown, rather than just those in layer 1.
This PR changes Rasterizer::Canvas constructor to set to 1. An alternative is to have -1 as the value for layer 1 throughout.
The insertion order for dictionaries is only a language feature for
Python 3.6/3.7+ implementations, and not prior to that.
This ensures that the engine won't be rebuilt if the order of detected
modules changes in any way, as the `OrderedDict` should guarantee
inerstion order.
Depending on the conditional statements of the 'for' and 'while' loops,
their body may not even execute once. For example:
func a():
var arr = []
for i in arr:
return i
# can be reached, but analysis says cannot
return -1
func b():
var should_loop = false
while should_loop:
return 1
# can be reached, but analysis says cannot
return 0
The parser will complain that the statements after the comment cannot
be reached, but it is clearly possible for our scenario. This is
because the parser falsely assumes that the loop body will always
execute at least once.
Fix the code to remove this assumption for both of those loops.
(cherry picked from commit 7b1423a61e)
A class can't have multiple signals with the same name, but previously users
would not be alerted to a conflict while editing the script where it occurred.
Now a helpful error will appear in the editor during script parsing.
(cherry picked from commit 9e44739324)
This patch adds ability to include external, user-defined C++ modules
to be compiled as part of Godot via `custom_modules` build option
which can be passed to `scons`.
```
scons platform=x11 tools=yes custom_modules="../project/modules"
```
Features:
- detects all available modules under `custom_modules` directory the
same way as it does for built-in modules (not recursive);
- works with both relative and absolute paths on the filesystem;
- multiple search paths can be specified as a comma-separated list.
Module custom documentation and editor icons collection and generation
process is adapted to work with absolute paths needed by such modules.
Also fixed doctool bug mixing absolute and relative paths respectively.
Implementation details:
- `env.module_list` is a dictionary now, which holds both module name as
key and either a relative or absolute path to a module as a value.
- `methods.detect_modules` is run twice: once for built-in modules, and
second for external modules, all combined later.
- `methods.detect_modules` was not doing what it says on the tin. It is
split into `detect_modules` which collects a list of available modules
and `write_modules` which generates `register_types` sources for each.
- whether a module is built-in or external is distinguished by relative
or absolute paths respectively. `custom_modules` scons converter
ensures that the path is absolute even if relative path is supplied,
including expanding user paths and symbolic links.
- treats the parent directory as if it was Godot's base directory, so
that there's no need to change include paths in cases where custom
modules are included as dependencies in other modules.
(cherry picked from commit a96f0e98d7)
The specific case for object reference seems unnecessary, as `RES res = var`
already does the work. The case where REF is invalid is never hit in the case
of already freed objects.
The assignment `res = *r` was causing the resource to be always invalidated
on the 3.2 branch.
(cherry picked from commit 12685df423)
Upstream development restarted after 13 years. Changes:
2020-02-02: Version 0.5.0
Minor speed improvement on the decompressor.
Prevent memory violation when decompressing corrupted input.
2020-01-10: Version 0.4.0
Only code & infrastructure clean-up, no new functionality.
(cherry picked from commit 5167c9186a)
Builtins that should prevent baking colors and vertex positions were incorrectly only active in shaders that were not unshaded. This was a terminology misunderstanding - unshaded materials can still use shaders so should have the same test to prevent baking.