`NOTIFICATION_MOUSE_ENTER` and `NOTIFICATION_MOUSE_EXIT` now includes
the areas of children control nodes if the mouse filters allow it.
In order to check if a Control node itself was entered/exited, the newly
introduced `NOTIFICATION_MOUSE_ENTER_SELF` and
`NOTIFICATION_MOUSE_EXIT_SELF` can be used.
Co-authored-by: Markus Sauermann <6299227+Sauermann@users.noreply.github.com>
This keyboard shortcut has been made with inspiration from the VS Code keyboard shortcut editor.action.copyLinesDownAction. It duplicates all selected lines and inserts them below no matter where the caret is within the line.
We allow using auto for lambdas or complex macros where a return type
may change based on the parameters. But where the type is clear, we
should be explicit.
Co-authored-by: A Thousand Ships <96648715+AThousandShips@users.noreply.github.com>
Upon investigating the extremely slow MSVC build times in #80513, I noticed
that while Godot policy is to never use exceptions, we weren't enforcing it
with compiler flags, and thus still included exception handling code and
stack unwinding.
This is wasteful on multiple aspects:
- Binary size: Around 20% binary size reduction with exceptions disabled
for both MSVC and GCC binaries.
- Compile time:
* More than 50% build time reduction with MSVC.
* 10% to 25% build time reduction with GCC + LTO.
- Performance: Possibly, needs to be benchmarked.
Since users may want to re-enable exceptions in their own thirdparty code
or the libraries they compile with Godot, this behavior can be toggled with
the `disable_exceptions` SCons option, which defaults to true.
Previously for InputEvents there was no distinction between
Window-area and Viewport-area.
This was problematic in cases where stretching was used and the Window
contained black bars at the sides of the Viewport.
This PR separates the area of Window and Viewport regarding InputEvents.
A single mouse click can cause multiple actions, which contradicts
the paradigm that a single Input Event should cause only a single
action.
The solution consists of two parts:
1. Physics Picking as the last step during viewport input event
handling, currently doesn't set the event as handled. This PR sets
the event as handled in the case of physics picking.
2. After an InputEvent is processed by a SubVieportContainer, it is
sent to its parent, even if it set as handled within the SubViewport.
This PR adds an additional test to check if the event is handled
before propagating the event to the parent Control.