On Windows the main thread can be enumerating DirectInput devices while the Windows.Gaming.Input thread is calling back with a new controller available, and in this case HIDAPI_IsDevicePresent() returned false since the controller initialization hadn't completed yet, creating a duplicate controller.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/7304
Use the delta of the target refresh rate and the refresh rate of the mode to select the closest matching display mode, as the actual closest mode may have a slightly lower rate than the target by a small fraction of a hz (e.g 59.98 vs 60.0).
Desktops can move windows, even exclusive fullscreen windows, from one display to another. To handle this, windows now hold two fullscreen modes: the desired mode, which is considered mutable only to the application, and the current mode. When a fullscreen request is made, the current mode is initially set to the desired mode for the initial fullscreen transition. If an exclusive fullscreen window is moved to a new display, the new display is checked to see if it has a mode compatible with the desired mode. If it does, the compatible mode is used so the windows will have the same properties on the new display. If no compatible mode is found, the window becomes desktop fullscreen. This occurs whenever the window is moved to ensure that an attempt will always be made to use the application's requested mode, if possible.
Exiting and reentering fullscreen results in the desired mode being restored on the display specified by it.
When an exclusive fullscreen display is specified, it overrides any positioning, including from driver specific functions. Allows for the proper placement of fullscreen windows on macOS and Windows when the floating window is on a display that differs from the one specified by the exclusive fullscreen mode.
A specific position-only function has been split out for use when a window has been moved.
`EM_ASM_` and `EM_ASM_INT_V` are calls that have been deprecated
for a long time.
Since the return value isn't used for the call to `EM_ASM_`, it
can be replaced with `EM_ASM`.
`EM_ASM_INT_V` is now (for the last few years) `EM_ASM_INT`.
A window 1920x1080 pixels wide at 125% scaling will have a width and height of 1536x864, but at pixel (1919,1079) the mouse coordinate will be (1535.2,863.2), which is within the bounds of 1536x864, but larger than (1535,863).