Adds hint "SDL_WINDOWS_DPI_SCALING" which can be set to "1" to
change the SDL coordinate system units to be DPI-scaled points, rather
than pixels everywhere.
This means windows will be appropriately sized, even when created on
high-DPI displays with scaling.
e.g. requesting a 640x480 window from SDL, on a display with 125%
scaling in Windows display settings, will create a window with an
800x600 client area (in pixels).
Setting this to "1" implicitly requests process DPI awareness
(setting SDL_WINDOWS_DPI_AWARENESS is unnecessary),
and forces SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI on all windows.
The hint allows setting a specific DPI awareness ("unaware", "system", "permonitor", "permonitorv2").
This is the first part of High-DPI support on Windows ( https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/2119 ).
It doesn't implement a virtualized SDL coordinate system, which will be
addressed in a later commit. (This hint could be useful for SDL apps
that want 1 SDL unit = 1 pixel, though.)
Detecting and behaving correctly under per-monitor V2
(calling AdjustWindowRectExForDpi where needed) should fix the
following issues:
https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/3286https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4712
Add the hint "SDL_VIDEO_WAYLAND_MODE_EMULATION", which can be used to disable mode emulation under Wayland. When disabled, only the desktop and/or native display resolution is exposed.
- SDL_JoystickGUID -> SDL_GUID (though we retain a type alias)
- Operations for GUID <-> String ops are now in
src/SDL_guid.c and include/SDL_guid.h
- The corresponding Joystick operations delegate to SDL_guid.c
- Added test/testguid.c
Added the ability to specify a name and the product VID/PID for a virtual controller
Also added a test case to testgamecontroller, if you pass --virtual as a parameter
* Add changes from code review by @ccawley2011, #5597, overall cleanup
* Update N-Gage README, minor cleanup and rephrasing
* Call SDL_SetMainReady() before calling SDL_main, return SDL_main instead of main
This can be used to check whether untrusted sizes would cause overflow
when used to calculate how much memory is needed.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
For stable releases, this gives us the ability to make bugfix-only point
releases such as 2.24.1 if we want to, and distinguish between them
programmatically. For example, this ability could have been useful after
2.0.16 to fix Xwayland regressions, and after 2.0.18 to fix event loop
regressions.
For development releases, this gives us the ability to make multiple
prereleases during the same feature cycle, and distinguish between them
programmatically. For example, this would have been useful during 2.0.22
development, which went through three prereleases before reaching the
final release.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Now that we've said this will be removed from SDL 3, we're free to use
any encoding that is compatible with existing SDL versions and will still
compare correctly for all SDL 2 version numbers. This allows the SDL 2
minor version to go beyond 1 digit, limited only by the size of
SDL_version.minor (which is 8 bits), making the largest possible version
number 2.255.99.
The patchlevel (micro version) is still limited to 2 digits.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The encoding used in SDL_VERSIONNUM (e.g. 2.0.22 -> 2022) cannot
represent 2-digit minor versions without overflowing from the hundreds
digit into the thousands digit, which produces confusing version
numbers that will compare incorrectly when the major version is increased
to 3.
However, we can sidestep this problem by declaring that SDL_VERSIONNUM
will no longer be present in SDL 3, which means it only needs to be able
to represent SDL 2 version numbers losslessly.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This comparison normally happens at compile-time, not at runtime, so
it doesn't matter if it isn't optimal. This avoids incorrect comparison
if the minor version in SDL_COMPILEDVERSION and SDL_VERSIONNUM has more
than one digit, which would cause it to overflow from the hundreds place
into the thousands place.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>