(This probably isn't right on truly ancient versions of Borland C, but it
should cover things from the last decade or so, I hope.)
(possibly) Fixes#1673.
We don't use it, it was a leftover from 1.2, I think, and it doesn't exist
on Solaris, so this should hopefully fix the build there.
This also means we don't need the configure/cmake checks for
SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_X11_CONST_PARAM_XEXTADDDISPLAY, so that was removed also.
Fixes#1666.
Vista and later provide the SleepConditionVariableCS() function for this.
Since SDL_syscond_srw.c doesn't require SRW locks anymore, rename it to
SDL_syscond_cv.c which better reflects the implementation of condition
variables rather than the implementation of mutexes.
Fixes#4051.
In the future, we might want to support special swap intervals. To
prevent applications from expecting nonzero values of vsync to be the
same as "on", fail with SDL_Unsupported() if the value passed is neither
0 nor 1.
Currently, if an application wants to toggle VSync, they'd have to tear
down the renderer and recreate it. This patch fixes that by letting
applications call SDL_RenderSetVSync().
This is the same as the patch in #3673, except it applies to all
renderers (including PSP, even thought it seems that the VSync flag is
disabled for that renderer). Furthermore, the renderer flags also change
as well, which #3673 didn't do. It is also an API instead of using hint
callbacks (which could be potentially dangerous).
Closes#3673.
See SDL bug #4703. This implements two new hints:
- SDL_APP_NAME
- SDL_SCREENSAVER_INHIBIT_ACTIVITY_NAME
The former is the successor to SDL_HINT_AUDIO_DEVICE_APP_NAME, and acts
as a generic "application name" used both by audio drivers and DBUS
screensaver inhibition. If SDL_AUDIO_DEVICE_APP_NAME is set, it will
still take priority over SDL_APP_NAME.
The second allows the "activity name" used by
org.freedesktop.ScreenSavver's Inhibit method, which are often shown in
the UI as the reason the screensaver (and/or suspend/other
power-managment features) are disabled.
Add a function to clamp a value to a range.
SDL_clamp(x, a, b) is equivalent to SDL_min(a, SDL_max(x, b)): it
ensures that x is not smaller than a, nor larger than b.
While, as best I can tell, this isn't actually standardised anywhere,
it's a very useful function/macro to have.
The __clang_major__ and __clang_minor__ macros provide a marketing
version, which is not necessarily comparable for clang distributions
from different vendors[1]. In practice, the versioning scheme for
Apple's clang is indeed completely different to that of the llvm.org
releases. It is thus preferable to check for features directly rather
than comparing versions.
In this specific case, __builtin_bswap16 was being used with older
Apple clang versions that don't support it.
[1] https://clang.llvm.org/docs/LanguageExtensions.html#builtin-macros