Alex Szpakowski
On my Mac OS X system (10.9.1), the SDL_MOUSEWHEEL event reports negative X values when my trackpad scrolls to the right, and positive X values when my trackpad scrolls to the left. This is backwards from what I'd expect, and I don't think it matches the Windows wheel events.
The vertical scroll values are what I'd expect though, and are consistent what gets reported on Windows (positive Y for scrolling up, negative Y for scrolling down.)
This is with "scroll direction: natural" disabled in the OS X trackpad settings (i.e. my scroll direction in non-SDL OS X programs matches what happens in Windows and Linux.)
I also tested with the horizontal scroll on a real mouse (Logitech G500 without custom drivers), and the horizontal scroll values in SDL are still flipped.
I "solved" the issue for myself by changing this line in the Cocoa_HandleMouseWheel function:
float x = [event deltaX];
to this:
float x = -[event deltaX];
I believe it should work fine with that change - I found something similar in another codebase while looking online for my issue - but I haven't tested on anything below Mac OS 10.8.
Besides being a little more simple to use than the earlier IOKit HID API, and
less likely to be deprecated, it also has the added benefit of working with
the Sony DualShock 4 controller in Bluetooth mode out of the box, whereas
the previous API has a bug that makes it report bad data for the
controller.
Cleaned up several other things in this code, having gone over every line of
it. The remaining deprecated calls are also gone.
Testing:
* Set the SDL_HINT_MOUSE_RELATIVE_MODE_WARP hint true, run testsprite2, press Ctrl-R to enter relative mode, alt tab away from the window, then click on the title bar of the window. Didn't get the mouse button release before, and we do now.
CR: Yahn + Alfred
The render target usage in controllermap is required if you are forced to use
the app at a different resolution than the one the art has been made for, for
example on Android, where you don't control the resolution.
(The coordinates for each button are hardcoded to the art size, and appear out
of place otherwise)
ernest.lee
[Exec] CMake Error at cmake_install.cmake:151 (FILE):
[13:37:43][Exec] file INSTALL cannot find
[13:37:43][Exec] "C:/TeamCity/buildAgent/work/2e3d17a492e75daf/Build/libSDL2.so".
The cmake INSTALL project doesn't work because it uses Linux so shared library paths. Windows uses dlls and I think cygwin also uses dlls. I've included this patch. Can you check if it works?
Sandu Liviu Catalin
I'm unable to compile the latest SDL (directly from the repository) even though I disabled every DirectX option since I don't need DirectX.
I allways het these errors:
D:\DevLibs\SDL\src\render\direct3d\SDL_render_d3d.c:1897:1: error: unknown type name 'IDirect3DDevice9'
D:\DevLibs\SDL\src\render\direct3d\SDL_render_d3d.c:1898:25: error: unknown type name 'SDL_Renderer'
ny00
SDL_RenderClear clears a render target with the wrong color, if the opengles2 renderer driver is used and the target texture's format is SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ARGB8888.
The bug is *not* reproduced if SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ABGR8888 is used as the texture format (the first from the renderer's list).
It is further not reproduced using any of the following renderer drivers: opengl, opengles (apparently powered by Gallium3D), software.
Finally, the correct color can be drawn using SDL_RenderFillRect (instead of SDL_RenderClear).
A few details about the current setup:
- OS: Ubuntu 12.04 for x86_64
- GPU: GeForce GTX 460
- GPU driver version: 331.20-0ubuntu1~xedgers~precise1 (from the xorg-edgers PPA)
---
Seth Williams
Sam,
It appears that the clear just needs to take the render target format into consideration.
Seth.
This lets it know, for example, that when you do this...
SDL_assert(ptr != NULL);
...that (ptr) is definitely not NULL at this point in the program, for the
sake of static analysis. While a buggy program could definitely trigger this
assertion, Clang assumes your assertion check is covering it and won't
report possible NULL dereferences after this point.
Since SDL_assert might continue if the user clicks "ignore", without this
change Clang would notice you checked for NULL (meaning that NULL is a real
possibility here) and still wrote code outside of that test branch that
dereferences the pointer, and thus would always trigger false positives.
Static analysis is fun!