- 24 Mar, 2015 19 commits
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Henri Verbeet authored
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Henri Verbeet authored
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Henri Verbeet authored
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Henri Verbeet authored
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Henri Verbeet authored
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Mark Harmstone authored
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David Naylor authored
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David Naylor authored
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Nikolay Sivov authored
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André Hentschel authored
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Vincent Povirk authored
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Vincent Povirk authored
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Ken Thomases authored
OS X doesn't have the same concept of maximized windows as Windows does. There's no mode that prevents a normally-movable window from being moved. If a window is "zoomed", it mostly fills the screen but the user can still move or resize it, at which point it ceases to be in the zoomed state. So, users are confused and frustrated when they can't move a window that's maximized. To get similar behavior while still respecting Win32 semantics, we detect when the user tries to move a maximized window. When they start, a request is submitted to the app to restore the window. Unless and until the window is restored, we don't actually allow the window to move. The user expects to move the window from its current (maximized) position. It should not jump to its normal position upon being restored. So, we set the window's normal position to its current position before restoring it.
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Ken Thomases authored
OS X doesn't have the same concept of maximized windows as Windows does. There's no mode that prevents a normally-resizable window from being resized. If a window is "zoomed", it mostly fills the screen but the user can still move or resize it, at which point it ceases to be in the zoomed state. So, users are confused and frustrated when they can't resize a window that's maximized. To get similar behavior while still respecting Win32 semantics, we now let the user try to resize maximized windows. (The resize cursors are shown at the edges of the window frame.) When they start, a request is submitted to the app to restore the window. Unless and until the window is restored, we don't actually allow the window to change its size. The user expects to resize the window from its current (maximized) position. It should not jump to its normal position upon being restored. So, we set the window's normal position to its current position before restoring it.
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Jacek Caban authored
Modified version of patch by Erik van Pienbroek.
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Jacek Caban authored
Modified version of patch by Erik van Pienbroek.
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Jacek Caban authored
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Ken Thomases authored
Based on behavior of Windows revealed by interactive tests added by Bruno Jesus.
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Andrew Eikum authored
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- 23 Mar, 2015 21 commits
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Sebastian Lackner authored
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Matteo Bruni authored
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Matteo Bruni authored
Notice that I'm using floats instead of doubles in the new function, mostly to be able to use struct wined3d_matrix and multiply_matrix(). At a rough estimate the precision should still be good enough.
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Matteo Bruni authored
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Stefan Dösinger authored
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Stefan Dösinger authored
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Stefan Dösinger authored
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Henri Verbeet authored
While these won't be used by the shader, they potentially affect the calculated offset for WINED3D_APPEND_ALIGNED_ELEMENT elements.
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Henri Verbeet authored
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Henri Verbeet authored
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Henri Verbeet authored
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Henri Verbeet authored
Instead of a fixed array of wined3d_shader_signature_element structures. Shader model 4 shaders can have different semantics in a single register, e.g. v1.xy TEXCOORD0 and v1.zw TEXCOORD1, so having a single wined3d_shader_signature_element structure per register isn't necessarily sufficient.
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Bruno Jesus authored
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Nikolay Sivov authored
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Nikolay Sivov authored
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Nikolay Sivov authored
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Nikolay Sivov authored
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Dmitry Timoshkov authored
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Nikolay Sivov authored
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Piotr Caban authored
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Piotr Caban authored
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