Was getting frustrated by the inconsistency in our include statements,
which were causing me problems. As a result, I went through and manually
re-organized every include statement in non-core files.
I'm just gonna copy my rant from Discord:
FOR HEADER FILES (.hpp):
- everything you use IN THE HEADER must be EXPLICITLY INCLUDED with the exception of things that fall under Core.hpp
- you may NOT include ANYTHING ELSE
FOR SOURCE FILES (.cpp):
- you can #include whatever you want as long as the partner header is included first
- anything that gets included by another include is fair game
- redundant includes are ok because they'll be harmless AS LONG AS our header files stay lean.
the point of this is NOT to optimize the number of includes used all around or make things more efficient necessarily. it's to improve readability & coherence and make it easier to avoid cyclical issues
Mobs and CombatNPCs still need theirs in order to properly set their
roaming and spawn coords. Assignment of the latter has been moved to the
CombatNPC constructor, where it should have already been.
Storing certain things in appearance data and others in their own fields
was gross. Now everything is stored on the same level and functions have
been added to generate appearance data when it's needed by the client.
- fixed many references to Entity.appearanceData.i[XYZ] to use the base Entity XYZ values
- BaseNPC::enterIntoViewOf grabs the position from the base Entity XYZ values
- NPCManager::updateNPCPosition updates the base Entity XYZ values
- MobAI.c/deadStep() also sends it's packet based on the Entity XYZ values
Replaced all references to chunk->players and chunk->NPCs with
chunk->entities and all instances of the old NPCClass enum with
EntityType.
The server compiles but will not yet run properly.
CNProtocol, CNShared, CNStructs and Defines are now in core/.
CNLoginServer, CNShardServer and Monitor are now in servers/.
core/Core.hpp wraps all the core headers except for CNShared.hpp.
Defines.cpp has been renamed to Packets.cpp, and so has its
corresponding namespace, but not the header file. This is in preparation
for upcoming changes.
This is terrible. It was a mistake to do this before cleaning up the
actual code. It might be better not to use this commit and to do this
refactor in a different order or something.