* Change "Toggle Speed Limit" to toggle between 100% and a custom value
This will change the shortcut for "Toggle Speed Limit" to make it swap between 100% and the value of "Limit Speed Percent" in the config. Old functionality is still there, but renamed to "Unthrottle".
* Complete reimplementation of the function
* Fix something that didn't get saved correctly
* Fix missing indentation
* Rewrite to keep only a single QSpinBox
* Second rewrite
* set Unthrottled to 0 in the Qspinbox
* Hotkey for Unthrottle
* minor improvements to the design
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Ben <bene_thomas@web.de>
* Default slider values
* clang-format fixes
* Prevent the speed slider from changing size
...when an element in its row has variable width.
* Change "Game Speed" to "Emulation Speed"
* Apply suggestions from code review
`game_speed` to` emulation_speed`
Co-authored-by: Valentin Vanelslande <vvanelslandedev@gmail.com>
* Fix for QSliders
* Revert "Prevent the speed slider from changing size"
This reverts commit ddaca20044.
* clang-format
...doesn't seem to stick to a choice
* Fix 2 for QSliders
Co-authored-by: B3n30 <benediktthomas@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ben <bene_thomas@web.de>
Co-authored-by: Valentin Vanelslande <vvanelslandedev@gmail.com>
I'm not sure why we decided to have a boolean here, but apparently that wasn't the correct behaviour. According to HW tests, the Software Keyboard simply displays the default text when the button text provided is empty (**not necessarily all zero**). For example, if you set a text for one of the buttons and leave others empty, the button you set will have your text, while others will have their default texts. Removed the boolean and updated frontend code to make it correct.
* GUI: Deadzone controls for sdl engine at configuration input
Co-Authored-By: CJ Bok <cjbok@users.noreply.github.com>
* configure_input: Use slider to edit modifier scale
Co-Authored-By: Kewlan <kewlan@users.noreply.github.com>
* Address minor review comment
Co-Authored-By: Kewlan <kewlan@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: CJ Bok <cjbok@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kewlan <kewlan@users.noreply.github.com>
* swkbd: Fix a bug where clicking Cancel hangs the game
The text is validated in `Finalize`. If the validation fails, an error is returned and the applet is not actually finalized. This can result in hangs.
This is usually not a problem as the frontend is expected to validate the text passed to `Finalize`. However, when the user clicked on `Cancel`, the text is ignored and the frontend won't do any validation. Therefore, we should skip the validation here as well.
Also fixed a potential data race. All these functions should now be called on the same thread
* Address review comments
Renamed the fields
Remove close button
* Add and implement option to hide mouse on iniactivity
+ clang format
* Set mouse hide timeout as a constant
* Address review comments, decrease mouse inactivity timeout to 2500ms
* Hide mouse: fix menubar bugs
squashable
* Hide mouse: ensure status bar has the default pointer
* video_core/renderer_opengl: Move SurfaceParams into its own file
Some of its enums are needed outside of the rasterizer cache
and trying to use it caused circular dependencies.
* video_core/renderer_opengl: Overhaul the texture filter framework
This should make it less intrusive.
Now texture filtering doesn't have any mutable global state.
The texture filters now always upscale to the internal rendering resolution.
This simplifies the logic in UploadGLTexture and it simply takes the role of BlitTextures at the end of the function.
This also prevent extra blitting required when uploading to a framebuffer surface with a mismatched size.
* video_core/renderer_opengl: Use generated mipmaps for filtered textures
The filtered guest mipmaps often looked terrible.
* core/settings: Remove texture filter factor
* sdl/config: Remove texture filter factor
* qt/config: Remove texture filter factor
When dumping was stopped, the game will be paused and then resumed. However when the game was already paused this will result in the game being unexpectedly resumed, which isn't what we want.
This is the main dialog of video dumping. This dialog allows the user to set output format, output path, video/audio encoder and video/audio bitrate.
When a format is selected, the list of video and audio encoders are updated. Only encoders of codecs that can be contained in the format is shown.
This dialog allows changing the value and unsetting one option. There are three possible variants of this dialog:
1. The LineEdit layout. This is used for normal options like string and duration, and just features a textbox for the user to type in whatever they want to set.
2. The ComboBox layout. This is used when there are named constants for an option, or when the option accepts an enum value like sample_format or pixel_format. A description will be displayed for the currently selected named constant. The user can also select 'custom' and type in their own value.
3. The CheckBox-es layout. This is used for flags options. A checkbox will be displayed for each named constant and the user can tick the flags they want to set.
This slider affects the number of cycles that the guest cpu emulation
reports that have passed since the last time slice. This option scales
the result returned by a percentage that the user selects. In some games
underclocking the CPU can give a major speedup. Exposing this as an
option will give users something to toy with for performance, while also
potentially enhancing games that experience lag on the real console
* Core::Timing: Add multiple timer, one for each core
* revert clang-format; work on tests for CoreTiming
* Kernel:: Add support for multiple cores, asserts in HandleSyncRequest because Thread->status == WaitIPC
* Add some TRACE_LOGs
* fix tests
* make some adjustments to qt-debugger, cheats and gdbstub(probably still broken)
* Make ARM_Interface::id private, rework ARM_Interface ctor
* ReRename TimingManager to Timing for smaler diff
* addressed review comments
10 slots are offered along with 'Save to Oldest Slot' and 'Load from Newest Slot'.
The savestate format is similar to the movie file format. It is called CST (Citra SavesTate), and is basically a 0x100 byte header (consisting of magic, revision, creation time and title ID) followed by Zstd compressed raw savestate data.
The savestate files are saved to the `states` folder in Citra's user folder. The files are named like `<Title ID>.<Slot ID>.cst`.
* yuzu/CMakeLists: Disable implicit QString conversions
Now that all of our code is compilable with implicit QString
conversions, we can enforce it at compile-time by disabling them.
Co-Authored-By: Mat M. <lioncash@users.noreply.github.com>
* citra_qt: Remove lots of implicit QString conversions
Co-authored-by: Mat M. <mathew1800@gmail.com>
- We have some important audio settings, makes them more discoverable.
Co-Authored-By: bunnei <bunneidev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: bunnei <bunneidev@gmail.com>
Until we get a on screen display or async shader loading, we should at
least have some measure of progress in the meantime. This is 90% a port
from the loading screen I made for yuzu, but with a slightly different
changed detection for when to display the ETA. Now we keep track of a
rolling estimate for shader load ETA and only display a ETA if its going
to take longer than 10 seconds.
This is based on what was done using additional layouts, but modified
to have a variable to control rotation and making it so Single Screen
Layout behaves like Upright Single would, and Default Layout behaves
like Upright Double would, when the new variable is used.
Large Layout and Side Layout currently ignore the new variable.
New variable still currently doesn't have a hotkey.
Fixes an issue where the touch point is incorrect in OpenGLWindow when the render
target is initialized for the first time with single window mode disabled.
While QOpenGLWidget sounds like a good idea, it has issues which are
harder to debug due to how Qt manages the context behind the scenes. We
could probably work around any of these issues over time, but its
probably easier to do it ourselves with a QWindow directly.
Plus using QWindow + createWindowContainer is the easiest to use
configuration for Qt + Vulkan so this is probably much better in the
long run.
Over time our config values have grown quite numerous in size.
Unfortunately it also makes the single functions we have for loading and
saving values more error prone.
For example, we were loading the core settings twice when they only
should have been loaded once. In another section, a variable was
shadowing another variable used to load settings from a completely
different section.
Finally, in one other case, there was an extraneous endGroup() call used
that didn't need to be done. This was essentially dead code and also a
bug waiting to happen.
This separates the section loading code into its own separate functions.
This keeps variables only visible to the code that actually needs it,
and makes it much easier to visually see the end of each individual
configuration group. It also makes it much easier to visually catch bugs
during code review.
While we're at it, this also uses QStringLiteral instead of raw string
literals, which both avoids constructing a lot of QString instances, but
also makes it much easier to disable implicit ASCII to QString and
vice-versa in the future via setting QT_NO_CAST_FROM_ASCII and
QT_NO_CAST_TO_ASCII as compilation flags.
By default, DisplayRole is used as the SortRole.
This behaviour is what's expected by the user.
Made it so that an access to SortRole is equivalent to one to DisplayRole.
Also fixes a bug with directory sorting.
This single line mode is aimed at restoring the intended behavior with Small or None icons. Line breaks will be replaced with commas (Region row) or spaces (Name row). One can toggle this option in UI configuration.
This option was intended for enabling optimizations when all rows are granted to have the same height. In our case this is not true, and therefore the behavior is actually undefined. Different versions of Qt handle this differently. Newer versions of Qt tend to hide contents that are too big in height, which goes against our wishes. Thus, it's probably the best to disable this option so that things don't go wrong if we ever decide to update Qt.