We clamped various values to the height of the screen, rather than the
height of the content box (height-1). We didn't notice this most of the
time as the last line of a file is empty - it only really mattered when
a file was the same height as the computer's screen.
We now do the following:
- Strip the trailing new line from a file when reading.
- Replace most usages of height with height-1.
Previously illumainate required manual users to manually download it and
place it in ./bin/. This is both inconvenient for the user, and makes it
hard to ensure people are running the "right" version.
We now provide a small Gradle plugin which registers illuaminate as a
ependency, downloading the appropriate (now versioned!) file. This also
theoretically supports Macs, though I don't have access to one to test
this.
This enables the following changes:
- The Lua lint script has been converted to a Gradle task (./gradle
lintLua).
- illuaminateDocs now uses a task definition with an explicit output
directory. We can now consume this output as an input to another
task, and get a task dependency implicitly.
- Move the pre-commit config into the root of the tree. We can now use
the default GitHub action to run our hooks.
- Simplify CONTRIBUTING.md a little bit. Hopefully it's less
intimidating now.
This is mostly copied from the work Toad and I did for CC:R.
Instead of not writing to the depth buffer when rendering terminals, we
now render terminal forgrounds with a small glPolygonOffset (or an
emulation of it where not possible). This removes the need for custom
render types, while still avoiding z-fighting between the terminal
foreground and background.
The VBO monitors backend now uses Iris's TextVertexSink API when
available: Iris overwrites the vertex format for RenderType.text, and so
we need to use this API to avoid rendering garbage.
Performance is maybe a little worse than before (<3ms) and definitely
worse than CC:R. Unfortunately we can't do our upload batching as that
conflicts with Optifine's patches - instead we need to maintain two
separate VBOs. This is a bit slower, but not so bad it's unworkable.
We're doing lots of weird OpenGL shenangins anyway, so it doesn't make
sense to use it. Instead just draw directly using the Tesselator
BufferBuilder.
This might improve compatiability with Sodium/Rubidium. Please don't let
me know if it doesn't though - I really don't want to have to deal with
it any more.
Rather than blanket disabling http with http.enabled. I think it's still
useful to keep the option around, but hopefully make it clearer what the
ramifications are.
- Changed page background to render as one quad, instead of two halves.
- Set page background to a z-offset that is between zeroth (potentially
bold border) and subsequent background pages. Bold borders were at the
same z-offset before.
We removed the config which ran all JavaExec tasks with the given
launcher, so need to override this again.
A little abusrd that this isn't done by Gradle, but there we go.
No bearing on MC, but allows us to drop the depenedency in other
projects (CCEmuX, eval.tweaked.cc, etc...)
I'd quite like to spin the core into a separate project which doesn't
depend on MC at all, but not worth doing right now.
Just saves us from having to worry about conflicts with other mods which
bundle Cobalt. This might make the transition to Jar-in-Jar easier too -
not sure yet!
Also produce an API jar - fixes#1060.
- Switch to plugins { ... } imports for Forge (FG finally supports it!)
- Use FG's new fg.component to clean up our Maven metadata instead. We
also mark JEI as optional (using Gradle's registerFeature), which
means we've no stray deps inside our POM any more.
No bearing on MC, but allows us to drop the depenedency in other
projects (CCEmuX, eval.tweaked.cc, etc...)
I'd quite like to spin the core into a separate project which doesn't
depend on MC at all, but not worth doing right now.