Some monitors are very specific about their reported refresh rates:
```
[54:37] [debug] [DISPLAY]: Skipping 640x480 as it requires 360.11hz but the monitor is currently set to 360hz
```
The current code truncated the display mode, but would compare against
the reported refresh rate. As per the log, they are obviously not equal.
- Retain the float component and only round it off when sending the
value to GOAL
- Make the comparison more generous, +/- 1.0hz
Prior to SDL3, borderless windows were kinda a hack, they cleaned all of
that up. The side-effect of that is that the C++ code keeps track of the
current window size (it does this for framebuffer sizing, but also to
set the size of the window).
This is now an issue because SDL is properly firing events when you
change to borderless mode, so our window size gets updated to the size
of the entire monitor. When you switch to windowed mode from borderless,
it now seems like it didn't work (it did, its just still taking up the
entire screen).
This could be better cleaned up if more settings are extracted out of
GOAL and put into C++ so they can be managed and accessed where they
belong. But for now, this is a minimally invasive fix.
Fixes#3917
This PR updates to SDL3, and with it, adds a handful of new features.
Everything seems to work but I'm going to look over the code once last
time before merging, some of the API changes are hard to spot.
Fixes#2773
### Pressure sensitivity support for DS3 Controllers
SDL3 adds pressure sensitivity support for DS3 controllers on windows. I
have not tested on linux. The option is disabled by default.
On windows you will need https://docs.nefarius.at/projects/DsHidMini/
and to be using SXS mode.
### DualSense and Xbox One Trigger Effects
If enabled, Jak 2 will have certain trigger effects. They are:
- xbox1:
- small vibrate when collecting dark eco
- big vibrate when changing to dark jak
- vibrate when shooting gun, proportional to gun type
- ps5:
- resistance when changing to dark jak
- different gun shooting effects
- red (resistance)
- yellow (weapon trigger)
- blue (vibrates)
- purple (less resistance)
> **Gun Shooting effects are only enabled if the new "Swap R1 and R2"
option is enabled**
There are more effects that could be used in `dualsense_effects.cpp`,
but I only exposed the ones I needed to OpenGOAL. If a modder wants to
use some of the others and wires them up end-to-end, please consider
contributing that upstream.
### New ImGUI Menu
Added new imgui options for selecting the active controller, for those
people that struggle to select the initial controller.

### Testing
The highlights of what I tested successfully:
- display
- [x] all mode switch permutations
- [x] launch with all modes saved
- [x] switch monitors / unplug monitor that was active, how does it
handle it
- [x] load with alternate monitor saved and all modes
- [x] allowing hidpi doesnt break macos
- controls
- [x] keyboard and mouse still work
- [x] pressure sensitivity on linux
The fundamental issue is related to hiDPI / Retina displays, I don't
think our rendering code is setup properly to handle the scaling between
the two (which you can derive by comparing `SDL_GetWindowSize` and
`SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize`).
So rather than opening that can of worms, I just removed the window
flag.
Also fixed an unrelated issue for displaying resolution options when in
windowed mode, it was previously only adding options to the list if they
were invalid for full-screen.
Fixes#3099
Also saves out the default `pc-settings.gc` file so it's less confusing
_and_ so we can request it from users to actually see what it's doing.
The fix in the last release was only to fix bad `game-size` values when
_loading_ the file. But if you don't have a file, it picks a default.
Right now it picks that default by:
1. Your largest reported resolution
2. If that fails, the one that is currently set
In reality this scenario can never really happen (if you have a set
resolution, it will be one of the reported ones). However what can
happen is for SDL to be misinformed by bad display/monitor drivers/the
OS and be given "supported" resolutions that aren't actually supported.
For example some users have a 4K resolution as their highest, despite
them using a 1080p monitor.
The solution is to not blindly assume the largest resolution is valid,
instead use the one the user already has set.
I'm also now filtering out resolutions by refresh rate, as perhaps this
also caused a problem. ie. the monitor supports a resolution if the
refresh rate is lowered, but it's currently set high (at 144hz for
example).
Fixes https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/issues/3563
These users have the following spamming in logs:
> OpenGL error 0x502 S8246 T824C: GL_INVALID_OPERATION error generated.
Source and destination dimensions must be identical with the current
filtering modes.
And the solution is to correctly set their game-size. The way this
change accomplishes that is by confirming whether or not the set
`game-size` is a valid resolution informed by SDL, if not, it defaults
to the monitor's currently set display mode's resolution.
This also moves the selected display id, and the display mode into the
C++ settings -- closer to where it's actually managed and used. I'm
tempted to do this eventually for the resolutions as well but that stuff
is much more burdensome. This hopefully simplifies debugging, reduces
startup flickering, and removes back-and-forth complexity. Hopefully
this makes debugging display related problems easier. It also adds a
bunch more logging to the related code.
This is primarily driven for proper mod-support. Mods would like to
isolate their settings and saves (potentially) and that is currently
done by find-and-replacing code before building. Bad!
Additionally, this has the side-effect of allowing for portable
installations of the game so, win-win.
Testing in progress, i'll merge once it is ready.
This updates `fmt` to the latest version and moves to just being a copy
of their repo to make updating easier (no editing their cmake / figuring
out which files to minimally include).
The motivation for this is now that we switched to C++ 20, there were a
ton of deprecated function usages that is going away in future compiler
versions. This gets rid of all those warnings.
While trying to narrow down why sometimes SDL takes 20-40seconds to
initialize I built up some more profiling features.
TLDR - I still don't know why SDL is taking a long time but I've
narrowed it down to it initializing the `GAME_CONTROLLER` subsystem.
This isn't unprecedented, I found numerous github issues and articles
suggesting this is the problem:

I imagine it is hardware/OS related on some level, there are even some
recent commits in SDL that have made it worse on certain platforms. I've
had this problem myself so I will hope to get it again soon so i can
debug where in the SDL code the delay occurs and make a proper bug
report. Hopefully this helps but it's not yet confirmed -
https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/pull/3384
The current event-based approach is very difficult to get right, and it
depends on no events ever being missed. This changes the keyboard/mouse
handling code to a polling-based approach.
Other fixes:
- an issue where modifier keys were not able to be successfully bound
(like Left Shift to `X`)
- improves cursor hiding (except when you use the start menu, this seems
like an SDL issue, see comment)
- Better discarding of kb/mouse inputs when imgui intercepts input
- properly swap bindings when an already set key is assigned, even if it
crosses the distinction of an analog vs normal button
Fixes#2800