Major change to how `deftype` shows up in our code:
- the decompiler will no longer emit the `offset-assert`,
`method-count-assert`, `size-assert` and `flag-assert` parameters. There
are extremely few cases where having this in the decompiled code is
helpful, as the types there come from `all-types` which already has
those parameters. This also doesn't break type consistency because:
- the asserts aren't compared.
- the first step of the test uses `all-types`, which has the asserts,
which will throw an error if they're bad.
- the decompiler won't emit the `heap-base` parameter unless necessary
now.
- the decompiler will try its hardest to turn a fixed-offset field into
an `overlay-at` field. It falls back to the old offset if all else
fails.
- `overlay-at` now supports field "dereferencing" to specify the offset
that's within a field that's a structure, e.g.:
```lisp
(deftype foobar (structure)
((vec vector :inline)
(flags int32 :overlay-at (-> vec w))
)
)
```
in this structure, the offset of `flags` will be 12 because that is the
final offset of `vec`'s `w` field within this structure.
- **removed ID from all method declarations.** IDs are only ever
automatically assigned now. Fixes#3068.
- added an `:overlay` parameter to method declarations, in order to
declare a new method that goes on top of a previously-defined method.
Syntax is `:overlay <method-name>`. Please do not ever use this.
- added `state-methods` list parameter. This lets you quickly specify a
list of states to be put in the method table. Same syntax as the
`states` list parameter. The decompiler will try to put as many states
in this as it can without messing with the method ID order.
Also changes `defmethod` to make the first type definition (before the
arguments) optional. The type can now be inferred from the first
argument. Fixes#3093.
---------
Co-authored-by: Hat Kid <6624576+Hat-Kid@users.noreply.github.com>
This renames the method object in `defmethod`s to `this` and adds
detection for the `set-time!` and `time-elapsed?` macros.
Definitely my biggest PR yet...
Previously, `object` and `none` were both top-level types. This made
decompilation rather messy as they have no LCA and resulted in a lot of
variables coming out as type `none` which is very very wrong and
additionally there were plenty of casts to `object`. This changes it so
`none` becomes a child of `object` (it is still represented by
`NullType` which remains unusable in compilation).
This change makes `object` the sole top-level type, and the type that
can represent *any* GOAL object. I believe this matches the original
GOAL built-in type structure. A function that has a return type of
`object` can now return an integer or a `none` at the same time.
However, keep in mind that the return value of `(none)` is still
undefined, just as before. This also makes a cast to `object`
meaningless in 90% of the situations it showed up in (as every single
thing is already an `object`) and the decompiler will no longer emit
them. Casts to `none` are also reduced. Yay!
Additionally, state handlers also don't get the final `(none)` printed
out anymore. The return type of a state handler is completely
meaningless outside the event handler (which is return type `object`
anyway) so there are no limitations on what the last form needs to be. I
did this instead of making them return `object` to trick the decompiler
into not trying to output a variable to be used as a return value
(internally, in the decompiler they still have return type `none`, but
they have `object` elsewhere).
Fixes#1703Fixes#830Fixes#928
Fixes empty boxed arrays of strings breaking some decomp
(`ctywide-speech` and `race-info`).
Adds `decomp-as` tag to decompiler types so that the static data
decompiler can use macros like `meters` and `seconds` on fields that
aren't of type `meters` or `time-frame`.
Adds `override` tag to decompiler types which overrides the type of
field with that name. The type must be a child type of the original
field's type (or the same type, but why would you do this?).
Fixes the camera being offset for `drillmtn` after loading `palout`
once.
This is a huge refactor sadly.
Manual patches:
- `drill-turret`: The static data for `*turret-13-path*`,
`*turret-14-path*` and `*turret-15-path*` was decompiled by hand and the
integers in the `set-speed-mult` events have been replaced with boxed
integer arrays that contain only that integer in order to make the
compiler happy. To that effect, the event handler in `target-turret` was
changed to access that array instead of just accessing the int.
- `hover-nav-control`: In `hover-nav-control::10`, `arg2` is usually a
`vector`, but there are some places where it is called with `#t` as
`arg2` and, subsequently, crashes the game because it tries to access
the `quad` of `arg2` if `arg2` is truthy. To mitigate this, the
condition `arg2` has been replaced with `(and (!= arg2 #t) arg2)` (in
this case, it would jump to the `else` that just resets the `dest-vel`
and `transv` `quad`s)
- `drill-baron`: The static data for `*drill-ship-turret-speed-event*`
has been decompiled by hand.
TODOs:
- Jellyfish crash the game
- Destroying the metalhead eggs that are on the breakable wall crashes
the game (already happened with the Peacemaker before)
- Figure out why static data of type `turret-path-event` doesn't
decompile
The docs for all the hover-nav and nav-network code could use some love
in the future, I'm not smart enough to figure out what any of that code
actually means, but it seems to work...
Also threw in the fix for the ▲ that was accidentally left commented
out.
draft because using the array is a little weird still, don't feel like
dealing with window's slow debugging builds today.
I get the following weird error:
```clj
(define test-array (new 'static 'boxed-array :type type vector))
gr> (-> test-array 0)
1538004 #x1777d4 0.0000 vector
gr> (type? (-> test-array 0) type)
1342757 #x147d25 0.0000 #t
gr> (new 'static (-> test-array 0))
-- Compilation Error! --
Got 3 arguments, but expected 2
Form:
(-> test-array 0)
Location:
Program string:1
(new 'static (-> test-array 0))
^
Code:
(new 'static (-> test-array 0))
```
Maybe this is expected though and the `new` method wants a symbol, not a
type?
Fixes#2060
Co-authored-by: water <awaterford111445@gmail.com>