Found out the hard way that the `abutton` array for pressure sensitivity
uses a different order than the `pad-buttons` enum, so I created a new
enum for abutton indexing.
I replaced any magic numbers across the codebase where it made sense,
e.g.
`(-> *cpad-list* cpads (-> self control unknown-cpad-info00 number)
abutton 6)`
becomes
`(-> *cpad-list* cpads (-> self control unknown-cpad-info00 number)
abutton (abutton-idx x))`
Finnish translations for Jak 2. These include cutscenes and all game
text.
All subtitle timings for cutscenes as well as non-cutscenes have been
edited for a better flow and to fit the 4x3 ratio.
I've been working on these solo for the most part so any input from
other finns would be appreciated.
A few issues in the progress menu I mentioned in #3504 still persist
I couldn't figure out how to add Finnish to the options menu, so I'm
gonna need someone else to do that part. 💀
But I was able to add them to the debug menu.
I also increased subtitle heap so hopefully that doesn't break anything.
Fixes#3620
---------
Co-authored-by: Tyler Wilding <xtvaser@gmail.com>
They still don't work yet, this is just naming/comments to help with
debug.
The vehicle tracks are now at least trying to draw, but like the others,
don't actually show up.
This attempts to do a best-effort quick fix for the sprite alignment in
the menus and first person views on higher aspect ratios. This:
- Hides the binocular borders completely when using a non-standard ratio
![Screenshot 2024-07-20
021430](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c56d3a6c-13b0-43e1-b99b-83292993728c)
- Hides the borders in jak's first person view when using a non-standard
ratio
![Screenshot 2024-07-20
021310](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/fefca993-960b-4741-87b7-6d7c17efe89d)
- Uses a combination of manual alignment and approximation to get the
pause menu closer.
![Screenshot 2024-07-20
151725](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2c8aa759-b33a-4fbe-abc6-b5861fc33208)
> 32:9 screenshot.
I accomplished the last one by manually aligning all of the core sprites
and text for the most popular aspect ratios. This means that from a
practical standpoint, things should align "perfectly". However, I then
used all of those values to derive a polynomial for each adjustment
based on the aspect ratio. This allows the game to do a half-decent
approximation/interpolation for every aspect ratio in-between the common
ones. It won't be perfect, but it will be better than this:
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/420b1e38-6f88-436a-8e8c-21df6b49428e)
This centralizes the code that both `extractor` and the decompiler
executes. In the past this code was partially-duplicated, meaning that
the `extractor` could only do _some_ operations and not others (ie.
could not extract the audio files).
I also simplified the process to enable audio streaming in the
configuration. This is to support a new feature in the launcher that
allows you to enable these options for the decompiler:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/13153231/8e6c20a1-8b5b-46f0-bceb-7644f713989f)
This PR does two main things:
1. Work through the main low-hanging fruit issues in the formatter
keeping it from feeling mature and usable
2. Iterate and prove that point by formatting all of the Jak 1 code
base. **This has removed around 100K lines in total.**
- The decompiler will now format it's results for jak 1 to keep things
from drifting back to where they were. This is controlled by a new
config flag `format_code`.
How am I confident this hasn't broken anything?:
- I compiled the entire project and stored it's `out/jak1/obj` files
separately
- I then recompiled the project after formatting and wrote a script that
md5's each file and compares it (`compare-compilation-outputs.py`
- The results (eventually) were the same:
![Screenshot 2024-05-25
132900](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/13153231/015e6f20-8d19-49b7-9951-97fa88ddc6c2)
> This proves that the only difference before and after is non-critical
whitespace for all code/macros that is actually in use.
I'm still aware of improvements that could be made to the formatter, as
well as general optimization of it's performance. But in general these
are for rare or non-critical situations in my opinion and I'll work
through them before doing Jak 2. The vast majority looks great and is
working properly at this point. Those known issues are the following if
you are curious:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/13153231/0edfaba1-6d36-40f5-ab23-0642209867c4)
For now, this just adds sky (clouds and fog), darkjak, and skull gem.
There are some unknown issues with drawing the skull gems still, but I
think it's unrelated to texture animations.
Also fixes https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/issues/3523
Adds a quick perf report feature to `goalc` that lets you compare how
much faster / slower it takes to compile the projects, with some simple
features like filtering the files, adjusting for how large of a margin
of error in the speeds you care about, and which test iteration you want
to compare against.
This is something I plan to use as I work more in `goalc` as an easy way
to track / show the results.
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/13153231/26f140c7-66d7-4162-994a-a71061e22857)
This adds hfrag, but with a few remaining issues:
- The textures aren't animated. Instead, it just uses one texture.
- The texture filtering isn't as good as at it could be.
I also cleaned up a few issues with the background renderers:
- Cleaned up some stuff that is common to hfrag, tie, tfrag, shrub
- Moved time-of-day color packing stuff to FR3 creation, rather than at
level load. This appears to reduce the frame time spikes when a level is
first drawn by about 5 or 6 ms in big levels.
- Cleaned up the x86 specific stuff used in time of day. Now there's
only one place where we have an `ifdef`, rather than spreading it all
over the rendering code.
This fixes issues with certain Jak 3 levels not rendering because there
is a mismatch between the DGO name, nickname and real level name (bsp
name).
FR3s use a different filename, so you can delete the ones you have after
this is merged.
This affects custom levels, but I don't have that toolchain set up so
someone else will have to test that.
This includes all the collision stuff needed to spawn `target`,
decompiles the sparticle code and adds some of the PC hacks needed for
merc to run (it doesn't work quite right and looks bad, likely due to a
combination of code copied from Jak 2 and the time of day hacks).
There are a bunch of temporary hacks (see commits) in place to prevent
the game from crashing quite as much, but it is still extremely prone to
doing so due to lots of missing functions/potentially bad decomp.
---------
Co-authored-by: water <awaterford111445@gmail.com>