Implements exit codes into the engine so tests can return their statuses.
Ideally we don't do this, and we use FIXUP logic to 'begin' and 'end' the engine execution for tests specifically.
Since realistically we're initialising the engine here we don't want to do that, since String should not require an engine startup to test a single header.
This lowers the complexity of running the unit tests and even for
physics should be possible to implement such a fix.
UDPServer now uses a single socket which is shared with the
PacketPeerUDP it creates and has a new `poll` function to read incoming
packets on that socket and delivers them to the appropriate peer.
PacketPeerUDP created this way never reads from the socket, but are
allowed to write on it using sendto.
This is needed because Windows (unlike Linux/BSD) does not support
packet routing when multiple sockets are bound on the same address/port.
- Extacted all syntax highlighting code from text edit
- Removed enable syntax highlighting from text edit
- Added line_edited_from signal to text_edit
- Renamed get/set_syntax_highlighting to get/set_syntax_highlighter
- Added EditorSyntaxHighligher
- Use the `.log` file extension (recognized on Windows out of the box)
to better hint that generated files are logs. Some editors provide
dedicated syntax highlighting for those files.
- Use an underscore to separate the basename from the date and
the date from the time in log filenames. This makes the filename
easier to read.
- Keep only 5 log files by default to decrease disk usage in case
messages are spammed.
So places that need to look into it can use the list instead of parsing
ProjectSettings details (like checking "*" in path for testing if it's
singleton).
Current error checks for to_int and to_int64 do not issue overflow error
messages for INT64_MAX + 1, INT64_MAX + 2, and other numbers close to the
integer limits. Likewise, error checks for hex_to_int, hex_to_int64 and
bin_to_int64 issue false positive error messages for INT64_MIN or INT32_MIN.
This commit fixes these error checks.
This change makes the behavior consistent when the value
is not found between erasing from an empty list
(no error, just returning false) and erasing from a non-empty list
(previously displaying triggering an error and returning false).
Error message previously triggered:
ERROR: erase: Condition ' !p_I ' is true. returned: false
At: ./core/list.h:157.