New rules:
- Do not silence CA1805 any more
- Limit where we silence CA1707, CA1711, CA1720
- Enforce severity=warning for IDE0040
- Enforce Allman style braces
- Enforce naming conventions (IDE1006 is still severity=suggestion)
Fixes:
- Fix REFL045, CS1572, CS1573
- Suppress CS0618 when generating `InvokeGodotClassMethod`
- Fix indent when generating GD_constants.cs
- Temporarily silence CS1734 in generated code
- Fix a lot of naming rule violations
Misc.:
- Remove ReSharper comments for RedundantNameQualifier
- Remove suppression attributes for RedundantNameQualifier
- Remove severity=warnings for CA1716, CA1304 (already included in the level of analysis we run)
This new version does not support the following type arguments:
- Generic types
- Array of Godot Object (Godot.Object[]) or derived types
The new implementation uses delegate pointers to call the Variant
conversion methods. We do type checking only once in the static
constructor to get the conversion delegates.
Now, we no longer need to do type checking every time, and we no
longer have to box value types.
This is the best implementation I could come up with, as C# generics
don't support anything similar to C++ template specializations.
- Array and Dictionary now store `Variant` instead of `System.Object`.
- Removed generic Array and Dictionary.
They cause too much issues, heavily relying on reflection and
very limited by the lack of a generic specialization.
- Removed support for non-Godot collections.
Support for them also relied heavily on reflection for marshaling.
Support for them will likely be re-introduced in the future, but
it will have to rely on source generators instead of reflection.
- Reduced our use of reflection.
The remaining usages will be moved to source generators soon.
The only usage that I'm not sure yet how to replace is dynamic
invocation of delegates.
The editor no longer needs to create temporary instances to get the
default values. The initializer values of the exported properties are
still evaluated at runtime. For example, in the following example,
`GetInitialValue()` will be called when first looks for default values:
```
[Export] int MyValue = GetInitialValue();
```
Exporting fields with a non-supported type now results in a compiler
error rather than a runtime error when the script is used.