This is needed to allow 2D to fully make use of 3D effects (e.g. glow), and can be used to substantially improve quality of 2D rendering at the cost of performance
Additionally, the 2D rendering pipeline is done in linear space (we skip linear_to_srgb conversion in 3D tonemapping) so the entire Viewport can be kept linear.
This is necessary for proper HDR screen support in the future.
This makes it easy to retrieve the project version at runtime
for display purposes, while simplifying the export preset configuration.
You can now leave the version empty unless you need to override it on a per-preset
basis.
Since export presets save the values of default values to the `export_presets.cfg`
file, this change only affects export presets created after this commit was merged.
This adds the ability for games to obtain platform-specific information about joypads such as their vendor/product ID, their XInput gamepad index or the real name of the device before it gets swapped out by the gamecontrollerdb's name.
This PR also includes a rebased version of #76045, this is because this PR is intended to be mainly to help people implementing Steam Input, as having the gamepad index is essential.
Also:
* changed `[b]true[/b]` to `[code]true[/code]`
* use `[i]` for mathematical constant "e"
* use `[b]` for button text & menu item text
* improve markups about "tap1" and "tap2" in AudioEffectDelay
The previous implementation for signals mouse_entered and mouse_exited
had shortcomings that relate to focused windows and pressed mouse buttons.
For example a Control can be hovered by mouse, even if it is occluded by
an embedded window.
This patch changes the behavior, so that Control and Viewport send
their mouse-enter/exit-notifications based solely on mouse position,
visible area, and input restrictions and not on which window has
focus or which mouse buttons are pressed. This implicitly also
changes when the mouse_entered and mouse_exited signals are sent.
This functionality can not be implemented as a part of
Viewport::_gui_input_event, because of its interplay with Windows and
because Viewport::_gui_input_event is based on input and not on
visibility.
This allows limiting framerate on any project, which is useful to
reduce power usage and latency with certain setups (such as VRR displays).
This is particularly useful in projects that do not expose a setting to change
the FPS limit. While external FPS limiters can be used, they can be cumbersome
to set up and result in increased input lag compared to a built-in FPS limiter.