Happy new year to the wonderful Godot community!
We're starting a new decade with a well-established, non-profit, free
and open source game engine, and tons of further improvements in the
pipeline from hundreds of contributors.
Godot will keep getting better, and we're looking forward to all the
games that the community will keep developing and releasing with it.
In the 3D version:
- Partially revert #20908 that was reverted in the 2D version as part
of #21653. This ensures that the Vector returned is always perpendicular
to the surface collided with; and not the floor_normal Vector passed to
the function when on a floor.
- Include an update of the floor velocity before multiplying by the time
delta, which was added to the 2D version as part of commit 13a8014.
In the 2D version:
- Use the Vector2.slide() function instead of Vector2.tangent() to adjust
the amount of motion the stop_on_slope undoes to ensure that it is in the
right direction. This is a implementation of the 3D approach from #30588.
- Combine the !found_collision and motion == Vector2() checks for break.
- Other minor formating changes to make the functions look identical.
Also renamed some variables to align with their use.
Polygon2D:
The property wasn't used anymore after switching from canvas_item_add_polygon() to canvas_item_add_triangle_array() for drawing.
Line2D:
Added the same property as for Polygon2D & fixed smooth line drawing to use indices correctly.
Fixes#26823
Particles were processed only on the next frame after the emission started, causing a one frame delay in rendering. Now the first process cycle is started during the same frame, which makes them consistent with Particles & Particles2D.
Fixes#32890
Now using joint_disable_collisions_between_bodies() to reset the exception, because body_remove_collision_exception() was doing only a part of the work.
Fixes#32733
When playing an animation in reverse, the animation initially starts on frame 0. If it loops, it'll play normally by going to the last frame of the animation, but if it does not... it prematurely stops, since it is already on the last frame (for reversed animation) by starting on frame 0.
OpenGL uses the diamond exit rule to rasterize lines. If we don't shift
the points down and to the right by 0.5, the line can sometimes miss a
pixel when it shouldn't. The final fragment of a line isn't drawn. By
drawing the lines clockwise, we can avoid a missing pixel in the rectangle.
See section 3.4.1 in the OpenGL 1.5 specification.
Fixes#32279
Modified Sprite to use "changed" signal instead of _changed_callback to make it work when tool is disabled (change receptors are editor only).
Fixes#32349