Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Rémi Verschelde
a7f49ac9a1 Update copyright statements to 2020
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.
2020-01-01 11:16:22 +01:00
Rémi Verschelde
5dae2ea777 SCons: Enable C++11 on the whole codebase
**Important:** This does not mean *yet* that C++11 features should be used
in contributions to Godot's codebase.

For now this change is done solely for feature branches working on Vulkan
support and GDScript typed instruction sets for Godot 4.0, which will both
use C++11 features and are based on the master branch.

The plan is to start porting the codebase to C++11 after Godot 3.2 is
released, following upcoming guidelines on the subset of new features that
should be used, and when/how to use them.

We will advertise clearly when C++11 contributions are open, especially
once we start a coordinated effort to port Godot's massive codebase. In the
meantime, please bear with us and good ol' C++03. :)
2019-07-22 17:17:30 +02:00
Rémi Verschelde
b0d41847ed SCons: Use CPPDEFINES instead of CPPFLAGS for pre-processor defines
It's the recommended way to set those, and is more portable
(automatically prepends -D for GCC/Clang and /D for MSVC).

We still use CPPFLAGS for some pre-processor flags which are not
defines.
2019-07-03 09:59:04 +02:00
Rémi Verschelde
d52b70fb5e SCons: Always use env.Prepend for CPPPATH
Include paths are processed from left to right, so we use Prepend to
ensure that paths to bundled thirdparty files will have precedence over
system paths (e.g. `/usr/include` should have lowest priority).
2019-04-30 13:12:06 +02:00
Rémi Verschelde
c2a669a9f0 SCons: Review uses of CCFLAGS, CXXFLAGS and CPPFLAGS
Many contributors (me included) did not fully understand what CCFLAGS,
CXXFLAGS and CPPFLAGS refer to exactly, and were thus not using them
in the way they are intended to be.

As per the SCons manual: https://www.scons.org/doc/HTML/scons-user/apa.html

- CCFLAGS: General options that are passed to the C and C++ compilers.
- CFLAGS: General options that are passed to the C compiler (C only;
  not C++).
- CXXFLAGS: General options that are passed to the C++ compiler. By
  default, this includes the value of $CCFLAGS, so that setting
  $CCFLAGS affects both C and C++ compilation.
- CPPFLAGS: User-specified C preprocessor options. These will be
  included in any command that uses the C preprocessor, including not
  just compilation of C and C++ source files [...], but also [...]
  Fortran [...] and [...] assembly language source file[s].

TL;DR: Compiler options go to CCFLAGS, unless they must be restricted
to either C (CFLAGS) or C++ (CXXFLAGS). Preprocessor defines go to
CPPFLAGS.
2019-04-24 16:57:58 +02:00
Windy Darian
6c90aaf5c7 Use c++11 for vhacd because VHACD-ASYNC.cpp wants it 2019-04-11 00:05:11 -04:00
Juan Linietsky
5823b5d77d Bundled VHACD library for convex decomposition.
Modified both MeshInstance tools as well as importer to use it instead of QuickHull.
2019-04-10 17:47:28 -03:00