Introduces support for FSR2 as a new upscaler option available from the project settings. Also introduces an specific render list for surfaces that require motion and the ability to derive motion vectors from depth buffer and camera motion.
This adds binds for GraphEdit/GraphElement/GraphNode, which were
skipped before due to a rework. This also adds binds for Window,
which was skipped before due to a complicated code organization.
Also adds theme cache entries/direct cache access to a few places
that previously missed it. Some theme properties are now exposed
to other classes via friendships or public getters for convenience.
This removes all string-based theme access from scene/ classes.
This allows to include script_instance.h directly in the
generated gdvirtual.gen.inc, and remove excessive includes
from the codebase.
This should also allow Resource to use GDVIRTUAL macros,
which wasn't possible previously due to a circular dependency.
This commit adds the default theme context, which replaces
the need to manually check the project and the default theme
all the time; simplifies related code.
It also adds framework for custom theme contexts, to be used
by the editor. Custom contexts can be attached to any node,
and not necessarily a GUI/Window node. Contexts do no break
theme inheritance and only define which global themes a node
uses as a fallback.
Contexts propagate NOTIFICATION_THEME_CHANGED when one of their
global themes changes. This ensures that global themes act just
like themes assigned to individual nodes and can be previewed
live in the editor.
The only use of that function can be replaced by `_notify_transform`,
which makes the `propagate_call` unnecessary.
As far as I can tell, the `data.blocked`-checks of `propagate_call`
are not needed in this case, because `_invalidate_global_transform`
causes no user-noticeable changes.
Previously the `p_reversed` parameter didn't influence the order
in a correct way.
Also script overridden _notification functions were not called in
the correct order.
To fix this some `notification` functions had to add a `p_reversed`
parameter.
This made it necessary to adjust cpp-bindings.
Co-authored-by: David Snopek <dsnopek@gmail.com>
Made Viewport::_cleanup_mouseover_colliders queue up mouse_exit and
mouse_shape_exit signals to emit and at the end of the function's
execution to avoid potential crashes.
Integer scaling is achieved (after aspect expansion) by "lying" to the
stretching code about the window's size, telling it that it's always an
integer multiple of the viewport so that it only gets stretched to an
integer factor.
This approach works with all stretch and aspect modes and doesn't
require handling for each, only requiring to "loosen up" some
self-excluding conditions (in other words, replacing some `else if`s
with just `if`s) regarding viewport offset and margin calculation (black
bars).
Includes a tiny usability change that adds a range hint for the content
scale factor between 0.5 to 8.0.
Co-Authored-By: Hugo Locurcio <hugo.locurcio@hugo.pro>
Previously for InputEvents there was no distinction between
Window-area and Viewport-area.
This was problematic in cases where stretching was used and the Window
contained black bars at the sides of the Viewport.
This PR separates the area of Window and Viewport regarding InputEvents.
Saving a subscene causes the main scene to be re-instantiated. And the resource
instance in the main scene will be reused when the main scene is re-instantiated.
So for resources with `resource_local_to_scene` enabled, resetting state may be
necessary (at least for `ViewportTexture`).
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.