This makes it easier to spot syntax errors when editing the
class reference. The schema is referenced locally so validation
can still work offline.
Each class XML's schema conformance is also checked on GitHub Actions.
The value is already clamped in the editor, but it wasn't being
clamped when the value was set via code. Values outside the [0.0; 1.0]
range can result in broken rendering.
This backports the high quality glow mode from the `master` branch.
Previously, during downsample, every second row was ignored.
Now, when high-quality is used, we sample two rows at once to ensure
that no pixel is missed. It is slower, but looks much better and has
a much high stability while moving.
High quality also takes an additional horizontal sample the width of the
horizontal blur matches the height of the vertical blur.
For the time being we don't support writing a description for those, preferring
having all details in the method's description.
Using self-closing tags saves half the lines, and prevents contributors from
thinking that they should write the argument or return documentation there.
(cherry picked from commit 7adf4cc9b5)
We already removed it from the online docs with #35132.
Currently it can only be "Built-In Types" (Variant types) or "Core"
(everything else), which is of limited use.
We might also want to consider dropping it from `ClassDB` altogether
in Godot 4.0.
Changed the behaviour of the Linear tonemapping operator to not clamp to [0, 1] range
in the case when KEEP_3D_LINEAR is defined. This allows to render values > 1.0 in
floating point texture targets (via Viewport) for further processing or saving high
dynamic range data into files. This only works when no color conversion is active.
The previous value (0) was a special case in the fog shader.
It made the shader use the Camera's `far` value as the fog depth end
value, which led to an inconsistency in the fog rendering between
the editor and a running project. This is because the editor camera
uses a `far` property of 500 by default, whereas the Camera node's
`far` property is set to 100 by default.
The new fixed value is equal to the default `far` property in Camera,
which leads to a consistent appearance between the editor and a running
project.
This closes#31686.
This makes height fog appear at the bottom of the scene
(instead of the top), which is generally the expected result.
This also tweaks the fog height setting hint to be more flexible.
This closes#30709.
Setters and getters have been hidden from the documentation when the matching
properties have been exposed, but some of them are parametric and require the
name or index of a given parameter to be used. So they need to be properly
documented with the type and name of the arguments they take.
For example, CPUParticles' `set_param(Parameter param, float value)`.
- Document a few more properties and methods
- Add more information to many classes
- Fix lots of typos and gramar mistakes
- Use [code] tags for parameters consistently
- Use [b] and [i] tags consistently
- Put "Warning:" and "Note:" on their own line to be more visible,
and make them always bold
- Tweak formatting in code examples to be more readable
- Use double quotes consistently
- Add more links to third-party technologies
This is a new singleton where camera sources such as webcams or cameras on a mobile phone can register themselves with the Server.
Other parts of Godot can interact with this to obtain images from the camera as textures.
This work includes additions to the Visual Server to use this functionality to present the camera image in the background. This is specifically targetted at AR applications.
This is not necessary and means that some setters and getters
can end up wrong if they are changed in the bindings but DocData
does not update them when running --doctool.
Fixes#29425.
Co-authored-by: Bojidar Marinov <bojidar.marinov.bg@gmail.com>