possible if time has leaped into the past. This is primarily useful so
that we can correlate such happenings with other strangeness that may be
caused by time bogosity.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2912 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
types and the puzzle stuff wants to classify the sounds it produces.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2878 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
draw but 9 images, with the non-corner ones being scaled as appropriate.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2856 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
public follow mode constants, instead of having a different method for
enabling each different follow mode.
Added a new follow mode: track, which aligns the upper-left coordinate of the
view with the hotspot of the pathable.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2851 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
frame tick interval 10ms on Windows because any non-multiple of 10 causes
the big fat fuckola in the form of heinously accelerated clock drift.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2751 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
SystemMediaTimer is make time stop while we're in the past, whereas in the
FrameManager we can just note that strangeness is afoot and keep on
tickin'.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2736 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
when I set it to 24? Let's try it like this for a spell.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2734 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
hotspot, which does not need to be the upper left coordinate. So we let
the sprite do the right thing and we just center on the hotspot.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2681 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
fly in the future; it also now provides efficient tileset name to tileset
id mappings which is exported via the TileSetRepository interface. Lastly,
TileManager now relies on TileSetRepository to efficiently provide tiles
by name or id and no longer maintains its own cache (because the
BundledTileSetRepository already maintains the same mappings).
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2663 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
creating the same Colorization instance over and over each time we're
asked for one.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2641 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
Java's png encoder doesn't get confused and merge black pixels into
the transparency.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2636 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1
- Tiles are initialized after being constructed which makes life simpler
for custom tiles which no longer have to have their own constructor that
passes Tile's stuff down to it.
- Tiles are no longer LRU cached (because we blow through that cache
instantly on all but the smallest of scenes), and are now tracked by
weak references so that we guarantee that only one instance of a tile is
ever in memory.
- Added code to track and report memory usage of weak cached tiles as well
as "stray" tiles which are created through other means than asking a
TileSet for a tile (fringe tiles being the most prolific example).
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://src.earth.threerings.net/narya/trunk@2628 542714f4-19e9-0310-aa3c-eee0fc999fb1