Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Amaryllis Kulla ab24f0fc74 Update copyright notice again
Keep information on first file creation year,
and update my email address yet again.
2023-10-05 21:27:15 +02:00
Ancurio f3b4ab62a5 Update copyright notice 2021-09-24 06:30:55 +02:00
Jonas Kulla 5549ff78f0 Bindings: Viewport: Don't dispose children in RGSS2/3 2014-10-24 18:55:03 +02:00
Jonas Kulla 81ac0780f8 Revert Disposable concept back into core
Pretty much a revert of
e858bbdcf5.

We need this in core to properly implement F12 reset.
2014-09-23 21:12:58 +02:00
Jonas Kulla e858bbdcf5 Lift 'Disposable' concept from core into bindings
Instead of replicating the RGSS Disposable interface in C++
and merely binding it, redefine the 'disposed' state as the
entire core object being deleted (and the binding object's
private pointer being null).

This makes the behavior more accurate in regard to RMXP.
It is now for example possible to subclass disposable classes
and access their 'dispose'/'disposed?' methods without
initializing the base class first (because the internal pointer
is simply null before initialization). Accessing any other
base methods will still raise an exception.

There are some quirks and irregular behavior in RMXP; eg.
most nullable bitmap attributes of disposable classes
(Sprite, Plane etc.) can still be queried afterwards, but
some cannot (Tilemap#tileset), and disposing certain
attributes crashes RMXP entirely (Tilemap#autotiles[n]).
mkxp tries to behave as close possible, but will be more
lenient some circumstances.

To the core, disposed bitmap attributes will look
identically to null, which slightly diverges from RMXP
(where they're treated as still existing, but aren't drawn).
The Disposable interface has been retained containing a
single signal, for the binding to inform core when
objects are disposed (so active attributes can be set to null).
2014-08-09 21:21:38 +02:00
Jonas Kulla ff25887f41 Initial commit 2013-09-01 16:27:21 +02:00