When using ALSA, cpal was returning bogus sample rates from
`Device::supported_output_configs`, causing the audio stream to
fail to initialize.
Use `Device::default_output_config` instead.
During the small period of time when a player is created but has no root movie, a temporary empty movie is installed with an assumed stage size and framerate of 550x400@12fps. This is Flash default for new projects, so it seemed appropriate. User ActionScript cannot see these values, and I'm not even sure JavaScript can, either.
Remove #![windows_subsystem = "windows"], which launched us as a
GUI app on win32. However, this had the side effect of hiding
output to stdout/stderr when launched from the command-line.
Since Ruffle is primarily a CLI interface as of yet, let's revert
back to a console win32 app so that we can display output. Instead,
we can hide the console if we detect we were not launched from the
command line.
On the desktop player, shared objects will now be flushed on quit.
Attempting to retrieve an existing shared object will now return a
reference to the existing one.
No longer show a command line window when opening a file with ruffle via a file association (open with).
Co-authored-by: Genna Wingert <wingertge@gmail.com>
When creating the viewport on desktop, the window DPI was not taken
into account, which may result in a blank screen until resized
(reported in #548). The window dimensions are now converted to
physical coordinates before passing them to the renderer.
Don't call `render` from `Player::tick`; instead, require the
frontends to explicitly call `render` when they wish to redraw.
The frontend can query `Player::needs_render` to see if the stage
is dirty and needs a redraw. Update desktop and web to use this
new method.
This fits better with the newer winit event loop model, which
requires explicitly calling `request_redraw`, and should avoid
spurious renders.
Change `ActionGetTime` (`getTimer`) to use a new backend method.
This allows it to return updated times if it is called multiple
times in a single frame. This fixes hangs caused by games that use
busy-loop "frame limiter" code.
It doesn't feel like Flash without having the hand cursor display
when hovering over buttons. First pass at implementing this;
core communicates which mouse cursor to use via
`InputBackend::set_mouse_cursor`.
TODO: Hand cursor only displayed for Button display objects
currently. Movie clips should also display this when they are in
"button mode" (when a button mouse event is set on them in AVM1,
or `buttonMode` property in AVM2).