• Show log

    Commit

  • Hash : 09ca66bf
    Author : Ryan C. Gordon
    Date : 2020-04-21T01:30:36

    SDL_error: simplified error string management. This patch removes deferred error string formatting: now we do it during SDL_SetError(), so there's no limit on printf-style arguments used. Also removes stub for managing error string translations; we don't have the facilities to maintain that and the way we set arbitrary error strings doesn't really make this practical anyhow. Since the final error string is set right away and unique to the thread, we no longer need a static buffer for legacy SDL_GetError(), and we don't have to allocate 5x 128-byte argument fields per-thread. Also, since we now use SDL_vsnprintf instead of parsing the format string ourselves, there's a lot of code deleted and we have access to more robust formatting powers now. This does mean the final error strings can't be more than 128 bytes, down from the theoretical maximum of around 768, but I think this is probably okay. They might truncate but they will always be null-terminated! Fixes Bugzilla #5092.

  • Properties

  • Git HTTP https://git.kmx.io/kc3-lang/SDL.git
    Git SSH git@git.kmx.io:kc3-lang/SDL.git
    Public access ? public
    Description

    Fork of https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL

    Users
    thodg_w thodg_m thodg_l kc3_lang_org thodg www_kmx_io
    Tags

  • README.txt

  •                          Simple DirectMedia Layer
    
                                      (SDL)
    
                                    Version 2.0
    
    ---
    https://www.libsdl.org/
    
    Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform development library designed
    to provide low level access to audio, keyboard, mouse, joystick, and graphics
    hardware via OpenGL and Direct3D. It is used by video playback software,
    emulators, and popular games including Valve's award winning catalog
    and many Humble Bundle games.
    
    More extensive documentation is available in the docs directory, starting
    with README.md
    
    Enjoy!
    	Sam Lantinga				(slouken@libsdl.org)