In include/SDL3/SDL_test_common.h
Add flag hide_cursor
In src/test/SDL_test_common.c
Handle option --hide-cursor to SDL_HideCursor
Handle Ctrl-h toggle to SDL_HideCursor and SDL_ShowCursor
HIDAPI's source code licensing says this:
```
HIDAPI can be used under one of three licenses.
1. The GNU General Public License, version 3.0, in LICENSE-gpl3.txt
2. A BSD-Style License, in LICENSE-bsd.txt.
3. The more liberal original HIDAPI license. LICENSE-orig.txt
The license chosen is at the discretion of the user of HIDAPI. For example:
1. An author of GPL software would likely use HIDAPI under the terms of the
GPL.
2. An author of commercial closed-source software would likely use HIDAPI
under the terms of the BSD-style license or the original HIDAPI license.
```
Since the original license in LICENSE-orig.txt is basically only clause 3 of
the zlib license (do not remove this notice from the source code), it makes
sense to switch to it, since it adds no new requirements to the user.
(Plus, it's extremely short and direct, which is always nice.)
The entire license:
```
HIDAPI - Multi-Platform library for
communication with HID devices.
Copyright 2009, Alan Ott, Signal 11 Software.
All Rights Reserved.
This software may be used by anyone for any reason so
long as the copyright notice in the source files
remains intact.
```
Fixes#9786.
Added SDL_Vulkan_DestroySurface, its documentation and corresponding platform specific implementations. Fixed some header inclusion orders to improve consistency between platforms. Added TODOs regarding MetalView creation and destruction which will benefit from the new functionality.
This isn't C++ code, so there's no need to append global symbols with two
colons. It looks ugly.
I _did_ leave them for actual C++ things in WinRT-specific comments and other
places, like a reference to a Perl class thing.
Also, even though it's not valid C, it's a useful expression to say
`StructType::SpecificField`, so I left those alone, too.
This extends the display scaling mode to be global and work in terms of pixels everywhere, with the content scale value set on displays. The per-window property had some issues, and has been removed in favor of retaining only the global hint that changes all coordinates to pixel values, sets the content scale on the displays, and generally makes the Wayland backend behave similarly to Win32 or X11.
Some additional work was needed to fix cases where displays can appear to overlap, since Wayland desktops are always described in logical coordinates, and attempting to adjust the display positions so that they don't overlap can get very ugly in all but the simplest cases, as large gaps between displays can result.
The flags parameter has been removed from SDL_CreateRenderer() and SDL_RENDERER_PRESENTVSYNC has been replaced with SDL_PROP_RENDERER_CREATE_PRESENT_VSYNC_NUMBER during window creation and SDL_PROP_RENDERER_VSYNC_NUMBER after renderer creation.
SDL_SetRenderVSync() now takes additional values besides 0 and 1.
The maximum texture size has been removed from SDL_RendererInfo, replaced with SDL_PROP_RENDERER_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE_NUMBER.
The shorthand version of this function didn't allow specifying a controller name, which seems pretty important. It seems like anyone actually implementing a virtual joystick is going to want to use some of the extended functionality.
These are needed when INT64_C and UINT64_C macros are either not
available (not likely), or guarded by __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS in C++
compilations (which is the case in many old SDKs.)
This allows applications to re-query the values if the system locale is changed during runtime, and better matches the other locale functions. A note is included in the documentation mentioning that this can be slow, as it has to call into OS functions.
Also allows for the removal of the init/quit time functions, as they are no longer needed.
Queries the "panel orientation" property on the connector and reports it in degrees of clockwise rotation via the 'SDL.display.KMSDRM.panel_orientation' display property.
This is provided by the kernel as a hint to userspace applications, and the application itself is ultimately responsible for any required coordinate transformations needed to conform to the requested orientation.
This will provide a quick and easy way of clearing the error when a function succeeds, if we want to do that in a more widespread way.
For now we guarantee that SDL_Init() will never have an error set when it returns successfully.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/8421
Added macros SDL_SINT64_C() and SDL_UINT64_C().
Integer suffixes of SDL_MAX_SINT64, SDL_MIN_SINT64, SDL_MAX_UINT64
and SDL_MIN_UINT64 are now system dependent.
The pointer confinement protocol does allow attempted warping the pointer via a hint, provided that the pointer is locked at the time of the request, and the requested coordinates fall within the bounds of the window.
Toggle the pointer locked state and request the pointer warp when the required protocol is available. This is similar to what XWayland does internally.