Instead of relying on SDL to determine when a click is a double-click, implement double-click handling specifically for the UI, as double-clicks are only supposed to be used there. This allows us to ensure that double-clicks only activate UI elements if both clicks were performed on the same UI element. Previously, only the position of the second click was considered, so UI element would incorrectly activate when double-clicking close to them as long as the second click starts and ends on them.
Implementing double-clicking handling separately is also necessary to support double-clicking in the UI with touch events, as SDL does not provide the double-click information for touch events.
The newly added `CUi::DoDoubleClickLogic` function should be called after a UI element has been clicked. It will return `true` if the current click should be interpreted as a double-click, i.e. if the same UI element was clicked, the click was within 0.5 seconds of the previous click (the default duration for SDL and Windows) and the distance from the previous click is within 32 screen pixels (the default distance for SDL).
Add `IInput::ConsumeEvents` function accepting a consumer `std::function` to replace the duplicate usage of the `IInput::NumEvents`, `IInput::GetEvent` and `IInput::IsEventValid` functions.
Use an `std::vector` to store the current input events to support any number of input events per client update instead of at most 32.
Use full `uint32_t` range for input counter instead of only using the range 0..0xFFFF. If the range is artificially reduced, then this can result in inputs being handled multiple times with high refresh rates, so the increased range should add future proofing for extremely fast devices.
Split `CInput::AddEvent` function into `CInput::AddKeyEvent` and `CInput::AddTextEvent` functions for readability and to make it easier to add additional input events (i.e. touch events).
Ensure double-click state is cleared at the end of each frame to prevent the double-click from being stored when no UI element consumes it.
Move member variables from `IInput` interface to `CInput` implementation.
Remove separate `CEditor::DispatchInputEvents` function.
Interpret fast repeated presses of the back-button (3 times within 1 second) as a quit-event, so the app can be quit cleanly and quickly without using the UI. The client settings are otherwise not saved if the app is closed by minimizing it using the home button and waiting for the OS to kill it or by discarding it in the recent apps view.
Translate the Android back-button to the escape-key, so it can be used to navigate back in menus, open/close the ingame menu, close the editor etc.
Trap the Android back button by setting the `SDL_ANDROID_TRAP_BACK_BUTTON` hint, so it can be handled in our code reliably instead of letting the system handle it.
Instead of defining the macro `WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN` and sometimes also the macro `_WIN32_WINNT` in each file that directly or indirectly includes `<windows.h>`, only define these macros once consistently in `CMakeLists.txt`.
Also define `NTDDI_VERSION`, which is the new macro to specify the minimum Windows version starting with Windows Vista. This macro needs to be defined in addition to old `_WIN32_WINNT` macro, according to the documentation.
See https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/winprog/using-the-windows-headers
Add stricter error handling when converting between UTF-16 (wide characters) and UTF-8 (multi-byte) on Windows.
The `windows_wide_to_utf8` function now returns an `std::optional`, which will be empty if the argument contains invalid UTF-16. Files/folders with names containing invalid UTF-16 are now ignored on Windows. It was previously not possible to use these files either, as converting their names to UTF-8 changed the invalid codepoints to unicode replacement characters.
The `windows_utf8_to_wide` function now fails with an assertion error if the argument contains invalid UTF-8, as this should never happen.
Closes#7486.
The TODO in the `Dilate` function is removed, as the code already appears to be safe without additional checks. The variable `k` is at most `(w * h - 1) * BPP`, as `ix` and `iy` are clamped to maximum `w - 1` and `h - 1` respectively. Because `p < BPP - 1` the index `k + p` is therefore always valid for the buffers. (The caller must ensure that the source and destination buffers are of size `w * h * BPP`.)
SDL fixed the bug on Windows that releasing the mouse while tabbing out directly refocuses the window, which broke desktop fullscreen (and maybe windowed fullscreen)
Port the line input (UI edit boxes, chat, console) and Input Method Editor (IME) support from upstream. Closes#4397.
General
------------------------------
Fix issues with the text input. Closes#4346. Closes#4524.
Word skipping (when holding Ctrl) is overhauled to be consistent with the Windows / Firefox experience that I took as reference.
Improve usability by not blinking (i.e. always rendering) the caret shortly after is has been moved.
UI text input
------------------------------
Fix inconsistent mouse-based left and right scrolling (closes#4347).
Support smooth left and right scrolling.
Chat
------------------------------
Support keyboard-based text selection of the chat input.
Mouse-based selection could be support in the future when we decide to add something like an ingame UI cursor.
Support smooth up and down scrolling of the chat input, removing the old hack that offsets the input string to simulate scrolling.
Console
------------------------------
Also support mouse-based text selection of the command input.
Only text from either the command input or the console log can be selected at the same time. This ensures that Ctrl+C will always copy the text that is currently visually selected in the console.
Check for Ctrl+C input event in event handler instead of in render function, to hopefully fix the issue that copying does not work sometimes (closes#5974 until further notice).
When Ctrl+C is used to copy text from the console log, the selection is cleared. This should make it more clear when text was copied from the log.
Fix an issue that was preventing the console log selection from being cleared, when all log lines are selected.
Remove Ctrl+A/E hotkeys that move cursor to beginning/end respectively. Ctrl+A now selectes all text like for all other inputs. Home and End keys can still be used to go the beginning and end.
Remove Ctrl+U/K hotkeys that clear everything before/after the cursor respectively. Hold shift and use Home/End to select everything instead.
IME support
------------------------------
Render list of IME candidates in the client on Windows, so the candidate list can also be viewed in fullscreen mode. There is no API available to retrieve a candidate list on the other operating systems.
Improve composition rendering by underlining the composition text instead of putting it in square brackets.
Track active input globally to properly activate and deactivate IME through the SDL functions.
Closes#1030. Closes#1008.
Password rendering
------------------------------
Fix rendering of passwords containing unicode. Instead of rendering one star character for each UTF-8 `char`, render on star for every unicode codepoint.
Show the composition text also for passwords. Without seeing the composition text it's hard to type a password containing those characters. The candidate window exposes the composition anyway. If you don't want to expose your password this way, e.g. while streaming, you could:
1. Use a latin password and switch off the IME for the password input with the IME hotkey.
2. Blank your screen with an external program while you are streaming and entering passwords.
3. Use binds to authenticate in rcon or to set the server browser password.
Refactoring
------------------------------
Move all text input logic and general rendering to `CLineInput`.
A `CLineInput` is associated with a particular `char` buffer given as a pointer either in the constructor or with `SetBuffer`. The maximum byte size of the buffer must also be specified. The maximum length in unicode codepoints can also be specified separately (e.g. on upstream, name are limited by the number of unicode codepoints instead).
Add `CLineInputBuffered`, which is a `CLineInput` that own a `char` buffer of a fixed size, which is specified as a template argument. As `CLineInput` does not own a buffer anymore, this reduces duplicate code for line inputs that need their own buffer.
Add `CLineInputNumber` which has additional convenience functions to consider the text as an `int` or `float`, to reduce duplicate code in those cases. In the future we could also add an input filter function so that only numbers can be entered in the number input.
Add `CLineInput::SetClipboardLineCallback` to handle the case that multiple lines of text are pasted into a lineinput. This reduces duplicate code, as this behavior was previously implemented separately for chat and console. The behavior is also fixed to be consistent with the console on Windows, so the first line being pasted edits the current input text and then sends it instead of being sent on its own without the existing input text.
Add `CalcFontSizeAndBoundingBox` to UI to reduce duplicate code. Expose `CalcAlignedCursorPos` as static member function to reuse it for line input.
Dispatch input events to UI inputs through the event handler instead of storing them in a duplicate buffer.
Use `size_t` for line input cursor position, length etc. and for `str_utf8_stats`.
Add `IButtonColorFunction` to UI to describe a functions that defines colors for the Default, Active and Hovered states of UI elements. Add some default button color functions. Use button color function to reduce duplicate code in scrollbar rendering.
Use `vec2` instead of two `floats` to represent the mouse positions in the text renderer.
Remove `CaretPosition` again, as it does not calculate the correct Y position near line breaks due to the wrapping being different when not rendering the entire string. Instead, calculate the exact caret position when rending a text container and store the caret position in the text cursor for later use.
IME usage guide (Windows)
------------------------------
1. Install the respective language and the Microsoft-IME keyboard (e.g. for Chinese, Japanese or Korean).
2. Launch the game (or a text editor to first try out the IME). Note that Windows may track the input language separately for every application. You can change this in the Windows input settings so the input language is changed globally.
2. Switch the input language using the hotkey Windows+Space or another hotkey that you configured in the Windows input settings (Alt+Shift is the default, but you should consider disabling it, to avoid accidentally changing the input language while playing).
3. Switch from Latin/English input mode to the respective asian input mode.
- Chinese: Use Ctrl+Space to switch between English and Chinese input mode. You can change this hotkey in the IME's settings.
- Japanese: Use Ctrl+Space to switch between Alphanumeric and Hiragana/Katakana input mode. You can change this hotkey in the IME's settings.
- Korean: Use Right Alt to switch between English and Hangul input mode. You cannot change this hotkey as of yet.
- Note that the input mode is also tracked per application, but there is no setting to change this behavior as far as I know, so you'll need to switch for every application separately.
4. Start typing. The underlined text is the current composition text. While a composition is active, you can only edit the composition text. Confirm the composition with Space or by selecting a candidate from the candidate list with the arrow keys. Cancel the composition with Escape or by using Backspace to delete the composition text. Note that not all languages offer a candidate list.
SDL version-specific issues
------------------------------
- 2.26.5, 2.24.2, 2.0.22: IME candidates work. But there are minor bugs when moving the composition cursor.
- 2.0.18, 2.0.20: IME candidates work.
- 2.0.16 (our current version): IME candidates cannot be determined with Windows API. Windows tries to draw the composition window like before, so this does not work in fullscreen mode.
- 2.0.8 (upstream 0.7): IME candidates work. But this SDL version is too old for us.
The console chain was broken due to `joystick_guid` being renamed to `inp_controller_guid`, so the active controller was not being updated when the GUID is changed via the console.
For relative mouse movement in SDL, the `SDL_GetRelativeMouseState` function always returns distance that the mouse moved since the last call of this function.
For joysticks, we only have access to the current axis values and no accumulated values.
This made the relative joystick movement speed decrease a lot when the client's refresh rate is low.
This is now counteracted by measuring the average time between calls of `IInput::Update` and multiplying the joystick movement by this number.
Closes#6296.
Instead of passing the generic `SDL_Event` to the handler functions and getting the specific structure inside the functions, pass the specific structure directly to the functions.
Handle the appropriate SDL events to open new joysticks when they are connected and remove joysticks when they are disconnected.
If the active joystick gets disconnected, then the first joystick in the list will be activated as a fallback.
If the previously activated joystick gets reconnected, it will be activated again automatically, as it is identified by the GUID stored in the configuration.
The stored joystick GUID is only updated when the user manually selects a new joystick in the controls settings or with the console.
Closes#6152.
Instead of considering diagonal hat inputs (e.g. up-left) as separate keys, consider them as inputs for both cardinal directions (e.g. up and left) at the same time.
This improves input with gamecontrollers that map the D-Pad to a joystick hat, as it was impossible with the previous handling to move with hat-left/right and jump with hat-up at the same time.
This means that diagonal hat buttons can no longer be used in binds, because they are no longer considered distinct buttons. It's unlikely that they would ever be useful in this game, as real joystick POV hats would not be used anyway.
Closes#6120.
Instead of closing the joysticks manually, use `SDL_QuitSubSystem(SDL_INIT_JOYSTICK)` to quit the entire subsystem, which will also close all joysticks correctly.
The engine input destructor is replaced with a `Shutdown` method so we can control when it is called, i.e. before calling `SDL_Quit`, which forcefully quits all subsystems.
`CJoystick::Close` is removed as we don't need to close joysticks manually anymore.