The hack was needed because the Nvidia 3D Vision heuristics are documented to only support surfaces that are the same size as the backbuffer. This would be the case if you enabled the hack and selected the "Auto (Window Size)" internal resolution.
However, on recent drivers the same effect is achieved by selecting the "Auto (Multiple)" internal resolution. Therefore the hack is no longer required.
Also have the renderer remember its own fullscreen state. This is done to prevent a case where we exit exclusive fullscreen through the configuration and a focus shift at the same time. In this case the renderer would fail to detect that the fullscreen state was changed.
This ensures the transition from/to exclusive mode happens while the RenderFrame is fullscreen.
This prevents fullscreen loops and relieves us of having to restore the window size after we exit fullscreen.
With strings, we don't need to care about passing in a length, since it internally stores it. So now, we don't even need a length parameter for these functions anymore as well.
This also kills off some sprintf_s calls.
- Isolate it into it's own namespace
- Shorten function names, the namespace self-documents.
- Just use the std I/O, we can just write directly to the stream for
logging.
For quite a while this has been causing integer division to generate a warning as error, blocking shader compiling. This means probably no one has even been running D3D in debug builds...
I tried disabling the warning with a #pragma, but it doesn't seem to apply when this flag is used.
We need to explicitly round when converting colors from float to uint
because multiplying a normalized float by 255 might not result in a whole
number. (The exact result here may vary depending on your
drivers/hardware.)
Ideally, we shouldn't be using floating point here, but fixing that is a
much more complicated patch.
Fixes gxtest TEV tests using Intel HD 4000.
CreateInputLayout requires a shader as an input, but it only cares about
the signature; we don't need to recompute it for different shaders with
the same inputs.