Many TrackPaint functions take a direction, but they used a mixture of uint8_t and int32_t types for the parameters. To make the semantics of the code clearer, use the dedicated Direction type for all of them.
This does mean that some parameters which were previously 32 bits (int32_t) will now be 8 bits (Direction) but from what I could see none of the usages make use of anything beyond the bottom 4 bits.
The get_track_paint_function functions have all been taking an extra 'direction' parameter, but nothing is actually using it. To simplify things, remove the parameter.
Previously when the arguments of a function wouldn't fit on a single line, clang-format would put each argument on its own line instead. By enabling the binpack parameter setting, it tried to fit as many on one line as possible instead.
Co-authored-by: Hielke Morsink <hielke.morsink@gmail.com>
Clang-format sees the text behind `#pragma region` as code and formats it. Instead of stating the copyright and date there, it's now in the comment block right below it. The text "Copyright" is left in the `#pragma region` line, as clang-format sees it as a single identifier.
I took the opportunity to normalize the dates, and add the copyright notice to the source files where it was missing them (except for third-party and the generated resources.h file).
This aims to make future refactoring easier. The arguments are removed where possible, but kept and marked with C++17's [[maybe_unused]] where they could not be removed (e.g. when they are used as a callback, rather than called directly).
I've skipped the rides/<category>/* and peep/* source files, because the rides source files are mostly generated and have a ton of unused variables, and the peep source files are being refactored.
I've also skipped most of window/* source files, because most of the functions are used as callbacks and will be bulk-renamed at some point.
`typedef struct/union/enum name { ... } name_again;` is not needed whe compiling C++, moving the name at the back to be in front of the object and removing `typedef` makes it usable the very same way.
This also replaces typedefs with the using keyword. They have better readability, especially for function pointer types, and would allow more flexibility when used with templates.