NWidgetMatrix modifies its child widget's index to indicate which element
is to be drawn, which now causes issues with code that does not know about
stuffing extra data into the index.
Instead, let NWidgetMatrix store the currently processing element, and
retrieve this information from the matrix widget while child widgets are
being drawn.
This means only widgets that are children of NWidgetMatrix need to know
anything about their extra data.
This changes from naming storage-type to naming functionality.
* `FillNestedArray` is renamed to `FillWidgetLookup`.
* `Window::nested_array` is renamed to `Window::widget_lookup`.
* `array` parameter renamed as well.
Having two ways (`FillNestedArray` and `SetupSmallestSize`) to initialize
`Window::nested_array` introduces confusion.
Instead, make `FillNestedArray` the canonical way, always call it, and remove
init_array from `SetupSmallestSize`.
When clicked, the button is still highlighted to show that it is active.
The bevel is controlled with widget_data by RWV_SHOW_BEVEL or RWV_HIDE_BEVEL values.
Always derive additional length from contained widgets instead of from the container, as the container's minimal length may have been adjusted by an NC_EQUALSIZE parent container.
AssignSizePosition is used with negative values when an NWidgetMatrix is
scrolled, but they were passed as unsigned and then stored as signed.
Widget pos_x/pos_y were already made signed.
This is considered a developer tool and is controlled from the help menu (or default hotkey Ctrl-O).
This draws a white dashed outline around widgets. NWidgetSpacer and (unused) WWT_EMPTY widgets are also filled with check pattern to highlight them, as they usually indicate a design issue.
Most NWidgetContainer derivatives implemented Draw() and GetWidgetFromPos()
the same way. Move this these to NWidgetContainer itself to avoid repeating.
This simplifies processing nwidget parts as, unlike the remaining length, the pointer to the end of the list never changes. This is the same principle as we use(d) for tracking end instead of length for C-style strings.
And this removes 160~ instances of the lengthof() macro.
GetScrolled*FromWidget took line height from the widget's resize_y value,
however not all widgets are resizable, resulting in a division-by-zero.
Allow passing line height explicitly in cases where a widget is not
resizable.
On first start-up, the game will ask if you want to participate
in our automated survey. You have to opt-in, and can easily opt-out
(via the Options) at any time.
When opt-in, whenever you exit a game, a JSON blob will be send
to the survey server hosted by OpenTTD. This JSON blob contains
information that gives a global picture of the game just played:
- What settings were used
- How many humans vs AIs
- How long the game has been played
- Basic information about the OS / CPU
All this information is kept very generic, so there is no
chance we send private information to our survey server.
Nothing in the JSON blob could identify you as a person; it
mostly tells about the game played. At any time you can see
what the JSON blob includes, by pressing the "Preview Survey
Results" button in-game.