This 'nice' structure was left around from #8258 just in case it might be used again.
Spoiler alert: it hasn't.
This removes manual memory management. And otherwise unused and untested code.
Sprite IDs are not useful information given they change don't refer to anything outside the loaded game.
Instead, include the filename and nfo line at minimum, and include action A or action 5 sprite replacement information if applicable.
The brings some performance advantages:
* No need to iterate all vehicles and check for primary vehicle as only vehicles that can have orders are listed.
* Shared orders only need to be tested once instead of for each vehicle sharing them.
* Vehicle tests only need to be performed on the first shared vehicle instead of all.
This means we have RTL support again with ICU 58+. It makes use of:
- ICU for bidi-itemization
- ICU for script-itemization
- OpenTTD for style-itemization
- harfbuzz for shaping
IntervalTimer and TimeoutTimer use RAII, and can be used to replace
all the time-based timeouts, lag-detection, "execute every N" we
have.
As it uses RAII, you can safely use it as static variable, class
member, temporary variable, etc. As soon as it goes out-of-scope,
it will be safely removed.
This allows for much easier to read code when it comes to intervals.
This is using a non-intrusive type-traits like templated system, which
allows compile-time validation that the command table and the command
enum match up.
Functions like localtime, gmtime and asctime are not thread safe as they (might) reuse the same buffer. So use the safer _s/_r variant for localtime and gmtime, and use strftime in favour of asctime.
CMake works on all our supported platforms, like MSVC, Mingw, GCC,
Clang, and many more. It allows for a single way of doing things,
so no longer we need shell scripts and vbs scripts to work on all
our supported platforms.
Additionally, CMake allows to generate project files for like MSVC,
KDevelop, etc.
This heavily reduces the lines of code we need to support multiple
platforms from a project perspective.
Addtiionally, this heavily improves our detection of libraries, etc.