Makes it consistent with the regular standard containers in terms of
size representation. This also gets rid of dependence on our own
type aliases, removing the need for an include.
The necessity of this parameter is dubious at best, and in 2019 probably
offers completely negligible savings as opposed to just leaving this
enabled. This removes it and simplifies the overall interface.
This is compromise for swap type being used in union. A union has deleted default constructor if it has at least one variant member with non-trivial default constructor, and no variant member of T has a default member initializer. In the use case of Bitfield, all variant members will be the swap type on endianness mismatch, which would all have non-trivial default constructor if default value is specified, and non of them can have member initializer
Original reason:
As Windows multi-byte character codec is unspecified while we always assume std::string uses UTF-8 in our code base, this can output gibberish when the string contains non-ASCII characters. ::OutputDebugStringW combined with Common::UTF8ToUTF16W is preferred here.
While admirable as a means to ensure immutability, this has the
unfortunate downside of making the class non-movable. std::move cannot
actually perform a move operation if the provided operand has const data
members (std::move acts as an operation to "slide" resources out of an
object instance). Given Barrier contains move-only types such as
std::mutex, this can lead to confusing error messages if an object ever
contained a Barrier instance and said object was attempted to be moved.
This is also unused and superceded by standard functionality. The
standard library provides std::this_thread::sleep_for(), which provides
a much more flexible interface, as different time units can be used with
it.
This is an old function that's no longer necessary. C++11 introduced
proper threading support to the language and a thread ID can be
retrieved via std::this_thread::get_id() if it's ever needed.
This is an analog of BitSet from Dolphin that was introduced to allow
iterating over a set of bits. Given it's currently unused, and given
that std::bitset exists, we can remove this. If it's ever needed in the
future it can be brought back.
Xbyak is currently entirely unused. Rather than carting it along, remove
it and get rid of a dependency. If it's ever needed in the future, then
it can be re-added (and likely be more up to date at that point in
time).
Currently, there's no way to specify if an assertion should
conditionally occur due to unimplemented behavior. This is useful when
something is only partially implemented (e.g. due to ongoing RE work).
In particular, this would be useful within the graphics code.
The rationale behind this is it allows a dev to disable unimplemented
feature assertions (which can occur in an unrelated work area), while
still enabling regular assertions, which act as behavior guards for
conditions or states which must not occur. Previously, the only way a
dev could temporarily disable asserts, was to disable the regular
assertion macros, which has the downside of also disabling, well, the
regular assertions which hold more sanitizing value, as opposed to
unimplemented feature assertions.
Currently, this was only performing a logging call, which doesn't
actually invoke any assertion behavior. This is unlike
UNIMPLEMENTED_MSG, which *does* assert.
This makes the expected behavior uniform across both macros.
Storing signed type causes the following behaviour: extractValue can do overflow/negative left shift. Now it only relies on two implementation-defined behaviours (which are almost always defined as we want): unsigned->signed conversion and signed right shift