Single line comments starting with `///` are interpreted by
Microsoft Visual Studio as documentation containing XML code.
Therefore single line comments starting with `///<` unfortunately
cause a parsing error, as IntelliSense will assume the `<` is the
start of an XML tag. This is not the case, but unfortunately,
IntelliSense will still complain about the following space
character rather than displaying the raw string. This commit alters
all such comments to start with `//!<` instead, which prevents the
issue.
This fixes issue #1622.
Removed useless cast in SFML/System/Utf.inl at line 296.
This useless cast creates a warning when using -Wuseless-cast as an option in g++ and clang++.
Operations can't be made on types smaller than 4 bytes (32 bits), so types smaller than 4 bytes are converted to at least 4 bytes types, thus rendering the static_cast<Uint32> useless in this particular case.
- remove Wait and SizeAll cursors as they don't look nice
(Wait is not spining and produces a broken rendering,
SizeAll is a simple white cursor.)
- fix memory management for NSCursor.
- ignore selector warnings.
This commit drops the previous custom CMake toolchain file for Android
in favor of CMake's new built-in toolchain for this (CMake >3.7.2).
This makes building SFML for Android a lot simpler and more straight
forward, working almost as smooth as other platforms.
To configure your build directory, all you have to do is defining just a
few variables the first time you invoke CMake.
**Required Variables**
* `CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME` must be `Android`, so CMake knows we actually want
to cross-compile.
* `CMAKE_ANDROID_NDK` must point to the NDK's installation directory,
e.g. `/usr/android/ndk` or `c:/android/ndk`.
**Recommended Variables**
* `CMAKE_ANDROID_STL_TYPE` defines the STL implementation to be used.
You should use `c++_shared`, although others might work.
**Optional Variables**
* `CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION` can be set to pick a specific SDK version other
than the latest.
* `CMAKE_ANDROID_ARCH_ABI` defines the target architecture and ABI, for
example `armeabi` or `armeabi-v7a`.
Based on your system, you might want to enforce a specific generator to
prevent issues, e.g. using `MinGW Makefiles`.