view CREDITS @ 4167:a6f635e5eaa6 SDL-1.2

Fixed bug #611 From Tim Angus 2008-08-12 11:18:06 I'm one of the maintainers of ioquake3.org, an updated version of the Quake 3 engine. Relatively recently, we moved ioq3 to use SDL as a replacement for 95% of the platform specific code that was there. On the whole it's doing a great job but unfortunately since the move we've been getting complaints about the quality of the mouse input on the Windows platform to the point where for many the game is unplayable. Put in other terms, the current stable SDL 1.2 is basically not fit for purpose if you need high quality mouse input as you do in a first person shooter. Over the weekend I decided to pull my finger out and actually figure out what's going on. There are basically two major problems. Firstly, when using the "windib" driver, mouse input is gathered via the WM_MOUSEMOVE message. Googling for this indicates that often this is known to result in "spurious" and/or "missing" mouse movement events; this is the primary cause of the poor mouse input. The second problem is that the "directx" driver does not work at all in combination with OpenGL meaning that you can't use DirectInput if your application also uses OpenGL. In other words you're locked into using the "windib" driver and its poor mouse input. In order to address these problems I've done the following: * Remove WM_MOUSEMOVE based motion event generation and replace with calls to GetCursorPos which seems much more reliable. In order to achieve this I've moved mouse motion out into a separate function that is called once per DIB_PumpEvents. * Remove the restriction on the "directx" driver being inoperable in combination with OpenGL. There is a bug for this issues that I've hijacked to a certain extent (http://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=265). I'm the first to admit I don't really understand why this restriction is there in the first place. The commit message for the bug fix that introduced this restriction (r581) isn't very elaborate and I couldn't see any other bug tracking the issue. If anyone has more information on the bug that was avoided by r581 it would be helpful as I/someone could then look into addressing the problem without disabling the "directx" driver. * I've also removed the restriction on not being allowed to use DirectInput in windowed mode. I couldn't see any reason for this, at least not from our perspective. I have my suspicions that it'll be something like matching up the cursor with the mouse coordinates... * I bumped up the DirectInput API used to version 7 in order to get access to mouse buttons 4-7. I've had to inject a little bit of the DX7 headers into SDL there as the MinGW ones aren't up to date in this respect.
author Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
date Thu, 02 Apr 2009 04:43:36 +0000
parents 72a00fe65ffe
children
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Simple DirectMedia Layer CREDITS
Thanks to everyone who made this possible, including:

* Cliff Matthews, for giving me a reason to start this project. :)
 -- Executor rocks!  *grin*

* Scott Call, for making a home for SDL on the 'Net... Thanks! :)

* The Linux Fund, C Magazine, Educational Technology Resources Inc.,
  Gareth Noyce, Jesse Pavel, Keith Kitchin, Jeremy Horvath, Thomas Nicholson,
  Hans-Peter Gygax, the Eternal Lands Development Team, Lars Brubaker,
  and Phoenix Kokido for financial contributions

* Gaëtan de Menten for writing the PHP and SQL behind the SDL website

* Tim Jones for the new look of the SDL website

* Marco Kraus for setting up SDL merchandise

* Martin Donlon for his work on the SDL Documentation Project

* Ryan Gordon for helping everybody out and keeping the dream alive. :)

* IBM R&D Lab for their PS3 SPE video acceleration code

* Mattias Engdegård, for help with the Solaris port and lots of other help

* Max Watson, Matt Slot, and Kyle for help with the MacOS Classic port

* Stan Shebs, for the initial Mac OS X port

* Eric Wing, Max Horn, and Darrell Walisser for unflagging work on the Mac OS X port

* Patrick Trainor, Jim Boucher, and Mike Gorchak for the QNX Neutrino port

* Carsten Griwodz for the AIX port

* Gabriele Greco, for the Amiga port

* Patrice Mandin, for the Atari port

* Hannu Viitala for the EPOC port

* Marcus Mertama for the S60 port.

* Peter Valchev for nagging me about the OpenBSD port until I got it right. :)

* Kent B Mein, for a place to do the IRIX port

* Ash, for a place to do the OSF/1 Alpha port

* David Sowsy, for help with the BeOS port

* Eugenia Loli, for endless work on porting SDL games to BeOS

* Jon Taylor for the GGI front-end

* Paulus Esterhazy, for the Visual C++ testing and libraries

* Brenda Tantzen, for Metrowerks CodeWarrior on MacOS

* Chris Nentwich, for the Hermes assembly blitters

* Michael Vance and Jim Kutter for the X11 OpenGL support

* Stephane Peter, for the AAlib front-end and multi-threaded timer idea.

* Jon Atkins for SDL_image, SDL_mixer and SDL_net documentation

* Peter Wiklund, for the 1998 winning SDL logo,
  and Arto Hamara, Steven Wong, and Kent Mein for other logo entries.

* Arne Claus, for the 2004 winning SDL logo,
  and Shandy Brown, Jac, Alex Lyman, Mikkel Gjoel, #Guy, Jonas Hartmann,
  Daniel Liljeberg,  Ronald Sowa, DocD, Pekka Jaervinen, Patrick Avella,
  Erkki Kontilla, Levon Gavalian, Hal Emerich, David Wiktorsson,
  S. Schury and F. Hufsky, Ciska de Ruyver, Shredweat, Tyler Montbriand,
  Martin Andersson, Merlyn Wysard, Fernando Ibanez, David Miller,
  Andre Bommele, lovesby.com, Francisco Camenforte Torres, and David Igreja
  for other logo entries.

* Bob Pendleton and David Olofson for being long time contributors to
  the SDL mailing list.

* Everybody at Loki Software, Inc. for their great contributions!

 And a big hand to everyone else who gave me appreciation, advice,
 and suggestions, especially the good folks on the SDL mailing list.

THANKS! :)

  -- Sam Lantinga			<slouken@libsdl.org>