We can make this message more meaningful by indicating the location the
screenshot has been saved to. We can also log out whenever a screenshot
could not be saved (e.g. due to filesystem permissions or some other
reason).
Treating it as a u16 can result in a sign-conversion warning when
performing arithmetic with it, as u16 promotes to an int when aritmetic
is performed on it, not unsigned int.
This also makes the interface more uniform, as the layout interface now
operates on u32 across the board.
We can just pass a pointer to GMainWindow directly and make it a
requirement of the interface. This makes the interface a little safer,
since this would technically otherwise allow any random QWidget to be
the parent of a render window, downcasting it to GMainWindow (which is
undefined behavior).
Allows for things such as:
auto rect = Common::Rectangle{0, 0, 0, 0};
as opposed to being required to explicitly write out the underlying
type, such as:
auto rect = Common::Rectangle<int>{0, 0, 0, 0};
The only requirement for the deduction is that all constructor arguments
be the same type.
Stays consistent in our code with using Qt's provided mechanisms, and
also properly handles Unicode paths (which file streams on Windows don't
do very well).
Qt uses a signed value to represent indices. We should follow this
convention where applicable to avoid unnecessary sign-conversion
warnings, as well as making it easier to interoperate with other aspects
of Qt.
While we're at it, we can also make a sign-conversion explicit.
critical() is intended for critical/fatal errors that threaten the
overall stability of an application. A user entering a conflicting key
sequence is neither of those.
1. This is something that should be solely emitted by the hotkey dialog
itself
2. This is functionally unused, given there's nothing listening for the
signal.
The previous code was all "smushed" together wasn't really grouped
together that well.
This spaces things out and separates them by relation to one another,
making it easier to visually parse the individual sections of code that
make up the constructor.
Uses a std::string_view instead of a std::string, given the pointed to
string isn't modified and is only used in a formatting operation.
This is nice because a few usages directly supply a string literal to
the function, allowing these usages to otherwise not heap allocate,
unlike the std::string overloads.
While we're at it, we can combine the address formatting into a single
formatting call.
A checkbox is able to be tri-state, giving it three possible activity
types, so in the connect call here, it would actually be truncating an
int into a bool.
Instead, we can just listen on the toggled() signal, which passes along
a bool, not an int.
nullptr was being returned in the error case, which, at a glance may
seem perfectly OK... until you realize that std::string has the
invariant that it may not be constructed from a null pointer. This
means that if this error case was ever hit, then the application would
most likely crash from a thrown exception in std::string's constructor.
Instead, we can change the function to return an optional value,
indicating if a failure occurred.