This picks a default directory and file name. If on Windows and save-as screenshot saving is enabled, it asks the user, first defaulting to the default screenshot path, and with a default filename in the format `[title_id]_[year-mt-dy_hr-mn-sc-msc].png`. Otherwise, or on Linux for now, it simply saves a file in that directory with that file name.
This adds two options to the General -> UI tab. The first disables picking a place to save the file. The second chooses a default directory for saving screenshots.
In file included from src/core/hle/kernel/memory/page_table.cpp:5:
src/./common/alignment.h:67:68: error: no member named 'align_val_t' in namespace 'std'
return static_cast<T*>(::operator new (n * sizeof(T), std::align_val_t{Align}));
~~~~~^
src/./common/alignment.h:71:51: error: no member named 'align_val_t' in namespace 'std'
::operator delete (p, n * sizeof(T), std::align_val_t{Align});
~~~~~^
NV_shader_buffer_{load,store} is a 2010 extension that allows GL applications
to use what in Vulkan is known as physical pointers, this is basically C
pointers. On GLASM these is exposed through the LOAD/STORE/ATOM
instructions.
Up until now, assembly shaders were using NV_shader_storage_buffer_object.
These work fine, but have a (probably unintended) limitation that forces
us to have the limit of a single stage for all shader stages. In contrast,
with NV_shader_buffer_{load,store} we can pass GPU addresses to the
shader through local parameters (GLASM equivalent uniform constants, or
push constants on Vulkan). Local parameters have the advantage of being
per stage, allowing us to generate code without worrying about binding
overlaps.
Given the expression involves a 32-bit value, this simplifies down to
just: 0x3ffffff. This is likely a remnant from testing that was never
cleaned up.
Resolves a -Wshift-overflow warning.
The purpose of make_pair is generally to deduce the types within the
pair without explicitly specifying the types, so these usages were
generally unnecessary, particularly when the type is enforced by the
array declaration.