The path returned by GUI:FilePicker is stored on the stack when the
callback is executed. The player only stored a StringView to the path
however it should take ownership of the path instead since the path is
accessed even after the file menu open action has returned.
This little functional change uses the most common algorithm for panning
audio, known as constant power panning. It makes it so that the total
output power (not directly the sample value, i.e. the peak) stays the
same no matter how the audio is panned.
"Frame" is an MPEG term, which is not only unintuitive but also
overloaded with different meaning by other codecs (e.g. FLAC).
Therefore, use the standard term Sample for the central audio structure.
The class is also extracted to its own file, because it's becoming quite
large. Bundling these two changes means not distributing similar
modifications (changing names and paths) across commits.
Co-authored-by: kleines Filmröllchen <malu.bertsch@gmail.com>
The conversion from a linear scale (how we think about audio) to a
logarithmic scale (how audio actually works) will be useful for other
operations, so let's extract it to its own utility function. Its inverse
will also allow reversible operations to be written more easily.
With one caveat: in the PreparePartialTemporalFields AO I made a change
to fix a spec issue that would require the input object to always have a
month or monthCode property.
This is tracked in https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal/issues/1910
and may get accepted as-is, in which case we simply need to remove the
NOTE comment.
We were previously using TRY_COMPILE_TARGET_TYPE to bypass the compiler
check at the beginning of the CMake build, since we don't have LibC
available and therefore can't link at that point.
However, this breaks a lot of assumptions in try_compile when it comes
to library checks. While this was the main idea behind our usage of the
flag, it also has some really nasty side effects when software wants
to find out what library a symbol is in.
Instead, just manually tell CMake that our compiler works as intended
and keep the target type setting at its default.
Before this change, we would generate the static C library by running
the command `ar -qcs` to collect the various `*.o` files into a single
archive.
The `q` option stands for "quick append", which simply appends new files
to the archive, without replacing any pre-existing entries for the same
file. The problem with this is obvious: each LibC rebuild would add
approximately 1 MB (the size of a cleanly built libc.a) to the size of
the file. It got so bad on my machine that the total file size ended up
being 3 gigabytes.
Note that this did not affect the GNU toolchain, because, as the `ar(1)`
manpage says:
> Note - GNU ar treats the command qs as a synonym for r - replacing
> already existing files in the archive and appending new ones at the
> end.
This port has been broken since the introduction of `sys_signame` (which
was almost 3 months ago), as oksh provided a conflicting definition for
it.
This commit also cleans up some of the patches, defining the appropriate
config macro instead of commenting out code.
When I opened this program's GitHub releases page, I noticed that a new
version was available, so I also did the update.
We move the input string into this field to avoid a string copy, so we
must do this step last to avoid using any views into it (note that
match.view here is a view into this string).
We now use AK::Error and AK::ErrorOr<T> in both kernel and userspace!
This was a slightly tedious refactoring that took a long time, so it's
not unlikely that some bugs crept in.
Nevertheless, it does pass basic functionality testing, and it's just
real nice to finally see the same pattern in all contexts. :^)
This variant returns ErrorOr<NonnullOwnPtr<T>> instead of KResultOr.
Eventually the KResultOr variant should go away once the kernel adopts
Error and ErrorOr<T>.
This also allows us to get rid of the ShareableBitmap(Bitmap)
constructor which was easy to misuse. Everyone now uses Bitmap's
to_shareable_bitmap() helper instead.