-The user will notice the following changes:
All vehicle types behaves in the same way
Adding/removing an engine (new design and so on) can no longer result in the window selecting a new engine
All valid replacements will be displayed since it looks at refitting options as well (this solves the missing ships with the newships GRF)
Since you can't replace an engine into itself, the engine selected in the left list will no longer appear in the right list
-The code changes:
Instead of looping all engines all the time, each list generates a list like the build windows
This ensures consistent list generation since only one function can loop all engines
Unified code for all vehicle types
It now use the lists to call the drawing code in the build vehicle window
Works on selected EngineIDs instead of selected index in the list
-The user will notice the following changes:
All vehicle types behaves in the same way
Adding/removing an engine (new design and so on) can no longer result in the window selecting a new engine
All valid replacements will be displayed since it looks at refitting options as well (this solves the missing ships with the newships GRF)
Since you can't replace an engine into itself, the engine selected in the left list will no longer appear in the right list
-The code changes:
Instead of looping all engines all the time, each list generates a list like the build windows
This ensures consistent list generation since only one function can loop all engines
Unified code for all vehicle types
It now use the lists to call the drawing code in the build vehicle window
Works on selected EngineIDs instead of selected index in the list
This will permanently solve the issue where compilation on OSX broke because C++ code was added to some header files
-Note: (important if you develop mac specific code)
taken from http://developer.apple.com/releasenotes/Cocoa/Objective-C++.html
gdb lacks an integrated C++ with Objective-C parser. This means that gdb won't be able to evaluate expressions that contain both C++ and Objective-C constructs.
gdb assumes that the language for ".mm" files is C++.
you can change it to objective C by typing: (gdb) set language objc
Mixing C++ and objective C has some limitation (see link for all of them)
This will permanently solve the issue where compilation on OSX broke because C++ code was added to some header files
-Note: (important if you develop mac specific code)
taken from http://developer.apple.com/releasenotes/Cocoa/Objective-C++.html
gdb lacks an integrated C++ with Objective-C parser. This means that gdb won't be able to evaluate expressions that contain both C++ and Objective-C constructs.
gdb assumes that the language for ".mm" files is C++.
you can change it to objective C by typing: (gdb) set language objc
Mixing C++ and objective C has some limitation (see link for all of them)
An example of this is that fopen that we redefine to _wfopen (for Windows Unicode compatability), is reverted to a non-Windows Unicode compatible fopen. This makes it impossible to start openttd with non-ASCII characters in the path or load savegames with non-ASCII characters under Windows.
An example of this is that fopen that we redefine to _wfopen (for Windows Unicode compatability), is reverted to a non-Windows Unicode compatible fopen. This makes it impossible to start openttd with non-ASCII characters in the path or load savegames with non-ASCII characters under Windows.
- The replacement bridge must be the same transport type, and if it's a rail bridge it must have the same railtype.
- Town owned bridges can also be upgraded, but only to a bridge with a higher top speed.
- The replacement bridge must be the same transport type, and if it's a rail bridge it must have the same railtype.
- Town owned bridges can also be upgraded, but only to a bridge with a higher top speed.