Steps to reproduce were:
* Open Blender (no need for factory settings, "Promt Quit" needs to be enabled)
* Edit the file (e.g. translate some object)
* Quit Blender but don't skip quit promt
* Press "Save & Quit"
* Save the file
Not sure if Windows supports the "Save & Quit" behavior, so this may not have
applied to Windows.
You only had to close Blender through File -> Quit.
Leaks happened because WM_exit() was called from within operator, UI wasn't able
to free some of it's heap data then. This data was the handler added in
uiTemplateRunningJobs() and the IDProperty group added in uiItemFullO_ptr_ex().
There was obviously a general design issue which only became visible in this
specific case.
We now delay the WM_exit call by wrapping it into a handler that gets registered
as usual. I didn't see a better way to do this, all tricks done in
ui_apply_but_funcs_after() to prevent leaks didn't work here. In fact they may
be redundant now, but am not brave enough to try ;)
MSVC still defines __cplusplus as 199711L until it's in full conformance with the newer c++ standards, however the things we need from the standard are fully supported, hence a check for the msvc version was needed.
Without this a "Clearcoat" link could be moved to "Clearcoat Normal"
for example, which doesn't make much sense.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D3105
PointCache was having a collection of items of PointCache type, having a
collection of items of PointCache type, having...
Nuff said.
For now, chose the 'ugly' way to fix it, that is, the one that changes
nothing to API and scripts using it: we define another 'PointCacheItem'
RNA type for items of our point cache collection, which has exact same
interface as PointCache except for the collection.
This is doomed to be rewritten at some point anyway, not worth spending
time trying to define a really correct data layout for now.
* In the Collada Module parameters are typically ordered
in a similar way. I changed this to:
extern std::string get_joint_id(Object *ob, Bone *bone);
* The Object parameter was not used in get_joint_sid().
I changed this to:
extern std::string get_joint_sid(Bone *bone);
We had a mix of two issues here actually:
* First, Brush are currently using their own sauce for custom previews,
this is not great, but moving them to use common ImagePreview system of
IDs is a low-priority TODO. For now, they should totally ignore their
own ImagePreview.
* Second, BKE_icon_changed() would systematically create a PreviewImage
for ID types supporting it, which does not really makes sense, this
function is merely here to 'tag' previews as outdated. Actual creation
of previews is deferred to later, when we actually need them.
They are used to start and end colored output in console.
Use with care, it is up to you to check that console actually
supports Truecolor ANSII.
In thew future we can extend this to other consoles and platforms.
Requires BLI_utildefines.h to be included first,
(already noted in other inline code).
Possible alternative could be to move BLI_assert into own header.
For IDProps IDarray, IDP_EqualsProperties was called for each item,
instead of IDP_EqualsProperties_ex, discarding value of `is_strict`
option.
Probably not an issue with current code, though.