I did consider not doing this, because "well, can't anyone who's
*actually* interested just diff the TH01 and TH02 implementations to
figure out the differences themselves", but that duplication ended up
feeling too filthy after all.
And hey, it's a nice excuse to update TH02's version to current naming
standards! 😛
Part of P0068, funded by Yanga.
The TH04/TH05 BGM/SE mode setup is a good example for code where
different structure field offsets will vanish completely upon reverse-
engineering. If we continued to use the per-game ID string as the
variable name, we'd only have another game-specific "difference" there.
Part of P0065, funded by Touhou Patch Center.
So many things named `score_*`, so many things named `hiscore_*`…
Let's go with `scoredat_*`, which clearly indicates that this stuff is
saved into a file, while still being only 8 characters.
Part of P0063, funded by -Tom-.
At least wherever Turbo C++ and master.lib want us to use a
non-pointer, since both use uint16_t for segment values throughout
their APIs instead of the more sensible void __seg*. Maybe, integer
arithmetic on segment values was widely considered more important than
dereferencing?
*Finally*. We already used `(unsigned) int` in quite a few places where
we actually want a 16-bit value, which was bound to annoy future port
developers.
Not applying this leak to TH03 since it would have more than one
`key_det` variable, resulting in names that are as much fanfiction as
the current ones…
This, hands down, has been the single worst stretch of decompilation so far.
Three extremely difficult functions that each still required inline assembly.
And no, this didn't even work out with any of the optimization features in
Borland C++ that aren't included in Turbo C++.
Oh, right, these functions can have parameters. So, let's turn snd_kaja_func()
into a macro that combines the function number and the parameter into the AX
value for the driver.
Only one code segment left in both OP and FUUIN! its-happening.gif
Yeah, that commit is way larger than I'm comfortable with, but none of these
functions is particularly large or difficult to decompile (with the exception
of graph_putsa_fx(), which I actually did weeks ago), and OP and MAIN have
their own unique functions in between the shared ones, so…
So yeah, after ignoring this issue for a week, we indeed have no choice but to
decompile these functions into this horrible mess of C and inline assembly.
And you know what? Since the compiled result still matches with ZUN's binary,
it's entirely possible that this *was* the original format this code was
written in! Seriously, how intoxicated do you have to be to write (or rather,
slur) code like this?
Keeping these functions entirely in assembly would have surely been better.
However, it would have made linking practically impossible, especially for the
later games which still need them in the current assembly slice format.
MAIN.EXE shares most of the code in this segment, but I can't remove it from
there right now due to the weird ordering of the data segments in that
executable…
And yes, once again, those three seemingly random type casts in here are
*necessary* to build a bit-perfect binary.
Oh, OK, so this is what the PC-98 GRCG is all about. You call grcg_setcolor(),
and that puts the PC-98 hardware in some sort of "monochromatic mode". Then,
you just write your pixels into any *single* one of the 4 VRAM bitplanes. This
causes the hardware to automatically write to *all* bitplanes in such a way
that the final palette index for each of the 8, 16, or 32 pixels you just wrote
a 1 value to will actually end up to match the color you set earlier.
Don't forget to call grcg_off() at the end though, or you can't draw any
non-monochromatic graphics, heh.
Yes, all of it. Including the bouncing polygons, of course. And since it's
placed at the end of ZUN's code inside the executable, the code's already
position-independent and fully hackable.