WTF. Fine, let's have separate, micro-optimized ASM implementations for
decoding and encoding inr MAIN.EXE, but still, all those minute
difference between OP.EXE and MAINE.EXE…
This is as far as anyone should reasonably go before decompilation;
things will get really ugly with the loading functions once the file
name is involved as well…
Completes P0063, funded by -Tom-.
As used for the title screen fade-in effect. Another function that
apparently was deliberately written to run not that fast, by blitting
each row individually to the 400th VRAM row just so that it can then
turn on the EGC, perform the *actual* masked blit to the VRAM
destination, and then turn the EGC off before moving to the next now.
The same effect could have entirely been accomplished by copying
graph_pack_put_8() and applying the mask there; it's not like ZUN
didn't know how to modify master.lib…
(See also 44ad3eb4) --Nmlgc
Yup, nothing interesting in here.
Except for maybe the confirmation that LS00.BB is used for the curved
bullets used by Shinki and EX-Alice?
Funded by -Tom-.
… because TH04's version of this takes the ASCII stage ID directly from
the resident structure.
So boss battles are simply triggered by setting the background tile
scroll speed to 0? That means…
Funded by zorg.
Also covering the two variations for blitting only every second row or
blitting only a 320x200 quarter, as seen in the endings.
So yeah, there's indeed nothing wrong with piread.cpp. TH03 just uses that
separate function that only blits every second row of an image, and indeed
always loads the entire image as it would appear in a PNG conversion. Here's
what happens if you display these images using the non-interlacing function:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/885krj09d9l0890/th03%20PI%20no%20interlace.png
With TH03 changing the calling convention for most of the code from __cdecl to
__pascal, I've been getting more and more confused about this myself. So,
let's settle on the following consistent syntax for function calls:
* C where the calling convention is actually __cdecl and where TASM's emitted
__cdecl code matches the original binary
* PASCAL where the calling convention is actually __pascal
* STDCALL where the calling convention is actually __cdecl, but where
the caller either defers stack cleanup (summing up the stack size of
multiple functions, then cleaning it all in a single "add sp" instruction)
or where the stack is cleared in a different way (e.g. "pop cx").
Unfortunately though, when using the ARG directive to automatically generate
an appropriate RET instruction for the given calling convention, TASM always
emits ENTER and LEAVE instructions even when no local variables are declared,
which greatly limits the number of functions where we can use that syntax. -.-