Less fancy token pasting, replacing them with inline functions where
possible, entirely removing unnecessary ones, and fixing smaller
issues here and there.
Part of P0186, funded by [Anonymous] and Blue Bolt.
The main point of the previous strings/ subdirectory was to bundle all
hardcoded strings for translators. And sure, *technically*, gaiji
strings are *both* strings *and* something you might want to translate.
But mainly, they're sprites with an attached enum, and their own
directory. Changes to the enum quickly tend to involve changes to the
strings that use these values, so it makes sense to keep both in the
same directory.
Especially since 82% of the previous strings/ directories consisted of
such gaiji strings.
That leaves the strings/ directory rather empty and nondescript though.
Recently though, I've been wanting to generally move all Shift-JIS text
to this directory. While that wouldn't *solve* the typical "text editor
accidentally a file upon save, due to wrongly detected encoding" issue,
it's at least a mitigation: If all Shift-JIS strings are in files that
contain nothing *but* Shift-JIS strings, a wrongly detected encoding
becomes immediately noticeable.
For that job, strings/ can have a more descriptive name though. Hence,
shiftjis/.
Part of P0141, funded by [Anonymous] and rosenrose.
DOS is not the same thing as the underlying CPU, after all. A separate
file not only indicates to future port authors which parts of the code
are x86-specific, but it also speeds up build times…
… in theory, because removing 677 lines from 49 files each doesn't seem
to speed up the build as much as I had hoped? But apparently my whole
system mysteriously got faster in the meantime, and I was getting 22-23
seconds for the entire repo even before this commit. Good enough.
Part of P0134, funded by [Anonymous].
The `struct date` members in `scoredat_t` add a dependency on <dos.h>
to the entire header file. Makes sense to move it out as early as
possible.
Part of P0133, funded by [Anonymous].