This avoids the allocations caused by LINQ when using traits.FirstOrDefault(Exts.IsTraitEnabled). This is important in FrozenActorLayer.RefreshState which is called very often. We apply the new helper method to all areas using the old pattern. An overload that takes an array allows arrays to be enumerated without causing allocations.
This allows callers to efficiently enumerate these returned collections without the allocation and overhead imposed by the IEnumerable interface. All implementations were already returning arrays, so this only required a signature change.
If the download failed, the map status would be MapStatus.DownloadError,
which would cause the Install method to return immediately. I've updated
the Install method now to account for MapStatus.DownloadError.
Additionally, internally renamed VisualBounds to SelectionOverlayBounds to avoid confusion with RenderBounds.
This step was necessary to prevent actors with selectable area smaller than their graphics to be removed too early from ScreenMap even though part of the graphics should still be visible.
RA cruisers were a prime example, but to a lesser extent several other actors were affected as well.
This separation also serves as preparation to determine the final RenderBounds from multiple source bounds later, to fix the remaining ScreenMap issues (building 'bibs', aircraft shadows).
- A 512x512 sheet is about half full after precaching and some usage, but uses 16x less memory than the default 2048x2048 sheet. This saving occurs twice as we maintain a managed buffer for this sheet.
- Only precache smaller fonts, as the larger fonts are less used and take up more space than is worthwhile.
- Only precache in white, as red is largely unused.
Packets from each chunk are now saved directly in an array, removing the overhead of a list. Additionally, a list is reused as a buffer for decoding packets into, preventing a new buffer from needing to be allocated for each chunk.
Attempts to use features from a new version will generate compile errors (on Roslyn and possibly other compilers), preventing accidental adoption of new language features.