This gives a very slight FPS boost.
1140 to 1143 FPS on my machine as measured by:
```bash
tools/linux_reduced_cpu_variance_run.sh tools/measure_timedemo_performance.py -n 5 --binary build-rel/devilutionx
```
Inlines blit command parsing.
We previously had blit commands because we supported rendering multiple
formats (CEL, CL2, CLX) but now we only ever render CLX, so this is
no longer necessary.
Original Blizzard encoder is slightly less optimal than our encoder.
While size in RAM in less of a concern for the non-`UNPACKED_MPQS`
build, smaller files are faster to render.
Savings for unpacked and minified MPQs:
* diabdat.mpq: 918,311 bytes.
* hellfire.mpq: 313,882 bytes.
Example player graphics (note that only a few are loaded at any given time for single player):
* diabdat/plrgfx/warrior/: 366,564 bytes.
Example monster graphics savings:
* diabdat/monsters/skelbow: 5,391 bytes.
Based on the implementation from https://github.com/diasurgical/devilutionx-graphics-tools/pull/6
Done with the following script:
```ruby
Dir["Source/**/*.{h,c,cc,cpp,hpp}"].each do |path|
v = File.read(path)
next if !v.include?("uint32_t") || v.include?("cstdint")
lines = v.lines
line_num = if lines[2].start_with?(" *")
lines.index { |l| l.start_with?(" */") } + 3
else
3
end
lines.insert(line_num, "#include <cstdint>\n")
File.write(path, lines.join(""))
end
```
then fixed-up manually
The format is almost identical to CL2, except it uses the frame header
to store frame width and height instead of 5 32-line offsets.
This means we always have access to frame dimensions, so we can use it
as an on-disk format for our graphics as well.
Additionally, we may be able to optimize the rendering even more
in the future now that we have guaranteed knowledge of frame dimensions.