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.