In C++, globals initialization order accross translation units is not
defined. Accessing a global via a function ensures that it is initialized.
This will be needed for #7638, which will statically initialize change
handlers after the Options object has been initialized.
1. Moves more assets-related stuff from `init` to `engine/assets`.
2. Removes `SDL_audiolib` dependency from `soundsample.h`.
3. Cleans up some unused/missing includes.
4 options args are a bit unwieldy, especially when you want
to pass only the first and the last one.
With a struct, there is no need to specify the default values
for the args in between.
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
Adds a custom sized type for the world tile rectagle.
This allows us to better express intent.
It also allows us to make certain globals smaller, e.g. `THEME_LOC`.
We want to be able to use unpacked MPQs on low-end platforms
(PS2/rg99/etc).
This is tricky on case-sensitive filesystems. Avoids case issues by
lowercasing all paths in the code (then we'll just need lowercased
listfiles).
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.