The regression was introduced to align 3DS export and import, but in fact it broke the transformation matrices on import. This commit reverts the relevant lines. Furthermore, matrix layout was double-checked with two other 3DS importers. Export was not considered.
- remove assumption that embedded texture names start with "*0", etc.
- rename ModelLoader::getTextureFromModel() to loadEmbeddedTexture()
- support loading uncompressed embedded textures
Fixes display of bullsquid.mdl from Half-Life (which has an
embdedded texture named "bottommap.bmp")
The search for a matching importer had a few issues, see #3791. There were two different mechanisms to determine whether an importer accepts a specific file extension:
1. `aiImporterDesc::mFileExtensions`, which was forwarded to the UI via `BaseImporter::GetExtensionList()`.
2. `BaseImporter::CanRead()` when called with `checkSig == false`, which determines whether to actually use that importer.
Both were redundant and got out of sync repeatedly. I removed 2. completely and replaced it with 1., thereby syncing UI/import and shortening all `BaseImporter::CanRead()` implementations.
Further bugfixes:
- fixed glTF2 importer throwing exceptions when checking whether it can load a file
- removed `BaseImporter::SimpleExtensionCheck()` because it is no longer used and had a bug with case sensitivity
Since the `checkSig` parameter in `BaseImporter::CanRead()` is now useless, it can be removed completely. I’m not sure if this would break ABI compatiblity, so I’ll submit it with a later pull request.
Textures were being double deleted after a merge scene because the
texture array wasn't being properly deleted at the end of merging.
Furthermore, the texture array was being sized to the number of
materials instead of the number of textures.
Ogre and 3MF imports threw DeadlyExportErrors under some circumstances. Bad for people who assumed that they only needed to catch DeadlyImportErrors. Changed them to DeadlyImportErrors.
std::string s(""); s = ""; calls the copy constructor, which in turn calls strlen(), … assigning a default-constructed string generates fewer instructions and is therefore preferred.
With C++11 uniform initialization, you’d simply write s = { } instead.
“LazyDictBase::WriteObjects()” in the two glTF implementations is only used for export. Since it’s a virtual method, and many compilers have trouble removing unreferenced virtual methods, glTF export stuff is pulled into the binary even if compiling without exports.
This commit removes said virtual function if only compiling for import.
This removes 75 KiB of useless code when compiled with Visual Studio for x64.