PKHeX needs the exact moveset rather than a "permit this extra move" because our recent logic improvements check for strict moveset matching when it is still an egg.
Closes#3577 thanks @wararjey !
In this pull request I've changed a ton of method signatures to reflect the more-narrow types of Species, Move# and Form; additionally, I've narrowed other large collections that stored lists of species / permitted values, and reworked them to be more performant with the latest API spaghetti that PKHeX provides. Roamer met locations, usually in a range of [max-min]<64, can be quickly checked using a bitflag operation on a UInt64. Other collections (like "Is this from Colosseum or XD") were eliminated -- shadow state is not transferred COLO<->XD, so having a Shadow ID or matching the met location from a gift/wild encounter is a sufficient check for "originated in XD".
Disallow max moves from Sketch
Hide dmax moves from legal dropdown lists
Pass ushort for moves for validating memories
Internal class for move pp (hide empty class from dll users)
Fix RibbonVerifier4 not checking gen4 contest ribbons correctly
Split IRibbonCommon6 to have memory ribbons separate, as they are not implemented in mystery gifts. Also, we can add the boolean flags to the interface, and check that the boolean is set if count is nonzero.
Fix adding ribbons to Gen8 gift templates
Improve Gen8 template ribbon fetch (no closure, faster IndexOf)
`Moveset` struct stores 4 moves, and exposes methods to interact with a moveset.
`IndividualValueSet` stores a 6 IV template (signed).
Performance impact:
* Less allocating on the heap: Moves - (8 bytes member ptr, 20 bytes heap->8 bytes member)
* Less allocating on the heap: IVs - (8 bytes member ptr, 28 bytes heap->8 bytes member)
* No heap pointers, no need to jump to grab data.
* Easy to inline logic for checking if moves are present (no linq usage with temporary collections).
End result is faster ctor times, less memory used, faster program.
The dummy EncounterInvalid has Generation:0, when 7->6/2 depends on which generation the encounter originated on. Change it so that the origin generation gets passed along.
* Rewrite ribbon verification
* Explicitly verifies all ribbons instead of chained iterators.
* Verifies using only the stack, using `struct` and `Span<T>`. No allocation on heap, or `IEnumerable` iterators.
* Verifies all egg ribbons using a separate method, explicitly implemented. No reflection overhead.
* Separates each ribbon interface to separate `static` classes. Easier to identify code needing change on new game update.
* Extracted logic for specific ribbons. Can easily revise complicated ribbon's acquisition rules.
* Simplifies GiveAll/RemoveAll legal ribbon mutations. No reflection overhead, and no allocation.
* Can be expanded in the future if we need to track conditions for ribbon acquisition (was Sinnoh Champ received in BDSP or Gen4?)
End result is a more performant implementation and easier to maintain & reuse logic.
Rewrites a good amount of legality APIs pertaining to:
* Legal moves that can be learned
* Evolution chains & cross-generation paths
* Memory validation with forgotten moves
In generation 8, there are 3 separate contexts an entity can exist in: SW/SH, BD/SP, and LA. Not every entity can cross between them, and not every entity from generation 7 can exist in generation 8 (Gogoat, etc). By creating class models representing the restrictions to cross each boundary, we are able to better track and validate data.
The old implementation of validating moves was greedy: it would iterate for all generations and evolutions, and build a full list of every move that can be learned, storing it on the heap. Now, we check one game group at a time to see if the entity can learn a move that hasn't yet been validated. End result is an algorithm that requires 0 allocation, and a smaller/quicker search space.
The old implementation of storing move parses was inefficient; for each move that was parsed, a new object is created and adjusted depending on the parse. Now, move parse results are `struct` and store the move parse contiguously in memory. End result is faster parsing and 0 memory allocation.
* `PersonalTable` objects have been improved with new API methods to check if a species+form can exist in the game.
* `IEncounterTemplate` objects have been improved to indicate the `EntityContext` they originate in (similar to `Generation`).
* Some APIs have been extended to accept `Span<T>` instead of Array/IEnumerable
was checking stale value
make loop max adjustable by caller; knowingly requesting squares is 1:65,536, so a higher loop count than 50k might guarantee more successes.
Maybe in the future we'd have separate algorithms to pre-choose seeds by choosing a PID and unrolling -> rolling.
Co-Authored-By: Kermalis <29823718+Kermalis@users.noreply.github.com>