`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.
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>
ShowdownSet: Lessen allocation
MoveTutor: Remove boxing by calling the generic method instead of object method
Xoro8b: Add more xmldoc, use positive constant instead of inverse negative for parity
StadiumUtil: Use built-in endianness reversal methods
Many years ago, PKX used to be a >4,000 line bloated file, which spun off multiple classes like CommonEdits and most of the early non-GUI PKM related logic. Now, it's just a stub to source the latest generation & personal table.
Separate files = more concise info, and more room to grow to do more advanced things.
Makes the IsPresent methods public (no longer internal).
Single underscore discards (one of the c# language revisions allowed reusing the single underscore discard).
Remove a temporary allocation in BDSP flag editor
Instantiating from template now follows group seed -> spawn 1 correlation, including alpha move.
Differentiates static encounters that don't follow the ow8a correlation, scrambles EC to disassociate.
Adds rand64 to get initial seeds
Set correct level range to match slotSeed; not respecting the slot roll being valid, but whatever.
Adds structures to read/write saved spawner data such as seeds, counts.
Adds generator and validator to emulate the FixInitSpec builder used by the game logic
Similar to SW/SH raids, validating these in-process is not feasible due to the number crunching required.
This does not handle the encounter slot call or the follow-up level range call. Just the inner FixInitSpec ctor & fill.
level is calc'd:
randFloat(sum) -> slot float
rand.Next() -> gen_seed (for all the details)
rand.NextInt(delta) +min -> level
Co-Authored-By: Lusamine <30205550+Lusamine@users.noreply.github.com>
Existing `get`/`set` logic is flawed in that it doesn't work on Big Endian operating systems, and it allocates heap objects when it doesn't need to.
`System.Buffers.Binary.BinaryPrimitives` in the `System.Memory` NuGet package provides both Little Endian and Big Endian methods to read and write data; all the `get`/`set` operations have been reworked to use this new API. This removes the need for PKHeX's manual `BigEndian` class, as all functions are already covered by the BinaryPrimitives API.
The `StringConverter` has now been rewritten to accept a Span to read from & write to, no longer requiring a temporary StringBuilder.
Other Fixes included:
- The Super Training UI for Gen6 has been reworked according to the latest block structure additions.
- Cloning a Stadium2 Save File now works correctly (opening from the Folder browser list).
- Checksum & Sanity properties removed from parent PKM class, and is now implemented via interface.
shininess unrelated to your trainer ID, lol
probably also applies to other predetermined encounters like underground and radar, but those aren't EC-seed regenerated (?)
Remove unused interface declaration
Big thanks to @SciresM @sora10pls @Lusamine @architdate @ReignOfComputer for testing and contributing code / test cases. Can't add co-authors from the PR menu :(
Builds will fail because azure pipelines not yet updated with net6.