* delete received items with the delete key
mass selection of received items for mass deletion as well
improved index selection on deletion
* tab indexing for the form
Loading the window and assigning the datasource fired the index changed event, changing the first block (array) to the (selected index of type), which was bool1. Exporting the save caused a bad block type write, yielding a bad size.
Only add the event after the constructor is finished, so that it only fires via user interaction.
Similarly reported but not exactly noticed in #2658Closes#2663
Gonna update the release with a hotfix
Cuts out about half the size; there's still a bunch of apply-value logic but it's not really big enough for a separate class.
Rename BallRandomizer->BallApplicator
Traded eggs in gen4 can have from any game (since version isn't updated on hatch).
Use the hashsets, and remove the incorrect array. The incorrect array allowed stuff like Pokéwalker to be a "valid met location", hah.
held item list now allocates less (concat arrays instead of ienumerables)
item list already prunes out of range items, so simplify data source fetch
simplify item list prune (return as list, so we can call RemoveAll instead of Where.ToList)
Typing in the key to the combobox should immediately start filtering. We can't put the block type first, as we can't quickly fetch a block by key.
So, just trim off everything but the key when we start ordering things. They're already in order by ascending key -- the known blocks have already been pulled to the top and can be sorted without modification.
Now matches Interface declaration style (iAccessorGenGame), and is consistently named with the other accessors already using the same naming style
plus they are now ordered in the file tree :)
no functional change
Not done for Array types or Object types
muh reflection, such spooky
mark Offset as non-browsable so it doesn't show up in propertygrid if the block is being edited by a grid :)
I imagine a struct-type-sensitive array property grid edit could be done via Buffer.BlockCopy to a dest array, but there's so few Array blocks... so meh
Uses reflection to grab a list of defined constants (block keys), and a list of defined block reader classes.
Show name of block in red for a more prominent hint that this block is somewhat editable :)
Closes#2658 ty @CanoeHope !
Mostly just serves as documentation; with the amount of fields being editable increasing, hard-coded GUI might not be optimal here. I'm thinking something like a PropertyGrid based on the selected block which will pull up the Block object if the key matches... for fields, something like a dynamically populated list or something.