Fixed bug with incorrect generation of "Array<>".
Added a primitive type-accepter for jsobject-like (for some very primitive
value); but it covers the PIXI case.
- Removed previous elapsed/elapsedMS deprecation as they act differently
when the game has been resumed, assuming that it has been properly
paused.
- Refined documentation
- Moved a few properties for better logical grouping
- Annotated timeToCall and timeExpected as protected
- Changed `count` from 0d9678e512 to
`updateNumber` and expanded documentation; also moved primary usage back
to local variable.
- Added `updatesThisFrame` which allows (logic) code to detect if it is
the last update, or if there are pending updates the same frame. While
it could be adventageous in certain cases it will be problematic if such
update logic relies in the supplied delta time, as such should change if
fixed-timing is deviated from or extended updates are done.
- Formatting and documentation.
- Updating documentation for clarity, esp. wrt the now / elapsed /
physicsTime.
- Marked elapsedMS as deprecated as it is just elapsed based on Date.now
instead of the high-res timer; both provide roughly equivalent behavior,
with elapsedMS just falling back to worse-case behavior.
There are a fair amount of Signal objects created. In the current
implementation these are somewhat "fat" objects for two reasons:
- A closure / ad-hoc `dispatch` is created for each new Signal - this
increases the retained size by 138+ bytes/Signal in Chrome.
- There are a number of instance variables that never change from their
default value, and the bindings array is always created, even if never
used.
This change "lightens" the Signals such that there is significantly less
penalty for having many (unusued) signals.
As an example of how much this _does_ play a role, in the "Random Sprite"
demo ~2000 Signals are created, with only 12 of these signals being
subscribed to. This results in a shallow size of ~300K and a retained size
of ~600K (which is almost as much memory as required by the
Sprites/Sprites themselves!) for .. nothing.
With these changes the shallow and retained sizes are less than 50K each -
and this is with only ~200 sprites!
This change addresses these issues by
- Changing it so there is _no_ `dispatch` closure created. This is a
_breaking change_ (although there is no usage of such in core where it
breaks); the code referenced "#24", but no such issue could be found on
github.
In the rare case that code needs to obtain a dispatch-closure, the
`boundDispatch` property can be used to trivially obtain a (cached)
closure.
- The properties and default values are moved into the prototype; and the
`_bindings` array creation is deferred. This change, coupled with the
removal of the automatic closure, results in a very lightweight
~24bytes/object (in Chrome) for unbound signals.
This is minor breaking change, as per the removal of the automatic
closure; but no such need/usage was found in the core. (There may be cases
in the examples, which were not checked.)
If merely opting for the array creation delay and keeping the default
properties in the prototype the shallow size is still halved; less
significant but still a consideration.
This de-optimization occurred between 2.0.7 and 2.1.0 and is currently
present through dev.
`Group.forEach`, which is used by QuadTree, had an extreme de-optimization
in assigning to `arguments` - _CPU profiling showed as much as 50% of the
time was used by Group.forEach_ (after the correction it is not
registered) due to this de-optimization making the "When Particles
Collide" demo run with an unsatisfactory performance, even on a Desktop.
The fix uses a separate array and push (which is optimizable; the previous
implementation was not optimizable in Chrome, FF, or IE!).
This also fixes usages of `slice(arguments,..); ushift` elsewhere in
Group, using the same convention. It applies the same update for `iterate`
as does https://github.com/photonstorm/phaser/pull/1353 so it can also
accept null/undefined for `args` from the invoking functions.
Update iterate documentation to cover usage of `args` and added a guard so
that the callback can be used without requiring that `args` is specified.
Ref. https://github.com/photonstorm/phaser/issues/1352
Keyboard.justReleased has bee renamed to Keyboard.upDuration which is a much clearer name for what the method actually does.
Keyboard.downDuration, Keyboard.upDuration and Keyboard.isDown now all return `null` if the Key wasn't found in the local keys array.