Turns out that TH04's player selection menu is exactly three times as
complicated as TH05's. Two screens for character and shot type rather than
one, and a way more intricate implementation for saving and restoring the
background behind the raised top and left edges of a character picture
when moving the cursor between Reimu and Marisa. TH04 decides to backup
precisely only the two 256×8 (top) and 8×244 (left) strips behind the
edges, indicated in red in the picture
below.
These take up just 4 KB of heap memory… but require custom blitting
functions, and expanding this explicitly hardcoded approach to TH05's 4
characters would have been pretty annoying. So, rather than, uh, not
explicitly hardcoding it all, ZUN decided to just be lazy with the backup
area in TH05, saving the entire 640×400 screen, and thus spending 128 KB
of heap memory on this rather simple selection shadow effect.
So, this really wasn't something to quickly get done during the first half
of a push, even after already having done TH05's equivalent of this menu.
But since life is very busy right now, I also used the occasion to start
addressing another code organization annoyance: master.lib's single master.h header file.
Now that ReC98 is trying to develop (or at least mimic) a more
type-safe C++ foundation to model the PC-98 hardware, a pure C header
(with counter-productive C++ extensions) is becoming increasingly
unidiomatic. By moving some of the original assumptions about function
parameters into the type system, we can also reduce the reliance on its
Japanese-only documentation without having to translate it
It's quite bloated, with at least 2800 lines of code that
currently are #included into the vast majority of files, not
counting master.h's recursively included C standard library
headers. PC-98 Touhou only makes direct use of a rather small fraction of
its contents.
And finally, all the DOS/V compatibility definitions are especially
useless in the context of ReC98. As I've noted
📝 time and
📝 time again, porting PC-98 Touhou to
IBM-compatible DOS won't be easy, and MASTER_DOSV won't be
helping much. Therefore, my upstream version of ReC98 will never include
all of master.lib. There's no point in lengthening compile times for
everyone by default, and those will be getting quite noticeable
after moving to a full 16-bit build process.
(Actually, what retro system ports should rather be doing: Get rid
of master.lib's original ASM code, replace it with
readable, modern
C++, and then simply convert the optimized assembly output of modern
compilers to your ISA of choice. Improving the landscape of such
assembly or object file converters would benefit everyone!)
So, time to start a new master.hpp header that would contain
just the declarations from master.h that PC-98 Touhou
actually needs, plus some semantic (yes, semantic) sugar. Comparing just
the old master.h to just the new master.hpp
after roughly 60% of the transition has been completed, we get median
build times of 319 ms for master.h, and 144 ms for
master.hpp on my (admittedly rather slow) DOSBox setup.
Nice!
As of this push, ReC98 consists of 107 translation units that have to be
compiled with Turbo C++ 4.0J. Fully rebuilding all of these currently
takes roughly 37.5 seconds in DOSBox. After the transition to
master.hpp is done, we could therefore shave some 10 to 15
seconds off this time, simply by switching header files. And that's just
the beginning, as this will also pave the way for further
#include optimizations. Life in this codebase will be great!
Unfortunately, there wasn't enough time to repay some of the actual
technical debt I was looking forward to, after all of this. Oh well, at
least we now also have nice identifiers for the three different boldface
options that are used when rendering text to VRAM, after procrastinating
that issue for almost 11 months. Next up, assuming the existing
subscriptions: More ridiculous decompilations of things that definitely
weren't originally written in C, and a big blocker in TH03's
MAIN.EXE.
And indeed, I got to end my vacation with a lot of image format and
blitting code, covering the final two formats, .GRC and .BOS. .GRC was
nothing noteworthy – one function for loading, one function for
byte-aligned blitting, and one function for freeing memory. That's it –
not even a unblitting function for this one. .BOS, on the other hand…
…has no generic (read: single/sane) implementation, and is only
implemented as methods of some boss entity class. And then again for
Sariel's dress and wand animations, and then again for Reimu's
animations, both of which weren't even part of these 4 pushes. Looking
forward to decompiling essentially the same algorithms all over again… And
that's how TH01 became the largest and most bloated PC-98 Touhou game. So
yeah, still not done with image formats, even at 44% RE.
This means I also had to reverse-engineer that "boss entity" class… yeah,
what else to call something a boss can have multiple of, that may or may
not be part of a larger boss sprite, may or may not be animated, and that
may or may not have an orb hitbox?
All bosses except for Kikuri share the same 5 global instances of this
class. Since renaming all these variables in ASM land is tedious anyway, I
went the extra mile and directly defined separate, meaningful names for
the entities of all bosses. These also now document the natural order in
which the bosses will ultimately be decompiled. So, unless a backer
requests anything else, this order will be:
Konngara
Sariel
Elis
Kikuri
SinGyoku
(code for regular card-flipping stages)
Mima
YuugenMagan
As everyone kind of expects from TH01 by now, this class reveals yet
another… um, unique and quirky piece of code architecture. In
addition to the position and hitbox members you'd expect from a class like
this, the game also stores the .BOS metadata – width, height, animation
frame count, and 📝 bitplane pointer slot
number – inside the same class. But if each of those still corresponds to
one individual on-screen sprite, how can YuugenMagan have 5 eye sprites,
or Kikuri have more than one soul and tear sprite? By duplicating that
metadata, of course! And copying it from one entity to another
At this point, I feel like I even have to congratulate the game for not
actually loading YuugenMagan's eye sprites 5 times. But then again, 53,760
bytes of waste would have definitely been noticeable in the DOS days.
Makes much more sense to waste that amount of space on an unused C++
exception handler, and a bunch of redundant, unoptimized blitting
functions
(Thinking about it, YuugenMagan fits this entire system perfectly. And
together with its position in the game's code – last to be decompiled
means first on the linker command line – we might speculate that
YuugenMagan was the first boss to be programmed for TH01?)
So if a boss wants to use sprites with different sizes, there's no way
around using another entity. And that's why Girl-Elis and Bat-Elis are two
distinct entities internally, and have to manually sync their position.
Except that there's also a third one for Attacking-Girl-Elis,
because Girl-Elis has 9 frames of animation in total, and the global .BOS
bitplane pointers are divided into 4 slots of only 8 images each.
Same for SinGyoku, who is split into a sphere entity, a
person entity, and a… white flash entity for all three forms,
all at the same resolution. Or Konngara's facial expressions, which also
require two entities just for themselves.
And once you decompile all this code, you notice just how much of it the
game didn't even use. 13 of the 50 bytes of the boss entity class are
outright unused, and 10 bytes are used for a movement clamping and lock
system that would have been nice if ZUN also used it outside of
Kikuri's soul sprites. Instead, all other bosses ignore this system
completely, and just
party on
the X/Y coordinates of the boss entities directly.
As for the rendering functions, 5 out of 10 are unused. And while those
definitely make up less than half of the code, I still must have
spent at least 1 of those 4 pushes on effectively unused functionality.
Only one of these functions lends itself to some speculation. For Elis'
entrance animation, the class provides functions for wavy blitting and
unblitting, which use a separate X coordinate for every line of the
sprite. But there's also an unused and sort of broken one for unblitting
two overlapping wavy sprites, located at the same Y coordinate. This might
indicate that Elis could originally split herself into two sprites,
similar to TH04 Stage 6 Yuuka? Or it might just have been some other kind
of animation effect, who knows.
After over 3 months of TH01 progress though, it's finally time to look at
other games, to cover the rest of the crowdfunding backlog. Next up: Going
back to TH05, and getting rid of those last PI false positives. And since
I can potentially spend the next 7 weeks on almost full-time ReC98 work,
I've also re-opened the store until October!