This is mostly a simple lexical search+replace but the absence of operator< for
std::weak_ptr<T> leads to some complications, particularly with Evoral::Sequence
and ExportPortChannel.
This was just a proxy for libs/evoral/evoral/Event.h. Note that the #define
that controlled allocation that was at the top of the removed header is
replicated in the Evoral header, so there are no semantic changes
* Remove unused direct calls into plugin
* Assume empty model to mean plugin-provided MIDNAM (!)
The route owned Instrument-Info is the central access point used
by the GUI for MIDI name lookups.
At this point in time, custom settings are saved/restored by the
GUI (MidiTimeAxisView). InstrumentInfo provides a volatile store
for MIDNAM mode and model.
It's long been a guideline (and IIRC a Weff-c++ warning) that either all, or
none, of the copy methods should be defined, but this became a standard warning
in GCC9. Presumably to account for a later language change though I'm not sure
which.
I don't remember why the ChanMapping copy constructor can't just be a simple
copy (it's just a map of POD), but figure it's safer to just copy what that
does.
gcc can recognize various regexps in comments. Since C++17 provides
[[fallthrough]], using /* fallthrough */ consistently seems
appropriate until we switch to C++17.
see also https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Warning-Options.html
Generated by tools/f2s. Some hand-editing will be required in a few places to fix up comments related to timecode
and video in order to keep the legible
It is slightly questionable whether type specific methods like
velocity() belong on Event at all, these may be better off as free
functions. However the code currently uses them as methods in many
places, and it seems like a step in the right direction, since, for
example, we might some day have events that have a velocity but aren't
stored as MIDI messages (e.g. if Ardour uses an internal musical model
that is more expressive).
In any case, the former inheritance and plethora of sloppy casts is
definitely not the right thing.