These alignment flags would cause an assertion error
"Horizontal alignment flags are ignored in horizontal sizers"
when opening the dialog (mainly when importing styles from another
script).
As the assertion error says, the flags are ignored anyway, so they're
safe to remove.
After the audio provider rework, adjust the audio players to not
use the int16 mono downmixed audio unless necessary. Furthermore,
the pulseaudio-based player now controls the volume directly through
pulseaudio instead of by modifying the buffer. This also reduces latency
when changing the volume.
The entire set of GetAudio functions is quite messy now. After wangqr's
audio rework, it was split into GetAudio and GetInt16MonoAudio
functions, but now volume scaling is also necessary. Really, this should
go back to a type constructor based system with audio players being
allowed to choose what properties out of mono / 16 bytes / int samples /
volume they need.
These were giving false negatives on samba shares, which broke the font
collector. Windows also recommends to not use access checks in these
cases, and instead just see if the operations succeeds or not.
The file was mistakenly added when pulling wangqr's "time to video"
feature. I fixed the branch, but instead of merging the whole branch
again, let's just delete the file here.
Float edits with a spinner are by default sized to fit their full
min-max range of possible values, so this makes min and max default to 0
and 100 (like it'd done internally in wx) instead of -DOUBLE_MAX and
DOUBLE_MAX.
Note that this does change the behavior of lua dialogs, but does not
contradict existing documentation or specification. It should only
affect scripts who either disobey the specification by specifying only
one value out of max/min, or scripts displaying these large float edits
by specifing a step, but no max or min.
Starting with AVISYNTH_INTERFACE_VERSION=5, this is how script
environments should be deleted. The previous code was causing crashes
when unloading AviSynth in certain scenarios, such as when failing to
open a file due to an incorrect path.