Checks for
- monitor types set correctly (all 4)
- monitor visibility set correctly
- monitor threads not running if not visible
- monitor positioning imported
- monitor width/height for lists
- custom monitor slider range
- sprite specificity
This involves adding a new opcode, event_whenstageclicked, and adding a
method to the blocks container to update the opcode pair depending on
whether the target is the stage. This method is then called in two
places: first after the sb2 import parses the blocks (not done in the
sb2 parsing itself because no other blocks are target specific) and then
again when blocks are shared between targets.
Also added tests for the block container method, and a fixture project
that tests the opcode splitting on sb2 import.
This test currently fails due to a bug in the sequencer's `stepThread`
method. The bug affects real projects, too, but was not caught by any
test prior to this one.
Central dispatch and worker dispatch share most of their code now by
inheriting from a new shared dispatch class.
Also, the format of passed messages has been altered to make it easier
to understand in a debugger.
The tests run using TinyWorker, which emulates web workers on Node.
There are quite a few quirks in that situation due to the differences
between Node and Webpack as well as the differences between TinyWorker
and real Web Workers.
The tests also exposed a few bugs in the dispatch system, which have now
been fixed. Most notably, if a method called through the dispatch system
throws an exception that exception will now be passed back to the
caller. Previously the exception would escape the dispatch system and
the caller would never hear any response at all.
Rather than assuming that the storage instance will be attached to a VM,
just return it. Callers may attach it to a `VM` or (in the case of
`import_sb2.js`) to a `Runtime`.
This new test verifies that clones and their associated threads are
cleaned up properly by the `delete this clone` block. The clones run two
stacks each: one which waits and then deletes the clone, and another
which includes a `forever` loop: this is to verify that the thread
running the `forever` loop is ended when the clone itself is deleted.
The project does this with two batches of clones to ensure there are no
problems with reusing array indices previously occupied by now-removed
threads or clones.
When importing a project we know the file extension for each asset to be
loaded. This change provides that information to the storage system so
that we can load assets which don't use the default. For example, this
allows loading JPG-format backdrops.
In support of this change, there's a new function on `StringUtil` called
`splitFirst`, which splits a string on the first instance of a separator
character. This change includes unit tests for this new function.