* Improve the naming of the element argument hash index selector (#71319)
So confusing name
* Improve the naming of the element argument hash index selector
* sr sync
Co-authored-by: oranges <email@oranges.net.nz>
Co-authored-by: tastyfish <crazychris32@gmail.com>
* Remove ELEMENT_DETACH on everything that doesn't need it, rename to ELEMENT_DETACH_ON_HOST_DESTROY + a PSA (about 0.2s init time savings) (#70972)
ELEMENT_DETACH is **not** a requirement to having `Detach` called.
Detach is always called when the element itself is destroyed.
ELEMENT_DETACH is a flag that when set, makes sure Detach is called when
the atom destroys.
Sometimes you want this, for instance:
```dm
/datum/element/point_of_interest/Detach(datum/target)
SSpoints_of_interest.on_poi_element_removed(target)
return ..()
```
This Detach cleans up a reference that would have hung if target was
destroyed without this being called.
However, most uses of Detach are cleaning up signals. Signals are
automatically cleaned up when something is destroyed. You do not need
ELEMENT_DETACH in this case, and it slows down init. This also includes
somewhat more complex stuff, like removing overlays on the source
object. It's getting deleted anyway, you don't care!
I have removed all uses of ELEMENT_DETACH that seemed superfluous. I
have also renamed it to `ELEMENT_DETACH_ON_HOST_DESTROY` to make its
purpose more clear, as me and a lot of other maintainers misunderstood
what it did,
---
An update to this, ELEMENT_DETACH *is* needed for anything that can
register to a turf, as turfs do not clear their signals on destroy.
* Remove ELEMENT_DETACH on everything that doesn't need it, rename to ELEMENT_DETACH_ON_HOST_DESTROY + a PSA (about 0.2s init time savings)
* skyrat elements
Co-authored-by: Mothblocks <35135081+Mothblocks@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: tastyfish <crazychris32@gmail.com>
* Contextual screentips -- Screentips now show you what items/objects can do (#64502)
Adds the foundational system for contextual screentips, which will show you what you can do with objects/items, including through context, such as what you are holding.
Provides several helper elements for most use cases, and applies it to a handful of common objects in order to show the full breadth of the system.
Changes screentips preference from on/off to on/off/only with context. Players who originally had it on off will have it migrated to only with context, though can re-disable it.
* Contextual screentips -- Screentips now show you what items/objects can do
Co-authored-by: Mothblocks <35135081+Mothblocks@users.noreply.github.com>