This commit does the following:
- Refactors scoreboard code to get rid of, at least, some of the
snowflakiness.
- Removes world << job objectives, puts them in the scoreboard.
Addendum: Nukeops and Rev are untested, due to the near-impossibility of
testing them alone. They _probably_ work.
This commit overhauls the examine system to baystation's latest system,
including a more efficient verb approach, and a new status panel tab,
which shows more information for pre-defined objects.
This commit does the following:
- Ports progress bars from -tg- (tgstation/-tg-station#9921)
- Refactors wall attackby code to make it 100% less insane; Instead of
manually checking every little thing, it uses do_after,
consequentially, making the new progress bars affect dealing with walls
as well.
Wall code makes a tiger sad.
This commit first and foremost ports the -tg- atom pooling system, and
removes the old experimental system entirely.
Secondly, this PR modifies the qdel system to use a -tg- lookalike
"destroy hint" system, which means that individual objects can tell qdel
what to do with them beyond taking care of things they need to delete.
This ties into the atom pooling system via a new hint define,
QDEL_HINT_PUTINPOOL, which will place the atom in the pool instead of
deleting it as per standard.
Emitter beams are now fully pooled.
Qdel now has semi-compatibility with all datum types, however it is not
the same as -tg-'s "Queue everything!" system. It simply passes it through
the GC immediately and adds it to the "hard del" lists. This means that
reagents can be qdel'ed, but there is no purpose as of yet, as it is more
or less the same as just deleting them, with the added effect of adding
logs of them being deleted to the garbage collector.
This thing still doesn't actually do any distance checks to find out who
the "nearest operative" is, but I'm just here for the runtime. Also, I
fixed the thing spawning never-ending threads, because whyyyy