On Windows we don't distribute the ./setup_win.bat, so the contents of
./internal/source are not actually relevant for them. Since the QB64
symbol file will be located in it though, it is important that they get
an updated copy. It does also just make basic sense that if we're
distributing an ./internal/source with the Windows version it should
match whatever QB64 it was shipped with.
The symbol file is a file that aids in debugging by allowing a crash
dump from a stripped executable to have it's symbols applied to it. The
file itself ends up in ./internal/temp after compilation and is called
`EXEFILE.sym`.
FIxes: #53
The Makefile was incorrectly tying together _ICON and icon.rc, making it
impossible to use one without the other. To fix this we introduce a new
DEP_ICON_RC flag, which indicates we need to use the icon.rc file (in
addition to regular icon support). DEP_ICON now only indicates we need
to support _ICON, and does not attempt to build the resource
information.
The purpose of moving the EXEs is so that they are not captured in the
build artifacts. They would be nice to have, but they end up being a few
hundred MBs in size so much too large to bother saving.
Currently there is a bug where if a variable width font is in use and
text printed would exactly fit to the end of the row, it is instead
wrapped and printed on the next line.
Ex. You're printing a character that is 10 pixels wide, starting
from position 90 on an image that is 100 pixels wide. This should fix,
but instead your character will be printed on the next line.
The reason this happens is an off by one error, cursor_x (effectively
the X value passed to LOCATE) is one based even when using a variable
width font where cursor_x represents a pixel location. The location that
check if the next character can fit on the screen never handles the base
one, so it ends up treating the ending Y coordinate as one past where it
will actually end, which makes the code thing the print will go past the
edge of the screen.
To fix we simply subtract one before doing the comparison to give us the
actual ending pixel column.