Each one should provide a message that will show up within LÖVE. Stop
relying on nearby prints to the terminal.
I also found some unnecessary ones.
There is some potential here for performance regressions: the format()
calls will trigger whether or not the assertion fails, and cause
allocations. So far Lua's GC seems good enough to manage the load even
with Moby Dick, even in some situations that caused issues in the past
like undo.
Thanks to physfs and nativefs.lua
nativefs still introduces some inconsistencies with love.filesystem with
relative paths:
* love.fs.read: reads from save dir if it exists, falls back to source dir if not
* nativefs.read: reads from save dir if it exists, falls back to source dir if not ✓
* love.fs.write: always writes to save dir
* nativefs.write: always writes to source dir (since no restrictions)
* love.fs.newFile followed by file:open('r'): reads from save dir if it exists, source dir if not
* nativefs.newFile followed by file:open('r'): always reads from working dir
* love.fs.newFile followed by file:open('w'): always writes to save dir
* nativefs.newFile followed by file:open('w'): always writes to working dir
So avoid using relative paths with App primitives.
Broken since 2022-09 X-(
Scenario:
* switch to source editor
* draw a line
* wait 3 seconds
Before this commit the app would crash and then fail to restart until
you deleted the created .lua file from save dir.
This is not the first time I've confused Lua's files and LÖVE's
droppedFile objects. Just never rely on multiple args in file:write().