Show number of errors separately, don't override status if there are a non-zero
number of errors - this was unhelpful if we've managed to resume after errors.
Previously tutorials were generated from all checklists.
Now <auto-tutorial>false</auto-tutorial> can be set at
any level of the checklist heirarchy to disable generation
of tutorials for a given checklist, group, or for all
checklists.
New dialogue is accesible from the File menu.
Allows enable/disable of three new features: multiplayer record, continuous
record and recovery snapshot. Also moved load/save tape from the file menu into
the new dialogue.
Also removed recently-added flight recorder items from the multiplayer dialogue.
The recovery snapshot interval is 1s second if enabled. Might be better to make
it longer, e.g. 5s, but don't know how to change checkbox value.
I only started to translate the new 'weather-scenarios' part, however
I'm too ignorant about the proper terms and phrases used in the field.
Thus, it would be much better if someone more competent in aviation and
weather terminology could review and finish the 'weather-scenarios'
part. The other parts are now fully translated (not the Qt launcher, but
that should be done in FlightGear-Qt.xlf).
Apparently, this file hasn't received the cleaned up source strings for
weather scenarios obtained since FGMeta commit c2a241c35[1]. The file
committed here was produced by simply running
fg-update-translation-files with what we currently have in FGData. I've
ignored changes to the other FlightGear-nonQt.xlf files because they
seem to all boil down to a modification of the order in which XML
attributes are given (what a PITA!).
[1] c2a241c357
I've rerun FGMeta's fg-copy-weather-scenarios-to-default-locale (new
version from FGMeta commit d259ec0b7674213). This added the "This file
was automatically generated (...)" comment at the top of
Translations/default/weather-scenarios.xml.
This tests
* basic functions of register/degregister
* ensures that transmit/receive work correctly
* Transfer encoding methods (byte, double, norm, int) work properly
This is a normal transmitter than doesn't act synchronously and instead queues messages for future processing.
Can be useful to implement thread safe receive/transmit logic where a sub thread is requiring property changes that can be sent to a queued transmitter that is then processed in the main thread.