* Dialog copper zones: Always enable thermal shape settings, because even with no thermal, some pads can use thermal option in local pad settings.
* GAL mode: shows page limits in gray color, like in legacy mode, and according to comments in sources.
* Fix a StrPrintf() %s count mismatch bug
* Better comments
* Use std::string::data() instead of a ref to the first char to get the str::string buffer (should not change anything with GNU lib)
* The resource setting for bitmap2component is too late in the CMakeLists.txt,
and is being ignored. Bitmap2component does not have an icon resource on
Windows. Moving the entire section resolves the issue.
* The other programs only have the mingw special case listed, not the generic
declaration for the resource file so added them.
The standard library requires iterators passed to functions that modify the
container to be mutable iterators, but GCC's implementation accepts
const_iterator in some places where these are only used to mark a place,
but the actual modification happens through a different parameter.
As this breaks implementations that use the passed iterator to modify the
container (e.g. because they use a different data organization), this is
not portable; because we already have a non-const reference to the
container anyway, this is trivially fixed as well.
In the C++ standard, this function is only defined for floating point
types, and integers cannot be implicitly converted. Using explicit
conversions avoids a GCC specific extension to the standard library.
This was apparently left in from debugging earlier, and should no longer be
needed. Since it uses a GCC extension, it makes compilation on others fail.
In the autorouter code, the value 0x80 is assigned to MATRIX_CELL, which is
an overflow for a signed 8-bit type. As this type is used as a bit mask,
there is no point in having a sign bit anyway.
The C++ preprocessor is actually not required to process "true" and "false"
correctly. This works in C if <stdbool.h> is included, because these are
then macros themselves, and resolved correctly, but C++ requires them to be
keywords, so no such macros exist, and the preprocessor can treat both as
undefined/zero.
Mostly cosmetic change, although there are compilers that choke on this.
The C++ standard specifies that classes contain themselves as members,
probably so they shadow any other definition of the same name for their own
member functions, but there is really no reason why the class name should
be duplicated here.