With 12 uses of `JoinStrings` in the codebase vs 36 uses of `fmt::join`, fmtlib's range adapter for string concatenation with delimiters is clearly the preferred option.
Also make the `Decrypt` method private.
As far as I can tell, the only motivation for exposing the `SetBytes`
and `Reset` methods is to allow `CBoot::SetupWiiMemory` to use the same
`SettingsHandler` instance to read settings data and then write it back.
It seems cleaner to just use two separate instances, and require a given
`SettingsHandler` instance to be used for either writing data to a
buffer or reading data from a buffer, but not both.
A natural next step is to split the `SettingsHandler` class into two
classes, one for writing data and one for reading data. I've deferred
that change for a future PR.
Use 1 of the same type as the stored value when shifting left. This
prevents undefined behavior caused by shifting an int more than 31 bits.
Previously iterator incrementation could either hang or prematurely
report it had reached the end of the bitset.
With this, situations where multiple arguments need to be moved
from multiple registers become easy to handle, and we also get
compile-time checking that the number of arguments is correct.
Check bytes directly to avoid ambiguity in the disassembly between short
and near jumps, which could hypothetically cause the test to pass when
it shouldn't.
Replace the bool parameter force5bytes in J, JMP, and J_CC with an enum
class Jump::Short/Near. Many callers set that parameter to the literal
'true', which was unclear if you didn't already know what it did.
Now that we've flipped the C++20 switch, let's start making use of
the nice new <bit> header.
I'm planning on handling this move away from BitUtils.h incrementally
in a series of PRs. There may be a few functions remaining in
BitUtils.h by the end that C++20 doesn't have any equivalents for.
SPDX standardizes how source code conveys its copyright and licensing
information. See https://spdx.github.io/spdx-spec/1-rationale/ . SPDX
tags are adopted in many large projects, including things like the Linux
kernel.