Javadoc and Formatting fixes.
Also, extremely minor code changes which have been tested.
This commit is only part one of two commits that aim to fix problems with formatting in our project. In part two I will modify the Google Java Style Guide (since it closely matches our code style) for our project so there is guidance on how to format and document.
* Updated PlotSquared URL
* Removed plugin acronyms
* Fixed a typo
* Fixed grammar
* Use modern block id's
* Update YouTube video URL
* begin allowing "post processing" of chunks
- restores legacy capability to continue saving edits in the background after sending the chunks
- speeds up the edit clientside
- nail in the coffin of the terrible and staticly coded coreedit
- We should totally make IronGolem work so Core* is no longer used by anyone
* begin allowing background history saving
* Handle post processors in queues properly
* Use futures for postprocessing so we're not waiting for them needlessly
* better use of closed boolean
* Reword
* Attempt to recover from incorrectly-extensioned schematic reads
- Should help avoid #605 (I'm assuming this is the issue)
- Possible issues with the InputStream being closed/pre-read or so? Thoughts:?
* more verbose checking in the first place
* accessing clipboards should not be synchronized to LocalSession
I believe this may be the issue causing thread locks when wrapping new players. If we're attempting to run a synchronised method within the LocalSesison when initialising it, it may go wrong..?
* nullcheck within synchronisation
* Allow parallelisation of masks
Increasing performance improvement with increased masking complexity and edit size.
* Address comments
- Rename Mask#clone to Mask#copy
- Rename Mask2D#copy to Mask2D#copy2D
- Correct formatting
* cx -> centerX
* Make various operations relying on a single SingleThreadQueueExtent instance (mainly brushes) thread safe
Shrinks the jar size since we no longer must bundle the Kotlin library. The downside is that some classes grew in size compared to their Kotlin versions.
Many contributors didn't care for Kotlin either.