2.8 KiB
Migration from 3.x.x
X10D 4.0.0 is a major release that introduces breaking changes. This document will help you migrate your code from 3.x.x to 4.0.0.
When a breaking change is mentioned, the compatibility mirrors that of the Microsoft documentation for .NET, which you can find here.
Removed APIs
X10D.DSharpPlus library
The X10D.DSharpPlus
library has been removed. This library was used to provide extension methods for the DSharpPlus
wrapper library. However, I have since moved to using a different library, and as such, I feel it is no longer in the
scope of X10D or in my best interest to maintain it. The library will remain available on NuGet until DSharpPlus release
5.0.0 as stable, and X10D.DSharpPlus will NOT be part of X10D 4.0.0. I'm sorry for any inconvenience this may cause.
X10D.Unity library
The X10D.Unity
library has been removed. This library was used to provide extension methods for the Unity API. Due to
game development politics, I no longer feel it in my best interest to continue development of the Unity package. The
library will remain on NuGet for the foreseeable future but will no longer be maintained. The upm
branch of the Git
repository will remain available indefinitely also.
Endianness
enum
Source incompatible change
The Endianness
enum was used to specify the endianness of data when reading or writing to a stream. This was causing
some clutter, and makes it harder to develop X10D, so it was removed. In its stead, any method which accepted an
Endianness
parameter now has two overloads: one for big-endian, and one for little-endian. For example, the following
code:
someStream.Write(12345, Endianness.BigEndian);
// or
Span<byte> buffer = stackalloc byte[4];
12345.TryWriteBytes(buffer, Endianness.BigEndian);
would now be written as:
someStream.WriteBigEndian(12345);
// or
Span<byte> buffer = stackalloc byte[4];
12345.TryWriteLittleEndianBytes(buffer);
IEnumerable<T>.ConcatOne(T)
extension method
Source incompatible change
The IEnumerable<T>.ConcatOne
extension method was used to concatenate a single item to an enumerable. At the time, I
was unaware of the Enumerable.Append
method, which does the same thing. As such, ConcatOne
has been removed. There
is no migration path for this, as the built in Append
method from LINQ is a drop-in replacement.
Exception Changes
Source incompatible change
If you were previously catching TypeInitializationException when calling Stream.GetHash<>
or Stream.TryWriteHash<>
,
you will now need to catch a ArgumentException instead. The justification for this change is that ArgumentException is
more general, and more easily understood by developers.