Its only purpose was to prevent importing CSV files as translations, but it
would still import them as *nothing*, leading to workflow issues.
This is now properly fixed with #47268 which allows disabling the import for
specific files.
(cherry picked from commit 7ed2220928)
* Removes error shown when file is in 'keep' mode
* Display a warning when attempting to open the file
* Closes#47296
(cherry picked from commit 4706297356)
The moment of inertia calculation for BoxShape is:
```
Vector3(
(p_mass / 3.0) * (ly * ly + lz * lz),
(p_mass / 3.0) * (lx * lx + lz * lz),
(p_mass / 3.0) * (lx * lx + ly * ly));
```
where the final line includes both the x and y extents.
However, for CapsuleShape3D, CylinderShape3D, ConvexPolygonShape3D, ConcavePolygonShape3D, and HeightMapShape3D, the final line read `(p_mass / 3.0) * (extents.y * extents.y + extents.y * extents.y)`. I believe this is a mistake, considering the comment in each case mentions using an AABB approximation, which should follow the same approach as BoxShape.
This change corrects the final line to include both the x and y components of the shape's extent.
The new CollisionObject gizmo used for custom shapes was used with
higher priority due to alphabetical order and was preventing physical
bones from being displayed in the editor.
`WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming` requires the mime-type to be
`application/wasm`, but some servers (including most debug servers) do
not provide the content-type header.
This commit forces it via JavaScript, by creating a `Response` object
with the `wasm` content, and explicitly defined `content-type` header.
(cherry picked from commit 778ef4e217)
Minimap size couldn't be resized back after been resized bigger than GraphEdit cause the grabber was out of GraphEdit.
This commit prevents resizing minimap bigger than GraphEdit and fix this issue.
(cherry picked from commit 045f55ec00)
The angular velocity estimate for kinematic bodies was calculated
incorrectly. Also, fixes its use in some kinematic/rigid collision
calculations.
3.3 version of #47130
Keyframe times shift slowly in imported animations, starting with a zero shift
at the beginning and increasing and becoming erratic slowly farther into an
animation, reaching significant levels at times after about 3 minutes into an
animation. This commit fixes the issue by increasing the precision of the
floating point numbers used for keyframe time calculations. Only the most
significant cases that cause fast accumulation of errors over a short animation
duration are fixed. Other cases that would have a marginal benefit from
switching to double precision numbers are left for another PR/further analysis.
Note that this change has no impact on the runtime performance of games/apps
created using Godot. It only affects the GLTF importer.
Fixes#47127.
(cherry picked from commit 6770a9413b)
There was a specific case where the node path wasn't checked for
validity before trying to access the attachment node.
It could cause lots of error log noise in both editor and game.