#pragma once #include #include enum { MU3_IO_OPBTN_TEST = 0x01, MU3_IO_OPBTN_SERVICE = 0x02, }; enum { MU3_IO_GAMEBTN_1 = 0x01, MU3_IO_GAMEBTN_2 = 0x02, MU3_IO_GAMEBTN_3 = 0x04, MU3_IO_GAMEBTN_SIDE = 0x08, MU3_IO_GAMEBTN_MENU = 0x10, }; /* Get the version of the Ongeki IO API that this DLL supports. This function should return a positive 16-bit integer, where the high byte is the major version and the low byte is the minor version (as defined by the Semantic Versioning standard). The latest API version as of this writing is 0x0100. */ uint16_t mu3_io_get_api_version(void); /* Initialize the IO DLL. This is the second function that will be called on your DLL, after mu3_io_get_api_version. All subsequent calls to this API may originate from arbitrary threads. Minimum API version: 0x0100 */ HRESULT mu3_io_init(void); /* Send any queued outputs (of which there are currently none, though this may change in subsequent API versions) and retrieve any new inputs. Minimum API version: 0x0100 */ HRESULT mu3_io_poll(void); /* Get the state of the cabinet's operator buttons as of the last poll. See MU3_IO_OPBTN enum above: this contains bit mask definitions for button states returned in *opbtn. All buttons are active-high. Minimum API version: 0x0100 */ void mu3_io_get_opbtns(uint8_t *opbtn); /* Get the state of the cabinet's gameplay buttons as of the last poll. See MU3_IO_GAMEBTN enum above for bit mask definitions. Inputs are split into a left hand side set of inputs and a right hand side set of inputs: the bit mappings are the same in both cases. All buttons are active-high, even though some buttons' electrical signals on a real cabinet are active-low. Minimum API version: 0x0100 */ void mu3_io_get_gamebtns(uint8_t *left, uint8_t *right); /* Get the position of the cabinet lever as of the last poll. The center position should be equal to or close to zero. The operator will be required to calibrate the lever's range of motion on first power-on, so the lever position reported through this API does not need to perfectly centered or cover every single position value possible, but it should be reasonably close in order to make things easier for the operator. The calibration screen displays the leftmost and rightmost position signal returned from the cabinet's ADC encoder as a pair of raw two's complement hexadecimal values. On a real cabinet these leftmost and rightmost positions are somewhere around 0xB000 and 0x5000 respectively (remember that negative values i.e. left positions have a high most-significant bit), although these values can easily vary by +/- 0x1000 across different cabinets. Minimum API version: 0x0100 */ void mu3_io_get_lever(int16_t *pos);