![]() +++ -84,6 +84,10 Do note that save states are bound to the libretro implementation being used. I think a bigger issue, is in Windows, when I run retroarch -help, I don't get a list of switches.ĭiff -git a/docs/retroarch.6 b/docs/retroarch.6 Would love your thoughts on where it could go and how it could improve. RA is always growing, and we need your help to make it awesome. Overall, insulting the design is not constructive. I bet there are very few other options that work like this.įWIW my thinking in reporting this was just that no one had given it any thought, or been inconvenienced, either because they always use RetroArch in one mode or the other, or didn't care to file a complaint. And it's a pure hassle, whereas users who want their fullscreen state to be remembered (no one does, you are just thinking that if they go into full screen once that they want that setting forever, and you are saving them from finding the setting in the Options) can locate the relevant Option. Pressing F11 (or f) is a temporary measure. A fullscreen function is common, when I put a movie into fullscreen, I don't expect the next movie to launch into fullscreen. I always love CLI improvements, as it means more control when launching the application. Allowing using -fullscreen=false to force Windowed mode. This doesn't exist in RetroArch currently, but it would be pretty easy to add. ![]() RetroArch will append the config, overwriting what's in retroarch.cfg, effectively making it always launch in windowed mode. When running RetroArch, use retroarch -appendconfig="". This is a workaround you can do right now to achieve what you're looking for. We could augment it to function in the way you intend however. This is not bonehead design, it's how most users would expect the program to run. When quitting RetroArch from fullscreen, RetroArch sees that the fullscreen option is TRUE, and then saves that in the configs. Launch RetroArch, but have it in Windowed mode.Just need to get clear what your intended workflow is, and then put together a clear plan in order to achieve it. ![]() No need to insult the software, it's not constructive.
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