RMQR: update to new draft ISO/IEC JTC1/SC31N000 (Draft 2019-6-24);
allow for righthand vertical timing pattern in populate_grid()
ULTRA: update max size and min cols based on BWIPP 2021-07-14 update
backend_tcl/zint_tcl.dsp: use /MD instead of /MT for tcl lib compat;
change include/lib path to more standard one
manual.txt: highlight that rMQR is still in development
GUI: use cross-platform smaller font func instead of explicit values for notes
The `CALCIUM` "name" is a macro which expands to a string constant.
Referencing the macro twice will cause it to be expanded twice, resulting
in two string instances which have identical content. By default, gcc will
deduplicate these two strings into the same memory region as gcc detects
the duplicated constant, even when optimization turned off (see
-fmerge-constants and -fmerge-all-constants GCC options).
The C Language specification does not require duplicated constants to be
deduplicated, and, in fact, the GCC manual page also explicitly states
this optimization is not performed for all targets.
Visual C++, in debug mode, does not deduplicate constants. This results
in `count += strchr(CALCIUM,x) - CALCIUM` yielding to negative values as
the substracted CALCIUM's expansion resides on a greater memory address
then the memory allocated for the expansion passed to `strchr`. The
value of `count` is used to compute the checksum, which then is not only
faulty, but also used as an array index without previously checking
whether or not the index is within the array bounds (modulo of a negative
integer is negative, which means out of bounds). This will cause very
difficult to predict behavior, in most cases, however, it will cause a
segmentation fault.
Manually allocate a memory range to contain the string, and use
this range instead of expanding the macro multiple times.