This PR aims to spark the retirement of a questionable pattern I have found all over our code base. I will illustrate how this pattern encourages code duplication, lacks type safety, requires documentation and can be prone to bugs.
```
std::map<std::string, Object> mMap; // Stored in all lowercase for a case-insensitive lookup
std::string lowerKey = Misc::StringUtils::lowerCase(key);
mMap.emplace(lowerKey, object);
std::string lowerKey = Misc::StringUtils::lowerCase(key);
mMap.find(lowerKey);
mMap.find(key); // Not found. Oops!
```
An alternative approach produces no such issues.
```
std::unordered_map<std::string, Object, Misc::StringUtils::CiHash, Misc::StringUtils::CiEqual> mMap;
mMap.emplace(key, object);
mMap.find(key);
```
Of course, such an alternative will work for a `map` as well, but an `unordered_map` is generally preferable over a `map` with these changes because we have moved `lowerCase` into the comparison operator.
In this PR I have refactored `Animation::mNodeMap` accordingly. I have reviewed and adapted all direct and indirect usage of `Animation::mNodeMap` to ensure we do not change behaviour with this PR.
Currently, we use a peculiar mapping of ESM classes by their std::type_info::name. This mapping is an undefined behaviour because std::type_info::name is strictly implementation defined. It could return a non-unique value on some platforms. With this PR we use the unsigned int sRecordId of the ESM class as a more efficient lookup type that does not build on undefined behaviour. We can expect marginally faster save-game loading with these changes as well.
Container is only used to add elements, iterate over all of them and
clear. Multimap adds overhead for all of these operations without any
benefits. Reduce Animation::resetActiveGroups CPU time usage by 50%.
1. Move weapon types behaviour from switches to the table (should allow
us to de-hardcode weapon types later)
2. Gereralize bones injection to actors skeletons (instead of using the
hardcoded xbase_anim_sh.nif)