Note, I suspect Rng::rollClosedProbability() is not needed. The only difference between it and rollProbability() is that one time in 37k (on Windows), it will give an output of 1.0.
On some versions of Linux, the value of 1.0 will occur about 1 time in 4 billion.
conversion from 'const float' to 'int', possible loss of data
conversion from 'double' to 'int', possible loss of data
conversion from 'float' to 'int', possible loss of data
Kept some fixes from the first round of review. Found out that several
targets weren't being built with the same basic warnings disabled.
Disabled a few warnings for external libraries specifically, rather than
applying them to all targets.
Most warnings are innocuous (wrong type-specifier for forward
declarations, conversion of literals into unsigned integers, warnings
about methods optimized out), but I believe actual bugs were revealed in
vartypedelegate.cpp and combat.cpp.