draw2d/cmd/draw2dgl.go

63 lines
2.2 KiB
Go

// Ported from GLUT's samples. Original copyright below applies.
/* Copyright (c) Mark J. Kilgard, 1996. */
/* This program is freely distributable without licensing fees
and is provided without guarantee or warrantee expressed or
implied. This program is -not- in the public domain. */
/* This program is a response to a question posed by Gil Colgate
<gcolgate@sirius.com> about how lengthy a program is required using
OpenGL compared to using Direct3D immediate mode to "draw a
triangle at screen coordinates 0,0, to 200,200 to 20,200, and I
want it to be blue at the top vertex, red at the left vertex, and
green at the right vertex". I'm not sure how long the Direct3D
program is; Gil has used Direct3D and his guess is "about 3000
lines of code". */
package main
import (
"gl"
"glut"
)
type GLPainter struct {
}
func reshape(w, h int) {
/* Because Gil specified "screen coordinates" (presumably with an
upper-left origin), this short bit of code sets up the coordinate
system to correspond to actual window coodrinates. This code
wouldn't be required if you chose a (more typical in 3D) abstract
coordinate system. */
gl.Viewport(0, 0, w, h) /* Establish viewing area to cover entire window. */
gl.MatrixMode(gl.PROJECTION) /* Start modifying the projection matrix. */
gl.LoadIdentity() /* Reset project matrix. */
gl.Ortho(0, float64(w), 0, float64(h), -1, 1) /* Map abstract coords directly to window coords. */
gl.Scalef(1, -1, 1) /* Invert Y axis so increasing Y goes down. */
gl.Translatef(0, float32(-h), 0) /* Shift origin up to upper-left corner. */
}
func display() {
gl.Clear(gl.COLOR_BUFFER_BIT)
gl.Begin(gl.TRIANGLES)
gl.Color3f(0.0, 0.0, 1.0) /* blue */
gl.Vertex2i(0, 0)
gl.Color3f(0.0, 1.0, 0.0) /* green */
gl.Vertex2i(200, 200)
gl.Color3f(1.0, 0.0, 0.0) /* red */
gl.Vertex2i(20, 200)
gl.End()
gl.Flush() /* Single buffered, so needs a flush. */
}
func main() {
glut.Init()
glut.CreateWindow("single triangle")
glut.DisplayFunc(display)
glut.ReshapeFunc(reshape)
glut.MainLoop()
}