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OpenGL Development Cookbook

You're reading from   OpenGL Development Cookbook OpenGL brings an added dimension to your graphics by utilizing the remarkable power of modern GPUs. This straight-talking cookbook is perfect for intermediate C++ programmers who want to exploit the full potential of OpenGL.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849695046
Length 326 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Muhammad Mobeen Movania Muhammad Mobeen Movania
Author Profile Icon Muhammad Mobeen Movania
Muhammad Mobeen Movania
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Modern OpenGL FREE CHAPTER 2. 3D Viewing and Object Picking 3. Offscreen Rendering and Environment Mapping 4. Lights and Shadows 5. Mesh Model Formats and Particle Systems 6. GPU-based Alpha Blending and Global Illumination 7. GPU-based Volume Rendering Techniques 8. Skeletal and Physically-based Simulation on the GPU Index

Introduction

The OpenGL API has seen various changes since its creation in 1992. With every new version, new features were added and additional functionality was exposed on supporting hardware through extensions. Until OpenGL v2.0 (which was introduced in 2004), the functionality in the graphics pipeline was fixed, that is, there were fixed set of operations hardwired in the graphics hardware and it was impossible to modify the graphics pipeline. With OpenGL v2.0, the shader objects were introduced for the first time. That enabled programmers to modify the graphics pipeline through special programs called shaders, which were written in a special language called OpenGL shading language (GLSL).

After OpenGL v2.0, the next major version was v3.0. This version introduced two profiles for working with OpenGL; the core profile and the compatibility profile. The core profile basically contains all of the non-deprecated functionality whereas the compatibility profile retains deprecated functionality for backwards compatibility. As of 2012, the latest version of OpenGL available is OpenGL v4.3. Beyond OpenGL v3.0, the changes introduced in the application code are not as drastic as compared to those required for moving from OpenGL v2.0 to OpenGL v3.0 and above.

In this chapter, we will introduce the three shader stages accessible in the OpenGL v3.3 core profile, that is, vertex, geometry, and fragment shaders. Note that OpenGL v4.0 introduced two additional shader stages that is tessellation control and tessellation evaluation shaders between the vertex and geometry shader.

You have been reading a chapter from
OpenGL Development Cookbook
Published in: Jun 2013
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781849695046
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