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Learning Three.js - the JavaScript 3D Library for WebGL

You're reading from  Learning Three.js - the JavaScript 3D Library for WebGL

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784392215
Pages 422 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Jos Dirksen Jos Dirksen
Profile icon Jos Dirksen

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Learning Three.js – the JavaScript 3D Library for WebGL Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Creating Your First 3D Scene with Three.js 2. Basic Components That Make Up a Three.js Scene 3. Working with the Different Light Sources Available in Three.js 4. Working with Three.js Materials 5. Learning to Work with Geometries 6. Advanced Geometries and Binary Operations 7. Particles, Sprites, and the Point Cloud 8. Creating and Loading Advanced Meshes and Geometries 9. Animations and Moving the Camera 10. Loading and Working with Textures 11. Custom Shaders and Render Postprocessing 12. Adding Physics and Sounds to Your Scene Index

Using textures in materials


There are different ways textures are used in Three.js. You can use them to define the colors of the mesh, but you can also use them to define shininess, bumps, and reflections. The first example we look at, though, is the most basic approach, where we use a texture to define the colors of the individual pixels of a mesh.

Loading a texture and applying it to a mesh

The most basic usage of a texture is when it's set as a map on a material. When you use this material to create a mesh, the mesh will be colored based on the supplied texture.

Loading a texture and using it on a mesh can be done in the following manner:

function createMesh(geom, imageFile) {
  var texture = THREE.ImageUtils.loadTexture("../assets/textures/general/" + imageFile)

  var mat = new THREE.MeshPhongMaterial();
  mat.map = texture;

  var mesh = new THREE.Mesh(geom, mat);
  return mesh;
}

In this code sample, we use the THREE.ImageUtils.loadTexture function to load an image file from a specific...

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