Pain and misery. Majority of functionality for 3D compressed images now
suddenly fails the test -- this is either very vaguely specified or I am
very bad at understanding things or there are bugs in my NVidia drivers.
This was awful feature. Kill me now.
ES 2.0 extensions to match ES3/desktop functionality. The enums from
NV_pack_subimage are not available in gl.xml from Khronos, I would need
to use hardcoded value.
Yeah, sorry, I know, the enums are renamed for second or third time in a
row, first they were Image::Format, then ImageFormat, then ColorFormat
and now PixelFormat. But this time it's final and last time they are
renamed and now everything is finally consistent:
* ColorFormat::DepthComponent -- depth is not a color, thus
PixelFormat::DepthComponent makes a lot more sense.
* There will be PixelStorage classes, which will be stored in images
alonside PixelFormat/PixelType enums, making everything nicely
aligned.
* The GL documentation about glTexImage2D() etc. denotes the <format>
and <type> parameters as format and type of *pixel* data, so now we
are _finally_ consistent with the official naming.
I wonder why did I not choose PixelFormat originally. Anyway, the old
<Magnum/ColorFormat.h> header, ColorFormat, ColorType and
CompressedColorFormat types are now aliases to the new ones, are marked
as deprecated and will be removed in some future release (as always, I'm
waiting at least six months before removing the deprecated
functionality).
Just added them to the list, nothing integrated or implemented yet. Also
added some more stuff into OpenGL mapping table, as I apparently forgot
some entries.
It is superseded by core functionality. The only annoyance is that you
need to use TextureFormat::SRGB in ES2 and TextureFormat::SRGB8 in ES3,
but that's with many other formats anyway. Also apparently the unsized
format is still allowed in core desktop GL, which is a shame.
For more clarity it's now better to explicitly list all extensions for
each API even though they might get duplicated. For WebGL they also link
to WebGL spec, which might contain a bit more info.