Except MeshVisualizer and VertexColor, which don't have any texturing,
so there it's not needed. In most cases the tests are reusing existing
ground truth files and only modifying transformations / flipping images.
As usual, the old APIs are still present, but marked as deprecated.
Existing code is not updated yet to ensure I didn't break anything with
this.
This way it's much more intuitive and makes the code shorter and nicer
in many cases. Shaders are now also able to hide irrelevant
draw/dispatch APIs to avoid accidents.
Should make new things more discoverable, avoid confusion when a
documented API isn't there and reduce the need for maintaining multiple
separate versions of the docs.
Slow and ugly, is here only for making quick'n'dirty alpha masked
drawing without a need for blending or depth sorting. Oh and also to
support the glTF alpha mask feature. Again, beware: *slow*.
I introduced *strong* enum with values, in a subnamespace, that have the
same name as completely unrelated typedefs. Guess what?! It breaks ALL
LINKS TO THOSE TYPEDEFS! **EVERYWHERE!!!**
Two reasons:
* documentation
* making it actually work because the rules are so complex and ever
changing that a thing I thought "just worked" in fact did not work at
all
The Vector tests now compile again.
This better reflects that the functions modify a global state instead of
a shader-local state and so rebinding may be necessary (unlike with
uniforms, which get preserved).
The old set*() functions are now inline aliases to the bind*()
functions, are marked as deprecated and will be removed in some future
release.
Also probably fixed a few issues when compiling the shader on older GLSL
and GLSL ES (floating point literal suffixed, missing precision qualifiers).
And less crazy preprocessor.
Apart from different include (<Magnum/Math/Color.h> instead of
<Magnum/Color.h>) there shouldn't be any visible change to the user. The
BasicColor3 and BasicColor4 classes are now Math::Color3 and
Math::Color4. The Color3, Color4, Color3ub and Color4ub typedefs in
Magnum namespace stayed the same.
BasicColor3 and BasicColor4 is now an alias to Math::Color3 and
Math::Color4, is marked as deprecated and will be removed in future
release. The same goes for the <Magnum/Color.h> include, which now just
includes the <Magnum/Math/Color.h> header.
Each shader now has sample image, example mesh configuration and example
rendering setup. Also properly documented all attribute types and made
introductory chapter for whole Shaders namespace.
Until now the textures were bound to layers, which was rather confusing,
especially when binding layered textures to layers (gaah). Also the
wording might have implied that each texture must be in some layer in
order to make it usable in shader. This is no longer the case with (yet
unimplemented) bindless texture, so another reason to remove the
confusion.
All occurences of texture layers were replaced texture binding units to
follow OpenGL naming. It was mostly in the docs, except for
already-deprecated *Layer enums in shaders, but they will be removed
soon anyway.
Why did I do this:
* It is more clean, shorter and nice looking with method chaining,
i.e. instead of:
shader.setColor(...)
.setOtherParam(5);
texture1.bind(MyShader::Texture1Layer);
texture2.bind(MyShader::Texture2Layer);
We now have this:
shader.setColor(...)
.setOtherParam(5)
.setTexture1(texture1)
.setTexture2(texture2);
* It is now also clear which texture type is expected, the layer
constant did not say anything about type.
* Also it is possible to use new features (multi bind, bindless
textures etc.) while preserving the same public API.
The only potential disadvantage is that the textures don't stay bound
like uniform values do, but this become a non-issue with bindless
textures. As usual, the old way is now deprecated and will be removed in
some future release.
As we are now using absolute includes, there is no need to prefix
everything with "magnum<Namespace>" etc. All generated configuration
files are renamed to configure.h and their path is included _before_
everything else to avoid accidental collisions.