*Finally* having consistent output on desktop, ES1, ES2, WebGL 1 and
WebGL 2, while also cutting 40% off the processing time. For the record,
the benchmark took 2.3 ms before, now it's 1.4.
Followup to previous commit -- links to opengl.org are now redirected to
khronos.org and the extension links have the same format for both GL and
GLES. That allows me to remove some of the Doxygen aliases and use just
a single set of the functions for both GL and GLES.
To be consistent with the rest, I don't know how did I forget about
this. Also it seems that the resource import header was never used, as
it included long-gone magnumConfigure.h. Thus I'm also not maintaining
any backwards compatibility, because it never worked in the first place.
The only places where they aren't absolute are:
- when header is included from corresponding source file
- when including headers which are not part of final installation (e.g.
test-specific configuration, headers from Implementation/)
Everything what was in src/ is now in src/Corrade, everything from
src/Plugins is now in src/MagnumPlugins, everything from external/ is in
src/MagnumExternal. Added new CMakeLists.txt file and updated the other
ones for the moves, no other change was made. If MAGNUM_BUILD_DEPRECATED
is set, everything compiles and installs like previously except for the
plugins, which are now in MagnumPlugins and not in Magnum/Plugins.
Encourages vectorization and generic usage even more. Some functions
were rewritten to make use of the new features, resulting in shorter and
more readable code. This also fixes the annoying naming collision with
WINAPI Rectangle() function.
The old Rectangle is now subclass of Range2D, is marked as deprecated
and will be removed in future release.
In 1.8.5 it is now possible to reference directly to enum member.
Hooray! Also added explicit @ref here and there, fixing some referencing
bugs along the way.
1.0 is taken as shape center (white), 0.0 as shape surroundings (black).
It was unintuitive to have it reverted, updated documentation to make it
right.
* Older GLSL doesn't have texelFetch() and related things, working
around it by using classical texture() and normalized floating-point
coordinates. But that needs to have Texture::imageSize() passed,
which is not available in OpenGL ES, thus the user must specify it
explicitly there. On desktop OpenGL that parameter is ignored.
* Older GLSL doesn't have gl_VertexID, thus vertex buffer must be
created and vertex data passed expliticly.
* GLSL ES 2.0 doesn't have one-component texture format and
TextureFormat::Luminance probably isn't renderable anywhere, thus
TextureFormat::RGB should be used, although it is inefficient.
* Checking for framebuffer completeness, if not complete, nothing is
done.
* Re-eabled building of TextureTools library in all ES PKGBUILDs.