gl-shader-core v2.2.0
gl-shader-core
The core of gl-shader, without the parser. It can be used to compile shaders without including the (relatively large) glsl-parser dependencies, or invoked directly by libraries which use a transform.
Install
npm install gl-shader-core
API
var shader = require("gl-shader-core")(gl, vertexSource, fragmentSource, uniforms, attributes)
Constructs a packaged gl-shader object with shims for all of the uniforms and attributes in the program.
gl
is the webgl context in which the program will be createdvertexSource
is the source code for the vertex shaderfragmentSource
is the source code for the fragment shaderuniforms
is a list of all uniforms exported by the shader programattributes
is a list of all attributes exported by the shader program
The uniform and attributes variables have output which is consistent with glsl-extract.
Returns A compiled shader object.
You can specify a default location
number for each attribute, otherwise WebGL will bind it automatically.
Methods
shader.bind()
Binds the shader for rendering
shader.dispose()
Deletes the shader program and associated resources.
Properties
gl
The WebGL context associated to the shader
handle
A handle to the underlying WebGL program object
vertexShader
A handle to the underlying WebGL fragment shader object
fragmentShader
A handle to the underlying WebGL vertex shader object
Uniforms
The uniforms for the shader program are packaged up as properties in the shader.uniforms
object. For example, to update a scalar uniform you can just assign to it:
shader.uniforms.scalar = 1.0
While you can update vector uniforms by writing an array to them:
shader.uniforms.vector = [1,0,1,0]
Matrix uniforms must have their arrays flattened first:
shader.uniforms.matrix = [ 1, 0, 1, 0,
0, 1, 0, 0,
0, 0, 1, 1,
0, 0, 0, 1 ]
You can also read the value of uniform too if the underlying shader is currently bound. For example,
console.log(shader.uniforms.scalar)
console.log(shader.uniforms.vector)
console.log(shader.uniforms.matrix)
Struct uniforms can also be accessed using the normal dot property syntax. For example,
shader.uniforms.light[0].color = [1, 0, 0, 1]
Attributes
The basic idea behind the attribute interface is similar to that for uniforms, however because attributes can be either a constant value or get values from a vertex array they have a slightly more complicated interface. All of the attributes are stored in the shader.attributes
property.
attrib = constant
For non-array attributes you can set the constant value to be broadcast across all vertices. For example, to set the vertex color of a shader to a constant you could do:
shader.attributes.color = [1, 0, 0, 1]
This internally uses gl.vertexAttribnf
. Setting the attribute will also call gl.disableVertexAttribArray
on the attribute's location.
attrib.location
This property accesses the location of the attribute. You can assign/read from it to modify the location of the attribute. For example, you can update the location by doing:
attrib.location = 0
Or you can read the currently bound location back by just accessing it:
console.log(attrib.location)
Internally, these methods just call gl.bindAttribLocation
and access the stored location.
WARNING Changing the attribute location requires recompiling the program. Do not dynamically modify this variable in your render loop.
attrib.pointer([type, normalized, stride, offset])
A shortcut for gl.vertexAttribPointer
/gl.enableVertexAttribArray
. See the OpenGL man page for details on how this works. The main difference here is that the WebGL context, size and index are known and so these parameters are bound.
type
is the type of the pointer (defaultgl.FLOAT
)normalized
specifies whether fixed-point data values should be normalized (true
) or converted directly as fixed-point values (false
) when they are accessed. (Defaultfalse
)stride
the byte offset between consecutive generic vertex attributes. (Default:0
)offset
offset of the first element of the array in bytes. (Default0
)
Reflection
Finally, the library supports some reflection capabilities. The set of all uniforms and data types are stored in the "type" property of the shader object,
console.log(shader.types)
This reflects the uniform and attribute parameters that were passed to the shader constructor.
Credits
(c) 2013 Mikola Lysenko. MIT License