The OpenGL Utility Toolkit (GLUT) Programming Interface
API Version 3 Mark J. Kilgard
Silicon Graphics, Inc.
November 13, 1996
OpenGL is a trademark of Silicon Graphics, Inc. X Window System is a trademark of X Consortium, Inc. Spaceball is a registered trademark of Spatial Systems Inc.
The author has taken care in preparation of this documentation but makes no expressed or implied warranty of any kind and assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions. No liability is assumed for incidental or consequential damages in connection with or arising from the use of information or programs contained herein.
Copyright c 1994, 1995, 1996. Mark J. Kilgard. All rights reserved.
All rights reserved. No part of this documentation may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the author.
CONTENTS
i
Contents
1 Introduction
1.1Background 1.2DesignPhilosophy 1.3APIVersion2 1.4APIVersion3 1.5Conventions 1.6Terminology
2 Initialization
2.1glutInit
2.2 glutInitWindowPosition, glutInitWindowSize 2.3glutInitDisplayMode
3 Beginning Event Processing
3.1glutMainLoop
4 Window Management
4.1glutCreateWindow 4.2glutCreateSubWindow 4.3glutSetWindow,glutGetWindow 4.4glutDestroyWindow 4.5glutPostRedisplay 4.6glutSwapBuffers 4.7glutPositionWindow 4.8glutReshapeWindow 4.9glutFullScreen 4.10glutPopWindow,glutPushWindow
4.11 glutShowWindow, glutHideWindow, glutIconifyWindow
4.12 glutSetWindowTitle, glutSetIconTitle
4.13glutSetCursor
5 Overlay Management
5.1glutEstablishOverlay 5.2glutUseLayer 5.3glutRemoveOverlay 5.4glutPostOverlayRedisplay 5.5 glutShowOverlay, glutHideOverlay
6 Menu Management
6.1glutCreateMenu 6.2glutSetMenu,glutGetMenu 6.3glutDestroyMenu 6.4glutAddMenuEntry 6.5glutAddSubMenu 6.6glutChangeToMenuEntry 6.7glutChangeToSubMenu 6.8glutRemoveMenuItem 6.9glutAttachMenu,glutDetachMenu
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ii CONTENTS
7 Callback Registration 19
7.1glutDisplayFunc 20 7.2glutOverlayDisplayFunc 20 7.3glutReshapeFunc 21 7.4glutKeyboardFunc 21 7.5glutMouseFunc 22 7.6glutMotionFunc,glutPassiveMotionFunc 22 7.7glutVisibilityFunc 23 7.8glutEntryFunc 23 7.9glutSpecialFunc 24 7.10glutSpaceballMotionFunc 24 7.11glutSpaceballRotateFunc 25 7.12glutSpaceballButtonFunc 25 7.13glutButtonBoxFunc 26 7.14glutDialsFunc 26 7.15glutTabletMotionFunc 27 7.16glutTabletButtonFunc 27 7.17glutMenuStatusFunc 27 7.18glutIdleFunc 28 7.19glutTimerFunc 28
8 Color Index Colormap Management 29
8.1glutSetColor 29 8.2glutGetColor 29 8.3glutCopyColormap 30
9 State Retrieval 30
9.1glutGet 30 9.2glutLayerGet 32 9.3glutDeviceGet 32 9.4glutGetModifiers 33 9.5glutExtensionSupported 33
10 Font Rendering 34
10.1glutBitmapCharacter 34 10.2glutBitmapWidth 35 10.3glutStrokeCharacter 35 10.4glutStrokeWidth 36
11 Geometric Object Rendering 36
11.1glutSolidSphere,glutWireSphere 36 11.2glutSolidCube,glutWireCube 36 11.3glutSolidCone,glutWireCone 37 11.4glutSolidTorus,glutWireTorus 37 11.5glutSolidDodecahedron,glutWireDodecahedron 38 11.6glutSolidOctahedron,glutWireOctahedron 38 11.7glutSolidTetrahedron,glutWireTetrahedron 38 11.8glutSolidIcosahedron,glutWireIcosahedron 38 11.9glutSolidTeapot,glutWireTeapot 39
12 Usage Advice 39
CONTENTS iii
13 FORTRAN Binding 41
13.1NamesfortheFORTRANGLUTBinding 41 13.2FontNamingCaveat 41 13.3NULLCallback 42
14 ImplementationIssues 42
14.1NameSpaceConventions 42 14.2ModularImplementation 42 14.3ErrorCheckingandReporting 42 14.4AvoidUnspecifiedGLUTUsageRestrictions 42
A GLUT State 44
A.1TypesofState 44 A.2GlobalState 44 A.3WindowState 45 A.4MenuState 48
B glut.h ANSI C Header File 49
C fglut.h FORTRAN Header File 55
References 60 Index 61
iv CONTENTS
1 Introduction
The OpenGL Utility Toolkit (GLUT) is a programming interface with ANSI C and FORTRAN bindings for writ- ing window system independent OpenGL programs. The toolkit supports the following functionality:
Multiple windows for OpenGL rendering.
Callback driven event processing.
Sophisticated input devices.
An “idle” routine and timers.
A simple, cascading pop-up menu facility.
Utility routines to generate various solid and wire frame objects.
Support for bitmap and stroke fonts.
Miscellaneous window management functions, including managing overlays.
An ANSI C implementation of GLUT for the X Window System [15] has been implemented by the author. Windows NT and OS/2 versions of GLUT are also available.
This documentation serves as both a specification and a programming guide. If you are interested in a brief introduction to programming with GLUT, look for the introductory OpenGL column [9] published in The X Journal. For a complete introduction to using GLUT, obtain the book Programming OpenGL for the X Window System [10]. GLUT is also used by the 2nd edition of the OpenGL Programming Guide. Teachers and students interested in using GLUT in conjunction with a college-level computer graphics class should investigate An- gel’s textbook Interactive Computer Graphics: A top-down approach with OpenGL [2] that uses GLUT for its OpenGL-based examples programs.
The remainder of this section describes GLUT’s design philosophy and usage model. The following sections specify the GLUT routines, grouped by functionality. The final sections discuss usage advice, the FORTRAN binding, and implementation issues. Appendix A enumerates and annotates the logical programmer visible state maintained by GLUT. Appendix B presents the ANSI C GLUT API via its header file. Appendix C presents the FORTRAN GLUT API via its header file.
1.1 Background
One of the major accomplishments in the specification of OpenGL [16, 12] was the isolation of window system dependencies from OpenGL’s rendering model. The result is that OpenGL is window system independent.
Window system operations such as the creation of a rendering window and the handling of window system events are left to the native window system to define. Necessary interactions between OpenGL and the window system such as creating and binding an OpenGL context to a window are described separately from the OpenGL specification in a window system dependent specification. For example, the GLX specification [4] describes the standard by which OpenGL interacts with the X Window System.
The predecessor to OpenGL is IRIS GL [17, 18]. Unlike OpenGL, IRIS GL does specify how rendering windows are created and manipulated. IRIS GL’s windowing interface is reasonably popular largely because it is simple to use. IRIS GL programmers can worry about graphics programming without needing to be an expert in programming the native window system. Experience also demonstrated that IRIS GL’s windowing interface was high-level enough that it could be retargeted to different window systems. Silicon Graphics migrated from NeWS to the X Window System without any major changes to IRIS GL’s basic windowing interface.
Removing window system operations from OpenGL is a sound decision because it allows the OpenGL graphics system to be retargeted to various systems including powerful but expensive graphics workstations as well as mass-production graphics systems like video games, set-top boxes for interactive television, and PCs.
Unfortunately, the lack of a window system interface for OpenGL is a gap in OpenGL’s utility. Learning native window system APIs such as the X Window System’s Xlib [7] or Motif [8] can be daunting. Even those familiar with native window system APIs need to understand the interface that binds OpenGL to the native
1
2 1. INTRODUCTION
window system. And when an OpenGL program is written using the native window system interface, despite the portability of the program’s OpenGL rendering code, the program itself will be window system dependent. Testing and documenting OpenGL’s functionality lead to the development of the tk and aux toolkits. The aux toolkit is used in the examples found in the OpenGL Programming Guide [11]. Unfortunately, aux has numerous limitations and its utility is largely limited to toy programs. The tk library has more functionality than aux but was developed in an ad hoc fashion and still lacks much important functionality that IRIS GL
programmers expect, like pop-up menus and overlays.
GLUT is designed to fill the need for a window system independent programming interface for OpenGL
programs. The interface is designed to be simple yet still meet the needs of useful OpenGL programs. Features from the IRIS GL, aux, and tk interfaces are included to make it easy for programmers used to these interfaces to develop programs for GLUT.
1.2 Design Philosophy
GLUT simplifies the implementation of programs using OpenGL rendering. The GLUT application program- ming interface (API) requires very few routines to display a graphics scene rendered using OpenGL. The GLUT API (like the OpenGL API) is stateful. Most initial GLUT state is defined and the initial state is reasonable for simple programs.
The GLUT routines also take relatively few parameters. No pointers are returned. The only pointers passed into GLUT are pointers to character strings (all strings passed to GLUT are copied, not referenced) and opaque font handles.
The GLUT API is (as much as reasonable) window system independent. For this reason, GLUT does not return any native window system handles, pointers, or other data structures. More subtle window system de- pendencies such as reliance on window system dependent fonts are avoided by GLUT; instead, GLUT supplies its own (limited) set of fonts.
For programming ease, GLUT provides a simple menu sub-API. While the menuing support is designed to be implemented as pop-up menus, GLUT gives window system leeway to support the menu functionality in another manner (pull-down menus for example).
Two of the most important pieces of GLUT state are the current window and current menu. Most window and menu routines affect the current window or menu respectively. Most callbacks implicitly set the current window and menu to the appropriate window or menu responsible for the callback. GLUT is designed so that a program with only a single window and/or menu will not need to keep track of any window or menu identifiers. This greatly simplifies very simple GLUT programs.
GLUT is designed for simple to moderately complex programs focused on OpenGL rendering. GLUT im- plements its own event loop. For this reason, mixing GLUT with other APIs that demand their own event han- dling structure may be difficult. The advantage of a builtin event dispatch loop is simplicity.
GLUT contains routines for rendering fonts and geometric objects, however GLUT makes no claims on the OpenGL display list name space. For this reason, none of the GLUT rendering routines use OpenGL display lists. It is up to the GLUT programmer to compile the output from GLUT rendering routines into display lists if this is desired.
GLUT routines are logically organized into several sub-APIs according to their functionality. The sub-APIs are:
Initialization. Command line processing, window system initialization, and initial window creation state are controlled by these routines.
Beginning Event Processing. This routine enters GLUT’s event processing loop. This routine never returns, and it continuously calls GLUT callbacks as necessary.
Window Management. These routines create and control windows.
Overlay Management. These routines establish and manage overlays for windows.
Menu Management. These routines create and control pop-up menus.
Callback Registration. These routines register callbacks to be called by the GLUT event processing loop.
1.3 API Version 2 3
ColorIndexColormapManagement. Theseroutinesallowthemanipulationofcolorindexcolormapsforwin- dows.
State Retrieval. These routines allows programs to retrieve state from GLUT.
Font Rendering. These routines allow rendering of stroke and bitmap fonts.
Geometric Shape Rendering. These routines allow the rendering of 3D geometric objects including spheres, cones, icosahedrons, and teapots.
1.3 API Version 2
In response to feedback from the original version of GLUT, GLUT API version 2 was developed. Additions to the original GLUT API version 1 are:
Support for requesting stereo and multisample windows.
New routines to query support for and provide callbacks for sophisticated input devices: the Spaceball,
tablet, and dial & button box.
New routine to register a callback for keyboard function and directional keys. In version 1, only ASCII characters could be generated.
New queries for stereo, multisampling, and elapsed time.
New routine to ease querying for OpenGL extension support. GLUT API version 2 is completely compatible with version 1 of the API.
1.4 API Version 3
Further feedback lead to the development of GLUT API version 3. Additions to the GLUT API version 2 are:
The glutMenuStateFunc has been deprecated in favor of the glutMenuStatusFunc.
glutFullScreen requests full screen top-level windows.
Three additional Helvetica bitmap fonts.
Implementations should enforce not allowing any modifications to menus while menus are in use.
glutBitmapWidth and glutStrokeBitmap return the widths of individual characters.
glutGetModifiers called during a keyboard, mouse, or special callback returns the modifiers (Shift, Ctrl, Alt) held down when the mouse or keyboard event was generated.
Access to per-window transparent overlays when overlay hardware is supported.
The routines added are glutEstablishOverlay, glutRemoveOverlay, glutShowOverlay, glutHideOverlay, glutUseOverlay, glutLayerGet, and glutPostOverlayRedisplay.
A new display mode called GLUT LUMINANCE using OpenGL’s RGBA color model, but that has no green or blue components. The red component is converted to an index and looked up in a writable col- ormap to determine displayed colors. See glutInitDisplayMode.
GLUT API version 3 should be largely compatible with version 2. Be aware that programs that used to (through some degree of fortuitous timing) modify menus while menus are in use will encounter fatal errors when doing so in version 3.
Another change in GLUT 3.0 that may require source code modification to pre-3.0 GLUT programs. GLUT 3.0 no longer lets a window be shown without a display callback registered. This change makes sure windows are not displayed on the screen without the GLUT application providing a way for them to be rendered. In
4 1. INTRODUCTION
conjunction with this change, glutDisplayFunc no longer allows NULL to deregister a display callback. While there is no longer a way to deregister a display callback, you can still change the change the display callback routine with subsequent calls to glutDisplayFunc.
The display mode mask parameter for glutInitDisplayMode and the milliseconds parameter for glutTimerFunc are now of type unsigned int (previously unsigned long).
1.5 Conventions
GLUT window and screen coordinates are expressed in pixels. The upper left hand corner of the screen or a window is (0,0). X coordinates increase in a rightward direction; Y coordinates increase in a downward direc- tion. Note: This is inconsistent with OpenGL’s coordinate scheme that generally considers the lower left hand coordinate of a window to be at (0,0) but is consistent with most popular window systems.
Integer identifiers in GLUT begin with one, not zero. So window identifiers, menu identifiers, and menu item indices are based from one, not zero.
In GLUT’s ANSI C binding, for most routines, basic types (int, char*) are used as parameters. In routines where the parameters are directly passed to OpenGL routines, OpenGL types (GLfloat) are used.
The header files for GLUT should be included in GLUT programs with the following include directive:
#include
Because a very large window system software vendor (who will remain nameless) has an apparent inability to appreciate that OpenGL’s API is independent of their window system API, portable ANSI C GLUT programs should not directly include
The ANSI C GLUT library archive is typically named libglut.a on Unix systems. GLUT programs need to link with the system’s OpenGL and GLUT libraries (and any libraries these libraries potentially depend on). A set of window system dependent libraries may also be necessary for linking GLUT programs. For example, programs using the X11 GLUT implementation typically need to link with Xlib, the X extension library, possibly the X Input extension library, the X miscellaneous utilities library, and the math library. An example X11/Unix compile line would look like:
cc -o foo foo.c -lglut -lGLU -lGL -lXmu -lXi -lXext -lX11 -lm
1.6 Terminology
A number of terms are used in a GLUT-specific manner throughout this document. The GLUT meaning of these terms is independent of the window system GLUT is used with. Here are GLUT-specific meanings for the following GLUT-specific terms:
Callback AprogrammerspecifiedroutinethatcanberegisteredwithGLUTtobecalledinresponsetoaspecific type of event. Also used to refer to a specific callback routine being called.
Colormap A mapping of pixel values to RGB color values. Use by color index windows. Dialsandbuttonbox Asophisticatedinputdeviceconsistingofapadofbuttonsandanarrayofrotatingdials,
often used by computer-aided design programs.
Display mode A set of OpenGL frame buffer capabilities that can be attributed to a window.
Idle A state when no window system events are received for processing as callbacks and the idle callback, if one is registered, is called.
Layer in use Either the normal plane or overlay. This per-window state determines what frame buffer layer OpenGL commands affect.
Menu entry A menu item that the user can select to trigger the menu callback for the menu entry’s value. Menu item Either a menu entry or a sub-menu trigger.
1.6 Terminology 5
Modifiers TheShift,Ctrl,andAltkeysthatcanbehelddownsimultaneouslywithakeyormousebuttonbeing pressed or released.
Multisampling Atechniqueforhardwareantialiasinggenerallyavailableonlyonexpensive3Dgraphicshard- ware [1]. Each pixel is composed of a number of samples (each containing color and depth information). The samples are averaged to determine the displayed pixel color value. Multisampling is supported as an extension to OpenGL.
Normal plane The default frame buffer layer where GLUT window state resides; as opposed to the overlay.
Overlay Aframebufferlayerthatcanbedisplayedpreferentiallytothenormalplaneandsupportstransparency to display through to the normal plane. Overlays are useful for rubber-banding effects, text annotation, and other operations, to avoid damaging the normal plane frame buffer state. Overlays require hardware support not present on all systems.
Pop The act of forcing a window to the top of the stacking order for sibling windows.
Pop-upmenu Amenuthatcanbesettoappearwhenaspecifiedmousebuttonispressedinawindow.Apop-
menu consists of multiple menu items.
Push The act of forcing a window to the bottom of the stacking order for sibling windows. Reshape The act of changing the size or shape of the window.
Spaceball Asophisticated3Dinputdevicethatprovidessixdegreesoffreedom,threeaxesofrotationandthree axes of translation. It also supports a number of buttons. The device is a hand-sized ball attached to a base. By cupping the ball with one’s hand and applying torsional or directional force on the ball, rotations and translationsare generated.
Stereo A frame buffer capability providing left and right color buffers for creating stereoscopic renderings. Typically, the user wears LCD shuttered goggles synchronized with the alternating display on the screen of the left and right color buffers.
Sub-menu A menu cascaded from some sub-menu trigger.
Sub-menu trigger A menu item that the user can enter to cascade another pop-up menu.
Subwindow Atypeofwindowthatisthechildwindowofatop-levelwindoworothersubwindow.Thedrawing and visible region of a subwindow is limited by its parent window.
Tablet A precise 2D input device. Like a mouse, 2D coordinates are returned. The absolute position of the tablet “puck” on the tablet is returned. Tablets also support a number of buttons.
Timer Acallbackthatcanbescheduledtobecalledinaspecifiedintervaloftime.
Top-level window A window that can be placed, moved, resized, etc. independently from other top-level win-
dows by the user. Subwindows may reside within a top-level window.
Window A rectangular area for OpenGL rendering.
Window display state One of shown, hidden, or iconified. A shown window is potentially visible on the screen (it may be obscured by other windows and not actually visible). A hidden window will never be visible. An iconified window is not visible but could be made visible in response to some user action like clicking on the window’s corresponding icon.
Window system A broad notion that refers to both the mechanism and policy of the window system. For ex- ample, in the X Window System both the window manager and the X server are integral to what GLUT considers the window system.
6 2. INITIALIZATION
2 Initialization
Routines beginning with the glutInit- prefix are used to initialize GLUT state. The primary initialization routine is glutInit that should only be called exactly once in a GLUT program. No non-glutInit- pre- fixed GLUT or OpenGL routines should be called before glutInit.
The other glutInit- routines may be called before glutInit. The reason is these routines can be used to set default window initialization state that might be modified by the command processing done in glutInit. For example, glutInitWindowSize(400, 400) can be called before glutInit to indicate 400 by 400 is the program’s default window size. Setting the initial window size or position before glutInit allows the GLUT program user to specify the initial size or position using command line arguments.
2.1 glutInit
glutInit is used to initialize the GLUT library. Usage
void glutInit(int *argcp, char **argv);
argcp A pointer to the program’s unmodified argc variable from main. Upon return, the value pointed to by argcp will be updated, because glutInit extracts any command line options intended for the GLUT library.
argv The program’s unmodified argv variable from main. Like argcp, the data for argv will be updated because glutInit extracts any command line options understood by the GLUT library.
Description
glutInit will initialize the GLUT library and negotiate a session with the window system. During this pro- cess, glutInit may cause the termination of the GLUT program with an error message to the user if GLUT cannot be properly initialized. Examples of this situation include the failure to connect to the window system, the lack of window system support for OpenGL, and invalid command line options.
glutInit also processes command line options, but the specific options parse are window system depen- dent.
X Implementation Notes
The X Window System specific options parsed by glutInit are as follows:
-displayDISPLAY SpecifytheXservertoconnectto.Ifnotspecified,thevalueoftheDISPLAYenviron-
ment variable is used.
-geometry WxH+X+Y Determines where window’s should be created on the screen. The parameter follow- ing -geometry should be formatted as a standard X geometry specification. The effect of using this option is to change the GLUT initial size and initial position the same as if glutInitWindowSize or glutInitWindowPositionwere called directly.
-iconic Requests all top-level windows be created in an iconic state.
-indirect Force the use of indirect OpenGL rendering contexts.
-direct Force the use of direct OpenGL rendering contexts (not all GLX implementations support direct rendering contexts). A fatal error is generated if direct rendering is not supported by the OpenGL imple- mentation.
If neither -indirect or -direct are used to force a particular behavior, GLUT will attempt to use direct rendering if possible and otherwise fallback to indirect rendering.
2.2 glutInitWindowPosition, glutInitWindowSize 7
-gldebug After processing callbacks and/or events, check if there are any OpenGL errors by calling glGetError. If an error is reported, print out a warning by looking up the error code with gluErrorString. Using this option is helpful in detecting OpenGL run-time errors.
-sync Enable synchronous X protocol transactions. This option makes it easier to track down potential X protocol errors.
2.2 glutInitWindowPosition, glutInitWindowSize
glutInitWindowPosition and glutInitWindowSize set the initial window position and size respec- tively.
Usage
void glutInitWindowSize(int width, int height); void glutInitWindowPosition(int x, int y);
width Width in pixels. height Height in pixels.
x Window X location in pixels. y Window Y location in pixels.
Description
Windows created by glutCreateWindow will be requested to be created with the current initial window position and size.
The initial value of the initial window position GLUT state is -1 and -1. If either the X or Y component to the initial window position is negative, the actual window position is left to the window system to determine. The initial value of the initial window size GLUT state is 300 by 300. The initial window size components must be greater than zero.
The intent of the initial window position and size values is to provide a suggestion to the window system for a window’s initial size and position. The window system is not obligated to use this information. Therefore, GLUT programs should not assume the window was created at the specified size or position. A GLUT program should use the window’s reshape callback to determine the true size of the window.
2.3 glutInitDisplayMode
glutInitDisplayMode sets the initial display mode. Usage
void glutInitDisplayMode(unsigned int mode);
mode Display mode, normally the bitwise OR-ing of GLUT display mode bit masks. See values below:
GLUT RGBA Bit mask to select an RGBA mode window. This is the default if neither GLUT RGBA nor GLUT INDEX are specified.
GLUT RGB An alias for GLUT RGBA.
GLUT INDEX Bit mask to select a color index mode window. This overrides GLUT RGBA if it is also specified.
GLUT SINGLE Bit mask to select a single buffered window. This is the default if neither GLUT DOUBLE or GLUT SINGLE are specified.
GLUT DOUBLE Bit mask to select a double buffered window. This overrides GLUT SINGLE if it is also spec- ified.
8 4. WINDOW MANAGEMENT
GLUT ACCUM Bit mask to select a window with an accumulation buffer.
GLUT ALPHA Bit mask to select a window with an alpha component to the color buffer(s). GLUT DEPTH Bit mask to select a window with a depth buffer.
GLUT STENCIL Bit mask to select a window with a stencil buffer.
GLUT MULTISAMPLE Bit mask to select a window with multisampling support. If multisampling is not avail- able, a non-multisampling window will automatically be chosen. Note: both the OpenGL client-side and server-side implementations must support the GLX SAMPLE SGIS extension for multisampling to be available.
GLUT STEREO Bit mask to select a stereo window.
GLUT LUMINANCE Bit mask to select a window with a “luminance” color model. This model provides the functionality of OpenGL’s RGBA color model, but the green and blue components are not maintained in the frame buffer. Instead each pixel’s red component is converted to an index between zero and glutGet(GLUT WINDOW COLORMAP SIZE)-1 and looked up in a per-window color map to deter- mine the color of pixels within the window. The initial colormap of GLUT LUMINANCE windows is ini- tialized to be a linear gray ramp, but can be modified with GLUT’s colormap routines.
Description
The initial display mode is used when creating top-level windows, subwindows, and overlays to determine the OpenGL display mode for the to-be-created window or overlay.
Note that GLUT RGBA selects the RGBA color model, but it does not request any bits of alpha (sometimes called an alpha buffer or destination alpha) be allocated. To request alpha, specify GLUT ALPHA. The same applies to GLUT LUMINANCE.
GLUT LUMINANCE Implementation Notes
GLUT LUMINANCE is not supported on most OpenGL platforms.
3 Beginning Event Processing
After a GLUT program has done initial setup such as creating windows and menus, GLUT programs enter the GLUT event processing loop by calling glutMainLoop.
3.1 glutMainLoop
glutMainLoop enters the GLUT event processing loop. Usage
void glutMainLoop(void);
Description
glutMainLoop enters the GLUT event processing loop. This routine should be called at most once in a GLUT program. Once called, this routine will never return. It will call as necessary any callbacks that have been reg- istered.
4 Window Management
GLUT supports two types of windows: top-level windows and subwindows. Both types support OpenGL ren- dering and GLUT callbacks. There is a single identifier space for both types of windows.
4.1 glutCreateWindow 9
4.1 glutCreateWindow
glutCreateWindow creates a top-level window. Usage
int glutCreateWindow(char *name); name ASCII character string for use as window name.
Description
glutCreateWindow creates a top-level window. The name will be provided to the window system as the window’s name. The intent is that the window system will label the window with the name.
Implicitly, the current window is set to the newly created window.
Each created window has a unique associated OpenGL context. State changes to a window’s associated OpenGL context can be done immediately after the window is created.
The display state of a window is initially for the window to be shown. But the window’s display state is not actually acted upon until glutMainLoop is entered. This means until glutMainLoop is called, rendering to a created window is ineffective because the window can not yet be displayed.
The value returned is a unique small integer identifier for the window. The range of allocated identifiers starts at one. This window identifier can be used when calling glutSetWindow.
X Implementation Notes
The proper X Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual (ICCCM) top-level properties are established. The WM COMMAND property that lists the command line used to invoke the GLUT program is only established for the first window created.
4.2 glutCreateSubWindow
glutCreateSubWindow creates a subwindow. Usage
int glutCreateSubWindow(int win,
int x, int y, int width, int height);
win Identifier of the subwindow’s parent window.
x Window X location in pixels relative to parent window’s origin. y Window Y location in pixels relative to parent window’s origin. width Width in pixels.
height Height in pixels.
Description
glutCreateSubWindow creates a subwindow of the window identified by win of size width and height at location x and y within the current window. Implicitly, the current window is set to the newly created sub- window.
Each created window has a unique associated OpenGL context. State changes to a window’s associated OpenGL context can be done immediately after the window is created.
The display state of a window is initially for the window to be shown. But the window’s display state is not actually acted upon until glutMainLoop is entered. This means until glutMainLoop is called, rendering to a created window is ineffective. Subwindows can not be iconified.
Subwindows can be nested arbitrarily deep.
10 4. WINDOW MANAGEMENT
The value returned is a unique small integer identifier for the window. The range of allocated identifiers starts at one.
4.3 glutSetWindow, glutGetWindow
glutSetWindow sets the current window; glutGetWindow returns the identifier of the current window. Usage
void glutSetWindow(int win); int glutGetWindow(void);
win Identifier of GLUT window to make the current window. Description
glutSetWindow sets the current window; glutGetWindow returns the identifier of the current win- dow. If no windows exist or the previously current window was destroyed, glutGetWindow returns zero. glutSetWindow does not change the layer in use for the window; this is done using glutUseLayer.
4.4 glutDestroyWindow
glutDestroyWindow destroys the specified window. Usage
void glutDestroyWindow(int win); win Identifier of GLUT window to destroy.
Description
glutDestroyWindow destroys the window specified by win and the window’s associated OpenGL context, logical colormap (if the window is color index), and overlay and related state (if an overlay has been established). Any subwindows of destroyed windows are also destroyed by glutDestroyWindow. If win was the current window, the current window becomes invalid (glutGetWindow will return zero).
4.5 glutPostRedisplay
glutPostRedisplay marks the current window as needing to be redisplayed. Usage
void glutPostRedisplay(void);
Description
Mark the normal plane of current window as needing to be redisplayed.
glutMainLoop, the window’s display callback will be called to redisplay the window’s normal plane. Multi- ple calls to glutPostRedisplay before the next display callback opportunity generates only a single redis- play callback. glutPostRedisplay may be called within a window’s display or overlay display callback to re-mark that window for redisplay.
Logically, normal plane damage notification for a window is treated as a glutPostRedisplay on the damaged window. Unlike damage reported by the window system, glutPostRedisplay will not set to true the normal plane’s damaged status (returned by glutLayerGet(GLUT NORMAL DAMAGED).
The next iteration through
Also, see glutPostOverlayRedisplay.
4.6 glutSwapBuffers 11
4.6 glutSwapBuffers
glutSwapBuffers swaps the buffers of the current window if double buffered.
Usage
void glutSwapBuffers(void);
Description
Performs a buffer swap on the layer in use for the current window. Specifically, glutSwapBuffers promotes the contents of the back buffer of the layer in use of the current window to become the contents of the front buffer. The contents of the back buffer then become undefined. The update typically takes place during the vertical retrace of the monitor, rather than immediately after glutSwapBuffers is called.
An implicit glFlush is done by glutSwapBuffers before it returns. Subsequent OpenGL commands can be issued immediately after calling glutSwapBuffers, but are not executed until the buffer exchange is completed.
If the layer in use is not double buffered, glutSwapBuffers has no effect.
4.7 glutPositionWindow
glutPositionWindow requests a change to the position of the current window.
Usage
void glutPositionWindow(int x, int y); x New X location of window in pixels.
y New Y location of window in pixels.
Description
glutPositionWindow requests a change in the position of the current window. For top-level windows, the x and y parameters are pixel offsets from the screen origin. For subwindows, the x and y parameters are pixel offsets from the window’s parent window origin.
The requests by glutPositionWindow are not processed immediately. The request is executed after returning to the main event loop. This allows multiple glutPositionWindow, glutReshapeWindow, and glutFullScreen requests to the same window to be coalesced.
In the case of top-level windows, a glutPositionWindow call is considered only a request for position- ing the window. The window system is free to apply its own policies to top-level window placement. The intent is that top-level windows should be repositioned according glutPositionWindow’s parameters.
glutPositionWindow disables the full screen status of a window if previously enabled.
4.8 glutReshapeWindow
glutReshapeWindow requests a change to the size of the current window.
Usage
void glutReshapeWindow(int width, int height);
width New width of window in pixels. height New height of window in pixels.
12 4. WINDOW MANAGEMENT
Description
glutReshapeWindow requests a change in the size of the current window. The width and height pa- rameters are size extents in pixels. The width and height must be positive values.
The requests by glutReshapeWindow are not processed immediately. The request is executed after re- turning to the main event loop. This allows multiple glutReshapeWindow, glutPositionWindow, and glutFullScreen requests to the same window to be coalesced.
In the case of top-level windows, a glutReshapeWindow call is considered only a request for sizing the window. The window system is free to apply its own policies to top-level window sizing. The intent is that top-level windows should be reshaped according glutReshapeWindow’s parameters. Whether a reshape actually takes effect and, if so, the reshaped dimensions are reported to the program by a reshape callback.
glutReshapeWindow disables the full screen status of a window if previously enabled.
4.9 glutFullScreen
glutFullScreen requests that the current window be made full screen. Usage
void glutFullScreen(void);
Description
glutFullScreen requests that the current window be made full screen. The exact semantics of what full screen means may vary by window system. The intent is to make the window as large as possible and disable any window decorations or borders added the window system. The window width and height are not guaranteed to be the same as the screen width and height, but that is the intent of making a window full screen.
glutFullScreen is defined to work only on top-level windows.
The glutFullScreen requests are not processed immediately. The request is executed after return- ing to the main event loop. This allows multiple glutReshapeWindow, glutPositionWindow, and glutFullScreen requests to the same window to be coalesced.
Subsequent glutReshapeWindow and glutPositionWindow requests on the window will disable the full screen status of the window.
X Implementation Notes
In the X implementation of GLUT, full screen is implemented by sizing and positioning the window to cover the entire screen and posting the MOTIF WM HINTS property on the window requesting absolutely no decorations. Non-Motif window managers may not respond to MOTIF WM HINTS.
4.10 glutPopWindow, glutPushWindow
glutPopWindow and glutPushWindow change the stacking order of the current window relative to its siblings.
Usage
void glutPopWindow(void);
void glutPushWindow(void);
Description
glutPopWindow and glutPushWindow work on both top-level windows and subwindows. The effect of pushing and popping windows does not take place immediately. Instead the push or pop is saved for execution upon return to the GLUT event loop. Subsequent push or pop requests on a window replace the previously
4.11 glutShowWindow, glutHideWindow, glutIconifyWindow 13
saved request for that window. The effect of pushing and popping top-level windows is subject to the window system’s policy for restacking windows.
4.11 glutShowWindow, glutHideWindow, glutIconifyWindow
glutShowWindow, glutHideWindow, and glutIconifyWindow change the display status of the cur- rent window.
Usage
void glutShowWindow(void);
void glutHideWindow(void);
void glutIconifyWindow(void);
Description
glutShowWindow will show the current window (though it may still not be visible if obscured by other shown windows). glutHideWindow will hide the current window. glutIconifyWindow will iconify a top-level window, but GLUT prohibits iconification of a subwindow. The effect of showing, hiding, and iconifying win- dows does not take place immediately. Instead the requests are saved for execution upon return to the GLUT event loop. Subsequent show, hide, or iconification requests on a window replace the previously saved request for that window. The effect of hiding, showing, or iconifying top-level windows is subject to the window sys- tem’s policy for displaying windows.
4.12 glutSetWindowTitle, glutSetIconTitle
glutSetWindowTitle and glutSetIconTitle change the window or icon title respectively of the cur- rent top-level window.
Usage
void glutSetWindowTitle(char *name); void glutSetIconTitle(char *name);
name ASCII character string for the window or icon name to be set for the window. Description
These routines should be called only when the current window is a top-level window. Upon creation of a top- level window, the window and icon names are determined by the name parameter to glutCreateWindow. Once created, glutSetWindowTitle and glutSetIconTitle can change the window and icon names respectively of top-level windows. Each call requests the window system change the title appropriately. Re- quests are not buffered or coalesced. The policy by which the window and icon name are displayed is window system dependent.
4.13 glutSetCursor
glutSetCursor changes the cursor image of the current window. Usage
void glutSetCursor(int cursor);
cursor Name of cursor image to change to.
GLUT CURSOR RIGHT ARROW Arrow pointing up and to the right.
14 5.
OVERLAY MANAGEMENT
GLUT CURSOR LEFT ARROW Arrow pointing up and to the left. GLUT CURSOR INFO Pointing hand.
GLUT CURSOR DESTROY Skull & cross bones.
GLUT CURSOR HELP Question mark.
GLUT CURSOR CYCLE Arrows rotating in a circle.
GLUT CURSOR SPRAY Spray can.
GLUT CURSOR WAIT Wrist watch.
GLUT CURSOR TEXT Insertion point cursor for text.
GLUT CURSOR CROSSHAIR Simple cross-hair.
GLUT CURSOR UP DOWN Bi-directional pointing up & down. GLUT CURSOR LEFT RIGHT Bi-directional pointing left & right. GLUT CURSOR TOP SIDE Arrow pointing to top side.
GLUT CURSOR BOTTOM SIDE Arrow pointing to bottom side.
GLUT CURSOR LEFT SIDE Arrow pointing to left side.
GLUT CURSOR RIGHT SIDE Arrow pointing to right side.
GLUT CURSOR TOP LEFT CORNER Arrow pointing to top-left corner.
GLUT CURSOR TOP RIGHT CORNER Arrow pointing to top-right corner.
GLUT CURSOR BOTTOM RIGHT CORNER Arrow pointing to bottom-left corner.
GLUT CURSOR BOTTOM LEFT CORNER Arrow pointing to bottom-right corner.
GLUT CURSOR FULL CROSSHAIR Full-screen cross-hair cursor (if possible, otherwise GLUT CURSOR CROSSHAIR).
GLUT CURSOR NONE Invisible cursor.
GLUT CURSOR INHERIT Use parent’s cursor.
Description
glutSetCursor changes the cursor image of the current window. Each call requests the window system change the cursor appropriately. The cursor image when a window is created is GLUT CURSOR INHERIT. The exact cursor images used are implementation dependent. The intent is for the image to convey the meaning of the cursor name. For a top-level window, GLUT CURSOR INHERIT uses the default window system cursor.
X Implementation Notes
GLUT for X uses SGI’s SGI CROSSHAIR CURSOR convention [5] to access a full screen cross-hair cursor if possible.
5 Overlay Management
When overlay hardware is available, GLUT provides a set of routine for establishing, using, and removing an overlay for GLUT windows. When an overlay is established, a separate OpenGL context is also established. A window’s overlay OpenGL state is kept distinct from the normal planes OpenGL state.
5.1 glutEstablishOverlay
glutEstablishOverlay establishes an overlay (if possible) for the current window.
5.2 glutUseLayer 15
Usage
void glutEstablishOverlay(void);
Description
glutEstablishOverlay establishes an overlay (if possible) for the current window. The requested display mode for the overlay is determined by the initial display mode. glutLayerGet(GLUTOVERLAYPOSSIBLE) can be called to determine if an overlay is possible for the current window with the current initial display mode. Do not attempt to establish an overlay when one is not possible; GLUT will terminate the program.
If glutEstablishOverlay is called when an overlay already exists, the existing overlay is first re- moved, and then a new overlay is established. The state of the old overlay’s OpenGL context is discarded.
The initial display state of an overlay is shown, however the overlay is only actually shown if the overlay’s window is shown.
Implicitly, the window’s layer in use changes to the overlay immediately after the overlay is established. X Implementation Notes
GLUT for X uses the SERVER OVERLAY VISUALS convention [6] is used to determine if overlay visuals are available. While the convention allows for opaque overlays (no transparency) and overlays with the trans- parency specified as a bitmask, GLUT overlay management only provides access to transparent pixel overlays.
Until RGBA overlays are better understood, GLUT only supports color index overlays.
5.2 glutUseLayer
glutUseLayer changes the layer in use for the current window.
Usage
void glutUseLayer(GLenum layer);
layer Either GLUT NORMAL or GLUT OVERLAY, selecting the normal plane or overlay respectively.
Description
glutUseLayer changes the per-window layer in use for the current window, selecting either the normal plane or overlay. The overlay should only be specified if an overlay exists, however windows without an overlay may still call glutUseLayer(GLUT NORMAL). OpenGL commands for the window are directed to the current layer in use.
To query the layer in use for a window, call glutLayerGet(GLUT LAYER IN USE). 5.3 glutRemoveOverlay
glutRemoveOverlay removes the overlay (if one exists) from the current window. Usage
void glutRemoveOverlay(void);
Description
glutRemoveOverlay removes the overlay (if one exists). It is safe to call glutRemoveOverlay even if no overlay is currently established–it does nothing in this case. Implicitly, the window’s layer in use changes to the normal plane immediately once the overlay is removed.
If the program intends to re-establish the overlay later, it is typically faster and less resource intensive to use glutHideOverlay and glutShowOverlay to simply change the display status of the overlay.
16 6. MENU MANAGEMENT
5.4 glutPostOverlayRedisplay
glutPostOverlayRedisplay marks the overlay of the current window as needing to be redisplayed. Usage
void glutPostOverlayRedisplay(void);
Description
Mark the overlay of current window as needing to be redisplayed. The next iteration through glutMainLoop, the window’s overlay display callback (or simply the display callback if no overlay display callback is registered) will be called to redisplay the window’s overlay plane. Multiple calls to glutPostOverlayRedisplay before the next display callback opportunity (or overlay display callback opportunity if one is registered) generate only a single redisplay. glutPostOverlayRedisplay may be called within a window’s display or overlay display callback to re-mark that window for redisplay.
Logically, overlay damage notification for a window is treated as a glutPostOverlayRedisplay on the damaged window. Unlike damage reported by the window system, glutPostOverlayRedisplay will not set to true the overlay’s damaged status (returned by glutLayerGet(GLUT OVERLAY DAMAGED).
Also, see glutPostRedisplay.
5.5 glutShowOverlay, glutHideOverlay
glutShowOverlay shows the overlay of the current window; glutHideOverlay hides the overlay. Usage
void glutShowOverlay(void);
void glutHideOverlay(void);
Description
glutShowOverlay shows the overlay of the current window; glutHideOverlay hides the overlay. The effect of showing or hiding an overlay takes place immediately. Note that glutShowOverlay will not actu- ally display the overlay unless the window is also shown (and even a shown window may be obscured by other windows, thereby obscuring the overlay). It is typically faster and less resource intensive to use these routines to control the display status of an overlay as opposed to removing and re-establishing the overlay.
6 Menu Management
GLUT supports simple cascading pop-up menus. They are designed to let a user select various modes within a program. The functionality is simple and minimalistic and is meant to be that way. Do not mistake GLUT’s pop-up menu facility with an attempt to create a full-featured user interface.
It is illegal to create or destroy menus, or change, add, or remove menu items while a menu (and any cascaded sub-menus) are in use (that is, popped up).
6.1 glutCreateMenu
glutCreateMenu creates a new pop-up menu.
Usage
int glutCreateMenu(void (*func)(int value));
func The callback function for the menu that is called when a menu entry from the menu is selected. The value passed to the callback is determined by the value for the selected menu entry.
6.2 glutSetMenu, glutGetMenu 17
Description
glutCreateMenu creates a new pop-up menu and returns a unique small integer identifier. The range of al- located identifiers starts at one. The menu identifier range is separate from the window identifier range. Im- plicitly, the current menu is set to the newly created menu. This menu identifier can be used when calling glutSetMenu.
When the menu callback is called because a menu entry is selected for the menu, the current menu will be implicitly set to the menu with the selected entry before the callback is made.
X Implementation Notes
If available, GLUT for X will take advantage of overlay planes for implementing pop-up menus. The use of overlay planes can eliminate display callbacks when pop-up menus are deactivated. The SERVER OVERLAY VISUALS convention [6] is used to determine if overlay visuals are available.
6.2 glutSetMenu, glutGetMenu
glutSetMenu sets the current menu; glutGetMenu returns the identifier of the current menu. Usage
void glutSetMenu(int menu); int glutGetMenu(void);
menu The identifier of the menu to make the current menu. Description
glutSetMenu sets the current menu; glutGetMenu returns the identifier of the current menu. If no menus exist or the previous current menu was destroyed, glutGetMenu returns zero.
6.3 glutDestroyMenu
glutDestroyMenu destroys the specified menu.
Usage
void glutDestroyMenu(int menu); menu The identifier of the menu to destroy.
Description
glutDestroyMenu destroys the specified menu by menu. If menu was the current menu, the current menu becomes invalid and glutGetMenu will return zero.
When a menu is destroyed, this has no effect on any sub-menus for which the destroyed menu has triggers. Sub-menu triggers are by name, not reference.
6.4 glutAddMenuEntry
glutAddMenuEntry adds a menu entry to the bottom of the current menu.
Usage
void glutAddMenuEntry(char *name, int value);
name ASCII character string to display in the menu entry.
value Value to return to the menu’s callback function if the menu entry is selected.
18 6. MENU MANAGEMENT
Description
glutAddMenuEntry adds a menu entry to the bottom of the current menu. The string name will be displayed for the newly added menu entry. If the menu entry is selected by the user, the menu’s callback will be called passing value as the callback’s parameter.
6.5 glutAddSubMenu
glutAddSubMenu adds a sub-menu trigger to the bottom of the current menu. Usage
void glutAddSubMenu(char *name, int menu);
name ASCII character string to display in the menu item from which to cascade the sub-menu.
menu Identifier of the menu to cascade from this sub-menu menu item. Description
glutAddSubMenu adds a sub-menu trigger to the bottom of the current menu. The string name will be dis- played for the newly added sub-menu trigger. If the sub-menu trigger is entered, the sub-menu numbered menu will be cascaded, allowing sub-menu menu items to be selected.
6.6 glutChangeToMenuEntry
glutChangeToMenuEntry changes the specified menu item in the current menu into a menu entry. Usage
void glutChangeToMenuEntry(int entry, char *name, int value);
entry Index into the menu items of the current menu (1 is the topmost menu item). name ASCII character string to display in the menu entry.
value Value to return to the menu’s callback function if the menu entry is selected.
Description
glutChangeToMenuEntry changes the specified menu entry in the current menu into a menu entry. The entry parameter determines which menu item should be changed, with one being the topmost item. entry must be between 1 and glutGet(GLUT MENU NUM ITEMS) inclusive. The menu item to change does not have to be a menu entry already. The string name will be displayed for the newly changed menu entry. The value will be returned to the menu’s callback if this menu entry is selected.
6.7 glutChangeToSubMenu
glutChangeToSubMenu changes the specified menu item in the current menu into a sub-menu trigger. Usage
void glutChangeToSubMenu(int entry, char *name, int menu);
entry Index into the menu items of the current menu (1 is the topmost menu item). name ASCII character string to display in the menu item to cascade the sub-menu from. menu Identifier of the menu to cascade from this sub-menu menu item.
6.8 glutRemoveMenuItem 19
Description
glutChangeToSubMenu changes the specified menu item in the current menu into a sub-menu trigger. The entry parameter determines which menu item should be changed, with one being the topmost item. entry must be between 1 and glutGet(GLUT MENU NUM ITEMS) inclusive. The menu item to change does not have to be a sub-menu trigger already. The string name will be displayed for the newly changed sub-menu trigger. The menu identifier names the sub-menu to cascade from the newly added sub-menu trigger.
6.8 glutRemoveMenuItem
glutRemoveMenuItem remove the specified menu item.
Usage
void glutRemoveMenuItem(int entry);
entry Index into the menu items of the current menu (1 is the topmost menu item).
Description
glutRemoveMenuItem remove the entry menu item regardless of whether it is a menu entry or sub-menu trigger. entry must be between 1 and glutGet(GLUT MENU NUM ITEMS) inclusive. Menu items below the removed menu item are renumbered.
6.9 glutAttachMenu, glutDetachMenu
glutAttachMenu attaches a mouse button for the current window to the identifier of the current menu; glutDetachMenu detaches an attached mouse button from the current window.
Usage
void glutAttachMenu(int button); void glutDetachMenu(int button);
button The button to attach a menu or detach a menu.
Description
glutAttachMenu attaches a mouse button for the current window to the identifier of the current menu; glutDetachMenu detaches an attached mouse button from the current window. By attaching a menu identi- fier to a button, the named menu will be popped up when the user presses the specified button. button should be one of GLUT LEFT BUTTON, GLUT MIDDLE BUTTON, and GLUT RIGHT BUTTON. Note that the menu is attached to the button by identifier, not by reference.
7 Callback Registration
GLUT supports a number of callbacks to respond to events. There are three types of callbacks: window, menu, and global. Window callbacks indicate when to redisplay or reshape a window, when the visibility of the window changes, and when input is available for the window. The menu callback is set by the glutCreateMenu call described already. The global callbacks manage the passing of time and menu usage. The calling order of callbacks between different windows is undefined.
Callbacks for input events should be delivered to the window the event occurs in. Events should not prop- agate to parent windows.
20 7. CALLBACK REGISTRATION
X Implementation Notes
The X GLUT implementation uses the X Input extension [13, 14] to support sophisticated input devices: Space- ball, dial & button box, and digitizing tablet. Because the X Input extension does not mandate how particular types of devices are advertised through the extension, it is possible GLUT for X may not correctly support in- put devices that would otherwise be of the correct type. The X GLUT implementation will support the Silicon Graphics Spaceball, dial & button box, and digitizing tablet as advertised through the X Input extension.
7.1 glutDisplayFunc
glutDisplayFunc sets the display callback for the current window. Usage
void glutDisplayFunc(void (*func)(void)); func The new display callback function.
Description
glutDisplayFunc sets the display callback for the current window. When GLUT determines that the nor- mal plane for the window needs to be redisplayed, the display callback for the window is called. Before the callback, the current window is set to the window needing to be redisplayed and (if no overlay display callback is registered) the layer in use is set to the normal plane. The display callback is called with no parameters. The entire normal plane region should be redisplayed in response to the callback (this includes ancillary buffers if your program depends on their state).
GLUT determines when the display callback should be triggered based on the window’s redisplay state. The redisplay state for a window can be either set explicitly by calling glutPostRedisplay or implicitly as the result of window damage reported by the window system. Multiple posted redisplays for a window are coalesced by GLUT to minimize the number of display callbacks called.
When an overlay is established for a window, but there is no overlay display callback registered, the display callback is used for redisplaying both the overlay and normal plane (that is, it will be called if either the redisplay state or overlay redisplay state is set). In this case, the layer in use is not implicitly changed on entry to the display callback.
See glutOverlayDisplayFunc to understand how distinct callbacks for the overlay and normal plane of a window may be established.
When a window is created, no display callback exists for the window. It is the responsibility of the pro- grammer to install a display callback for the window before the window is shown. A display callback must be registered for any window that is shown. If a window becomes displayed without a display callback being reg- istered, a fatal error occurs. Passing NULL to glutDisplayFunc is illegal as of GLUT 3.0; there is no way to “deregister” a display callback (though another callback routine can always be registered).
Upon return from the display callback, the normal damaged state of the window (returned by calling glutLayerGet(GLUT NORMAL DAMAGED) is cleared. If there is no overlay display callback registered the overlay damaged state of the window (returned by calling glutLayerGet(GLUT OVERLAY DAMAGED) is also cleared.
7.2 glutOverlayDisplayFunc
glutOverlayDisplayFunc sets the overlay display callback for the current window. Usage
void glutOverlayDisplayFunc(void (*func)(void)); func The new overlay display callback function.
7.3 glutReshapeFunc 21
Description
glutDisplayFunc sets the overlay display callback for the current window. The overlay display callback is functionally the same as the window’s display callback except that the overlay display callback is used to redisplay the window’s overlay.
When GLUT determines that the overlay plane for the window needs to be redisplayed, the overlay display callback for the window is called. Before the callback, the current window is set to the window needing to be redisplayed and the layer in use is set to the overlay. The overlay display callback is called with no parameters. The entire overlay region should be redisplayed in response to the callback (this includes ancillary buffers if your program depends on their state).
GLUT determines when the overlay display callback should be triggered based on the window’s over- lay redisplay state. The overlay redisplay state for a window can be either set explicitly by calling glutPostOverlayRedisplay or implicitly as the result of window damage reported by the window sys- tem. Multiple posted overlay redisplays for a window are coalesced by GLUT to minimize the number of over- lay display callbacks called.
Upon return from the overlay display callback, the overlay damaged state of the window (returned by calling glutLayerGet(GLUT OVERLAY DAMAGED) is cleared.
The overlay display callback can be deregistered by passing NULL to glutOverlayDisplayFunc. The overlay display callback is initially NULL when an overlay is established. See glutDisplayFunc to under- stand how the display callback alone is used if an overlay display callback is not registered.
7.3 glutReshapeFunc
glutReshapeFunc sets the reshape callback for the current window. Usage
void glutReshapeFunc(void (*func)(int width, int height)); func The new reshape callback function.
Description
glutReshapeFunc sets the reshape callback for the current window. The reshape callback is triggered when a window is reshaped. A reshape callback is also triggered immediately before a window’s first display callback after a window is created or whenever an overlay for the window is established. The width and height parameters of the callback specify the new window size in pixels. Before the callback, the current window is set to the window that has been reshaped.
If a reshape callback is not registered for a window or NULL is passed to glutReshapeFunc (to deregister a previously registered callback), the default reshape callback is used. This default callback will simply call glViewport(0,0,width,height) on the normal plane (and on the overlay if one exists).
If an overlay is established for the window, a single reshape callback is generated. It is the callback’s respon- sibility to update both the normal plane and overlay for the window (changing the layer in use as necessary).
When a top-level window is reshaped, subwindows are not reshaped. It is up to the GLUT program to man- age the size and positions of subwindows within a top-level window. Still, reshape callbacks will be triggered for subwindows when their size is changed using glutReshapeWindow.
7.4 glutKeyboardFunc
glutKeyboardFunc sets the keyboard callback for the current window. Usage
void glutKeyboardFunc(void (*func)(unsigned char key, int x, int y));
22 7. CALLBACK REGISTRATION func The new keyboard callback function.
Description
glutKeyboardFunc sets the keyboard callback for the current window. When a user types into the window, each key press generating an ASCII character will generate a keyboard callback. The key callback parameter is the generated ASCII character. The state of modifier keys such as Shift cannot be determined directly; their only effect will be on the returned ASCII data. The x and y callback parameters indicate the mouse location in window relative coordinates when the key was pressed. When a new window is created, no keyboard callback is initially registered, and ASCII key strokes in the window are ignored. Passing NULL to glutKeyboardFunc disables the generation of keyboard callbacks.
During a keyboard callback, glutGetModifiers may be called to determine the state of modifier keys when the keystroke generating the callback occurred.
Also, see glutSpecialFunc for a means to detect non-ASCII key strokes.
7.5 glutMouseFunc
glutMouseFunc sets the mouse callback for the current window.
Usage
void glutMouseFunc(void (*func)(int button, int state, int x, int y));
func The new mouse callback function.
Description
glutMouseFunc sets the mouse callback for the current window. When a user presses and releases mouse buttons in the window, each press and each release generates a mouse callback. The button parameter is one of GLUT LEFT BUTTON, GLUT MIDDLE BUTTON, or GLUT RIGHT BUTTON. For systems with only two mouse buttons, it may not be possible to generate GLUT MIDDLE BUTTON callback. For systems with a single mouse button, it may be possible to generate only a GLUT LEFT BUTTON callback. The state parameter is either GLUT UP or GLUT DOWN indicating whether the callback was due to a release or press respectively. The x and y callback parameters indicate the window relative coordinates when the mouse button state changed. If a GLUT DOWN callback for a specific button is triggered, the program can assume a GLUT UP callback for the same button will be generated (assuming the window still has a mouse callback registered) when the mouse button is released even if the mouse has moved outside the window.
If a menu is attached to a button for a window, mouse callbacks will not be generated for that button.
During a mouse callback, glutGetModifiers may be called to determine the state of modifier keys when the mouse event generating the callback occurred.
Passing NULL to glutMouseFunc disables the generation of mouse callbacks.
7.6 glutMotionFunc, glutPassiveMotionFunc
glutMotionFunc and glutPassiveMotionFunc set the motion and passive motion callbacks respec- tively for the current window.
Usage
void glutMotionFunc(void (*func)(int x, int y));
void glutPassiveMotionFunc(void (*func)(int x, int y));
func The new motion or passive motion callback function.
7.7 glutVisibilityFunc 23
Description
glutMotionFunc and glutPassiveMotionFunc set the motion and passive motion callback respec- tively for the current window. The motion callback for a window is called when the mouse moves within the window while one or more mouse buttons are pressed. The passive motion callback for a window is called when the mouse moves within the window while no mouse buttons are pressed.
The x and y callback parameters indicate the mouse location in window relative coordinates.
Passing NULL to glutMotionFunc or glutPassiveMotionFunc disables the generation of the mouse or passive motion callback respectively.
7.7 glutVisibilityFunc
glutVisibilityFunc sets the visibility callback for the current window. Usage
void glutVisibilityFunc(void (*func)(int state)); func The new visibility callback function.
Description
glutVisibilityFunc sets the visibility callback for the current window.
for a window is called when the visibility of a window changes. The state callback parameter is either GLUT NOT VISIBLE or GLUT VISIBLE depending on the current visibility of the window. GLUT VISIBLE does not distinguish a window being totally versus partially visible. GLUT NOT VISIBLE means no part of the window is visible, i.e., until the window’s visibility changes, all further rendering to the window is discarded.
GLUT considers a window visible if any pixel of the window is visible or any pixel of any descendant win- dow is visible on the screen.
Passing NULL to glutVisibilityFunc disables the generation of the visibility callback.
If the visibility callback for a window is disabled and later re-enabled, the visibility status of the window is undefined; any change in window visibility will be reported, that is if you disable a visibility callback and re-enable the callback, you are guaranteed the next visibility change will be reported.
7.8 glutEntryFunc
glutEntryFunc sets the mouse enter/leave callback for the current window. Usage
void glutEntryFunc(void (*func)(int state)); func The new entry callback function.
Description
glutEntryFunc sets the mouse enter/leave callback for the current window. The state callback parameter is either GLUT LEFT or GLUT ENTERED depending on if the mouse pointer has last left or entered the window.
Passing NULL to glutEntryFunc disables the generation of the mouse enter/leave callback. Some window systems may not generate accurate enter/leave callbacks.
X Implementation Notes
The visibility callback
An X implementation of GLUT should generate accurate enter/leave callbacks.
24 7. CALLBACK REGISTRATION
7.9 glutSpecialFunc
glutSpecialFunc sets the special keyboard callback for the current window. Usage
void glutSpecialFunc(void (*func)(int key, int x, int y)); func The new special callback function.
Description
glutSpecialFunc sets the special keyboard callback for the current window. The special keyboard call- back is triggered when keyboard function or directional keys are pressed. The key callback parameter is a GLUT KEY * constant for the special key pressed. The x and y callback parameters indicate the mouse in win- dow relative coordinates when the key was pressed. When a new window is created, no special callback is initially registered and special key strokes in the window are ignored. Passing NULL to glutSpecialFunc disables the generation of special callbacks.
During a special callback, glutGetModifiers may be called to determine the state of modifier keys when the keystroke generating the callback occurred.
An implementation should do its best to provide ways to generate all the GLUT KEY * special keys. The available GLUT KEY * values are:
GLUT KEY F1 F1 function key.
GLUT KEY F2 F2 function key.
GLUT KEY F3 F3 function key.
GLUT KEY F4 F4 function key.
GLUT KEY F5 F5 function key.
GLUT KEY F6 F6 function key.
GLUT KEY F7 F7 function key.
GLUT KEY F8 F8 function key.
GLUT KEY F9 F9 function key.
GLUT KEY F10 F10 function key.
GLUT KEY F11 F11 function key.
GLUT KEY F12 F12 function key.
GLUT KEY LEFT Left directional key.
GLUT KEY UP Up directional key.
GLUT KEY RIGHT Right directional key.
GLUT KEY DOWN Down directional key.
GLUT KEY PAGE UP Page up directional key. GLUT KEY PAGE DOWN Page down directional key. GLUT KEY HOME Home directional key.
GLUT KEY END End directional key. GLUT KEY INSERT Inset directional key.
Note that the escape, backspace, and delete keys are generated as an ASCII character.
7.10 glutSpaceballMotionFunc
glutSpaceballMotionFunc sets the Spaceball motion callback for the current window.
7.11 glutSpaceballRotateFunc 25
Usage
void glutSpaceballMotionFunc(void (*func)(int x, int y, int z)); func The new spaceball motion callback function.
Description
glutSpaceballMotionFunc sets the Spaceball motion callback for the current window. The Spaceball motion callback for a window is called when the window has Spaceball input focus (normally, when the mouse is in the window) and the user generates Spaceball translations. The x, y, and z callback parameters indicate the translations along the X, Y, and Z axes. The callback parameters are normalized to be within the range of -1000 to 1000 inclusive.
Registering a Spaceball motion callback when a Spaceball device is not available has no effect and is not an error. In this case, no Spaceball motion callbacks will be generated.
Passing NULL to glutSpaceballMotionFunc disables the generation of Spaceball motion callbacks. When a new window is created, no Spaceball motion callback is initially registered.
7.11 glutSpaceballRotateFunc
glutSpaceballRotateFunc sets the Spaceball rotation callback for the current window. Usage
void glutSpaceballRotateFunc(void (*func)(int x, int y, int z)); func The new spaceball rotate callback function.
Description
glutSpaceballRotateFunc sets the Spaceball rotate callback for the current window. The Spaceball ro- tate callback for a window is called when the window has Spaceball input focus (normally, when the mouse is in the window) and the user generates Spaceball rotations. The x, y, and z callback parameters indicate the rotation along the X, Y, and Z axes. The callback parameters are normalized to be within the range of -1800 to 1800 inclusive.
Registering a Spaceball rotate callback when a Spaceball device is not available is ineffectual and not an error. In this case, no Spaceball rotate callbacks will be generated.
Passing NULL to glutSpaceballRotateFunc disables the generation of Spaceball rotate callbacks. When a new window is created, no Spaceball rotate callback is initially registered.
7.12 glutSpaceballButtonFunc
glutSpaceballButtonFunc sets the Spaceball button callback for the current window. Usage
void glutSpaceballButtonFunc(void (*func)(int button, int state)); func The new spaceball button callback function.
Description
glutSpaceballButtonFunc sets the Spaceball button callback for the current window. The Space- ball button callback for a window is called when the window has Spaceball input focus (normally, when the mouse is in the window) and the user generates Spaceball button presses. The button parameter will be the button number (starting at one). The number of available Spaceball buttons can be determined with
26 7. CALLBACK REGISTRATION
glutDeviceGet(GLUT NUM SPACEBALL BUTTONS). The state is either GLUT UP or GLUT DOWN in- dicating whether the callback was due to a release or press respectively.
Registering a Spaceball button callback when a Spaceball device is not available is ineffectual and not an error. In this case, no Spaceball button callbacks will be generated.
Passing NULL to glutSpaceballButtonFunc disables the generation of Spaceball button callbacks. When a new window is created, no Spaceball button callback is initially registered.
7.13 glutButtonBoxFunc
glutButtonBoxFunc sets the dial & button box button callback for the current window.
Usage
void glutButtonBoxFunc(void (*func)(int button, int state)); func The new button box callback function.
Description
glutButtonBoxFunc sets the dial & button box button callback for the current window. The dial & but- ton box button callback for a window is called when the window has dial & button box input focus (normally, when the mouse is in the window) and the user generates dial & button box button presses. The button pa- rameter will be the button number (starting at one). The number of available dial & button box buttons can be determined with glutDeviceGet(GLUT NUM BUTTON BOX BUTTONS). The state is either GLUT UP or GLUT DOWN indicating whether the callback was due to a release or press respectively.
Registering a dial & button box button callback when a dial & button box device is not available is ineffectual and not an error. In this case, no dial & button box button callbacks will be generated.
Passing NULL to glutButtonBoxFunc disables the generation of dial & button box button callbacks. When a new window is created, no dial & button box button callback is initially registered.
7.14 glutDialsFunc
glutDialsFunc sets the dial & button box dials callback for the current window.
Usage
void glutDialsFunc(void (*func)(int dial, int value)); func The new dials callback function.
Description
glutDialsFunc sets the dial & button box dials callback for the current window. The dial & button box di- als callback for a window is called when the window has dial & button box input focus (normally, when the mouse is in the window) and the user generates dial & button box dial changes. The dial parameter will be the dial number (starting at one). The number of available dial & button box dials can be determined with glutDeviceGet(GLUT NUM DIALS). The value measures the absolute rotation in degrees. Dial values do not “roll over” with each complete rotation but continue to accumulate degrees (until the int dial value overflows).
Registering a dial & button box dials callback when a dial & button box device is not available is ineffectual and not an error. In this case, no dial & button box dials callbacks will be generated.
Passing NULL to glutDialsFunc disables the generation of dial & button box dials callbacks. When a new window is created, no dial & button box dials callback is initially registered.
7.15 glutTabletMotionFunc 27
7.15 glutTabletMotionFunc
glutTabletMotionFunc sets the special keyboard callback for the current window. Usage
void glutTabletMotionFunc(void (*func)(int x, int y)); func The new tablet motion callback function.
Description
glutTabletMotionFunc sets the tablet motion callback for the current window. The tablet motion callback for a window is called when the window has tablet input focus (normally, when the mouse is in the window) and the user generates tablet motion. The x and y callback parameters indicate the absolute position of the tablet “puck” on the tablet. The callback parameters are normalized to be within the range of 0 to 2000 inclusive.
Registering a tablet motion callback when a tablet device is not available is ineffectual and not an error. In this case, no tablet motion callbacks will be generated.
Passing NULL to glutTabletMotionFunc disables the generation of tablet motion callbacks. When a new window is created, no tablet motion callback is initially registered.
7.16 glutTabletButtonFunc
glutTabletButtonFunc sets the special keyboard callback for the current window. Usage
void glutTabletButtonFunc(void (*func)(int button, int state, int x, int y));
func The new tablet button callback function. Description
glutTabletButtonFunc sets the tablet button callback for the current window.
ton callback for a window is called when the window has tablet input focus (normally, when the mouse is in the window) and the user generates tablet button presses. The button parameter will be the button number (starting at one). The number of available tablet buttons can be determined with glutDeviceGet(GLUT NUM TABLET BUTTONS). The state is either GLUT UP or GLUT DOWN indi- cating whether the callback was due to a release or press respectively. The x and y callback parameters indicate the window relative coordinates when the tablet button state changed.
Registering a tablet button callback when a tablet device is not available is ineffectual and not an error. In this case, no tablet button callbacks will be generated.
Passing NULL to glutTabletButtonFunc disables the generation of tablet button callbacks. When a new window is created, no tablet button callback is initially registered.
7.17 glutMenuStatusFunc
glutMenuStatusFunc sets the global menu status callback. Usage
void glutMenuStatusFunc(void (*func)(int status, int x, int y)); void glutMenuStateFunc(void (*func)(int status));
The tablet but-
func The new menu status (or state) callback function.
28 7. CALLBACK REGISTRATION
Description
glutMenuStatusFunc sets the global menu status callback so a GLUT program can determine when a menu is in use or not. When a menu status callback is registered, it will be called with the value GLUT MENU IN USE for its value parameter when pop-up menus are in use by the user; and the callback will be called with the value GLUT MENU NOT IN USE for its status parameter when pop-up menus are no longer in use. The x and y parameters indicate the location in window coordinates of the button press that caused the menu to go into use, or the location where the menu was released (may be outside the window). The func parameter names the callback function. Other callbacks continue to operate (except mouse motion callbacks) when pop-up menus are in use so the menu status callback allows a program to suspend animation or other tasks when menus are in use. The cascading and unmapping of sub-menus from an initial pop-up menu does not generate menu status callbacks. There is a single menu status callback for GLUT.
When the menu status callback is called, the current menu will be set to the initial pop-up menu in both the GLUTMENUINUSEandGLUTMENUNOTINUSEcases. Thecurrentwindowwillbesettothewindow from which the initial menu was popped up from, also in both cases.
Passing NULL to glutMenuStatusFunc disables the generation of the menu status callback.
glutMenuStateFunc is a deprecated version of the glutMenuStatusFunc routine. The only dif- ference is glutMenuStateFunc callback prototype does not deliver the two additional x and y coordinates.
7.18 glutIdleFunc
glutIdleFunc sets the global idle callback. Usage
void glutIdleFunc(void (*func)(void)); func The new idle callback function.
Description
glutIdleFunc sets the global idle callback to be func so a GLUT program can perform background pro- cessing tasks or continuous animation when window system events are not being received. If enabled, the idle callback is continuously called when events are not being received. The callback routine has no parameters. The current window and current menu will not be changed before the idle callback. Programs with multiple windows and/or menus should explicitly set the current window and/or current menu and not rely on its current setting.
The amount of computation and rendering done in an idle callback should be minimized to avoid affecting the program’s interactive response. In general, not more than a single frame of rendering should be done in an idle callback.
Passing NULL to glutIdleFunc disables the generation of the idle callback.
7.19 glutTimerFunc
glutTimerFunc registers a timer callback to be triggered in a specified number of milliseconds. Usage
void glutTimerFunc(unsigned int msecs,
void (*func)(int value), value);
msecs Number of milliseconds to pass before calling the callback. func The timer callback function.
value Integer value to pass to the timer callback.
Description
glutTimerFunc registers the timer callback func to be triggered in at least msecs milliseconds. The value parameter to the timer callback will be the value of the value parameter to glutTimerFunc. Mul- tiple timer callbacks at same or differing times may be registered simultaneously.
The number of milliseconds is a lower bound on the time before the callback is generated. GLUT attempts to deliver the timer callback as soon as possible after the expiration of the callback’s time interval.
There is no support for canceling a registered callback. Instead, ignore a callback based on its value pa- rameter when it is triggered.
8 Color Index Colormap Management
OpenGL supports both RGBA and color index rendering. The RGBA mode is generally preferable to color index because more OpenGL rendering capabilities are available and color index mode requires the loading of colormap entries.
The GLUT color index routines are used to write and read entries in a window’s color index colormap. Every GLUT color index window has its own logical color index colormap. The size of a window’s colormap can be determined by calling glutGet(GLUT WINDOW COLORMAP SIZE).
GLUT color index windows within a program can attempt to share colormap resources by copying a sin- gle color index colormap to multiple windows using glutCopyColormap. If possible GLUT will attempt to share the actual colormap. While copying colormaps using glutCopyColormap can potentially allow sharing of physical colormap resources, logically each window has its own colormap. So changing a copied colormap of a window will force the duplication of the colormap. For this reason, color index programs should generally load a single color index colormap, copy it to all color index windows within the program, and then not modify any colormap cells.
Use of multiple colormaps is likely to result in colormap installation problems where some windows are displayed with an incorrect colormap due to limitations on colormap resources.
8.1 glutSetColor
glutSetColor sets the color of a colormap entry in the layer of use for the current window. Usage
void glutSetColor(int cell,
GLfloat red, GLfloat green, GLfloat blue);
cell Color cell index (starting at zero).
red Red intensity (clamped between 0.0 and 1.0 inclusive). green Green intensity (clamped between 0.0 and 1.0 inclusive). blue Blue intensity (clamped between 0.0 and 1.0 inclusive).
Description
Sets the cell color index colormap entry of the current window’s logical colormap for the layer in use with the color specified by red, green, and blue. The layer in use of the current window should be a color index window. cell should be zero or greater and less than the total number of colormap entries for the window. If the layer in use’s colormap was copied by reference, a glutSetColor call will force the duplication of the colormap. Do not attempt to set the color of an overlay’s transparent index.
8.2 glutGetColor
glutGetColor retrieves a red, green, or blue component for a given color index colormap entry for the layer in use’s logical colormap for the current window.
29
30 9.
STATE RETRIEVAL
Usage
GLfloat glutGetColor(int cell, int component); cell Color cell index (starting at zero).
component One of GLUT RED, GLUT GREEN, or GLUT BLUE. Description
glutGetColor retrieves a red, green, or blue component for a given color index colormap entry for the cur- rent window’s logical colormap. The current window should be a color index window. cell should be zero or greater and less than the total number of colormap entries for the window. For valid color indices, the value returned is a floating point value between 0.0 and 1.0 inclusive. glutGetColor will return -1.0 if the color index specified is an overlay’s transparent index, less than zero, or greater or equal to the value returned by glutGet(GLUT WINDOW COLORMAP SIZE), that is if the color index is transparent or outside the valid range of color indices.
8.3 glutCopyColormap
glutCopyColormap copies the logical colormap for the layer in use from a specified window to the current window.
Usage
void glutCopyColormap(int win);
win The identifier of the window to copy the logical colormap from.
Description
glutCopyColormap copies (lazily if possible to promote sharing) the logical colormap from a specified win- dow to the current window’s layer in use. The copy will be from the normal plane to the normal plane; or from the overlay to the overlay (never across different layers). Once a colormap has been copied, avoid setting cells in the colormap with glutSetColor since that will force an actual copy of the colormap if it was previously copied by reference. glutCopyColormap should only be called when both the current window and the win window are color index windows.
9 State Retrieval
GLUT maintains a considerable amount of programmer visible state. Some (but not all) of this state may be directly retrieved.
9.1 glutGet
glutGet retrieves simple GLUT state represented by integers. Usage
int glutGet(GLenum state);
state Name of state to retrieve.
GLUT WINDOW X X location in pixels (relative to the screen origin) of the current window. GLUT WINDOW Y Y location in pixels (relative to the screen origin) of the current window. GLUT WINDOW WIDTH Width in pixels of the current window.
9.1 glutGet 31 GLUT WINDOW HEIGHT Height in pixels of the current window.
GLUT WINDOW BUFFER SIZE Total number of bits for current window’s color buffer. For an RGBA window, this is the sum of GLUT WINDOW RED SIZE, GLUT WINDOW GREEN SIZE, GLUT WINDOW BLUE SIZE, and GLUT WINDOW ALPHA SIZE. For color index windows, this is the number of bits for color indices.
GLUT WINDOW STENCIL SIZE Number of bits in the current window’s stencil buffer.
GLUT WINDOW DEPTH SIZE Number of bits in the current window’s depth buffer.
GLUT WINDOW RED SIZE Number of bits of red stored the current window’s color buffer. Zero if the window is color index.
GLUT WINDOW GREEN SIZE Number of bits of green stored the current window’s color buffer. Zero if the window is color index.
GLUT WINDOW BLUE SIZE Number of bits of blue stored the current window’s color buffer. Zero if the win- dow is color index.
GLUT WINDOW ALPHA SIZE Number of bits of alpha stored the current window’s color buffer. Zero if the window is color index.
GLUT WINDOW ACCUM RED SIZE Number of bits of red stored in the current window’s accumulation buffer. Zero if the window is color index.
GLUT WINDOW ACCUM GREEN SIZE Number of bits of green stored in the current window’s accumulation buffer. Zero if the window is color index.
GLUT WINDOW ACCUM BLUE SIZE Number of bits of blue stored in the current window’s accumulation buffer. Zero if the window is color index.
GLUT WINDOW ACCUM ALPHA SIZE Number of bits of alpha stored in the current window’s accumulation buffer. Zero if the window is color index.
GLUT WINDOW DOUBLEBUFFER One if the current window is double buffered, zero otherwise.
GLUT WINDOW RGBA One if the current window is RGBA mode, zero otherwise (i.e., color index).
GLUT WINDOW PARENT The window number of the current window’s parent; zero if the window is a top-level window.
GLUT WINDOW NUM CHILDREN The number of subwindows the current window has (not counting children of children).
GLUT WINDOW COLORMAP SIZE Size of current window’s color index colormap; zero for RGBA color model windows.
GLUT WINDOW NUM SAMPLES Number of samples for multisampling for the current window.
GLUT WINDOW STEREO One if the current window is stereo, zero otherwise.
GLUT WINDOW CURSOR Current cursor for the current window.
GLUT SCREEN WIDTH Width of the screen in pixels. Zero indicates the width is unknown or not available.
GLUT SCREEN HEIGHT Height of the screen in pixels. Zero indicates the height is unknown or not available.
GLUT SCREEN WIDTH MM Width of the screen in millimeters. Zero indicates the width is unknown or not available.
GLUT SCREEN HEIGHT MM Height of the screen in millimeters. Zero indicates the height is unknown or not available.
GLUT MENU NUM ITEMS Number of menu items in the current menu.
GLUT DISPLAY MODE POSSIBLE Whether the current display mode is supported or not. GLUT INIT DISPLAY MODE The initial display mode bit mask.
GLUT INIT WINDOW X The X value of the initial window position.
GLUT INIT WINDOW Y The Y value of the initial window position.
32
9. STATE RETRIEVAL
GLUT INIT WINDOW WIDTH The width value of the initial window size.
GLUT INIT WINDOW HEIGHT The height value of the initial window size.
GLUT ELAPSED TIME Number of milliseconds since glutInit glutGet(GLUT ELAPSED TIME)).
Description
called (or first call to
glutGet retrieves simple GLUT state represented by integers. The state parameter determines what type of state to return. Window capability state is returned for the layer in use. GLUT state names beginning with GLUT WINDOW return state for the current window. GLUT state names beginning with GLUT MENU return state for the current menu. Other GLUT state names return global state. Requesting state for an invalid GLUT state name returns negative one.
9.2 glutLayerGet
glutLayerGet retrieves GLUT state pertaining to the layers of the current window. Usage
int glutLayerGet(GLenum info);
info Name of device information to retrieve.
GLUT OVERLAY POSSIBLE Whether an overlay could be established for the current window given the cur- rent initial display mode. If false, glutEstablishOverlay will fail with a fatal error if called.
GLUT LAYER IN USE Either GLUT NORMAL or GLUT OVERLAY depending on whether the normal plane or overlay is the layer in use.
GLUT HAS OVERLAY If the current window has an overlay established.
GLUT TRANSPARENT INDEX The transparent color index of the overlay of the current window; negative one
is returned if no overlay is in use.
GLUT NORMAL DAMAGED True if the normal plane of the current window has damaged (by window system activity) since the last display callback was triggered. Calling glutPostRedisplay will not set this true.
GLUTOVERLAYDAMAGEDTrue if the overlay plane of the current window has damaged (by window system activity) since the last display callback was triggered. Calling glutPostRedisplay or glutPostOverlayRedisplay will not set this true. Negative one is returned if no overlay is in use.
Description
glutLayerGet retrieves GLUT layer information for the current window represented by integers. The info parameter determines what type of layer information to return.
9.3 glutDeviceGet
glutDeviceGet retrieves GLUT device information represented by integers. Usage
int glutDeviceGet(GLenum info);
info Name of device information to retrieve.
GLUT HAS KEYBOARD Non-zero if a keyboard is available; zero if not available. For most GLUT implemen- tations, a keyboard can be assumed.
9.4 glutGetModifiers 33
GLUT HAS MOUSE Non-zero if a mouse is available; zero if not available. For most GLUT implementations, a keyboard can be assumed.
GLUT HAS SPACEBALL Non-zero if a Spaceball is available; zero if not available.
GLUT HAS DIAL AND BUTTON BOX Non-zero if a dial & button box is available; zero if not available.
GLUT HAS TABLET Non-zero if a tablet is available; zero if not available.
GLUT NUM MOUSE BUTTONS Number of buttons supported by the mouse. If no mouse is supported, zero is returned.
GLUT NUM SPACEBALL BUTTONS Number of buttons supported by the Spaceball. If no Spaceball is sup- ported, zero is returned.
GLUT NUM BUTTON BOX BUTTONS Number of buttons supported by the dial & button box device. If no dials & button box device is supported, zero is returned.
GLUT NUM DIALS Number of dials supported by the dial & button box device. If no dials & button box device is supported, zero is returned.
GLUT NUM TABLET BUTTONS Number of buttons supported by the tablet. If no tablet is supported, zero is returned.
Description
glutDeviceGet retrieves GLUT device information represented by integers. The info parameter deter- mines what type of device information to return. Requesting device information for an invalid GLUT device information name returns negative one.
9.4 glutGetModifiers
glutGetModifiers returns the modifier key state when certain callbacks were generated. Usage
int glutGetModifiers(void);
GLUT ACTIVE SHIFT Set if the Shift modifier or Caps Lock is active. GLUT ACTIVE CTRL Set if the Ctrl modifier is active.
GLUT ACTIVE ALT Set if the Alt modifier is active.
Description
glutGetModifiers returns the modifier key state at the time the input event for a keyboard, special, or mouse callback is generated. This routine may only be called while a keyboard, special, or mouse callback is being handled. The window system is permitted to intercept window system defined modifier key strokes or mouse buttons, in which case, no GLUT callback will be generated. This interception will be independent of use of glutGetModifiers.
9.5 glutExtensionSupported
glutExtensionSupported helps to easily determine whether a given OpenGL extension is supported. Usage
int glutExtensionSupported(char *extension); extension Name of OpenGL extension.
34 10. FONT RENDERING
Description
glutExtensionSupported helps to easily determine whether a given OpenGL extension is supported or not. The extension parameter names the extension to query. The supported extensions can also be deter- mined with glGetString(GL EXTENSIONS), but glutExtensionSupported does the correct pars- ing of the returned string.
glutExtensionSupported returns non-zero if the extension is supported, zero if not supported. There must be a valid current window to call glutExtensionSupported. glutExtensionSupported only returns information about OpenGL extensions only. This
means window system dependent extensions (for example, GLX extensions) are not reported by glutExtensionSupported.
10 Font Rendering
GLUT supports two type of font rendering: stroke fonts, meaning each character is rendered as a set of line segments; and bitmap fonts, where each character is a bitmap generated with glBitmap. Stroke fonts have the advantage that because they are geometry, they can be arbitrarily scale and rendered. Bitmap fonts are less flexible since they are rendered as bitmaps but are usually faster than stroke fonts.
10.1 glutBitmapCharacter
glutBitmapCharacter renders a bitmap character using OpenGL. Usage
void glutBitmapCharacter(void *font, int character); font Bitmap font to use.
character Character to render (not confined to 8 bits). Description
Without using any display lists, glutBitmapCharacter renders the character in the named bitmap font. The available fonts are:
GLUT BITMAP 8 BY 13 A fixed width font with every character fitting in an 8 by 13 pixel rectangle. The exact bitmaps to be used is defined by the standard X glyph bitmaps for the X font named:
-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal–13-120-75-75-C-80-iso8859-1
GLUT BITMAP 9 BY 15 A fixed width font with every character fitting in an 9 by 15 pixel rectangle. The
exact bitmaps to be used is defined by the standard X glyph bitmaps for the X font named:
-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal–15-140-75-75-C-90-iso8859-1
GLUT BITMAP TIMES ROMAN 10 A 10-point proportional spaced Times Roman font. The exact bitmaps to
be used is defined by the standard X glyph bitmaps for the X font named:
-adobe-times-medium-r-normal–10-100-75-75-p-54-iso8859-1
GLUT BITMAP TIMES ROMAN 24 A 24-point proportional spaced Times Roman font. The exact bitmaps to
be used is defined by the standard X glyph bitmaps for the X font named:
-adobe-times-medium-r-normal–24-240-75-75-p-124-iso8859-1
GLUT BITMAP HELVETICA 10 A 10-point proportional spaced Helvetica font. The exact bitmaps to be used
is defined by the standard X glyph bitmaps for the X font named:
-adobe-helvetica-medium-r-normal–10-100-75-75-p-56-iso8859-1
10.2 glutBitmapWidth 35
GLUT BITMAP HELVETICA 12 A 12-point proportional spaced Helvetica font. The exact bitmaps to be used is defined by the standard X glyph bitmaps for the X font named:
-adobe-helvetica-medium-r-normal–12-120-75-75-p-67-iso8859-1
GLUT BITMAP HELVETICA 18 A 18-point proportional spaced Helvetica font. The exact bitmaps to be used
is defined by the standard X glyph bitmaps for the X font named:
-adobe-helvetica-medium-r-normal–18-180-75-75-p-98-iso8859-1
Rendering a nonexistent character has no effect. glutBitmapCharacter automatically sets the OpenGL unpack pixel storage modes it needs appropriately and saves and restores the previous modes before returning. The generated call to glBitmap will adjust the current raster position based on the width of the character.
10.2 glutBitmapWidth
glutBitmapWidth returns the width of a bitmap character.
Usage
int glutBitmapWidth(GLUTbitmapFont font, int character); font Bitmap font to use.
character Character to return width of (not confined to 8 bits).
Description
glutBitmapWidth returns the width in pixels of a bitmap character in a supported bitmap font. While the width of characters in a font may vary (though fixed width fonts do not vary), the maximum height characteristics of a particular font are fixed.
10.3 glutStrokeCharacter
glutStrokeCharacter renders a stroke character using OpenGL.
Usage
void glutStrokeCharacter(void *font, int character); font Stroke font to use.
character Character to render (not confined to 8 bits).
Description
Without using any display lists, glutStrokeCharacter renders the character in the named stroke font. The available fonts are:
GLUT STROKE ROMAN A proportionally spaced Roman Simplex font for ASCII characters 32 through 127. The maximum top character in the font is 119.05 units; the bottom descends 33.33 units.
GLUT STROKE MONO ROMAN A mono-spaced spaced Roman Simplex font (same characters as GLUTSTROKEROMAN) for ASCII characters 32 through 127. The maximum top character in the font is 119.05 units; the bottom descends 33.33 units. Each character is 104.76 units wide.
Rendering a nonexistent character has no effect. A glTranslatef is used to translate the current model view matrix to advance the width of the character.
36 11. GEOMETRIC OBJECT RENDERING
10.4 glutStrokeWidth
glutStrokeWidth returns the width of a stroke character.
Usage
int glutStrokeWidth(GLUTstrokeFont font, int character); font Stroke font to use.
character Character to return width of (not confined to 8 bits).
Description
glutStrokeWidth returns the width in pixels of a stroke character in a supported stroke font. While the width of characters in a font may vary (though fixed width fonts do not vary), the maximum height characteristics of a particular font are fixed.
11 Geometric Object Rendering
GLUT includes a number of routines for generating easily recognizable 3D geometric objects. These routines reflect functionality available in the aux toolkit described in the OpenGL Programmer’s Guide
and are included in GLUT to allow the construction of simple GLUT programs that render recognizable objects. These routines can be implemented as pure OpenGL rendering routines. The routines do not generate display lists for the objects they create.
The routines generate normals appropriate for lighting but do not generate texture coordinates (except for the teapot).
11.1 glutSolidSphere, glutWireSphere
glutSolidSphere and glutWireSphere render a solid or wireframe sphere respectively.
Usage
void glutSolidSphere(GLdouble radius,
GLint slices, GLint stacks);
void glutWireSphere(GLdouble radius,
GLint slices, GLint stacks);
radius The radius of the sphere.
slices The number of subdivisions around the Z axis (similar to lines of longitude). stacks The number of subdivisions along the Z axis (similar to lines of latitude).
Description
Renders a sphere centered at the modeling coordinates origin of the specified radius. The sphere is subdivided around the Z axis into slices and along the Z axis into stacks.
11.2 glutSolidCube, glutWireCube
glutSolidCube and glutWireCube render a solid or wireframe cube respectively.
11.3 glutSolidCone, glutWireCone 37
Usage
void glutSolidCube(GLdouble size); void glutWireCube(GLdouble size);
size Length of each edge.
Description
glutSolidCube and glutWireCube render a solid or wireframe cube respectively. The cube is centered at the modeling coordinates origin with sides of length size.
11.3 glutSolidCone, glutWireCone
glutSolidCone and glutWireCone render a solid or wireframe cone respectively.
Usage
void glutSolidCone(GLdouble base, GLdouble height, GLint slices, GLint stacks);
void glutWireCone(GLdouble base, GLdouble height, GLint slices, GLint stacks);
base The radius of the base of the cone.
height The height of the cone.
slices The number of subdivisions around the Z axis. stacks The number of subdivisions along the Z axis.
Description
glutSolidCone and glutWireCone render a solid or wireframe cone respectively oriented along the Z axis. The base of the cone is placed at Z = 0, and the top at Z = height. The cone is subdivided around the Z axis into slices, and along the Z axis into stacks.
11.4 glutSolidTorus, glutWireTorus
glutSolidTorus and glutWireTorus render a solid or wireframe torus (doughnut) respectively.
Usage
void glutSolidTorus(GLdouble innerRadius, GLdouble outerRadius,
GLint nsides, GLint rings); void glutWireTorus(GLdouble innerRadius, GLdouble outerRadius,
GLint nsides, GLint rings);
innerRadius Inner radius of the torus. outerRadius Outer radius of the torus. nsides Number of sides for each radial section. rings Number of radial divisions for the torus.
38 11. GEOMETRIC OBJECT RENDERING
Description
glutSolidTorus and glutWireTorus render a solid or wireframe torus (doughnut) respectively centered at the modeling coordinates origin whose axis is aligned with the Z axis.
11.5 glutSolidDodecahedron, glutWireDodecahedron
glutSolidDodecahedron and glutWireDodecahedron render a solid or wireframe dodecahedron (12-sided regular solid) respectively.
Usage
void glutSolidDodecahedron(void);
void glutWireDodecahedron(void);
Description
glutSolidDodecahedron and glutWireDodecahedron render a solid or wireframe dodecahedron p
respectively centered at the modeling coordinates origin with a radius of .
11.6 glutSolidOctahedron, glutWireOctahedron
glutSolidOctahedron and glutWireOctahedron render a solid or wireframe octahedron (8-sided regular solid) respectively.
Usage
void glutSolidOctahedron(void);
void glutWireOctahedron(void);
Description
glutSolidOctahedron and glutWireOctahedron render a solid or wireframe octahedron respec- tively centered at the modeling coordinates origin with a radius of 1.0.
11.7 glutSolidTetrahedron, glutWireTetrahedron
glutSolidTetrahedron and glutWireTetrahedron render a solid or wireframe tetrahedron (4-sided regular solid) respectively.
Usage
void glutSolidTetrahedron(void);
void glutWireTetrahedron(void);
Description
glutSolidTetrahedron and glutWireTetrahedron render a solid or wireframe tetrahedron respec- p
tively centered at the modeling coordinates origin with a radius of .
11.8 glutSolidIcosahedron, glutWireIcosahedron
glutSolidIcosahedron and glutWireIcosahedron render a solid or wireframe icosahedron (20- sided regular solid) respectively.
11.9 glutSolidTeapot, glutWireTeapot 39
Usage
void glutSolidIcosahedron(void);
void glutWireIcosahedron(void);
Description
glutSolidIcosahedron and glutWireIcosahedron render a solid or wireframe icosahedron respec- tively. The icosahedron is centered at the modeling coordinates origin and has a radius of 1.0.
11.9 glutSolidTeapot, glutWireTeapot
glutSolidTeapot and glutWireTeapot render a solid or wireframe teapot respectively. Usage
void glutSolidTeapot(GLdouble size); void glutWireTeapot(GLdouble size);
size Relative size of the teapot.
Description
glutSolidTeapot and glutWireTeapot render a solid or wireframe teapot respectively. Both surface normals and texture coordinates for the teapot are generated. The teapot is generated with OpenGL evaluators.
12 Usage Advice
There are a number of points to keep in mind when writing GLUT programs. Some of these are strong recom- mendations, others simply hints and tips.
Do not change state that will affect the way a window will be drawn in a window’s display callback. Your display callbacks should be idempotent.
If you need to redisplay a window, instead of rendering in whatever callback you happen to be in, call glutPostRedisplay (or glutPostRedisplay for overlays). As a general rule, the only code that renders directly to the screen should be in called from display callbacks; other types of callbacks should not be rendering to the screen.
If you use an idle callback to control your animation, use the visibility callbacks to determine when the window is fully obscured or iconified to determine when not to waste processor time rendering.
Neither GLUT nor the window system automatically reshape sub-windows. If subwindows should be reshaped to reflect a reshaping of the top-level window, the GLUT program is responsible for doing this.
Avoid using color index mode if possible. The RGBA color model is more functional, and it is less likely to cause colormap swapping effects.
Do not call any GLUT routine that affects the current window or current menu if there is no current win- dow or current menu defined. This can be the case at initialization time (before any windows or menus have been created) or if your destroy the current window or current menu. GLUT implementations are not obliged to generate a warning because doing so would slow down the operation of every such routine to first make sure there was a current window or current menu.
Yes, the classic computer graphics teapot modeled by Martin Newell in 1975 [3].
40 12. USAGE ADVICE
For most callbacks, the current window and/or current menu is set appropriately at the time of the call- back. Timer and idle callbacks are exceptions. If your application uses multiple windows or menus, make sure you explicitly you set the current window or menu appropriately using glutSetWindow or glutSetMenu in the idle and timer callbacks.
If you register a single function as a callback routine for multiple windows, you can call glutGetWindow within the callback to determine what window generated the callback. Like- wise, glutGetMenu can be called to determine what menu.
By default, timer and idle callbacks may be called while a pop-up menu is active. On slow machines, slow rendering in an idle callback may compromise menu performance. Also, it may be desirable for motion to stop immediately when a menu is triggered. In this case, use the menu entry/exit callback set with glutMenuStateFunc to track the usage of pop-up menus.
Do not select for more input callbacks than you actually need. For example, if you do not need motion or passive motion callbacks, disable them by passing NULL to their callback register functions. Disabling input callbacks allows the GLUT implementation to limit the window system input events that must be processed.
Not every OpenGL implementation supports the same range of frame buffer capabilities, though minimum requirements for frame buffer capabilities do exist. If glutCreateWindow or glutCreateSubWindow are called with an initial display mode not supported by the OpenGL implementation, a fatal error will be generated with an explanatory message. To avoid this, glutGet(GLUTDISPLAYMODEPOSSIBLE) should be called to determine if the initial dis- play mode is supported by the OpenGL implementation.
The Backspace, Delete, and Escape keys generate ASCII characters, so detect these key presses with the glutKeyboardFunc callback, not with the glutSpecialFunc callback.
Keep in mind that when a window is damaged, you should assume all of the ancillary buffers are damaged and redraw them all.
Keep in mind that after a glutSwapBuffers, you should assume the state of the back buffer becomes undefined.
If not using glutSwapBuffers for double buffered animation, remember to use glFlush to make sure rendering requests are dispatched to the frame buffer. While many OpenGL implementations will automatically flush pending commands, this is specifically not mandated.
Remember that it is illegal to create or destroy menus or change, add, or remove menu items while a menu (and any cascaded sub-menus) are in use (that is, “popped up”). Use the menu status callback to know when to avoid menu manipulation.
It is more efficient to use glutHideOverlay and glutShowOverlay to control the display state of a window’s overlay instead of removing and re-establishing an overlay every time an overlay is needed.
Few workstations have support for multiple simultaneously installed overlay colormaps. For this reason, if an overlay is cleared or otherwise not be used, it is best to hide it using glutHideOverlay to avoid other windows with active overlays from being displayed with the wrong colormap. If your application uses multiple overlays, use glutCopyColormap to promote colormap sharing.
If you are encountering GLUT warnings or fatal errors in your programs, try setting a debugger break- pointin glutWarningor glutFatalError(thoughthesenamesarepotentiallyimplementation dependent) to determine where within your program the error occurred.
GLUT has no special routine for exiting the program. GLUT programs should use ANSI C’s exit rou- tine. If a program needs to perform special operations before quitting the program, use the ANSI C onexit routine to register exit callbacks. GLUT will exit the program unilaterally when fatal errors occur or when the window system requests the program to terminate. For this reason, avoid calling any GLUT routines within an exit callback.
13
Definitely, definitely, use the -gldebug option to look for OpenGL errors when OpenGL rendering does not appear to be operating properly. OpenGL errors are only reported if you explicitly look for them!
FORTRAN Binding
All GLUT functionality is available through the GLUT FORTRAN API. The GLUT FORTRAN binding is in- tended to be used in conjunction with the OpenGL and GLU FORTRAN APIs.
A FORTRAN routine using GLUT routines should include the GLUT FORTRAN header file. While this is potentially system dependent, on Unix systems this is normally done by including after the SUBROUTINE, FUNCTION, or PROGRAM line:
#include “GL/fglut.h”
Though the FORTRAN 77 specification differentiates identifiers by their first six characters only, the GLUT FORTRAN binding (and the OpenGL and GLU FORTRAN bindings) assume identifiers are not limited to 6 char- acters.
The FORTRAN GLUT binding library archive is typically named libfglut.a on Unix systems. FOR- TRAN GLUT programs need to link with the system’s OpenGL and GLUT libraries and the respective Fortran binding libraries (and any libraries these libraries potentially depend on). A set of window system dependent libraries may also be necessary for linking GLUT programs. For example, programs using the X11 GLUT im- plementation typically need to link with Xlib, the X extension library, possibly the X Input extension library, the X miscellaneous utilities library, and the math library. An example X11/Unix compile line for a GLUT FOR- TRAN program would look like:
f77 -o foo foo.c -lfglut -lglut -lfGLU -lGLU -lfGL -lGL \ -lXmu -lXi -lXext -lX11 -lm
13.1 Names for the FORTRAN GLUT Binding
Allowing for FORTRAN’s case-insensitivity, the GLUT FORTRAN binding constant and routine names are the same as the C binding’s names.
The OpenGL Architectural Review Board (ARB) official OpenGL FORTRAN API prefixes every routine and constant with the letter F. The justification was to avoid name space collisions with the C names in anachronistic compilers. Nearly all modern FORTRAN compilers avoid these name space clashes via other means (underbar suffixing of FORTRAN routines is used by most Unix FORTRAN compilers).
The GLUT FORTRAN API does not use such prefixing conventions because of the documentation and cod- ing confusion introduced by such prefixes. The confusion is heightened by FORTRAN’s default implicit variable initialization so programmers may realize the lack of a constant prefix as a result of a run-time error. The confu- sion introduced to support the prefixes was not deemed worthwhile simply to support anachronistic compliers.
13.2 Font Naming Caveat
Because GLUT fonts are compiled directly into GLUT programs as data, and programs should only have the fonts compiled into them that they use, GLUT font names like GLUT BITMAP TIMES ROMAN 24 are really symbols so the linker should only pull in used fonts.
Unfortunately, because some supposedly modern FORTRAN compilers link declared but unused data EXTERNALs, “GL/fglut.h” does not explicitly declare EXTERNAL the GLUT font symbols. Declaring the GLUT font symbols as EXTERNAL risks forcing every GLUT FORTRAN program to contain the data for ev- ery GLUT font. GLUT Fortran programmers should explicitly declare EXTERNAL the GLUT fonts they use. Example:
SUBROUTINE PRINTA
#include “GL/fglut.h”
EXTERNAL GLUT_BITMAP_TIMES_ROMAN_24
CALL glutBitmapCharacter(GLUT_BITMAP_TIMES_ROMAN_24, 65) END
41
42 14. IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES
13.3 NULL Callback
FORTRAN does not support passing NULL as a callback parameter the way ANSI C does. For this reason, GLUTNULL is used in place of NULL in GLUT FORTRAN programs to indicate a NULL callback.
14 Implementation Issues
While this specification is primarily intended to describe the GLUT API and not its implementation, the section describes implementation issues that are likely to help both GLUT implementors properly implement GLUT and provide GLUT programmers with information to better utilize GLUT.
14.1 Name Space Conventions
The GLUT implementation should have a well-defined name space for both exported symbols and visible, but not purposefully exported symbols. All exported functions are prefixed by glut. All exported macro defini- tions are prefixed by GLUT . No data symbols are exported. All internal symbols that might be user-visible but notintendedtobeexportedshouldbeprefixedby glut.UsersoftheGLUTAPIshouldnotuseany glut prefixed symbols.
14.2 Modular Implementation
It is often the case that windowing libraries tend to result in large, bulky programs because a large measure of “dynamically dead” code is linked into the programs because it can not be determined at link time that the program will never require (that is, execute) the code. A consideration (not a primary one though) in GLUT’s API design is make the API modular enough that programs using a limited subset of GLUT’s API can minimize the portion of the GLUT library implementation required. This does assume the implementation of GLUT is structured to take advantage of the API’s modularity.
A good implementation can be structured so significant chunks of code for color index colormap manage- ment, non-standard device support (Spaceball, dial & button box, and tablet), overlay management, pop-up menus, miscellaneous window management routines (pop, push, show, hide, full screen, iconify), geometric shape rendering, and font rendering only need to be pulled into GLUT programs when the interface to this func- tionality is explicitly used by the GLUT program.
14.3 Error Checking and Reporting
How errors and warnings about improper GLUT usage are reported to GLUT programs is implementation de- pendent. The recommended behavior in the case of an error is to output a message and exit. In the case of a warning, the recommended behavior is to output a message and continue. All improper uses of the GLUT inter- face do not need to be caught or reported. What conditions are caught or reported should be based on how ex- pensive the condition is to check for. For example, an implementation may not check every glutSetWindow call to determine if the window identifier is valid.
The run-time overhead of error checking for a very common operation may outweight the benefit of clean error reporting. This trade-off is left for the implementor to make. The implementor should also consider the difficulty of diagnosing the improper usage without a message being output. For example, if a GLUT program attempts to create a menu while a menu is in use (improper usage!), this warrants a message because this im- proper usage may often be benign, allowing the bug to easily go unnoticed.
14.4 Avoid Unspecified GLUT Usage Restrictions
GLUT implementations should be careful to not limit the conditions under which GLUT routines may be called. GLUT implementations are expected to be resilient when GLUT programs call GLUT routines with defined behavior at “unexpected” times. For example, a program should be permitted to destroy the current window from within a display callback (assuming the user does not then call GLUT routines requiring a current window).
14.4 Avoid Unspecified GLUT Usage Restrictions 43
This means after dispatching callbacks, a GLUT implementation should be “defensive” about how the program might have used manipulated GLUT state during the callback.
44 A. GLUT STATE
A GLUT State
This appendix specifies precisely what programmer visible state GLUT maintains. There are three categories of programmer visible state that GLUT maintains: global, window, and menu. The window and menu state cate- gories are maintained for each created window or menu. Additional overlay-related window state is maintained when an overlay is established for a window for the lifetime of the overlay.
The tables below name each element of state, define its type, specify what GLUT API entry points set or change the state (if possible), specify what GLUT API entry point or glutGet, glutDeviceGet, or glutLayerGet state constant is used to get the state (if possible), and how the state is initially set. For details of how any API entry point operates on the specified state, see the routine’s official description. Footnotes for each category of state indicate additional caveats to the element of state.
A.1 Types of State
These types are used to specify GLUT’s programmer visible state:
Bitmask A group of boolean bits.
Boolean True or false.
Callback Ahandletoauser-suppliedroutineinvokedwhenthegivencallbackistriggered(orNULLwhichis the default callback).
ColorCell Red, green, and blue color component triple, an array of which makes a colormap. Cursor A GLUT cursor name.
Integer Anintegervalue.
Layer Either normal plane or overlay.
MenuItem Either a menu entry or a submenu trigger. Both subtypes contain of a String name. A menu entry has an Integer value. A submenu cascade has an Integer menu name naming its associated submenu.
MenuState Either in use or not in use.
Stacking An ordering for top-level windows and sub-windows having the same parent. Higher windows ob-
scure lower windows.
State One of shown, hidden, or iconified.
String A string of ASCII characters.
Timer A triple of a timer Callback, an Integer callback parameter, and a time in milliseconds (that expires in real time).
A.2 Global State
There are two types of global state: program controlled state which can be modified directly or indirectly by the program, and fixed system dependent state.
A.3 Window State 45
A.2.1 Program Controlled State
Name
Type
Set/Change
Get
Initial
currentWindow currentMenu initWindowX initWindowY initWindowWidth initWindowHeight initDisplayMode
idleCallback menuState menuStateCallback timerList
Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Bitmask
Callback MenuState Callback list of Timer
glutSetWindow (1) glutSetMenu (2) glutInitWindowPosition glutInitWindowPosition glutInitWindowSize glutInitWindowSize glutInitDisplayMode
glutIdleFunc
– glutMenuEntryFunc glutTimerFunc
glutGetWindow
glutGetMenu
GLUT INIT WINDOW X
GLUT INIT WINDOW Y
GLUT INIT WINDOW WIDTH GLUT INIT WINDOW HEIGHT GLUT INIT DISPLAY MODE
– (3) –
–
0
0
-1
-1
300
300
GLUT RGB, GLUT SINGLE, GLUT DEPTH NULL NotInUse NULL
none
(1) The currentWindow is also changed implicitly by every window or menu callback (to the window triggering the callback) and the creation of a window (to the window being created).
(2) ThecurrentMenuisalsochangedimplicitlybyeverymenucallback(tothemenutriggeringthecallback)andthecreationofamenu (to the menu being created).
(3) ThemenustatecallbackistriggeredwhenthemenuStatechanges.
A.2.2 Fixed System Dependent State
Name
Type
Get
screenWidth screenHeight screenWidthMM screenHeightMM hasKeyboard hasMouse hasSpaceball hasDialAndButtonBox hasTablet numMouseButtons numSpaceballButtons numButtonBoxButtons numDials numTabletButtons
Integer Integer Integer Integer Boolean Boolean Boolean Boolean Boolean Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer
GLUT SCREEN WIDTH GLUT SCREEN HEIGHT GLUT SCREEN WIDTH MM GLUT SCREEN HEIGHT MM GLUT HAS KEYBOARD GLUT HAS MOUSE
GLUT HAS SPACEBALL
GLUT HAS DIAL AND BUTTON BOX GLUT HAS TABLET
GLUT NUM MOUSE BUTTONS
GLUT NUM SPACEBALL BUTTONS GLUT NUM BUTTON BOX BUTTONS GLUT NUM DIALS
GLUT NUM TABLET BUTTONS
A.3 Window State
For the purposes of listing the window state elements, window state is classified into three types: base state, frame buffer capability state, and layer state. The tags top-level, sub-win, and cindex indicate the table entry applies only to top-level windows, subwindows, or color index windows respectively.
46
A. GLUT STATE
A.3.1 Basic State
Name number
x
y
width
height
top-level: fullScreen
cursor stacking
displayState
visibility
redisplay
top-level: windowTitle top-level: iconTitle displayCallback reshapeCallback keyboardCallback mouseCallback motionCallback passiveMotionCallback specialCallback spaceballMotionCallback spaceballRotateCallback spaceballButtonCallback buttonBoxCallback dialsCallback tabletMotionCallback tabletButtonCallback visibilityCallback entryCallback
cindex: colormap
windowParent numChildren leftMenu middleMenu rightMenu
Type Integer
Integer Integer Integer Integer Boolean
Cursor Stacking
State (7)
Visibility Boolean String String Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback Callback array of ColorCell Integer
Integer Integer Integer Integer
Set/Change –
glutPositionWindow glutPositionWindow glutReshapeWindow glutReshapeWindow
glutFullScreen glutPositionWindow glutReshapeWindow (6) glutSetCursor glutPopWindow glutPushWindow glutShowWindow (8) glutHideWindow glutIconifyWindow
(9)
glutPostRedisplay (11) glutWindowTitle glutIconTitle glutDisplayFunc glutReshapeFunc glutKeyboardFunc glutMouseFunc glutMotionFunc glutPassiveMotionFunc glutSpecialFunc glutSpaceballMotionFunc glutSpaceballRotateFunc glutSpaceballButtonFunc glutButtonBoxFunc glutDialsFunc glutTabletMotionFunc glutTabletButtonFunc glutVisibilityFunc glutEntryFunc glutSetColor glutCopyColormap
–
glutCreateSubWindow glutDestroyWindow glutAttachMenu glutDetachMenu glutAttachMenu glutDetachMenu glutAttachMenu glutDetachMenu
Get glutGetWindow
GLUT WINDOW X
GLUT WINDOW Y
GLUT WINDOW WIDTH GLUT WINDOW HEIGHT
GLUT WINDOW CURSOR –
–
(10) –
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
– glutGetColor
GLUT WINDOW PARENT GLUT NUM CHILDREN
–
–
–
Initial
top-level: glutCreateWindow (1) sub-win: glutCreateSubWindow (1) top-level: initWindowX (2) sub-win: glutCreateSubWindow top-level: initWindowY (3) sub-win: glutCreateSubWindow top-level: initWindowWidth (4) sub-win: glutCreateSubWindow top-level: initWindowHeight (5) sub-win: glutCreateSubWindow False
GLUT CURSOR INHERIT top
shown
undefined
False glutCreateWindow glutCreateWindow NULL (12)
NULL (13) NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL NULL undefined
top-level: 0 sub-win: (14) 0
0 0 0
(1) Assigneddynamicallyfromunassignedwindownumbersgreaterthanzero.
(2) IfinitWindowXisgreaterorequaltozeroandinitWindowYisgreaterorequaltozerotheninitWindowX,elsewindowlocationleftto
window system to decide.
(3) IfinitWindowYisgreaterorequaltozeroandinitWindowXisgreaterorequaltozerotheninitWindowY,elsewindowlocationleftto window system to decide.
(4) IfinitWindowWidthisgreaterthanzeroandinitWindowHeightisgreaterthanzerotheinitWindowWidth,elsewindowsizelefttowin- dow system to decide.
(5) If initWindowHeight is greater than zero and initWindowWidth is greater than zero then initWindowHeight, else window size left to window system to decide.
(6) glutFullScreen sets to true; glutPositionWindow and glutReshapeWindow set to false. (7) Subwindowscannotbeiconified.
(8) WindowsystemeventscanalsochangethedisplayState.
A.3 Window State 47
(9) Visibility of a window can change for window system dependent reason, for example, a new window may occlude the window. glutPopWindow and glutPushWindow can affect window visibility as a side effect.
(10) ThevisibilitycallbacksetbyglutVisibilityFuncallowsthevisibilitystatetobetracked.
(11) TheredisplaystatecanbeexplicitlyenabledbyglutRedisplayFuncorimplicitlyinresponsetonormalplaneredisplayevents
from the window system.
(12) Awindow’sdisplayCallbackmustberegisteredbeforethefirstdisplaycallbackwouldbetriggered(ortheprogramisterminated). (13) Insteadofbeingano-opasmostNULLcallbacksare,aNULLreshapeCallbacksetstheOpenGLviewporttorenderintothecomplete
window, i.e., glViewport(0,0,width, height).
(14) DeterminedbycurrentWindowatglutCreateSubWindowtime.
A.3.2 Frame Buffer Capability State
Name
Type
Get
Total number of bits in color buffer
Number of bits in stencil buffer
Number of bits in depth buffer
Number of bits of red stored in color buffer
Number of bits of green stored in color buffer Number of bits of blue stored in color buffer
Number of bits of alpha stored in color buffer Number of bits of red stored in accumulation buffer Number of bits of green stored in accumulation buffer Number of bits of blue stored in accumulation buffer Number of bits of alpha stored in accumulation buffer Color index colormap size
If double buffered
If RGBA color model
If stereo
Number of samples for multisampling
Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Integer Boolean Boolean Boolean Integer
GLUT WINDOW BUFFER SIZE
GLUT WINDOW STENCIL SIZE
GLUT WINDOW DEPTH SIZE
GLUT WINDOW RED SIZE
GLUT WINDOW GREEN SIZE
GLUT WINDOW BLUE SIZE
GLUT WINDOW ALPHA SIZE
GLUT WINDOW ACCUM RED SIZE GLUT WINDOW ACCUM GREEN SIZE GLUT WINDOW ACCUM BLUE SIZE GLUT WINDOW ACCUM ALPHA SIZE GLUT WINDOW COLORMAP SIZE GLUT WINDOW DOUBLEBUFFER GLUT WINDOW RGBA
GLUT WINDOW STEREO
GLUT WINDOW MULTISAMPLE
A window’s (normal plane) frame buffer capability state is derived from the global initDisplayMode state at the window’s creation. A window’s frame buffer capabilities can not be changed.
A.3.3 Layer State
Name
Type
Set/Change
Get
Initial
hasOverlay
overlayPossible layerInUse
cindex: transparentIndex overlayRedisplay overlayDisplayCallback overlayDisplayState
normalDamaged overlayDamaged
Boolean
Boolean Layer Integer Boolean Callback State
Boolean Boolean
glutEstablishOverlay glutRemoveOverlay (1)
glutUseLayer (2)
–
glutPostOverlayRedisplay (4) glutOverlayDisplayFunc glutShowOverlay glutHideOverlay
(5)
(6)
GLUT HAS OVERLAY
GLUT OVERLAY POSSIBLE GLUT LAYER IN USE
GLUT TRANSPARENT INDEX –
– –
GLUT NORMAL DAMAGED GLUT OVERLAY DAMAGED
False
False
normal plane (3)
False
NULL shown
False False
(1) WhetheranoverlayispossibleisbasedontheinitDisplayModestateandtheframebuffercapabilitystateofthewindow.
(2) ThelayerInUseisimplicitlysettooverlayafterglutEstablishOverlay;likewise,glutRemoveOverlayresetsthestateto
normal plane.
(3) ThetransparentIndexissetwhenacolorindexoverlayisestablished.Itcannotbeset;itmaychangeiftheoverlayisre-established.
When no overlay is in use or if the overlay is not color index, the transparentIndex is -1.
(4) TheoverlayRedisplaystatecanbeexplicitlyenabledbyglutPostOverlayRedisplayorimplicitlyinresponsetooverlayredis- play events from the window system.
(5) Setwhenthewindowsystemreportsaregionofthewindow’snormalplaneisundefined(forexample,damagedbyanotherwindow moving or being initially shown). The specifics of when damage occurs are left to the window system to determine. The window’s redisplay state is always set true when damage occurs. normalDamaged is cleared whenever the window’s display callback returns.
(6) Setwhenthewindowsystemreportsaregionofthewindow’soverlayplaneisundefined(forexample,damagedbyanotherwindow moving or being initially shown). The specifics of when damage occurs are left to the window system to determine. The damage may occur independent from damage to the window’s normal plane. The window’s redisplay state is always set true when damage occurs. normalDamaged is cleared whenever the window’s display callback returns.
When an overlay is established, overlay frame buffer capability state is maintained as described in Section A.3.2. The layerInUse determines whether glutGet returns normal plane or overlay state when an overlay is established.
48 A. GLUT STATE
A.4 Menu State
(1) Assigneddynamicallyfromunassignedwindownumbersgreaterthanzero.
Name
Type
Set/Change
Get
Initial
number select items numItems
Integer
Callback
list of MenuItem Integer
– – – –
glutSetMenu
–
–
GLUT MENU NUM ITEMS
top-level: glutCreateMenu (1) glutCreateMenu
–
0
B glut.h ANSI C Header File
1 #ifndef __glut_h__
2 #define __glut_h__
3
4 /*
5
6 /* 7
8
9
This program is freely distributable without licensing fees and is provided without guarantee or warrantee expressed or implied. This program is -not- in the public domain. */
15 #endif
16
17 /*
18 *
35 #endif
36
37 /*
38 *
Copyright (c) Mark J. Kilgard, 1994, 1995, 1996. */
10 #include
11 #include
12
13 #ifdef __cplusplus
14 extern “C” {
GLUT API revision history:
19 *
20 *
21 *
22 * or additions).
23 *
GLUT_API_VERSION is updated to reflect incompatible GLUT API changes (interface changes, semantic changes, deletions,
24 * 25 *
26 *
27 *
28 *
29 *
30 *
31 *
32 */
33 #ifndef GLUT_API_VERSION /* allow this to be overriden */
34 #define GLUT_API_VERSION 3
GLUT_API_VERSION=1 First public release of GLUT. 11/29/94
GLUT_API_VERSION=2 Added support for OpenGL/GLX multisampling, extension. Supports new input devices like tablet, dial and button box, and Spaceball. Easy to query OpenGL extensions.
GLUT_API_VERSION=3 glutMenuStatus added.
GLUT implementation revision history:
39 *
40 *
41 *
42 *
43 *
44 *
45 *
46 *
47 *
48 * interfaces.
49 *
GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION is updated to reflect both GLUT API revisions and implementation revisions (ie, bug fixes).
GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION=1 mjk’s first public release of GLUT Xlib-based implementation. 11/29/94
GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION=2 mjk’s second public release of GLUT Xlib-based implementation providing GLUT version 2
GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION=3 mjk’s GLUT 2.2 GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION=4 mjk’s GLUT 2.3 GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION=5 mjk’s GLUT 3.0 GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION=6 mjk’s GLUT 3.1
50 *
51 *
52 *
53 *
54 *
55 *
56 *
57 */
58 #ifndef GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION /* allow this to be overriden */
59 #define GLUT_XLIB_IMPLEMENTATION 6
60 #endif 61
62 /* display mode bit masks */
63 #define GLUT_RGB 0
64 #define GLUT_RGBA GLUT_RGB
65 #define GLUT_INDEX 1
66 #define GLUT_SINGLE 0
images. 4/17/95
images. 6/?/95
images. 10/?/95
49
50
B. GLUT.H ANSI C HEADER FILE
67 #define GLUT_DOUBLE
68 #define GLUT_ACCUM
69 #define GLUT_ALPHA
70 #define GLUT_DEPTH
71 #define GLUT_STENCIL
72 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >=
73 #define GLUT_MULTISAMPLE
74 #define GLUT_STEREO
2)
2 4 8 16 32
128 256
512
0 1 2
0 1
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
0 1
0 1
0 1
75 #endif
76 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >=
77 #define GLUT_LUMINANCE
78 #endif
79
80 /* mouse buttons */
81 #define GLUT_LEFT_BUTTON
82 #define GLUT_MIDDLE_BUTTON
83 #define GLUT_RIGHT_BUTTON
84
85 /* mouse button callback
86 #define GLUT_DOWN
87 #define GLUT_UP
88
89 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 90 /* function keys */
91 #define GLUT_KEY_F1
92 #define GLUT_KEY_F2
93 #define GLUT_KEY_F3
94 #define GLUT_KEY_F4
95 #define GLUT_KEY_F5
96 #define GLUT_KEY_F6
97 #define GLUT_KEY_F7
98 #define GLUT_KEY_F8
99 #define GLUT_KEY_F9
100 #define GLUT_KEY_F10
101 #define GLUT_KEY_F11
102 #define GLUT_KEY_F12
103 /* directional keys */
104 #define GLUT_KEY_LEFT
105 #define GLUT_KEY_UP
106 #define GLUT_KEY_RIGHT
107 #define GLUT_KEY_DOWN
108 #define GLUT_KEY_PAGE_UP
109 #define GLUT_KEY_PAGE_DOWN
110 #define GLUT_KEY_HOME
111 #define GLUT_KEY_END
112 #define GLUT_KEY_INSERT
113 #endif
114
115 /* entry/exit callback state */
116 #define GLUT_LEFT
117 #define GLUT_ENTERED
118
119 /* menu usage callback state */
120 #define GLUT_MENU_NOT_IN_USE
121 #define GLUT_MENU_IN_USE
122
123 /* visibility callback state */
124 #define GLUT_NOT_VISIBLE
125 #define GLUT_VISIBLE
126
127 /* color index component selection values */
128 #define GLUT_RED 0
129 #define GLUT_GREEN 1
130 #define GLUT_BLUE 2
131
132 /* layers for use */
133 #define GLUT_NORMAL 0
134 #define GLUT_OVERLAY 1
3)
state */
2)
135
136 /* stroke font opaque addresses (use constants instead in source code) */ 137 extern void *glutStrokeRoman;
138 extern void *glutStrokeMonoRoman;
139
140 /* stroke font constants (use these in GLUT program) */
141 #define GLUT_STROKE_ROMAN (&glutStrokeRoman)
142 #define GLUT_STROKE_MONO_ROMAN (&glutStrokeMonoRoman)
143
144 /* bitmap font opaque addresses (use constants instead in source code) */ 145 extern void *glutBitmap9By15;
146 extern void *glutBitmap8By13;
147 extern void *glutBitmapTimesRoman10;
148 extern void *glutBitmapTimesRoman24;
149 extern void *glutBitmapHelvetica10;
150 extern void *glutBitmapHelvetica12;
151 extern void *glutBitmapHelvetica18;
152
153 /* bitmap font constants (use these in GLUT program) */
154 #define GLUT_BITMAP_9_BY_15 (&glutBitmap9By15)
155 #define GLUT_BITMAP_8_BY_13 (&glutBitmap8By13)
156 #define GLUT_BITMAP_TIMES_ROMAN_10 (&glutBitmapTimesRoman10)
157 #define GLUT_BITMAP_TIMES_ROMAN_24 (&glutBitmapTimesRoman24)
158 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 3)
159 #define GLUT_BITMAP_HELVETICA_10 (&glutBitmapHelvetica10)
160 #define GLUT_BITMAP_HELVETICA_12 (&glutBitmapHelvetica12)
161 #define GLUT_BITMAP_HELVETICA_18 (&glutBitmapHelvetica18)
162 #endif
163
164 /* glutGet parameters */
165 #define GLUT_WINDOW_X 100
166 #define GLUT_WINDOW_Y 101
167 #define GLUT_WINDOW_WIDTH 102
168 #define GLUT_WINDOW_HEIGHT 103
169 #define GLUT_WINDOW_BUFFER_SIZE 104
170 #define GLUT_WINDOW_STENCIL_SIZE 105
171 #define GLUT_WINDOW_DEPTH_SIZE 106
172 #define GLUT_WINDOW_RED_SIZE 107
173 #define GLUT_WINDOW_GREEN_SIZE 108
174 #define GLUT_WINDOW_BLUE_SIZE 109
175 #define GLUT_WINDOW_ALPHA_SIZE 110
176 #define GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_RED_SIZE 111
177 #define GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_GREEN_SIZE 112
178 #define GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_BLUE_SIZE 113
179 #define GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_ALPHA_SIZE 114
180 #define GLUT_WINDOW_DOUBLEBUFFER 115
181 #define GLUT_WINDOW_RGBA 116
182 #define GLUT_WINDOW_PARENT 117
183 #define GLUT_WINDOW_NUM_CHILDREN 118
184 #define GLUT_WINDOW_COLORMAP_SIZE 119
185 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 2)
186 #define GLUT_WINDOW_NUM_SAMPLES 120
187 #define GLUT_WINDOW_STEREO 121
188 #endif
189 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 3)
190 #define GLUT_WINDOW_CURSOR 122
191 #endif
192 #define GLUT_SCREEN_WIDTH 200
193 #define GLUT_SCREEN_HEIGHT 201
194 #define GLUT_SCREEN_WIDTH_MM 202
195 #define GLUT_SCREEN_HEIGHT_MM 203
196 #define GLUT_MENU_NUM_ITEMS 300
197 #define GLUT_DISPLAY_MODE_POSSIBLE 400
198 #define GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_X 500
199 #define GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_Y 501
200 #define GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_WIDTH 502
201 #define GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_HEIGHT 503
202 #define GLUT_INIT_DISPLAY_MODE 504
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52
B. GLUT.H ANSI C HEADER FILE
203
204
205 #endif
206
207 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 2)
208 /* glutDeviceGet parameters */
209 #define GLUT_HAS_KEYBOARD
210 #define GLUT_HAS_MOUSE
211 #define GLUT_HAS_SPACEBALL
212 #define GLUT_HAS_DIAL_AND_BUTTON_BOX
213 #define GLUT_HAS_TABLET
214 #define GLUT_NUM_MOUSE_BUTTONS
215 #define GLUT_NUM_SPACEBALL_BUTTONS
216 #define GLUT_NUM_BUTTON_BOX_BUTTONS
217 #define GLUT_NUM_DIALS
218 #define GLUT_NUM_TABLET_BUTTONS
219 #endif
220
221 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 3)
222 /* glutLayerGet parameters */
223 #define GLUT_OVERLAY_POSSIBLE
224 #define GLUT_LAYER_IN_USE
225 #define GLUT_HAS_OVERLAY
226 #define GLUT_TRANSPARENT_INDEX
227 #define GLUT_NORMAL_DAMAGED
228 #define GLUT_OVERLAY_DAMAGED
229
230 /* glutUseLayer parameters */
231 #define GLUT_NORMAL
232 #define GLUT_OVERLAY
233
234 /* glutGetModifiers return mask */
235 #define GLUT_ACTIVE_SHIFT
236 #define GLUT_ACTIVE_CTRL
237 #define GLUT_ACTIVE_ALT
238
239 /* glutSetCursor parameters */ 240 /* Basic arrows */
241 #define GLUT_CURSOR_RIGHT_ARROW
242 #define GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_ARROW
243 /* Symbolic cursor shapees */
244 #define GLUT_CURSOR_INFO
245 #define GLUT_CURSOR_DESTROY
246 #define GLUT_CURSOR_HELP
247 #define GLUT_CURSOR_CYCLE
248 #define GLUT_CURSOR_SPRAY
249 #define GLUT_CURSOR_WAIT
250 #define GLUT_CURSOR_TEXT
251 #define GLUT_CURSOR_CROSSHAIR
252 /* Directional cursors */
253 #define GLUT_CURSOR_UP_DOWN
254 #define GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_RIGHT
255 /* Sizing cursors */
256 #define GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_SIDE
257 #define GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_SIDE
258 #define GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_SIDE
259 #define GLUT_CURSOR_RIGHT_SIDE
260 #define GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_LEFT_CORNER
261 #define GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_RIGHT_CORNER
262 #define GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_RIGHT_CORNER
263 #define GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_LEFT_CORNER
264 /* Inherit from parent window */
265 #define GLUT_CURSOR_INHERIT
266 /* Blank cursor */
267 #define GLUT_CURSOR_NONE
268 /* Fullscreen crosshair (if available) */
269 #define GLUT_CURSOR_FULL_CROSSHAIR 102
270 #endif
#if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 2) #define GLUT_ELAPSED_TIME
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271
272 /* GLUT initialization sub-API */
273 extern void glutInit(int *argcp, char **argv);
274 extern void glutInitDisplayMode(unsigned int mode);
275 extern void glutInitWindowPosition(int x,
276 extern void glutInitWindowSize(int width,
277 extern void glutMainLoop(void);
278
int y);
int height);
279 /* GLUT window sub-api */
280 extern int glutCreateWindow(char *title);
281 extern int glutCreateSubWindow(int win, int x, int y, int width, int height);
282 extern void glutDestroyWindow(int win);
283 extern void glutPostRedisplay(void);
284 extern void glutSwapBuffers(void);
285 extern int glutGetWindow(void);
286 extern void glutSetWindow(int win);
287 extern void glutSetWindowTitle(char *title);
288 extern void glutSetIconTitle(char *title);
289 extern void glutPositionWindow(int x, int y);
290 extern void glutReshapeWindow(int width, int height);
291 extern void glutPopWindow(void);
292 extern void glutPushWindow(void);
293 extern void glutIconifyWindow(void);
294 extern void glutShowWindow(void);
295 extern void glutHideWindow(void);
296 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 3)
297 extern void glutFullScreen(void);
298 extern void glutSetCursor(int cursor);
299
300 /* GLUT overlay sub-API */
301 extern void glutEstablishOverlay(void); 302 extern void glutRemoveOverlay(void);
303 extern void glutUseLayer(GLenum layer);
304 extern void glutPostOverlayRedisplay(void); 305 extern void glutShowOverlay(void);
306 extern void glutHideOverlay(void);
307 #endif
308
309 /* GLUT menu sub-API */
310 extern int glutCreateMenu(void (*)(int));
311 extern void glutDestroyMenu(int menu);
312 extern int glutGetMenu(void);
313 extern void glutSetMenu(int menu);
314 extern void glutAddMenuEntry(char *label, int value);
315 extern void glutAddSubMenu(char *label, int submenu);
316 extern void glutChangeToMenuEntry(int item, char *label, int value);
317 extern void glutChangeToSubMenu(int item, char *label, int submenu);
318 extern void glutRemoveMenuItem(int item);
319 extern void glutAttachMenu(int button);
320 extern void glutDetachMenu(int button);
321
322 /* GLUT callback sub-api */
323 extern void glutDisplayFunc(void (*)(void));
324 extern void glutReshapeFunc(void (*)(int width, int height));
325 extern void glutKeyboardFunc(void (*)(unsigned char key, int x, int y));
326 extern void glutMouseFunc(void (*)(int button, int state, int x, int y));
327 extern void glutMotionFunc(void (*)(int x, int y));
328 extern void glutPassiveMotionFunc(void (*)(int x, int y));
329 extern void glutEntryFunc(void (*)(int state));
330 extern void glutVisibilityFunc(void (*)(int state));
331 extern void glutIdleFunc(void (*)(void));
332 extern void glutTimerFunc(unsigned int millis, void (*)(int value), int value);
333 extern void glutMenuStateFunc(void (*)(int state));
334 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 2)
335 extern void glutSpecialFunc(void (*)(int key, int x, int y));
336 extern void glutSpaceballMotionFunc(void (*)(int x, int y, int z));
337 extern void glutSpaceballRotateFunc(void (*)(int x, int y, int z));
338 extern void glutSpaceballButtonFunc(void (*)(int button, int state));
53
54 B. GLUT.H ANSI C HEADER FILE
339 extern void glutButtonBoxFunc(void (*)(int button, int state));
340 extern void glutDialsFunc(void (*)(int dial, int value));
341 extern void glutTabletMotionFunc(void (*)(int x, int y));
342 extern void glutTabletButtonFunc(void (*)(int button, int state, int x, int y));
343 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 3)
344 extern void glutMenuStatusFunc(void (*)(int status, int x, int y));
345 extern void glutOverlayDisplayFunc(void (*)(void));
346 #endif
347 #endif
348
349 /* GLUT color index sub-api */
350 extern void glutSetColor(int, GLfloat red, GLfloat green, GLfloat blue);
351 extern GLfloat glutGetColor(int ndx, int component);
352 extern void glutCopyColormap(int win);
353
354 /* GLUT state retrieval sub-api */
355 extern int glutGet(GLenum type);
356 extern int glutDeviceGet(GLenum type);
357 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 2)
358 /* GLUT extension support sub-API */
359 extern int glutExtensionSupported(char *name);
360 #endif
361 #if (GLUT_API_VERSION >= 3)
362 extern int glutGetModifiers(void); 363 extern int glutLayerGet(GLenum type); 364 #endif
365
366 /* GLUT font sub-API */
367 extern void glutBitmapCharacter(void *font, int character);
368 extern int glutBitmapWidth(void *font, int character);
369 extern void glutStrokeCharacter(void *font, int character);
370 extern int glutStrokeWidth(void *font, int character);
371
372 /* GLUT pre-built models sub-API */
373 extern
374 extern
375 extern
376 extern
377 extern
378 extern
379 extern
380 extern
381 extern void glutWireDodecahedron(void);
382 extern void glutSolidDodecahedron(void);
383 extern void glutWireTeapot(GLdouble size);
384 extern void glutSolidTeapot(GLdouble size);
385 extern void glutWireOctahedron(void);
void glutWireSphere(GLdouble radius, GLint slices, GLint stacks);
void glutSolidSphere(GLdouble radius, GLint slices, GLint stacks);
void glutWireCone(GLdouble base, GLdouble height, GLint slices, GLint stacks);
void glutSolidCone(GLdouble base, GLdouble height, GLint slices, GLint stacks);
void glutWireCube(GLdouble size);
void glutSolidCube(GLdouble size);
void glutWireTorus(GLdouble innerRadius, GLdouble outerRadius, GLint sides, GLint rings); void glutSolidTorus(GLdouble innerRadius, GLdouble outerRadius, GLint sides, GLint rings);
386 extern void glutSolidOctahedron(void);
387 extern void glutWireTetrahedron(void);
388 extern void glutSolidTetrahedron(void);
389 extern void glutWireIcosahedron(void);
390 extern void glutSolidIcosahedron(void);
391
392 #ifdef __cplusplus
393 }
394
395 #endif
396 #endif
/* __glut_h__ */
C fglut.h FORTRAN Header File
1 C Copyright (c) Mark J. Kilgard, 1994. 2
3 C This program is freely distributable without licensing fees
4 C and is provided without guarantee or warrantee expressed or
5 C implied. This program is -not- in 6
7 C GLUT Fortran header file
8
the public domain.
9 C display mode bit masks
10 integer*4 GLUT_RGB
11 parameter ( GLUT_RGB = 0 )
12 integer*4 GLUT_RGBA
13 parameter ( GLUT_RGBA = 0 )
14 integer*4 GLUT_INDEX
15 parameter ( GLUT_INDEX = 1 )
16 integer*4 GLUT_SINGLE
17 parameter ( GLUT_SINGLE = 0 )
18 integer*4 GLUT_DOUBLE
19 parameter ( GLUT_DOUBLE = 2 )
20 integer*4 GLUT_ACCUM
21 parameter ( GLUT_ACCUM =4)
22 integer*4 GLUT_ALPHA
23 parameter ( GLUT_ALPHA =8)
24 integer*4 GLUT_DEPTH
25 parameter ( GLUT_DEPTH =16)
26 integer*4 GLUT_STENCIL
27 parameter ( GLUT_STENCIL = 32
28 integer*4 GLUT_MULTISAMPLE
29 parameter ( GLUT_MULTISAMPLE = 128 )
30 integer*4 GLUT_STEREO
31 parameter ( GLUT_STEREO = 256 )
32
33 C mouse buttons
34 integer*4 GLUT_LEFT_BUTTON
35 parameter ( GLUT_LEFT_BUTTON = 0 )
36 integer*4 GLUT_MIDDLE_BUTTON
37 parameter ( GLUT_MIDDLE_BUTTON = 1 )
38 integer*4 GLUT_RIGHT_BUTTON
39 parameter ( GLUT_RIGHT_BUTTON =2)
40
41 C mouse button callback state
42 integer*4 GLUT_DOWN
43 parameter ( GLUT_DOWN = 0 )
44 integer*4 GLUT_UP
45 parameter ( GLUT_UP = 1 )
46
47 C special key callback values
48 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F1
49 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F1 =
50 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F2
51 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F2 =
52 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F3
53 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F3 =
54 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F4
55 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F4 =
56 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F5
57 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F5 =
58 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F6
59 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F6 =
60 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F7
61 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F7 =
62 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F8
63 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F8 =
64 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F9
65 parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F9 =
66 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F10
1 )
2 )
3 )
4 )
5 )
6 )
7 )
8 )
9 )
)
55
56
C. FGLUT.H FORTRAN HEADER FILE
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91 C
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97 C
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parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F10 = 10 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F11
parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F11 = 11 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_F12
parameter ( GLUT_KEY_F12 = 12 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_LEFT
parameter ( GLUT_KEY_LEFT = 100 integer*4 GLUT_KEY_UP
parameter ( GLUT_KEY_UP = 101 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_RIGHT parameter ( GLUT_KEY_RIGHT = 102 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_DOWN
parameter ( GLUT_KEY_DOWN = 103 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_PAGE_UP
parameter ( GLUT_KEY_PAGE_UP = 104 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_PAGE_DOWN parameter ( GLUT_KEY_PAGE_DOWN = 105 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_HOME
parameter ( GLUT_KEY_HOME = 106 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_END
parameter ( GLUT_KEY_END = 107 ) integer*4 GLUT_KEY_INSERT parameter ( GLUT_KEY_INSERT = 108 )
entry/exit callback state integer*4 GLUT_LEFT
124 C
125 C
126 C
127
128 C
129 C
130 C
131 C
132 C
133 C
134 C
stroke font opaque names
external GLUT_STROKE_ROMAN external GLUT_STROKE_MONO_ROMAN
bitmap font opaque names
external GLUT_BITMAP_9_BY_15 external GLUT_BITMAP_8_BY_13 external GLUT_BITMAP_TIMES_ROMAN_10 external GLUT_BITMAP_TIMES_ROMAN_24 external GLUT_BITMAP_HELVETICA_10 external GLUT_BITMAP_HELVETICA_12
menu
parameter ( GLUT_LEFT = 0 ) integer*4 GLUT_ENTERED parameter ( GLUT_ENTERED = 1 )
usage callback state
integer*4 GLUT_MENU_NOT_IN_USE parameter ( GLUT_MENU_NOT_IN_USE = 0 ) integer*4 GLUT_MENU_IN_USE
parameter ( GLUT_MENU_IN_USE = 1)
100
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102
103 C
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109 C
110
111
112
113
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117 C
118 C
119 C
120 C
121 C
122 C the fonts are used.
123
visibility callback state
integer*4 GLUT_NOT_VISIBLE parameter ( GLUT_NOT_VISIBLE = 0) integer*4 GLUT_VISIBLE
parameter ( GLUT_VISIBLE = 1)
color index component selection values integer*4 GLUT_RED
parameter ( GLUT_RED = 0 ) integer*4 GLUT_GREEN parameter ( GLUT_GREEN = 1 ) integer*4 GLUT_BLUE parameter ( GLUT_BLUE = 2 )
XXX Unfortunately, SGI’s Fortran compiler links with EXTERNAL data even if it is not used. This defeats the purpose of GLUT naming fonts via opaque symbols. This means GLUT Fortran programmers should explicitly declared EXTERNAL GLUT fonts in subroutines where
)
135 C external GLUT_BITMAP_HELVETICA_18
136
137 C glutGet parameters
138 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_X
139 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_X = 100 )
140 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_Y
141 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_Y = 101 )
142 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_WIDTH
143 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_WIDTH = 102 )
144 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_HEIGHT
145 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_HEIGHT = 103 )
146 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_BUFFER_SIZE
147 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_BUFFER_SIZE = 104 )
148 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_STENCIL_SIZE
149 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_STENCIL_SIZE = 105 )
150 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_DEPTH_SIZE
151 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_DEPTH_SIZE = 106 )
152 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_RED_SIZE
153 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_RED_SIZE = 107 )
154 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_GREEN_SIZE
155 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_GREEN_SIZE = 108 )
156 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_BLUE_SIZE
157 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_BLUE_SIZE = 109 )
158 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_ALPHA_SIZE
159 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_ALPHA_SIZE = 110 )
160 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_RED_SIZE
161 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_RED_SIZE = 111 )
162 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_GREEN_SIZE
163 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_GREEN_SIZE = 112 )
164 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_BLUE_SIZE
165 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_BLUE_SIZE = 113 )
166 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_ALPHA_SIZE
167 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_ACCUM_ALPHA_SIZE = 114 )
168 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_DOUBLEBUFFER
169 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_DOUBLEBUFFER =
170 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_RGBA
171 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_RGBA = 116 )
172 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_PARENT
115 )
173 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_PARENT = 117 )
174 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_NUM_CHILDREN
175 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_NUM_CHILDREN =
176 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_COLORMAP_SIZE
177 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_COLORMAP_SIZE = 119 )
178 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_NUM_SAMPLES
179 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_NUM_SAMPLES = 120 )
180 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_STEREO
181 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_STEREO = 121 )
182 integer*4 GLUT_WINDOW_CURSOR
183 parameter ( GLUT_WINDOW_CURSOR = 122 )
184 integer*4 GLUT_SCREEN_WIDTH
185 parameter ( GLUT_SCREEN_WIDTH = 200 )
186 integer*4 GLUT_SCREEN_HEIGHT
187 parameter ( GLUT_SCREEN_HEIGHT = 201 )
188 integer*4 GLUT_SCREEN_WIDTH_MM
189 parameter ( GLUT_SCREEN_WIDTH_MM = 202 )
190 integer*4 GLUT_SCREEN_HEIGHT_MM
191 parameter ( GLUT_SCREEN_HEIGHT_MM = 203 )
192 integer*4 GLUT_MENU_NUM_ITEMS
193 parameter ( GLUT_MENU_NUM_ITEMS = 300 )
194 integer*4 GLUT_DISPLAY_MODE_POSSIBLE
195 parameter ( GLUT_DISPLAY_MODE_POSSIBLE = 400 )
196 integer*4 GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_X
197 parameter ( GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_X = 500 )
198 integer*4 GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_Y
199 parameter ( GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_Y = 501 )
200 integer*4 GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_WIDTH
201 parameter ( GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_WIDTH = 502 )
202 integer*4 GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_HEIGHT
118 )
57
58 C.
FGLUT.H FORTRAN HEADER FILE
203 parameter ( GLUT_INIT_WINDOW_HEIGHT = 503 )
204 integer*4 GLUT_INIT_DISPLAY_MODE
205 parameter ( GLUT_INIT_DISPLAY_MODE = 504 )
206 integer*4 GLUT_ELAPSED_TIME
207 parameter ( GLUT_ELAPSED_TIME = 700 )
208
209 C glutDeviceGet parameters
210 integer*4 GLUT_HAS_KEYBOARD
211 parameter ( GLUT_HAS_KEYBOARD = 600 )
212 integer*4 GLUT_HAS_MOUSE
213 parameter ( GLUT_HAS_MOUSE = 601 )
214 integer*4 GLUT_HAS_SPACEBALL
215 parameter ( GLUT_HAS_SPACEBALL = 602 )
216 integer*4 GLUT_HAS_DIAL_AND_BUTTON_BOX
217 parameter ( GLUT_HAS_DIAL_AND_BUTTON_BOX = 603 )
218 integer*4 GLUT_HAS_TABLET
219 parameter ( GLUT_HAS_TABLET = 604 )
220 integer*4 GLUT_NUM_MOUSE_BUTTONS
221 parameter ( GLUT_NUM_MOUSE_BUTTONS = 605 )
222 integer*4 GLUT_NUM_SPACEBALL_BUTTONS
223 parameter ( GLUT_NUM_SPACEBALL_BUTTONS = 606 )
224 integer*4 GLUT_NUM_BUTTON_BOX_BUTTONS
225 parameter ( GLUT_NUM_BUTTON_BOX_BUTTONS = 607 )
226 integer*4 GLUT_NUM_DIALS
227 parameter ( GLUT_NUM_DIALS = 608 )
228 integer*4 GLUT_NUM_TABLET_BUTTONS
229 parameter ( GLUT_NUM_TABLET_BUTTONS = 609 )
230
231 C glutLayerGet parameters
232 integer*4 GLUT_OVERLAY_POSSIBLE
233 parameter ( GLUT_OVERLAY_POSSIBLE = 800 )
234 integer*4 GLUT_LAYER_IN_USE
235 parameter ( GLUT_LAYER_IN_USE = 801 )
236 integer*4 GLUT_HAS_OVERLAY
237 parameter ( GLUT_HAS_OVERLAY = 802 )
238 integer*4 GLUT_TRANSPARENT_INDEX
239 parameter ( GLUT_TRANSPARENT_INDEX = 803 )
240 integer*4 GLUT_NORMAL_DAMAGED
241 parameter ( GLUT_NORMAL_DAMAGED = 804 )
242 integer*4 GLUT_OVERLAY_DAMAGED
243 parameter ( GLUT_OVERLAY_DAMAGED = 805 )
244
245 C glutUseLayer parameters
246
247
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249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259 C glutSetCursor parameters
260 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_RIGHT_ARROW
261 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_RIGHT_ARROW = 0 )
262 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_ARROW
263 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_ARROW = 1 )
264 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_INFO
265 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_INFO = 2 )
266 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_DESTROY
267 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_DESTROY = 3 )
268 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_HELP
269 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_HELP = 4 )
270 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_CYCLE
integer*4 GLUT_NORMAL parameter ( GLUT_NORMAL = 0 ) integer*4 GLUT_OVERLAY parameter ( GLUT_OVERLAY = 1 )
C glutGetModifiers return mask integer*4 GLUT_ACTIVE_SHIFT
parameter ( GLUT_ACTIVE_SHIFT = 1 ) integer*4 GLUT_ACTIVE_CTRL parameter ( GLUT_ACTIVE_CTRL = 2 ) integer*4 GLUT_ACTIVE_ALT parameter ( GLUT_ACTIVE_ALT = 4 )
271 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_CYCLE = 5 )
272 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_SPRAY
273 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_SPRAY = 6 )
274 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_WAIT
275 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_WAIT = 7 )
276 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_TEXT
277 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_TEXT = 8 )
278 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_CROSSHAIR
279 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_CROSSHAIR = 9 )
280 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_UP_DOWN
281 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_UP_DOWN = 10 )
282 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_RIGHT
283 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_RIGHT = 11 )
284 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_SIDE
285 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_SIDE = 12 )
286 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_SIDE
287 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_SIDE = 13 )
288 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_SIDE
289 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_LEFT_SIDE = 14 )
290 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_RIGHT_SIDE
291 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_RIGHT_SIDE = 15 )
292 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_LEFT_CORNER
293 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_LEFT_CORNER = 16 )
294 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_RIGHT_CORNER
295 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_TOP_RIGHT_CORNER = 17 )
296 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_RIGHT_CORNER
297 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_RIGHT_CORNER = 18 )
298 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_LEFT_CORNER
299 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_BOTTOM_LEFT_CORNER = 19 )
300 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_INHERIT
301 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_INHERIT = 100 )
302 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_NONE
303 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_NONE = 101 )
304 integer*4 GLUT_CURSOR_FULL_CROSSHAIR
305 parameter ( GLUT_CURSOR_FULL_CROSSHAIR = 102 )
306
307 C GLUT functions
308 integer*4 glutcreatewindow
309 integer*4 glutgetwindow
310 integer*4 glutcreatemenu
311 integer*4 glutgetmenu
312 real glutgetcolor
313 integer*4 glutget
314 integer*4 glutdeviceget
315 integer*4 glutextensionsupported
316
317 C GLUT NULL name
318 external glutnull
319
59
60 REFERENCES
References
[1] Kurt Akeley, “RealityEngine Graphics,” Proceedings of SIGGRAPH ’93, July 1993.
[2] Edward Angel, Interactive Computer Graphics: A top-down approach with OpenGL, Addison-Wesley,
ISBN 0-201-85571-2, 1996.
[3] F.C. Crow, “The Origins of the Teapot,” IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, January 1987.
[4] Phil Karlton, OpenGL Graphics with the X Window System, Ver. 1.0, Silicon Graphics, April 30, 1993.
[5] Mark J. Kilgard, “Going Beyond the MIT Sample Server: The Silicon Graphics X11 Server,” The X Jour- nal, SIGS Publications, January 1993.
[6] Mark Kilgard,
[7] Mark Kilgard, Jan/Feb 1994.
[8] Mark Kilgard, tions, Jul/Aug
[9] Mark Kilgard,
[10] Mark Kilgard, 1996.
“Programming X Overlay Windows,” The X Journal, SIGS Publications, July 1993. “OpenGL and X, Part 2: Using OpenGL with Xlib,” The X Journal, SIGS Publications,
“OpenGL and X, Part 3: Integrating OpenGL with Motif,” The X Journal, SIGS Publica- 1994.
“An OpenGL Toolkit,” The X Journal, SIGS Publications, Nov/Dec 1994.
Programming OpenGL for the X Window System, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-48359-9,
Tom Davis, Mason Woo, OpenGL Programming Guide: The official guide to learning
[11] Jackie Neider,
OpenGL, Release 1, Addison Wesley, 1993.
[12] OpenGL Architecture Review Board, OpenGL Reference Manual: The official reference document for OpenGL, Release 1, Addison Wesley, 1992.
[13] MarkPatrick,GeorgeSachs,X11InputExtensionLibrarySpecification,XConsortiumStandard,X11R6, April 18, 1994.
[14] MarkPatrick,GeorgeSachs,X11InputExtensionProtocolSpecification,XConsortiumStandard,X11R6, April 17, 1994.
[15] Robert Scheifler, James Gettys, X Window System: The complete Reference to Xlib, X Protocol, ICCCM, XLFD, third edition, Digital Press, 1992.
[16] Mark Segal, Kurt Akeley, The OpenGLTM Graphics System: A Specification, Version 1.0, Silicon Graph- ics, June 30, 1992.
[17] Silicon Graphics, Graphics Library Programming Guide, Document Number 007-1210-040, 1991.
[18] Silicon Graphics, Graphics Library Window and Font Library Guide, Document Number 007-1329-010, 1991.
Index
MOTIF WM HINTS, 12
SGI CROSSHAIR CURSOR, 14
glutFatalError, 40 glutWarning, 40
Architectural Review Board, 41
Callback, 4 Colormap, 4
Dials and button box, 4 Display mode, 4
glFlush, 11, 40
GLUT LUMINANCE, 3, 8 glutAddMenuEntry, 17 glutAddSubMenu, 18 glutAttachMenu, 19 glutBitmapCharacter, 34 glutBitmapWidth, 3, 35 glutButtonBoxFunc, 26 glutChangeToMenuEntry, 18 glutChangeToSubMenu, 18 glutCopyColormap, 30 glutCreateMenu, 16 glutCreateSubWindow, 9, 40 glutCreateWindow, 9, 40 glutDestroyMenu, 17 glutDestroyWindow, 10 glutDeviceGet, 32, 44 glutDialsFunc, 26 glutDisplayFunc, 4, 20 glutEntryFunc, 23 glutEstablishOverlay, 3, 14 glutExtensionSupported, 33 glutFullScreen, 12
glutGet, 30, 40, 44 glutGetColor, 29 glutGetMenu, 17, 40 glutGetModifiers, 3, 33 glutGetWindow, 10, 40 glutHideOverlay, 3, 16 glutHideWindow, 13 glutIconifyWindow, 13 glutIdleFunc, 28
glutInit, 6 glutInitDisplayMode, 3, 7 glutInitWindowPosition, 7 glutInitWindowSize, 6, 7 glutKeyboardFunc, 21, 40 glutLayerGet, 3, 32, 44 glutMainLoop, 8
glutMenuStateFunc, 3, 40 glutMenuStatusFunc, 3, 27 glutMotionFunc, 22 glutMouseFunc, 22 GLUTNULL, 42 glutOverlayDisplayFunc, 20 glutPopWindow, 12 glutPositionWindow, 11 glutPostOverlayRedisplay, 3, 16 glutPostRedisplay, 10, 39 glutPushWindow, 12 glutRemoveMenuItem, 19 glutRemoveOverlay, 3, 15 glutReshapeFunc, 21 glutReshapeWindow, 11 glutSetColor, 29
glutSetCursor, 13, 14 glutSetIconTitle, 13 glutSetMenu, 17, 40 glutSetWindow, 10, 40 glutSetWindowTitle, 13 glutShowOverlay, 3, 16 glutShowWindow, 13 glutSolidCone, 37 glutSolidCube, 36 glutSolidDodecahedron, 38 glutSolidIcosahedron, 38 glutSolidOctahedron, 38 glutSolidSphere, 36 glutSolidTeapot, 39 glutSolidTetrahedron, 38 glutSolidTorus, 37 glutSpaceballButtonFunc, 25 glutSpaceballMotionFunc, 24 glutSpaceballRotateFunc, 25 glutSpecialFunc, 24, 40 glutStrokeBitmap, 3 glutStrokeCharacter, 35 glutStrokeWidth, 36 glutSwapBuffers, 11, 40 glutTabletButtonFunc, 27 glutTabletMotionFunc, 27 glutTimerFunc, 28 glutUseLayer, 15 glutUseOverlay, 3 glutVisibilityFunc, 23 glutWireCone, 37 glutWireCube, 36 glutWireDodecahedron, 38 glutWireIcosahedron, 38 glutWireOctahedron, 38
61
62 INDEX
glutWireSphere, 36 glutWireTeapot, 39 glutWireTetrahedron, 38 glutWireTorus, 37
Idle, 4
Layer in use, 4
Menu entry, 4 Menu item, 4 Modifiers, 5 Multisampling, 5
Normal plane, 5
onexit, 40
OpenGL errors, 7 Overlay, 5
overlay hardware, 14
Pop, 5
Pop-up menu, 5 Push, 5
Reshape, 5
SERVER OVERLAY VISUALS, 15, 17 Spaceball, 5
Stereo, 5
Sub-menu, 5
Sub-menu trigger, 5 Subwindow, 5
Tablet, 5
The X Journal, 1 Timer, 5
Top-level window, 5
Window, 5
Window display state, 5 Window system, 5
WM COMMAND, 9
X Input Extension, 20
X Inter-Client Communication Conventions Man-
ual, 9
X protocol errors, 7