gluTessCallback - define a callback for a tessellation
object
void gluTessCallback( GLUtesselator* tess,
GLenum which,
GLvoid * CallBackFunc )
- tess
- Specifies the tessellation object (created with gluNewTess).
- which
- Specifies the callback being defined. The following values are valid:
GLU_TESS_BEGIN, GLU_TESS_BEGIN_DATA,
GLU_TESS_EDGE_FLAG, GLU_TESS_EDGE_FLAG_DATA,
GLU_TESS_VERTEX, GLU_TESS_VERTEX_DATA, GLU_TESS_END,
GLU_TESS_END_DATA, GLU_TESS_COMBINE,
GLU_TESS_COMBINE_DATA, GLU_TESS_ERROR, and
GLU_TESS_ERROR_DATA.
- CallBackFunc
- Specifies the function to be called.
gluTessCallback is used to indicate a callback to be used
by a tessellation object. If the specified callback is already defined, then
it is replaced. If CallBackFunc is NULL, then the existing callback
becomes undefined.
These callbacks are used by the tessellation object to describe
how a polygon specified by the user is broken into triangles. Note that
there are two versions of each callback: one with user-specified polygon
data and one without. If both versions of a particular callback are
specified, then the callback with user-specified polygon data will be used.
Note that the polygon_data parameter used by some of the functions is
a copy of the pointer that was specified when gluTessBeginPolygon was
called. The legal callbacks are as follows:
- GLU_TESS_BEGIN
- The begin callback is invoked like glBegin to indicate the start of
a (triangle) primitive. The function takes a single argument of type
GLenum. If the GLU_TESS_BOUNDARY_ONLY property is set to
GL_FALSE, then the argument is set to either
GL_TRIANGLE_FAN, GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP, or GL_TRIANGLES.
If the GLU_TESS_BOUNDARY_ONLY property is set to GL_TRUE,
then the argument will be set to GL_LINE_LOOP. The function
prototype for this callback is:
void begin ( GLenum type );
- GLU_TESS_BEGIN_DATA
- The same as the GLU_TESS_BEGIN callback except that it takes an
additional pointer argument. This pointer is identical to the opaque
pointer provided when gluTessBeginPolygon was called. The function
prototype for this callback is:
void beginData ( GLenum type, void *polygon_data );
- GLU_TESS_EDGE_FLAG
- The edge flag callback is similar to glEdgeFlag. The function takes
a single boolean flag that indicates which edges lie on the polygon
boundary. If the flag is GL_TRUE, then each vertex that follows
begins an edge that lies on the polygon boundary, that is, an edge that
separates an interior region from an exterior one. If the flag is
GL_FALSE, then each vertex that follows begins an edge that lies in
the polygon interior. The edge flag callback (if defined) is invoked
before the first vertex callback.
- Since triangle fans and triangle strips do not support edge flags, the
begin callback is not called with GL_TRIANGLE_FAN or
GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP if a non-NULL edge flag callback is provided. (If
the callback is initialized to NULL, there is no impact on performance).
Instead, the fans and strips are converted to independent triangles. The
function prototype for this callback is:
void edgeFlag ( GLboolean flag );
- GLU_TESS_EDGE_FLAG_DATA
- The same as the GLU_TESS_EDGE_FLAG callback except that it takes an
additional pointer argument. This pointer is identical to the opaque
pointer provided when gluTessBeginPolygon was called. The function
prototype for this callback is:
void edgeFlagData ( GLboolean flag, void *polygon_data
);
- GLU_TESS_VERTEX
- The vertex callback is invoked between the begin and end callbacks. It is
similar to glVertex, and it defines the vertices of the triangles
created by the tessellation process. The function takes a pointer as its
only argument. This pointer is identical to the opaque pointer provided by
the user when the vertex was described (see gluTessVertex). The
function prototype for this callback is:
void vertex ( void *vertex_data );
- GLU_TESS_VERTEX_DATA
- The same as the GLU_TESS_VERTEX callback except that it takes an
additional pointer argument. This pointer is identical to the opaque
pointer provided when gluTessBeginPolygon was called. The function
prototype for this callback is:
void vertexData ( void *vertex_data, void *polygon_data
);
- GLU_TESS_END
- The end callback serves the same purpose as glEnd. It indicates the
end of a primitive and it takes no arguments. The function prototype for
this callback is:
void end ( void );
- GLU_TESS_END_DATA
- The same as the GLU_TESS_END callback except that it takes an
additional pointer argument. This pointer is identical to the opaque
pointer provided when gluTessBeginPolygon was called. The function
prototype for this callback is:
void endData ( void *polygon_data);
- GLU_TESS_COMBINE
- The combine callback is called to create a new vertex when the
tessellation detects an intersection, or wishes to merge features. The
function takes four arguments: an array of three elements each of type
GLdouble, an array of four pointers, an array of four elements each of
type GLfloat, and a pointer to a pointer. The prototype is:
void combine( GLdouble coords[3], void *vertex_data[4],
GLfloat weight[4], void **outData );
- The vertex is defined as a linear combination of up to four existing
vertices, stored in vertex_data. The coefficients of the linear
combination are given by weight; these weights always add up to 1.
All vertex pointers are valid even when some of the weights are 0.
coords gives the location of the new vertex.
- The user must allocate another vertex, interpolate parameters using
vertex_data and weight, and return the new vertex pointer in
outData. This handle is supplied during rendering callbacks. The
user is responsible for freeing the memory some time after
gluTessEndPolygon is called.
- For example, if the polygon lies in an arbitrary plane in 3-space, and a
color is associated with each vertex, the GLU_TESS_COMBINE callback
might look like this:
void myCombine( GLdouble coords[3], VERTEX *d[4],
GLfloat w[4], VERTEX **dataOut ) {
VERTEX *new = new_vertex();
new->x = coords[0];
new->y = coords[1];
new->z = coords[2];
new->r = w[0]*d[0]->r + w[1]*d[1]->r + w[2]*d[2]->r +
w[3]*d[3]->r;
new->g = w[0]*d[0]->g + w[1]*d[1]->g + w[2]*d[2]->g +
w[3]*d[3]->g;
new->b = w[0]*d[0]->b + w[1]*d[1]->b + w[2]*d[2]->b +
w[3]*d[3]->b;
new->a = w[0]*d[0]->a + w[1]*d[1]->a + w[2]*d[2]->a +
w[3]*d[3]->a;
*dataOut = new; }
- If the tessellation detects an intersection, then the
GLU_TESS_COMBINE or GLU_TESS_COMBINE_DATA callback (see
below) must be defined, and it must write a non-NULL pointer into
dataOut. Otherwise the GLU_TESS_NEED_COMBINE_CALLBACK error
occurs, and no output is generated.
- GLU_TESS_COMBINE_DATA
- The same as the GLU_TESS_COMBINE callback except that it takes an
additional pointer argument. This pointer is identical to the opaque
pointer provided when gluTessBeginPolygon was called. The function
prototype for this callback is:
void combineData ( GLdouble coords[3], void
*vertex_data[4],
GLfloat weight[4], void **outData,
void *polygon_data );
- GLU_TESS_ERROR
- The error callback is called when an error is encountered. The one
argument is of type GLenum; it indicates the specific error that occurred
and will be set to one of GLU_TESS_MISSING_BEGIN_POLYGON,
GLU_TESS_MISSING_END_POLYGON,
GLU_TESS_MISSING_BEGIN_CONTOUR,
GLU_TESS_MISSING_END_CONTOUR, GLU_TESS_COORD_TOO_LARGE,
GLU_TESS_NEED_COMBINE_CALLBACK or GLU_OUT_OF_MEMORY.
Character strings describing these errors can be retrieved with the
gluErrorString call. The function prototype for this callback
is:
void error ( GLenum errno );
- The GLU library will recover from the first four errors by inserting the
missing call(s). GLU_TESS_COORD_TOO_LARGE indicates that some
vertex coordinate exceeded the predefined constant
GLU_TESS_MAX_COORD in absolute value, and that the value has been
clamped. (Coordinate values must be small enough so that two can be
multiplied together without overflow.)
GLU_TESS_NEED_COMBINE_CALLBACK indicates that the tessellation
detected an intersection between two edges in the input data, and the
GLU_TESS_COMBINE or GLU_TESS_COMBINE_DATA callback was not
provided. No output is generated. GLU_OUT_OF_MEMORY indicates that
there is not enough memory so no output is generated.
- GLU_TESS_ERROR_DATA
- The same as the GLU_TESS_ERROR callback except that it takes an
additional pointer argument. This pointer is identical to the opaque
pointer provided when gluTessBeginPolygon was called. The function
prototype for this callback is:
void errorData ( GLenum errno, void *polygon_data
);
Polygons tessellated can be rendered directly like this:
gluTessCallback(tobj, GLU_TESS_BEGIN, glBegin);
gluTessCallback(tobj, GLU_TESS_VERTEX, glVertex3dv); gluTessCallback(tobj,
GLU_TESS_END, glEnd); gluTessCallback(tobj, GLU_TESS_COMBINE, myCombine);
gluTessBeginPolygon(tobj, NULL);
gluTessBeginContour(tobj);
gluTessVertex(tobj, v, v);
...
gluTessEndContour(tobj); gluTessEndPolygon(tobj);
Typically, the tessellated polygon should be stored in a display
list so that it does not need to be retessellated every time it is
rendered.
glBegin, glEdgeFlag, glVertex,
gluNewTess, gluErrorString, gluTessVertex,
gluTessBeginPolygon, gluTessBeginContour,
gluTessProperty, gluTessNormal