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No commits in common. "940b7a86686e164271417e3f4f8ef443c0e37207" and "f6722ab4921e8ec647e4c7a7740974b8be0d6153" have entirely different histories.

106 changed files with 3604 additions and 9417 deletions

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@ -15,10 +15,10 @@ environment:
- GENERATOR: MinGW Makefiles
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS: OFF
CFLAGS: -Werror
- GENERATOR: Visual Studio 12 2013
- GENERATOR: Visual Studio 10 2010
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS: ON
CFLAGS: /WX
- GENERATOR: Visual Studio 12 2013
- GENERATOR: Visual Studio 10 2010
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS: OFF
CFLAGS: /WX
matrix:
@ -30,14 +30,14 @@ for:
- GENERATOR: MinGW Makefiles
build_script:
- set PATH=%PATH:C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin=C:\MinGW\bin%
- cmake -B build -G "%GENERATOR%" -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=%BUILD_SHARED_LIBS%
- cmake -S . -B build -G "%GENERATOR%" -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=%BUILD_SHARED_LIBS%
- cmake --build build
-
matrix:
only:
- GENERATOR: Visual Studio 12 2013
- GENERATOR: Visual Studio 10 2010
build_script:
- cmake -B build -G "%GENERATOR%" -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=%BUILD_SHARED_LIBS%
- cmake -S . -B build -G "%GENERATOR%" -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=%BUILD_SHARED_LIBS%
- cmake --build build --target glfw
notifications:
- provider: Email

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@ -1,67 +0,0 @@
# EditorConfig for GLFW and its internal dependencies
#
# All files created by GLFW should indent with four spaces unless their format requires
# otherwise. A few files still use other indent styles for historical reasons.
#
# Dependencies have (what seemed to be) their existing styles described. Those with
# existing trailing whitespace have it preserved to avoid cluttering future commits.
root = true
[*]
charset = utf-8
end_of_line = lf
[include/GLFW/*.h]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
[{src,examples,tests}/*.{c,m,h,rc,in}]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
[CMakeLists.txt]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
[CMake/**.{cmake,in}]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
[*.{md}]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
trim_trailing_whitespace = false
[DoxygenLayout.xml]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 2
[docs/*.{scss,html}]
indent_style = tab
indent_size = unset
[deps/mingw/*.h]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
tab_width = 8
trim_trailing_whitespace = false
[deps/getopt.{c,h}]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 2
[deps/linmath.h]
indent_style = tab
tab_width = 4
indent_size = 4
trim_trailing_whitespace = false
[deps/nuklear*.h]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
[deps/tinycthread.{c,h}]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 2

2
.github/CODEOWNERS vendored
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@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
* @elmindreda
src/wl_* @linkmauve
docs/*.css @glfw/webdev
docs/*.scss @glfw/webdev
docs/*.html @glfw/webdev

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@ -9,92 +9,86 @@ permissions:
contents: read
jobs:
build-linux-clang:
name: Linux (Clang)
build-linux-x11-clang:
name: X11 (Linux, Clang)
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
timeout-minutes: 4
env:
CC: clang
CFLAGS: -Werror
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Install dependencies
run: |
sudo apt update
sudo apt install libxrandr-dev libxinerama-dev libxcursor-dev libxi-dev libxext-dev libwayland-dev libxkbcommon-dev
sudo apt install libxrandr-dev libxinerama-dev libxcursor-dev libxi-dev libxext-dev
- name: Configure Null shared library
run: cmake -B build-null-shared -D GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND=OFF -D GLFW_BUILD_X11=OFF -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build Null shared library
run: cmake --build build-null-shared --parallel
- name: Configure static library
run: cmake -S . -B build-static
- name: Build static library
run: cmake --build build-static --parallel
- name: Configure X11 shared library
run: cmake -B build-x11-shared -D GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND=OFF -D GLFW_BUILD_X11=ON -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build X11 shared library
run: cmake --build build-x11-shared --parallel
- name: Configure shared library
run: cmake -S . -B build-shared -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build shared library
run: cmake --build build-shared --parallel
- name: Configure Wayland shared library
run: cmake -B build-wayland-shared -D GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND=ON -D GLFW_BUILD_X11=OFF -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build Wayland shared library
run: cmake --build build-wayland-shared --parallel
build-linux-full-clang:
name: X11+Wayland (Linux, Clang)
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
CC: clang
CFLAGS: -Werror
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Install dependencies
run: |
sudo apt update
sudo apt install libxrandr-dev libxinerama-dev libxcursor-dev libxi-dev libxext-dev wayland-protocols libwayland-dev libxkbcommon-dev
- name: Configure Wayland+X11 static library
run: cmake -B build-full-static -D GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND=ON -D GLFW_BUILD_X11=ON
- name: Build Wayland+X11 static library
run: cmake --build build-full-static --parallel
- name: Configure static library
run: cmake -S . -B build-static -D GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND=ON
- name: Build static library
run: cmake --build build-static --parallel
- name: Configure Wayland+X11 shared library
run: cmake -B build-full-shared -D GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND=ON -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON -D GLFW_BUILD_X11=ON
- name: Build Wayland+X11 shared library
run: cmake --build build-full-shared --parallel
- name: Configure shared library
run: cmake -S . -B build-shared -D GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND=ON -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build shared library
run: cmake --build build-shared --parallel
build-macos-clang:
name: macOS (Clang)
build-macos-cocoa-clang:
name: Cocoa (macOS, Clang)
runs-on: macos-latest
timeout-minutes: 4
env:
CFLAGS: -Werror
MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET: 10.11
CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES: x86_64;arm64
MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET: 10.8
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Configure Null shared library
run: cmake -B build-null-shared -D GLFW_BUILD_COCOA=OFF -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build Null shared library
run: cmake --build build-null-shared --parallel
- name: Configure static library
run: cmake -S . -B build-static
- name: Build static library
run: cmake --build build-static --parallel
- name: Configure Cocoa static library
run: cmake -B build-cocoa-static
- name: Build Cocoa static library
run: cmake --build build-cocoa-static --parallel
- name: Configure shared library
run: cmake -S . -B build-shared -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build shared library
run: cmake --build build-shared --parallel
- name: Configure Cocoa shared library
run: cmake -B build-cocoa-shared -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build Cocoa shared library
run: cmake --build build-cocoa-shared --parallel
build-windows-vs2022:
name: Windows (VS2022)
build-windows-win32-vs2022:
name: Win32 (Windows, VS2022)
runs-on: windows-latest
timeout-minutes: 4
env:
CFLAGS: /WX
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Configure Win32 shared x86 library
run: cmake -B build-win32-shared-x86 -G "Visual Studio 17 2022" -A Win32 -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build Win32 shared x86 library
run: cmake --build build-win32-shared-x86 --parallel
- name: Configure static library
run: cmake -S . -B build-static -G "Visual Studio 17 2022"
- name: Build static library
run: cmake --build build-static --parallel
- name: Configure Win32 static x64 library
run: cmake -B build-win32-static-x64 -G "Visual Studio 17 2022" -A x64
- name: Build Win32 static x64 library
run: cmake --build build-win32-static-x64 --parallel
- name: Configure Win32 shared x64 library
run: cmake -B build-win32-shared-x64 -G "Visual Studio 17 2022" -A x64 -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build Win32 shared x64 library
run: cmake --build build-win32-shared-x64 --parallel
- name: Configure shared library
run: cmake -S . -B build-shared -G "Visual Studio 17 2022" -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- name: Build shared library
run: cmake --build build-shared --parallel

5
.gitignore vendored
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@ -1,6 +1,5 @@
# The canonical out-of-tree build subdirectory
build
build-*
# Visual Studio clutter
_ReSharper*
@ -57,11 +56,11 @@ src/glfw3ConfigVersion.cmake
# Compiled binaries
src/libglfw.so
src/libglfw.so.3
src/libglfw.so.3.5
src/libglfw.so.3.4
src/libglfw.dylib
src/libglfw.dylib
src/libglfw.3.dylib
src/libglfw.3.5.dylib
src/libglfw.3.4.dylib
src/libglfw3.a
src/glfw3.lib
src/glfw3.dll

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.4...3.28 FATAL_ERROR)
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.4...3.20 FATAL_ERROR)
project(GLFW VERSION 3.5.0 LANGUAGES C)
project(GLFW VERSION 3.4.0 LANGUAGES C)
if (POLICY CMP0069)
cmake_policy(SET CMP0069 NEW)
@ -27,15 +27,11 @@ if (GLFW_USE_OSMESA)
message(FATAL_ERROR "GLFW_USE_OSMESA has been removed; set the GLFW_PLATFORM init hint")
endif()
if (DEFINED GLFW_USE_WAYLAND AND UNIX AND NOT APPLE)
message(FATAL_ERROR
"GLFW_USE_WAYLAND has been removed; delete the CMake cache and set GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND and GLFW_BUILD_X11 instead")
endif()
cmake_dependent_option(GLFW_BUILD_WIN32 "Build support for Win32" ON "WIN32" OFF)
cmake_dependent_option(GLFW_BUILD_COCOA "Build support for Cocoa" ON "APPLE" OFF)
cmake_dependent_option(GLFW_BUILD_X11 "Build support for X11" ON "UNIX;NOT APPLE" OFF)
cmake_dependent_option(GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND "Build support for Wayland" ON "UNIX;NOT APPLE" OFF)
cmake_dependent_option(GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND "Build support for Wayland"
"${GLFW_USE_WAYLAND}" "UNIX;NOT APPLE" OFF)
cmake_dependent_option(GLFW_USE_HYBRID_HPG "Force use of high-performance GPU on hybrid systems" OFF
"WIN32" OFF)
@ -59,6 +55,11 @@ list(APPEND CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "${GLFW_SOURCE_DIR}/CMake/modules")
find_package(Threads REQUIRED)
if (GLFW_BUILD_DOCS)
set(DOXYGEN_SKIP_DOT TRUE)
find_package(Doxygen)
endif()
#--------------------------------------------------------------------
# Report backend selection
#--------------------------------------------------------------------
@ -129,7 +130,7 @@ if (GLFW_BUILD_TESTS)
add_subdirectory(tests)
endif()
if (GLFW_BUILD_DOCS)
if (DOXYGEN_FOUND AND GLFW_BUILD_DOCS)
add_subdirectory(docs)
endif()
@ -151,6 +152,11 @@ if (GLFW_INSTALL)
install(FILES "${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/src/glfw3.pc"
DESTINATION "${CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR}/pkgconfig")
if (DOXYGEN_FOUND AND GLFW_BUILD_DOCS)
install(DIRECTORY "${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/docs/html"
DESTINATION "${CMAKE_INSTALL_DOCDIR}")
endif()
# Only generate this target if no higher-level project already has
if (NOT TARGET uninstall)
configure_file(CMake/cmake_uninstall.cmake.in

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@ -15,7 +15,6 @@ video tutorials.
- Keith Bauer
- John Bartholomew
- Coşku Baş
- Bayemite
- Niklas Behrens
- Andrew Belt
- Nevyn Bengtsson
@ -33,9 +32,7 @@ video tutorials.
- Nicolas Caramelli
- David Carlier
- Arturo Castro
- Jose Luis Cercós Pita
- Chi-kwan Chan
- Victor Chernyakin
- TheChocolateOre
- Ali Chraghi
- Joseph Chua
@ -49,9 +46,7 @@ video tutorials.
- Andrew Corrigan
- Bailey Cosier
- Noel Cower
- James Cowgill
- CuriouserThing
- Bill Currie
- Jason Daly
- danhambleton
- Jarrod Davis
@ -103,7 +98,6 @@ video tutorials.
- Warren Hu
- Charles Huber
- Brent Huisman
- Florian Hülsmann
- illustris
- InKryption
- IntellectualKitty
@ -127,7 +121,6 @@ video tutorials.
- Rokas Kupstys
- Konstantin Käfer
- Eric Larson
- Guillaume Lebrun
- Francis Lecavalier
- Jong Won Lee
- Robin Leffmann
@ -139,7 +132,6 @@ video tutorials.
- lo-v-ol
- Eyal Lotem
- Aaron Loucks
- Ned Loynd
- Luflosi
- lukect
- Tristam MacDonald
@ -157,7 +149,6 @@ video tutorials.
- Jonathan Mercier
- Marcel Metz
- Liam Middlebrook
- mightgoyardstill
- Ave Milia
- Icyllis Milica
- Jonathan Miller
@ -174,15 +165,11 @@ video tutorials.
- Pascal Muetschard
- James Murphy
- Julian Møller
- Julius Häger
- Nat!
- NateIsStalling
- ndogxj
- F. Nedelec
- n3rdopolis
- Kristian Nielsen
- Joel Niemelä
- Victor Nova
- Kamil Nowakowski
- onox
- Denis Ovod
@ -205,7 +192,6 @@ video tutorials.
- Stanislav Podgorskiy
- Konstantin Podsvirov
- Nathan Poirier
- Pokechu22
- Alexandre Pretyman
- Pablo Prietz
- przemekmirek
@ -230,7 +216,6 @@ video tutorials.
- Sebastian Schuberth
- Jan Schuerkamp
- Scr3amer
- Jan Schuerkamp
- Christian Sdunek
- Matt Sealey
- Steve Sexton
@ -260,7 +245,6 @@ video tutorials.
- Paul Sultana
- Nathan Sweet
- TTK-Bandit
- Nuno Teixeira
- Jared Tiala
- Sergey Tikhomirov
- Arthur Tombs

339
README.md
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@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
[![Build status](https://github.com/glfw/glfw/actions/workflows/build.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/glfw/glfw/actions)
[![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/0kf0ct9831i5l6sp/branch/master?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/elmindreda/glfw)
[![Coverity Scan](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/4884/badge.svg)](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/glfw-glfw)
## Introduction
@ -10,15 +11,15 @@ application development. It provides a simple, platform-independent API for
creating windows, contexts and surfaces, reading input, handling events, etc.
GLFW natively supports Windows, macOS and Linux and other Unix-like systems. On
Linux both Wayland and X11 are supported.
Linux both X11 and Wayland are supported.
GLFW is licensed under the [zlib/libpng
license](https://www.glfw.org/license.html).
You can [download](https://www.glfw.org/download.html) the latest stable release
as source or Windows binaries. Each release starting with 3.0 also has
a corresponding [annotated tag](https://github.com/glfw/glfw/releases) with
source and binary archives.
as source or Windows binaries, or fetch the `latest` branch from GitHub. Each
release starting with 3.0 also has a corresponding [annotated
tag](https://github.com/glfw/glfw/releases) with source and binary archives.
The [documentation](https://www.glfw.org/docs/latest/) is available online and is
included in all source and binary archives. See the [release
@ -46,19 +47,18 @@ features or fixing bugs.
## Compiling GLFW
GLFW is written primarily in C99, with parts of macOS support being written in
Objective-C. GLFW itself requires only the headers and libraries for your OS
and window system. It does not need any additional headers for context creation
APIs (WGL, GLX, EGL, NSGL, OSMesa) or rendering APIs (OpenGL, OpenGL ES, Vulkan)
to enable support for them.
GLFW itself requires only the headers and libraries for your OS and window
system. It does not need the headers for any context creation API (WGL, GLX,
EGL, NSGL, OSMesa) or rendering API (OpenGL, OpenGL ES, Vulkan) to enable
support for them.
GLFW supports compilation on Windows with Visual C++ 2013 and later, MinGW and
GLFW supports compilation on Windows with Visual C++ 2010 and later, MinGW and
MinGW-w64, on macOS with Clang and on Linux and other Unix-like systems with GCC
and Clang. It will likely compile in other environments as well, but this is
not regularly tested.
There are [pre-compiled binaries](https://www.glfw.org/download.html) available
for all supported compilers on Windows and macOS.
There are [pre-compiled Windows binaries](https://www.glfw.org/download.html)
available for all supported compilers.
See the [compilation guide](https://www.glfw.org/docs/latest/compile.html) for
more information about how to compile GLFW yourself.
@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ more information.
## System requirements
GLFW supports Windows XP and later and macOS 10.11 and later. Linux and other
GLFW supports Windows XP and later and macOS 10.8 and later. Linux and other
Unix-like systems running the X Window System are supported even without
a desktop environment or modern extensions, although some features require
a running window or clipboard manager. The OSMesa backend requires Mesa 6.3.
@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ in the documentation for more information.
## Dependencies
GLFW itself needs only CMake 3.4 or later and the headers and libraries for your
GLFW itself needs only CMake 3.1 or later and the headers and libraries for your
OS and window system.
The examples and test programs depend on a number of tiny libraries. These are
@ -119,20 +119,302 @@ guide](https://github.com/glfw/glfw/blob/master/docs/CONTRIBUTING.md) for
information on what to include when reporting a bug.
## Changelog since 3.4
## Changelog
- Added `glfwSetWindowProgressIndicator` for displaying progress on the dock or taskbar (#2286,#1183)
- Added `GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS` input mode that allows mouse buttons beyond
the limit of the mouse button tokens to be reported (#2423)
- [Cocoa] Added `QuartzCore` framework as link-time dependency
- [Cocoa] Removed support for OS X 10.10 Yosemite and earlier (#2506)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: The fractional scaling related objects were not destroyed
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwInit` would segfault on compositor with no seat (#2517)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: A drag entering a non-GLFW surface could cause a segfault
- [Null] Added Vulkan 'window' surface creation via `VK_EXT_headless_surface`
- [Null] Added EGL context creation on Mesa via `EGL_MESA_platform_surfaceless`
- [EGL] Allowed native access on Wayland with `GLFW_CONTEXT_CREATION_API` set to
`GLFW_NATIVE_CONTEXT_API` (#2518)
- Added `GLFW_PLATFORM` init hint for runtime platform selection (#1958)
- Added `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA`,
`GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_X11` and `GLFW_PLATFORM_NULL` symbols to
specify the desired platform (#1958)
- Added `glfwGetPlatform` function to query what platform was selected (#1655,#1958)
- Added `glfwPlatformSupported` function to query if a platform is supported
(#1655,#1958)
- Added `glfwInitAllocator` for setting a custom memory allocator (#544,#1628,#1947)
- Added `GLFWallocator` struct and `GLFWallocatefun`, `GLFWreallocatefun` and
`GLFWdeallocatefun` types (#544,#1628,#1947)
- Added `glfwInitVulkanLoader` for using a non-default Vulkan loader (#1374,#1890)
- Added `GLFW_RESIZE_NWSE_CURSOR`, `GLFW_RESIZE_NESW_CURSOR`,
`GLFW_RESIZE_ALL_CURSOR` and `GLFW_NOT_ALLOWED_CURSOR` cursor shapes (#427)
- Added `GLFW_RESIZE_EW_CURSOR` alias for `GLFW_HRESIZE_CURSOR` (#427)
- Added `GLFW_RESIZE_NS_CURSOR` alias for `GLFW_VRESIZE_CURSOR` (#427)
- Added `GLFW_POINTING_HAND_CURSOR` alias for `GLFW_HAND_CURSOR` (#427)
- Added `GLFW_MOUSE_PASSTHROUGH` window hint for letting mouse input pass
through the window (#1236,#1568)
- Added `GLFW_CURSOR_CAPTURED` cursor mode to confine the cursor to the window
content area (#58)
- Added `GLFW_POSITION_X` and `GLFW_POSITION_Y` window hints for initial position
(#1603,#1747)
- Added `GLFW_ANY_POSITION` hint value for letting the window manager choose (#1603,#1747)
- Added `GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE` error for platform detection failures (#1958)
- Added `GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE` error for platform limitations (#1692)
- Added `GLFW_FEATURE_UNIMPLEMENTED` error for incomplete backends (#1692)
- Added `GLFW_WAYLAND_APP_ID` window hint string for Wayland app\_id selection
(#2121,#2122)
- Added `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE` init hint and `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_*`
values to select ANGLE backend (#1380)
- Added `GLFW_X11_XCB_VULKAN_SURFACE` init hint for selecting X11 Vulkan
surface extension (#1793)
- Added `GLFW_NATIVE_INCLUDE_NONE` for disabling inclusion of native headers (#1348)
- Added `GLFW_BUILD_WIN32` CMake option for enabling Win32 support (#1958)
- Added `GLFW_BUILD_COCOA` CMake option for enabling Cocoa support (#1958)
- Added `GLFW_BUILD_X11` CMake option for enabling X11 support (#1958)
- Added `GLFW_LIBRARY_TYPE` CMake variable for overriding the library type
(#279,#1307,#1497,#1574,#1928)
- Added `GLFW_PKG_CONFIG_REQUIRES_PRIVATE` and `GLFW_PKG_CONFIG_LIBS_PRIVATE` CMake
variables exposing pkg-config dependencies (#1307)
- Made joystick subsystem initialize at first use (#1284,#1646)
- Made `GLFW_DOUBLEBUFFER` a read-only window attribute
- Updated the minimum required CMake version to 3.1
- Updated gamepad mappings from upstream
- Disabled tests and examples by default when built as a CMake subdirectory
- Renamed `GLFW_USE_WAYLAND` CMake option to `GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND` (#1958)
- Removed `GLFW_USE_OSMESA` CMake option enabling the Null platform (#1958)
- Removed CMake generated configuration header
- Bugfix: The CMake config-file package used an absolute path and was not
relocatable (#1470)
- Bugfix: Video modes with a duplicate screen area were discarded (#1555,#1556)
- Bugfix: Compiling with -Wextra-semi caused warnings (#1440)
- Bugfix: Built-in mappings failed because some OEMs re-used VID/PID (#1583)
- Bugfix: Some extension loader headers did not prevent default OpenGL header
inclusion (#1695)
- Bugfix: Buffers were swapped at creation on single-buffered windows (#1873)
- Bugfix: Gamepad mapping updates could spam `GLFW_INVALID_VALUE` due to
incompatible controllers sharing hardware ID (#1763)
- Bugfix: Native access functions for context handles did not check that the API matched
- Bugfix: `glfwMakeContextCurrent` would access TLS slot before initialization
- Bugfix: `glfwSetGammaRamp` could emit `GLFW_INVALID_VALUE` before initialization
- Bugfix: `glfwGetJoystickUserPointer` returned `NULL` during disconnection (#2092)
- Bugfix: `glfwGetKeyScancode` returned `0` on error when initialized instead of `-1`
- Bugfix: Failure to make a newly created context current could cause segfault (#2327)
- [Win32] Added the `GLFW_WIN32_KEYBOARD_MENU` window hint for enabling access
to the window menu
- [Win32] Added a version info resource to the GLFW DLL
- [Win32] Made hidden helper window use its own window class
- [Win32] Disabled framebuffer transparency on Windows 7 when DWM windows are
opaque (#1512)
- [Win32] Bugfix: `GLFW_INCLUDE_VULKAN` plus `VK_USE_PLATFORM_WIN32_KHR` caused
symbol redefinition (#1524)
- [Win32] Bugfix: The cursor position event was emitted before its cursor enter
event (#1490)
- [Win32] Bugfix: The window hint `GLFW_MAXIMIZED` did not move or resize the
window (#1499)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Disabled cursor mode interfered with some non-client actions
- [Win32] Bugfix: Super key was not released after Win+V hotkey (#1622)
- [Win32] Bugfix: `glfwGetKeyName` could access out of bounds and return an
invalid pointer
- [Win32] Bugfix: Some synthetic key events were reported as `GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN`
(#1623)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Non-BMP Unicode codepoint input was reported as UTF-16
- [Win32] Bugfix: Monitor functions could return invalid values after
configuration change (#1761)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Initialization would segfault on Windows 8 (not 8.1) (#1775)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Duplicate size events were not filtered (#1610)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Full screen windows were incorrectly resized by DPI changes
(#1582)
- [Win32] Bugfix: `GLFW_SCALE_TO_MONITOR` had no effect on systems older than
Windows 10 version 1703 (#1511)
- [Win32] Bugfix: `USE_MSVC_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_DLL` had no effect on CMake 3.15 or
later (#1783,#1796)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Compilation with LLVM for Windows failed (#1807,#1824,#1874)
- [Win32] Bugfix: The foreground lock timeout was overridden, ignoring the user
- [Win32] Bugfix: Content scale queries could fail silently (#1615)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Content scales could have garbage values if monitor was recently
disconnected (#1615)
- [Win32] Bugfix: A window created maximized and undecorated would cover the whole
monitor (#1806)
- [Win32] Bugfix: The default restored window position was lost when creating a maximized
window
- [Win32] Bugfix: `glfwMaximizeWindow` would make a hidden window visible
- [Win32] Bugfix: `Alt+PrtSc` would emit `GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN` and a different
scancode than `PrtSc` (#1993)
- [Win32] Bugfix: `GLFW_KEY_PAUSE` scancode from `glfwGetKeyScancode` did not
match event scancode (#1993)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Instance-local operations used executable instance (#469,#1296,#1395)
- [Win32] Bugfix: The OSMesa library was not unloaded on termination
- [Win32] Bugfix: Right shift emitted `GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN` when using a CJK IME (#2050)
- [Win32] Bugfix: `glfwWaitEventsTimeout` did not return for some sent messages (#2408)
- [Win32] Bugfix: Fix pkg-config for dynamic library on Windows (#2386, #2420)
- [Win32] Bugfix: XInput could reportedly provide invalid DPad bit masks (#2291)
- [Cocoa] Added support for `VK_EXT_metal_surface` (#1619)
- [Cocoa] Added locating the Vulkan loader at runtime in an application bundle
- [Cocoa] Moved main menu creation to GLFW initialization time (#1649)
- [Cocoa] Changed `EGLNativeWindowType` from `NSView` to `CALayer` (#1169)
- [Cocoa] Changed F13 key to report Print Screen for cross-platform consistency
(#1786)
- [Cocoa] Disabled macOS fullscreen when `GLFW_RESIZABLE` is false
- [Cocoa] Removed dependency on the CoreVideo framework
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: `glfwSetWindowSize` used a bottom-left anchor point (#1553)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Window remained on screen after destruction until event poll
(#1412)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Event processing before window creation would assert (#1543)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Undecorated windows could not be iconified on recent macOS
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Touching event queue from secondary thread before main thread
would abort (#1649)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Non-BMP Unicode codepoint input was reported as UTF-16
(#1635)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Failing to retrieve the refresh rate of built-in displays
could leak memory
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Objective-C files were compiled as C with CMake 3.19 (#1787)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Duplicate video modes were not filtered out (#1830)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Menu bar was not clickable on macOS 10.15+ until it lost and
regained focus (#1648,#1802)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Monitor name query could segfault on macOS 11 (#1809,#1833)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: The install name of the installed dylib was relative (#1504)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: The MoltenVK layer contents scale was updated only after
related events were emitted
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Moving the cursor programmatically would freeze it for
a fraction of a second (#1962)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: `kIOMasterPortDefault` was deprecated in macOS 12.0 (#1980)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: `kUTTypeURL` was deprecated in macOS 12.0 (#2003)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: A connected Apple AirPlay would emit a useless error (#1791)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: The EGL and OSMesa libraries were not unloaded on termination
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: `GLFW_MAXIMIZED` was always true when `GLFW_RESIZABLE` was false
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Changing `GLFW_DECORATED` in macOS fullscreen would abort
application (#1886)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Setting a monitor from macOS fullscreen would abort
application (#2110)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: The Vulkan loader was not loaded from the `Frameworks` bundle
subdirectory (#2113,#2120)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Compilation failed on OS X 10.8 due to unconditional use of 10.9+
symbols (#2161)
- [Cocoa] Bugfix: Querying joystick elements could reportedly segfault on macOS
13 Ventura (#2320)
- [X11] Bugfix: The CMake files did not check for the XInput headers (#1480)
- [X11] Bugfix: Key names were not updated when the keyboard layout changed
(#1462,#1528)
- [X11] Bugfix: Decorations could not be enabled after window creation (#1566)
- [X11] Bugfix: Content scale fallback value could be inconsistent (#1578)
- [X11] Bugfix: `glfwMaximizeWindow` had no effect on hidden windows
- [X11] Bugfix: Clearing `GLFW_FLOATING` on a hidden window caused invalid read
- [X11] Bugfix: Changing `GLFW_FLOATING` on a hidden window could silently fail
- [X11] Bugfix: Disabled cursor mode was interrupted by indicator windows
- [X11] Bugfix: Monitor physical dimensions could be reported as zero mm
- [X11] Bugfix: Window position events were not emitted during resizing (#1613)
- [X11] Bugfix: `glfwFocusWindow` could terminate on older WMs or without a WM
- [X11] Bugfix: Querying a disconnected monitor could segfault (#1602)
- [X11] Bugfix: IME input of CJK was broken for "C" locale (#1587,#1636)
- [X11] Bugfix: Termination would segfault if the IM had been destroyed
- [X11] Bugfix: Any IM started after initialization would not be detected
- [X11] Bugfix: Xlib errors caused by other parts of the application could be
reported as GLFW errors
- [X11] Bugfix: A handle race condition could cause a `BadWindow` error (#1633)
- [X11] Bugfix: XKB path used keysyms instead of physical locations for
non-printable keys (#1598)
- [X11] Bugfix: Function keys were mapped to `GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN` for some layout
combinations (#1598)
- [X11] Bugfix: Keys pressed simultaneously with others were not always
reported (#1112,#1415,#1472,#1616)
- [X11] Bugfix: Some window attributes were not applied on leaving fullscreen
(#1863)
- [X11] Bugfix: Changing `GLFW_FLOATING` could leak memory
- [X11] Bugfix: Icon pixel format conversion worked only by accident, relying on
undefined behavior (#1986)
- [X11] Bugfix: Dynamic loading on OpenBSD failed due to soname differences
- [X11] Bugfix: Waiting for events would fail if file descriptor was too large
(#2024)
- [X11] Bugfix: Joystick events could lead to busy-waiting (#1872)
- [X11] Bugfix: `glfwWaitEvents*` did not continue for joystick events
- [X11] Bugfix: `glfwPostEmptyEvent` could be ignored due to race condition
(#379,#1281,#1285,#2033)
- [X11] Bugfix: Dynamic loading on NetBSD failed due to soname differences
- [X11] Bugfix: Left shift of int constant relied on undefined behavior (#1951)
- [X11] Bugfix: The OSMesa libray was not unloaded on termination
- [X11] Bugfix: A malformed response during selection transfer could cause a segfault
- [X11] Bugfix: Some calls would reset Xlib to the default error handler (#2108)
- [Wayland] Added improved fallback window decorations via libdecor (#1639,#1693)
- [Wayland] Added dynamic loading of all Wayland libraries
- [Wayland] Added support for key names via xkbcommon
- [Wayland] Added support for file path drop events (#2040)
- [Wayland] Added support for more human-readable monitor names where available
- [Wayland] Disabled alpha channel for opaque windows on systems lacking
`EGL_EXT_present_opaque` (#1895)
- [Wayland] Removed support for `wl_shell` (#1443)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: The `GLFW_HAND_CURSOR` shape used the wrong image (#1432)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `CLOCK_MONOTONIC` was not correctly enabled
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Repeated keys could be reported with `NULL` window (#1704)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Retrieving partial framebuffer size would segfault
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Scrolling offsets were inverted compared to other platforms
(#1463)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Client-Side Decorations were destroyed in the wrong order
(#1798)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Monitors physical size could report zero (#1784,#1792)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Some keys were not repeating in Wayland (#1908)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Non-arrow cursors are offset from the hotspot (#1706,#1899)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: The `O_CLOEXEC` flag was not defined on FreeBSD
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Key repeat could lead to a race condition (#1710)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Activating a window would emit two input focus events
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Disable key repeat mechanism when window loses input focus
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Window hiding and showing did not work (#1492,#1731)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: A key being repeated was not released when window lost focus
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Showing a hidden window did not emit a window refresh event
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Full screen window creation did not ignore `GLFW_VISIBLE`
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Some keys were reported as wrong key or `GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN`
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Text input did not repeat along with key repeat
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwPostEmptyEvent` sometimes had no effect (#1520,#1521)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwSetClipboardString` would fail if set to result of
`glfwGetClipboardString`
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Data source creation error would cause double free at termination
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Partial writes of clipboard string would cause beginning to repeat
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Some errors would cause clipboard string transfer to hang
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Drag and drop data was misinterpreted as clipboard string
- [Wayland] Bugfix: MIME type matching was not performed for clipboard string
- [Wayland] Bugfix: The OSMesa library was not unloaded on termination
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwCreateWindow` could emit `GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE`
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Lock key modifier bits were only set when lock keys were pressed
- [Wayland] Bugfix: A window leaving full screen mode would be iconified (#1995)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: A window leaving full screen mode ignored its desired size
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwSetWindowMonitor` did not update windowed mode size
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwRestoreWindow` would make a full screen window windowed
- [Wayland] Bugfix: A window maximized or restored by the user would enter an
inconsistent state
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Window maximization events were not emitted
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwRestoreWindow` assumed it was always in windowed mode
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwSetWindowSize` would resize a full screen window
- [Wayland] Bugfix: A window content scale event would be emitted every time
the window resized
- [Wayland] Bugfix: If `glfwInit` failed it would close stdin
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Manual resizing with fallback decorations behaved erratically
(#1991,#2115,#2127)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Size limits included frame size for fallback decorations
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Updating `GLFW_DECORATED` had no effect on server-side
decorations
- [Wayland] Bugfix: A monitor would be reported as connected again if its scale
changed
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwTerminate` would segfault if any monitor had changed
scale
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Window content scale events were not emitted when monitor
scale changed
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwSetWindowAspectRatio` reported an error instead of
applying the specified ratio
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `GLFW_MAXIMIZED` window hint had no effect
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `glfwRestoreWindow` had no effect before first show
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Hiding and then showing a window caused program abort on
wlroots compositors (#1268)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: `GLFW_DECORATED` was ignored when showing a window with XDG
decorations
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Connecting a mouse after `glfwInit` would segfault (#1450)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Joysticks connected after `glfwInit` were not detected (#2198)
- [Wayland] Bugfix: Fallback decorations emitted `GLFW_CURSOR_UNAVAILABLE` errors
- [POSIX] Removed use of deprecated function `gettimeofday`
- [POSIX] Bugfix: `CLOCK_MONOTONIC` was not correctly tested for or enabled
- [Linux] Bugfix: Joysticks without buttons were ignored (#2042,#2043)
- [Linux] Bugfix: A small amount of memory could leak if initialization failed (#2229)
- [WGL] Disabled the DWM swap interval hack for Windows 8 and later (#1072)
- [NSGL] Removed enforcement of forward-compatible flag for core contexts
- [NSGL] Bugfix: `GLFW_COCOA_RETINA_FRAMEBUFFER` had no effect on newer
macOS versions (#1442)
- [NSGL] Bugfix: Workaround for swap interval on 10.14 broke on 10.12 (#1483)
- [NSGL] Bugfix: Defining `GL_SILENCE_DEPRECATION` externally caused
a duplicate definition warning (#1840)
- [EGL] Added platform selection via the `EGL_EXT_platform_base` extension
(#442)
- [EGL] Added ANGLE backend selection via `EGL_ANGLE_platform_angle` extension
(#1380)
- [EGL] Added loading of glvnd `libOpenGL.so.0` where available for OpenGL
- [EGL] Bugfix: The `GLFW_DOUBLEBUFFER` context attribute was ignored (#1843)
- [EGL] Bugfix: Setting `GLFW_CONTEXT_DEBUG` caused creation to fail (#2348)
- [GLX] Added loading of glvnd `libGLX.so.0` where available
- [GLX] Bugfix: Context creation failed if GLX 1.4 was not exported by GLX library
## Contact
@ -141,12 +423,13 @@ On [glfw.org](https://www.glfw.org/) you can find the latest version of GLFW, as
well as news, documentation and other information about the project.
If you have questions related to the use of GLFW, we have a
[forum](https://discourse.glfw.org/).
[forum](https://discourse.glfw.org/), and the `#glfw` IRC channel on
[Libera.Chat](https://libera.chat/).
If you have a bug to report, a patch to submit or a feature you'd like to
request, please file it in the
[issue tracker](https://github.com/glfw/glfw/issues) on GitHub.
Finally, if you're interested in helping out with the development of GLFW or
porting it to your favorite platform, join us on the forum or GitHub.
porting it to your favorite platform, join us on the forum, GitHub or IRC.

247
deps/vs2008/stdint.h vendored Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,247 @@
// ISO C9x compliant stdint.h for Microsoft Visual Studio
// Based on ISO/IEC 9899:TC2 Committee draft (May 6, 2005) WG14/N1124
//
// Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Alexander Chemeris
//
// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
//
// 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
// this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
//
// 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
// documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
//
// 3. The name of the author may be used to endorse or promote products
// derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
//
// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
// WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
// MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
// EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
// PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS;
// OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
// WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
// OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
// ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#ifndef _MSC_VER // [
#error "Use this header only with Microsoft Visual C++ compilers!"
#endif // _MSC_VER ]
#ifndef _MSC_STDINT_H_ // [
#define _MSC_STDINT_H_
#if _MSC_VER > 1000
#pragma once
#endif
#include <limits.h>
// For Visual Studio 6 in C++ mode and for many Visual Studio versions when
// compiling for ARM we should wrap <wchar.h> include with 'extern "C++" {}'
// or compiler give many errors like this:
// error C2733: second C linkage of overloaded function 'wmemchr' not allowed
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
# include <wchar.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
// Define _W64 macros to mark types changing their size, like intptr_t.
#ifndef _W64
# if !defined(__midl) && (defined(_X86_) || defined(_M_IX86)) && _MSC_VER >= 1300
# define _W64 __w64
# else
# define _W64
# endif
#endif
// 7.18.1 Integer types
// 7.18.1.1 Exact-width integer types
// Visual Studio 6 and Embedded Visual C++ 4 doesn't
// realize that, e.g. char has the same size as __int8
// so we give up on __intX for them.
#if (_MSC_VER < 1300)
typedef signed char int8_t;
typedef signed short int16_t;
typedef signed int int32_t;
typedef unsigned char uint8_t;
typedef unsigned short uint16_t;
typedef unsigned int uint32_t;
#else
typedef signed __int8 int8_t;
typedef signed __int16 int16_t;
typedef signed __int32 int32_t;
typedef unsigned __int8 uint8_t;
typedef unsigned __int16 uint16_t;
typedef unsigned __int32 uint32_t;
#endif
typedef signed __int64 int64_t;
typedef unsigned __int64 uint64_t;
// 7.18.1.2 Minimum-width integer types
typedef int8_t int_least8_t;
typedef int16_t int_least16_t;
typedef int32_t int_least32_t;
typedef int64_t int_least64_t;
typedef uint8_t uint_least8_t;
typedef uint16_t uint_least16_t;
typedef uint32_t uint_least32_t;
typedef uint64_t uint_least64_t;
// 7.18.1.3 Fastest minimum-width integer types
typedef int8_t int_fast8_t;
typedef int16_t int_fast16_t;
typedef int32_t int_fast32_t;
typedef int64_t int_fast64_t;
typedef uint8_t uint_fast8_t;
typedef uint16_t uint_fast16_t;
typedef uint32_t uint_fast32_t;
typedef uint64_t uint_fast64_t;
// 7.18.1.4 Integer types capable of holding object pointers
#ifdef _WIN64 // [
typedef signed __int64 intptr_t;
typedef unsigned __int64 uintptr_t;
#else // _WIN64 ][
typedef _W64 signed int intptr_t;
typedef _W64 unsigned int uintptr_t;
#endif // _WIN64 ]
// 7.18.1.5 Greatest-width integer types
typedef int64_t intmax_t;
typedef uint64_t uintmax_t;
// 7.18.2 Limits of specified-width integer types
#if !defined(__cplusplus) || defined(__STDC_LIMIT_MACROS) // [ See footnote 220 at page 257 and footnote 221 at page 259
// 7.18.2.1 Limits of exact-width integer types
#define INT8_MIN ((int8_t)_I8_MIN)
#define INT8_MAX _I8_MAX
#define INT16_MIN ((int16_t)_I16_MIN)
#define INT16_MAX _I16_MAX
#define INT32_MIN ((int32_t)_I32_MIN)
#define INT32_MAX _I32_MAX
#define INT64_MIN ((int64_t)_I64_MIN)
#define INT64_MAX _I64_MAX
#define UINT8_MAX _UI8_MAX
#define UINT16_MAX _UI16_MAX
#define UINT32_MAX _UI32_MAX
#define UINT64_MAX _UI64_MAX
// 7.18.2.2 Limits of minimum-width integer types
#define INT_LEAST8_MIN INT8_MIN
#define INT_LEAST8_MAX INT8_MAX
#define INT_LEAST16_MIN INT16_MIN
#define INT_LEAST16_MAX INT16_MAX
#define INT_LEAST32_MIN INT32_MIN
#define INT_LEAST32_MAX INT32_MAX
#define INT_LEAST64_MIN INT64_MIN
#define INT_LEAST64_MAX INT64_MAX
#define UINT_LEAST8_MAX UINT8_MAX
#define UINT_LEAST16_MAX UINT16_MAX
#define UINT_LEAST32_MAX UINT32_MAX
#define UINT_LEAST64_MAX UINT64_MAX
// 7.18.2.3 Limits of fastest minimum-width integer types
#define INT_FAST8_MIN INT8_MIN
#define INT_FAST8_MAX INT8_MAX
#define INT_FAST16_MIN INT16_MIN
#define INT_FAST16_MAX INT16_MAX
#define INT_FAST32_MIN INT32_MIN
#define INT_FAST32_MAX INT32_MAX
#define INT_FAST64_MIN INT64_MIN
#define INT_FAST64_MAX INT64_MAX
#define UINT_FAST8_MAX UINT8_MAX
#define UINT_FAST16_MAX UINT16_MAX
#define UINT_FAST32_MAX UINT32_MAX
#define UINT_FAST64_MAX UINT64_MAX
// 7.18.2.4 Limits of integer types capable of holding object pointers
#ifdef _WIN64 // [
# define INTPTR_MIN INT64_MIN
# define INTPTR_MAX INT64_MAX
# define UINTPTR_MAX UINT64_MAX
#else // _WIN64 ][
# define INTPTR_MIN INT32_MIN
# define INTPTR_MAX INT32_MAX
# define UINTPTR_MAX UINT32_MAX
#endif // _WIN64 ]
// 7.18.2.5 Limits of greatest-width integer types
#define INTMAX_MIN INT64_MIN
#define INTMAX_MAX INT64_MAX
#define UINTMAX_MAX UINT64_MAX
// 7.18.3 Limits of other integer types
#ifdef _WIN64 // [
# define PTRDIFF_MIN _I64_MIN
# define PTRDIFF_MAX _I64_MAX
#else // _WIN64 ][
# define PTRDIFF_MIN _I32_MIN
# define PTRDIFF_MAX _I32_MAX
#endif // _WIN64 ]
#define SIG_ATOMIC_MIN INT_MIN
#define SIG_ATOMIC_MAX INT_MAX
#ifndef SIZE_MAX // [
# ifdef _WIN64 // [
# define SIZE_MAX _UI64_MAX
# else // _WIN64 ][
# define SIZE_MAX _UI32_MAX
# endif // _WIN64 ]
#endif // SIZE_MAX ]
// WCHAR_MIN and WCHAR_MAX are also defined in <wchar.h>
#ifndef WCHAR_MIN // [
# define WCHAR_MIN 0
#endif // WCHAR_MIN ]
#ifndef WCHAR_MAX // [
# define WCHAR_MAX _UI16_MAX
#endif // WCHAR_MAX ]
#define WINT_MIN 0
#define WINT_MAX _UI16_MAX
#endif // __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS ]
// 7.18.4 Limits of other integer types
#if !defined(__cplusplus) || defined(__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS) // [ See footnote 224 at page 260
// 7.18.4.1 Macros for minimum-width integer constants
#define INT8_C(val) val##i8
#define INT16_C(val) val##i16
#define INT32_C(val) val##i32
#define INT64_C(val) val##i64
#define UINT8_C(val) val##ui8
#define UINT16_C(val) val##ui16
#define UINT32_C(val) val##ui32
#define UINT64_C(val) val##ui64
// 7.18.4.2 Macros for greatest-width integer constants
#define INTMAX_C INT64_C
#define UINTMAX_C UINT64_C
#endif // __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS ]
#endif // _MSC_STDINT_H_ ]

View File

@ -1,102 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<protocol name="fractional_scale_v1">
<copyright>
Copyright © 2022 Kenny Levinsen
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
</copyright>
<description summary="Protocol for requesting fractional surface scales">
This protocol allows a compositor to suggest for surfaces to render at
fractional scales.
A client can submit scaled content by utilizing wp_viewport. This is done by
creating a wp_viewport object for the surface and setting the destination
rectangle to the surface size before the scale factor is applied.
The buffer size is calculated by multiplying the surface size by the
intended scale.
The wl_surface buffer scale should remain set to 1.
If a surface has a surface-local size of 100 px by 50 px and wishes to
submit buffers with a scale of 1.5, then a buffer of 150px by 75 px should
be used and the wp_viewport destination rectangle should be 100 px by 50 px.
For toplevel surfaces, the size is rounded halfway away from zero. The
rounding algorithm for subsurface position and size is not defined.
</description>
<interface name="wp_fractional_scale_manager_v1" version="1">
<description summary="fractional surface scale information">
A global interface for requesting surfaces to use fractional scales.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="unbind the fractional surface scale interface">
Informs the server that the client will not be using this protocol
object anymore. This does not affect any other objects,
wp_fractional_scale_v1 objects included.
</description>
</request>
<enum name="error">
<entry name="fractional_scale_exists" value="0"
summary="the surface already has a fractional_scale object associated"/>
</enum>
<request name="get_fractional_scale">
<description summary="extend surface interface for scale information">
Create an add-on object for the the wl_surface to let the compositor
request fractional scales. If the given wl_surface already has a
wp_fractional_scale_v1 object associated, the fractional_scale_exists
protocol error is raised.
</description>
<arg name="id" type="new_id" interface="wp_fractional_scale_v1"
summary="the new surface scale info interface id"/>
<arg name="surface" type="object" interface="wl_surface"
summary="the surface"/>
</request>
</interface>
<interface name="wp_fractional_scale_v1" version="1">
<description summary="fractional scale interface to a wl_surface">
An additional interface to a wl_surface object which allows the compositor
to inform the client of the preferred scale.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="remove surface scale information for surface">
Destroy the fractional scale object. When this object is destroyed,
preferred_scale events will no longer be sent.
</description>
</request>
<event name="preferred_scale">
<description summary="notify of new preferred scale">
Notification of a new preferred scale for this surface that the
compositor suggests that the client should use.
The sent scale is the numerator of a fraction with a denominator of 120.
</description>
<arg name="scale" type="uint" summary="the new preferred scale"/>
</event>
</interface>
</protocol>

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<protocol name="idle_inhibit_unstable_v1">
<copyright>
Copyright © 2015 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
</copyright>
<interface name="zwp_idle_inhibit_manager_v1" version="1">
<description summary="control behavior when display idles">
This interface permits inhibiting the idle behavior such as screen
blanking, locking, and screensaving. The client binds the idle manager
globally, then creates idle-inhibitor objects for each surface.
Warning! The protocol described in this file is experimental and
backward incompatible changes may be made. Backward compatible changes
may be added together with the corresponding interface version bump.
Backward incompatible changes are done by bumping the version number in
the protocol and interface names and resetting the interface version.
Once the protocol is to be declared stable, the 'z' prefix and the
version number in the protocol and interface names are removed and the
interface version number is reset.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the idle inhibitor object">
Destroy the inhibit manager.
</description>
</request>
<request name="create_inhibitor">
<description summary="create a new inhibitor object">
Create a new inhibitor object associated with the given surface.
</description>
<arg name="id" type="new_id" interface="zwp_idle_inhibitor_v1"/>
<arg name="surface" type="object" interface="wl_surface"
summary="the surface that inhibits the idle behavior"/>
</request>
</interface>
<interface name="zwp_idle_inhibitor_v1" version="1">
<description summary="context object for inhibiting idle behavior">
An idle inhibitor prevents the output that the associated surface is
visible on from being set to a state where it is not visually usable due
to lack of user interaction (e.g. blanked, dimmed, locked, set to power
save, etc.) Any screensaver processes are also blocked from displaying.
If the surface is destroyed, unmapped, becomes occluded, loses
visibility, or otherwise becomes not visually relevant for the user, the
idle inhibitor will not be honored by the compositor; if the surface
subsequently regains visibility the inhibitor takes effect once again.
Likewise, the inhibitor isn't honored if the system was already idled at
the time the inhibitor was established, although if the system later
de-idles and re-idles the inhibitor will take effect.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the idle inhibitor object">
Remove the inhibitor effect from the associated wl_surface.
</description>
</request>
</interface>
</protocol>

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<protocol name="pointer_constraints_unstable_v1">
<copyright>
Copyright © 2014 Jonas Ådahl
Copyright © 2015 Red Hat Inc.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
</copyright>
<description summary="protocol for constraining pointer motions">
This protocol specifies a set of interfaces used for adding constraints to
the motion of a pointer. Possible constraints include confining pointer
motions to a given region, or locking it to its current position.
In order to constrain the pointer, a client must first bind the global
interface "wp_pointer_constraints" which, if a compositor supports pointer
constraints, is exposed by the registry. Using the bound global object, the
client uses the request that corresponds to the type of constraint it wants
to make. See wp_pointer_constraints for more details.
Warning! The protocol described in this file is experimental and backward
incompatible changes may be made. Backward compatible changes may be added
together with the corresponding interface version bump. Backward
incompatible changes are done by bumping the version number in the protocol
and interface names and resetting the interface version. Once the protocol
is to be declared stable, the 'z' prefix and the version number in the
protocol and interface names are removed and the interface version number is
reset.
</description>
<interface name="zwp_pointer_constraints_v1" version="1">
<description summary="constrain the movement of a pointer">
The global interface exposing pointer constraining functionality. It
exposes two requests: lock_pointer for locking the pointer to its
position, and confine_pointer for locking the pointer to a region.
The lock_pointer and confine_pointer requests create the objects
wp_locked_pointer and wp_confined_pointer respectively, and the client can
use these objects to interact with the lock.
For any surface, only one lock or confinement may be active across all
wl_pointer objects of the same seat. If a lock or confinement is requested
when another lock or confinement is active or requested on the same surface
and with any of the wl_pointer objects of the same seat, an
'already_constrained' error will be raised.
</description>
<enum name="error">
<description summary="wp_pointer_constraints error values">
These errors can be emitted in response to wp_pointer_constraints
requests.
</description>
<entry name="already_constrained" value="1"
summary="pointer constraint already requested on that surface"/>
</enum>
<enum name="lifetime">
<description summary="constraint lifetime">
These values represent different lifetime semantics. They are passed
as arguments to the factory requests to specify how the constraint
lifetimes should be managed.
</description>
<entry name="oneshot" value="1">
<description summary="the pointer constraint is defunct once deactivated">
A oneshot pointer constraint will never reactivate once it has been
deactivated. See the corresponding deactivation event
(wp_locked_pointer.unlocked and wp_confined_pointer.unconfined) for
details.
</description>
</entry>
<entry name="persistent" value="2">
<description summary="the pointer constraint may reactivate">
A persistent pointer constraint may again reactivate once it has
been deactivated. See the corresponding deactivation event
(wp_locked_pointer.unlocked and wp_confined_pointer.unconfined) for
details.
</description>
</entry>
</enum>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the pointer constraints manager object">
Used by the client to notify the server that it will no longer use this
pointer constraints object.
</description>
</request>
<request name="lock_pointer">
<description summary="lock pointer to a position">
The lock_pointer request lets the client request to disable movements of
the virtual pointer (i.e. the cursor), effectively locking the pointer
to a position. This request may not take effect immediately; in the
future, when the compositor deems implementation-specific constraints
are satisfied, the pointer lock will be activated and the compositor
sends a locked event.
The protocol provides no guarantee that the constraints are ever
satisfied, and does not require the compositor to send an error if the
constraints cannot ever be satisfied. It is thus possible to request a
lock that will never activate.
There may not be another pointer constraint of any kind requested or
active on the surface for any of the wl_pointer objects of the seat of
the passed pointer when requesting a lock. If there is, an error will be
raised. See general pointer lock documentation for more details.
The intersection of the region passed with this request and the input
region of the surface is used to determine where the pointer must be
in order for the lock to activate. It is up to the compositor whether to
warp the pointer or require some kind of user interaction for the lock
to activate. If the region is null the surface input region is used.
A surface may receive pointer focus without the lock being activated.
The request creates a new object wp_locked_pointer which is used to
interact with the lock as well as receive updates about its state. See
the the description of wp_locked_pointer for further information.
Note that while a pointer is locked, the wl_pointer objects of the
corresponding seat will not emit any wl_pointer.motion events, but
relative motion events will still be emitted via wp_relative_pointer
objects of the same seat. wl_pointer.axis and wl_pointer.button events
are unaffected.
</description>
<arg name="id" type="new_id" interface="zwp_locked_pointer_v1"/>
<arg name="surface" type="object" interface="wl_surface"
summary="surface to lock pointer to"/>
<arg name="pointer" type="object" interface="wl_pointer"
summary="the pointer that should be locked"/>
<arg name="region" type="object" interface="wl_region" allow-null="true"
summary="region of surface"/>
<arg name="lifetime" type="uint" enum="lifetime" summary="lock lifetime"/>
</request>
<request name="confine_pointer">
<description summary="confine pointer to a region">
The confine_pointer request lets the client request to confine the
pointer cursor to a given region. This request may not take effect
immediately; in the future, when the compositor deems implementation-
specific constraints are satisfied, the pointer confinement will be
activated and the compositor sends a confined event.
The intersection of the region passed with this request and the input
region of the surface is used to determine where the pointer must be
in order for the confinement to activate. It is up to the compositor
whether to warp the pointer or require some kind of user interaction for
the confinement to activate. If the region is null the surface input
region is used.
The request will create a new object wp_confined_pointer which is used
to interact with the confinement as well as receive updates about its
state. See the the description of wp_confined_pointer for further
information.
</description>
<arg name="id" type="new_id" interface="zwp_confined_pointer_v1"/>
<arg name="surface" type="object" interface="wl_surface"
summary="surface to lock pointer to"/>
<arg name="pointer" type="object" interface="wl_pointer"
summary="the pointer that should be confined"/>
<arg name="region" type="object" interface="wl_region" allow-null="true"
summary="region of surface"/>
<arg name="lifetime" type="uint" enum="lifetime" summary="confinement lifetime"/>
</request>
</interface>
<interface name="zwp_locked_pointer_v1" version="1">
<description summary="receive relative pointer motion events">
The wp_locked_pointer interface represents a locked pointer state.
While the lock of this object is active, the wl_pointer objects of the
associated seat will not emit any wl_pointer.motion events.
This object will send the event 'locked' when the lock is activated.
Whenever the lock is activated, it is guaranteed that the locked surface
will already have received pointer focus and that the pointer will be
within the region passed to the request creating this object.
To unlock the pointer, send the destroy request. This will also destroy
the wp_locked_pointer object.
If the compositor decides to unlock the pointer the unlocked event is
sent. See wp_locked_pointer.unlock for details.
When unlocking, the compositor may warp the cursor position to the set
cursor position hint. If it does, it will not result in any relative
motion events emitted via wp_relative_pointer.
If the surface the lock was requested on is destroyed and the lock is not
yet activated, the wp_locked_pointer object is now defunct and must be
destroyed.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the locked pointer object">
Destroy the locked pointer object. If applicable, the compositor will
unlock the pointer.
</description>
</request>
<request name="set_cursor_position_hint">
<description summary="set the pointer cursor position hint">
Set the cursor position hint relative to the top left corner of the
surface.
If the client is drawing its own cursor, it should update the position
hint to the position of its own cursor. A compositor may use this
information to warp the pointer upon unlock in order to avoid pointer
jumps.
The cursor position hint is double buffered. The new hint will only take
effect when the associated surface gets it pending state applied. See
wl_surface.commit for details.
</description>
<arg name="surface_x" type="fixed"
summary="surface-local x coordinate"/>
<arg name="surface_y" type="fixed"
summary="surface-local y coordinate"/>
</request>
<request name="set_region">
<description summary="set a new lock region">
Set a new region used to lock the pointer.
The new lock region is double-buffered. The new lock region will
only take effect when the associated surface gets its pending state
applied. See wl_surface.commit for details.
For details about the lock region, see wp_locked_pointer.
</description>
<arg name="region" type="object" interface="wl_region" allow-null="true"
summary="region of surface"/>
</request>
<event name="locked">
<description summary="lock activation event">
Notification that the pointer lock of the seat's pointer is activated.
</description>
</event>
<event name="unlocked">
<description summary="lock deactivation event">
Notification that the pointer lock of the seat's pointer is no longer
active. If this is a oneshot pointer lock (see
wp_pointer_constraints.lifetime) this object is now defunct and should
be destroyed. If this is a persistent pointer lock (see
wp_pointer_constraints.lifetime) this pointer lock may again
reactivate in the future.
</description>
</event>
</interface>
<interface name="zwp_confined_pointer_v1" version="1">
<description summary="confined pointer object">
The wp_confined_pointer interface represents a confined pointer state.
This object will send the event 'confined' when the confinement is
activated. Whenever the confinement is activated, it is guaranteed that
the surface the pointer is confined to will already have received pointer
focus and that the pointer will be within the region passed to the request
creating this object. It is up to the compositor to decide whether this
requires some user interaction and if the pointer will warp to within the
passed region if outside.
To unconfine the pointer, send the destroy request. This will also destroy
the wp_confined_pointer object.
If the compositor decides to unconfine the pointer the unconfined event is
sent. The wp_confined_pointer object is at this point defunct and should
be destroyed.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the confined pointer object">
Destroy the confined pointer object. If applicable, the compositor will
unconfine the pointer.
</description>
</request>
<request name="set_region">
<description summary="set a new confine region">
Set a new region used to confine the pointer.
The new confine region is double-buffered. The new confine region will
only take effect when the associated surface gets its pending state
applied. See wl_surface.commit for details.
If the confinement is active when the new confinement region is applied
and the pointer ends up outside of newly applied region, the pointer may
warped to a position within the new confinement region. If warped, a
wl_pointer.motion event will be emitted, but no
wp_relative_pointer.relative_motion event.
The compositor may also, instead of using the new region, unconfine the
pointer.
For details about the confine region, see wp_confined_pointer.
</description>
<arg name="region" type="object" interface="wl_region" allow-null="true"
summary="region of surface"/>
</request>
<event name="confined">
<description summary="pointer confined">
Notification that the pointer confinement of the seat's pointer is
activated.
</description>
</event>
<event name="unconfined">
<description summary="pointer unconfined">
Notification that the pointer confinement of the seat's pointer is no
longer active. If this is a oneshot pointer confinement (see
wp_pointer_constraints.lifetime) this object is now defunct and should
be destroyed. If this is a persistent pointer confinement (see
wp_pointer_constraints.lifetime) this pointer confinement may again
reactivate in the future.
</description>
</event>
</interface>
</protocol>

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<protocol name="relative_pointer_unstable_v1">
<copyright>
Copyright © 2014 Jonas Ådahl
Copyright © 2015 Red Hat Inc.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
</copyright>
<description summary="protocol for relative pointer motion events">
This protocol specifies a set of interfaces used for making clients able to
receive relative pointer events not obstructed by barriers (such as the
monitor edge or other pointer barriers).
To start receiving relative pointer events, a client must first bind the
global interface "wp_relative_pointer_manager" which, if a compositor
supports relative pointer motion events, is exposed by the registry. After
having created the relative pointer manager proxy object, the client uses
it to create the actual relative pointer object using the
"get_relative_pointer" request given a wl_pointer. The relative pointer
motion events will then, when applicable, be transmitted via the proxy of
the newly created relative pointer object. See the documentation of the
relative pointer interface for more details.
Warning! The protocol described in this file is experimental and backward
incompatible changes may be made. Backward compatible changes may be added
together with the corresponding interface version bump. Backward
incompatible changes are done by bumping the version number in the protocol
and interface names and resetting the interface version. Once the protocol
is to be declared stable, the 'z' prefix and the version number in the
protocol and interface names are removed and the interface version number is
reset.
</description>
<interface name="zwp_relative_pointer_manager_v1" version="1">
<description summary="get relative pointer objects">
A global interface used for getting the relative pointer object for a
given pointer.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the relative pointer manager object">
Used by the client to notify the server that it will no longer use this
relative pointer manager object.
</description>
</request>
<request name="get_relative_pointer">
<description summary="get a relative pointer object">
Create a relative pointer interface given a wl_pointer object. See the
wp_relative_pointer interface for more details.
</description>
<arg name="id" type="new_id" interface="zwp_relative_pointer_v1"/>
<arg name="pointer" type="object" interface="wl_pointer"/>
</request>
</interface>
<interface name="zwp_relative_pointer_v1" version="1">
<description summary="relative pointer object">
A wp_relative_pointer object is an extension to the wl_pointer interface
used for emitting relative pointer events. It shares the same focus as
wl_pointer objects of the same seat and will only emit events when it has
focus.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="release the relative pointer object"/>
</request>
<event name="relative_motion">
<description summary="relative pointer motion">
Relative x/y pointer motion from the pointer of the seat associated with
this object.
A relative motion is in the same dimension as regular wl_pointer motion
events, except they do not represent an absolute position. For example,
moving a pointer from (x, y) to (x', y') would have the equivalent
relative motion (x' - x, y' - y). If a pointer motion caused the
absolute pointer position to be clipped by for example the edge of the
monitor, the relative motion is unaffected by the clipping and will
represent the unclipped motion.
This event also contains non-accelerated motion deltas. The
non-accelerated delta is, when applicable, the regular pointer motion
delta as it was before having applied motion acceleration and other
transformations such as normalization.
Note that the non-accelerated delta does not represent 'raw' events as
they were read from some device. Pointer motion acceleration is device-
and configuration-specific and non-accelerated deltas and accelerated
deltas may have the same value on some devices.
Relative motions are not coupled to wl_pointer.motion events, and can be
sent in combination with such events, but also independently. There may
also be scenarios where wl_pointer.motion is sent, but there is no
relative motion. The order of an absolute and relative motion event
originating from the same physical motion is not guaranteed.
If the client needs button events or focus state, it can receive them
from a wl_pointer object of the same seat that the wp_relative_pointer
object is associated with.
</description>
<arg name="utime_hi" type="uint"
summary="high 32 bits of a 64 bit timestamp with microsecond granularity"/>
<arg name="utime_lo" type="uint"
summary="low 32 bits of a 64 bit timestamp with microsecond granularity"/>
<arg name="dx" type="fixed"
summary="the x component of the motion vector"/>
<arg name="dy" type="fixed"
summary="the y component of the motion vector"/>
<arg name="dx_unaccel" type="fixed"
summary="the x component of the unaccelerated motion vector"/>
<arg name="dy_unaccel" type="fixed"
summary="the y component of the unaccelerated motion vector"/>
</event>
</interface>
</protocol>

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<protocol name="viewporter">
<copyright>
Copyright © 2013-2016 Collabora, Ltd.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
</copyright>
<interface name="wp_viewporter" version="1">
<description summary="surface cropping and scaling">
The global interface exposing surface cropping and scaling
capabilities is used to instantiate an interface extension for a
wl_surface object. This extended interface will then allow
cropping and scaling the surface contents, effectively
disconnecting the direct relationship between the buffer and the
surface size.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="unbind from the cropping and scaling interface">
Informs the server that the client will not be using this
protocol object anymore. This does not affect any other objects,
wp_viewport objects included.
</description>
</request>
<enum name="error">
<entry name="viewport_exists" value="0"
summary="the surface already has a viewport object associated"/>
</enum>
<request name="get_viewport">
<description summary="extend surface interface for crop and scale">
Instantiate an interface extension for the given wl_surface to
crop and scale its content. If the given wl_surface already has
a wp_viewport object associated, the viewport_exists
protocol error is raised.
</description>
<arg name="id" type="new_id" interface="wp_viewport"
summary="the new viewport interface id"/>
<arg name="surface" type="object" interface="wl_surface"
summary="the surface"/>
</request>
</interface>
<interface name="wp_viewport" version="1">
<description summary="crop and scale interface to a wl_surface">
An additional interface to a wl_surface object, which allows the
client to specify the cropping and scaling of the surface
contents.
This interface works with two concepts: the source rectangle (src_x,
src_y, src_width, src_height), and the destination size (dst_width,
dst_height). The contents of the source rectangle are scaled to the
destination size, and content outside the source rectangle is ignored.
This state is double-buffered, and is applied on the next
wl_surface.commit.
The two parts of crop and scale state are independent: the source
rectangle, and the destination size. Initially both are unset, that
is, no scaling is applied. The whole of the current wl_buffer is
used as the source, and the surface size is as defined in
wl_surface.attach.
If the destination size is set, it causes the surface size to become
dst_width, dst_height. The source (rectangle) is scaled to exactly
this size. This overrides whatever the attached wl_buffer size is,
unless the wl_buffer is NULL. If the wl_buffer is NULL, the surface
has no content and therefore no size. Otherwise, the size is always
at least 1x1 in surface local coordinates.
If the source rectangle is set, it defines what area of the wl_buffer is
taken as the source. If the source rectangle is set and the destination
size is not set, then src_width and src_height must be integers, and the
surface size becomes the source rectangle size. This results in cropping
without scaling. If src_width or src_height are not integers and
destination size is not set, the bad_size protocol error is raised when
the surface state is applied.
The coordinate transformations from buffer pixel coordinates up to
the surface-local coordinates happen in the following order:
1. buffer_transform (wl_surface.set_buffer_transform)
2. buffer_scale (wl_surface.set_buffer_scale)
3. crop and scale (wp_viewport.set*)
This means, that the source rectangle coordinates of crop and scale
are given in the coordinates after the buffer transform and scale,
i.e. in the coordinates that would be the surface-local coordinates
if the crop and scale was not applied.
If src_x or src_y are negative, the bad_value protocol error is raised.
Otherwise, if the source rectangle is partially or completely outside of
the non-NULL wl_buffer, then the out_of_buffer protocol error is raised
when the surface state is applied. A NULL wl_buffer does not raise the
out_of_buffer error.
If the wl_surface associated with the wp_viewport is destroyed,
all wp_viewport requests except 'destroy' raise the protocol error
no_surface.
If the wp_viewport object is destroyed, the crop and scale
state is removed from the wl_surface. The change will be applied
on the next wl_surface.commit.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="remove scaling and cropping from the surface">
The associated wl_surface's crop and scale state is removed.
The change is applied on the next wl_surface.commit.
</description>
</request>
<enum name="error">
<entry name="bad_value" value="0"
summary="negative or zero values in width or height"/>
<entry name="bad_size" value="1"
summary="destination size is not integer"/>
<entry name="out_of_buffer" value="2"
summary="source rectangle extends outside of the content area"/>
<entry name="no_surface" value="3"
summary="the wl_surface was destroyed"/>
</enum>
<request name="set_source">
<description summary="set the source rectangle for cropping">
Set the source rectangle of the associated wl_surface. See
wp_viewport for the description, and relation to the wl_buffer
size.
If all of x, y, width and height are -1.0, the source rectangle is
unset instead. Any other set of values where width or height are zero
or negative, or x or y are negative, raise the bad_value protocol
error.
The crop and scale state is double-buffered state, and will be
applied on the next wl_surface.commit.
</description>
<arg name="x" type="fixed" summary="source rectangle x"/>
<arg name="y" type="fixed" summary="source rectangle y"/>
<arg name="width" type="fixed" summary="source rectangle width"/>
<arg name="height" type="fixed" summary="source rectangle height"/>
</request>
<request name="set_destination">
<description summary="set the surface size for scaling">
Set the destination size of the associated wl_surface. See
wp_viewport for the description, and relation to the wl_buffer
size.
If width is -1 and height is -1, the destination size is unset
instead. Any other pair of values for width and height that
contains zero or negative values raises the bad_value protocol
error.
The crop and scale state is double-buffered state, and will be
applied on the next wl_surface.commit.
</description>
<arg name="width" type="int" summary="surface width"/>
<arg name="height" type="int" summary="surface height"/>
</request>
</interface>
</protocol>

3151
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@ -1,200 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<protocol name="xdg_activation_v1">
<copyright>
Copyright © 2020 Aleix Pol Gonzalez &lt;aleixpol@kde.org&gt;
Copyright © 2020 Carlos Garnacho &lt;carlosg@gnome.org&gt;
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
</copyright>
<description summary="Protocol for requesting activation of surfaces">
The way for a client to pass focus to another toplevel is as follows.
The client that intends to activate another toplevel uses the
xdg_activation_v1.get_activation_token request to get an activation token.
This token is then forwarded to the client, which is supposed to activate
one of its surfaces, through a separate band of communication.
One established way of doing this is through the XDG_ACTIVATION_TOKEN
environment variable of a newly launched child process. The child process
should unset the environment variable again right after reading it out in
order to avoid propagating it to other child processes.
Another established way exists for Applications implementing the D-Bus
interface org.freedesktop.Application, which should get their token under
activation-token on their platform_data.
In general activation tokens may be transferred across clients through
means not described in this protocol.
The client to be activated will then pass the token
it received to the xdg_activation_v1.activate request. The compositor can
then use this token to decide how to react to the activation request.
The token the activating client gets may be ineffective either already at
the time it receives it, for example if it was not focused, for focus
stealing prevention. The activating client will have no way to discover
the validity of the token, and may still forward it to the to be activated
client.
The created activation token may optionally get information attached to it
that can be used by the compositor to identify the application that we
intend to activate. This can for example be used to display a visual hint
about what application is being started.
Warning! The protocol described in this file is currently in the testing
phase. Backward compatible changes may be added together with the
corresponding interface version bump. Backward incompatible changes can
only be done by creating a new major version of the extension.
</description>
<interface name="xdg_activation_v1" version="1">
<description summary="interface for activating surfaces">
A global interface used for informing the compositor about applications
being activated or started, or for applications to request to be
activated.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the xdg_activation object">
Notify the compositor that the xdg_activation object will no longer be
used.
The child objects created via this interface are unaffected and should
be destroyed separately.
</description>
</request>
<request name="get_activation_token">
<description summary="requests a token">
Creates an xdg_activation_token_v1 object that will provide
the initiating client with a unique token for this activation. This
token should be offered to the clients to be activated.
</description>
<arg name="id" type="new_id" interface="xdg_activation_token_v1"/>
</request>
<request name="activate">
<description summary="notify new interaction being available">
Requests surface activation. It's up to the compositor to display
this information as desired, for example by placing the surface above
the rest.
The compositor may know who requested this by checking the activation
token and might decide not to follow through with the activation if it's
considered unwanted.
Compositors can ignore unknown activation tokens when an invalid
token is passed.
</description>
<arg name="token" type="string" summary="the activation token of the initiating client"/>
<arg name="surface" type="object" interface="wl_surface"
summary="the wl_surface to activate"/>
</request>
</interface>
<interface name="xdg_activation_token_v1" version="1">
<description summary="an exported activation handle">
An object for setting up a token and receiving a token handle that can
be passed as an activation token to another client.
The object is created using the xdg_activation_v1.get_activation_token
request. This object should then be populated with the app_id, surface
and serial information and committed. The compositor shall then issue a
done event with the token. In case the request's parameters are invalid,
the compositor will provide an invalid token.
</description>
<enum name="error">
<entry name="already_used" value="0"
summary="The token has already been used previously"/>
</enum>
<request name="set_serial">
<description summary="specifies the seat and serial of the activating event">
Provides information about the seat and serial event that requested the
token.
The serial can come from an input or focus event. For instance, if a
click triggers the launch of a third-party client, the launcher client
should send a set_serial request with the serial and seat from the
wl_pointer.button event.
Some compositors might refuse to activate toplevels when the token
doesn't have a valid and recent enough event serial.
Must be sent before commit. This information is optional.
</description>
<arg name="serial" type="uint"
summary="the serial of the event that triggered the activation"/>
<arg name="seat" type="object" interface="wl_seat"
summary="the wl_seat of the event"/>
</request>
<request name="set_app_id">
<description summary="specifies the application being activated">
The requesting client can specify an app_id to associate the token
being created with it.
Must be sent before commit. This information is optional.
</description>
<arg name="app_id" type="string"
summary="the application id of the client being activated."/>
</request>
<request name="set_surface">
<description summary="specifies the surface requesting activation">
This request sets the surface requesting the activation. Note, this is
different from the surface that will be activated.
Some compositors might refuse to activate toplevels when the token
doesn't have a requesting surface.
Must be sent before commit. This information is optional.
</description>
<arg name="surface" type="object" interface="wl_surface"
summary="the requesting surface"/>
</request>
<request name="commit">
<description summary="issues the token request">
Requests an activation token based on the different parameters that
have been offered through set_serial, set_surface and set_app_id.
</description>
</request>
<event name="done">
<description summary="the exported activation token">
The 'done' event contains the unique token of this activation request
and notifies that the provider is done.
</description>
<arg name="token" type="string" summary="the exported activation token"/>
</event>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the xdg_activation_token_v1 object">
Notify the compositor that the xdg_activation_token_v1 object will no
longer be used. The received token stays valid.
</description>
</request>
</interface>
</protocol>

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@ -1,156 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<protocol name="xdg_decoration_unstable_v1">
<copyright>
Copyright © 2018 Simon Ser
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
</copyright>
<interface name="zxdg_decoration_manager_v1" version="1">
<description summary="window decoration manager">
This interface allows a compositor to announce support for server-side
decorations.
A window decoration is a set of window controls as deemed appropriate by
the party managing them, such as user interface components used to move,
resize and change a window's state.
A client can use this protocol to request being decorated by a supporting
compositor.
If compositor and client do not negotiate the use of a server-side
decoration using this protocol, clients continue to self-decorate as they
see fit.
Warning! The protocol described in this file is experimental and
backward incompatible changes may be made. Backward compatible changes
may be added together with the corresponding interface version bump.
Backward incompatible changes are done by bumping the version number in
the protocol and interface names and resetting the interface version.
Once the protocol is to be declared stable, the 'z' prefix and the
version number in the protocol and interface names are removed and the
interface version number is reset.
</description>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the decoration manager object">
Destroy the decoration manager. This doesn't destroy objects created
with the manager.
</description>
</request>
<request name="get_toplevel_decoration">
<description summary="create a new toplevel decoration object">
Create a new decoration object associated with the given toplevel.
Creating an xdg_toplevel_decoration from an xdg_toplevel which has a
buffer attached or committed is a client error, and any attempts by a
client to attach or manipulate a buffer prior to the first
xdg_toplevel_decoration.configure event must also be treated as
errors.
</description>
<arg name="id" type="new_id" interface="zxdg_toplevel_decoration_v1"/>
<arg name="toplevel" type="object" interface="xdg_toplevel"/>
</request>
</interface>
<interface name="zxdg_toplevel_decoration_v1" version="1">
<description summary="decoration object for a toplevel surface">
The decoration object allows the compositor to toggle server-side window
decorations for a toplevel surface. The client can request to switch to
another mode.
The xdg_toplevel_decoration object must be destroyed before its
xdg_toplevel.
</description>
<enum name="error">
<entry name="unconfigured_buffer" value="0"
summary="xdg_toplevel has a buffer attached before configure"/>
<entry name="already_constructed" value="1"
summary="xdg_toplevel already has a decoration object"/>
<entry name="orphaned" value="2"
summary="xdg_toplevel destroyed before the decoration object"/>
</enum>
<request name="destroy" type="destructor">
<description summary="destroy the decoration object">
Switch back to a mode without any server-side decorations at the next
commit.
</description>
</request>
<enum name="mode">
<description summary="window decoration modes">
These values describe window decoration modes.
</description>
<entry name="client_side" value="1"
summary="no server-side window decoration"/>
<entry name="server_side" value="2"
summary="server-side window decoration"/>
</enum>
<request name="set_mode">
<description summary="set the decoration mode">
Set the toplevel surface decoration mode. This informs the compositor
that the client prefers the provided decoration mode.
After requesting a decoration mode, the compositor will respond by
emitting an xdg_surface.configure event. The client should then update
its content, drawing it without decorations if the received mode is
server-side decorations. The client must also acknowledge the configure
when committing the new content (see xdg_surface.ack_configure).
The compositor can decide not to use the client's mode and enforce a
different mode instead.
Clients whose decoration mode depend on the xdg_toplevel state may send
a set_mode request in response to an xdg_surface.configure event and wait
for the next xdg_surface.configure event to prevent unwanted state.
Such clients are responsible for preventing configure loops and must
make sure not to send multiple successive set_mode requests with the
same decoration mode.
</description>
<arg name="mode" type="uint" enum="mode" summary="the decoration mode"/>
</request>
<request name="unset_mode">
<description summary="unset the decoration mode">
Unset the toplevel surface decoration mode. This informs the compositor
that the client doesn't prefer a particular decoration mode.
This request has the same semantics as set_mode.
</description>
</request>
<event name="configure">
<description summary="suggest a surface change">
The configure event asks the client to change its decoration mode. The
configured state should not be applied immediately. Clients must send an
ack_configure in response to this event. See xdg_surface.configure and
xdg_surface.ack_configure for details.
A configure event can be sent at any time. The specified mode must be
obeyed by the client.
</description>
<arg name="mode" type="uint" enum="mode" summary="the decoration mode"/>
</event>
</interface>
</protocol>

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@ -2,20 +2,20 @@
# NOTE: The order of this list determines the order of items in the Guides
# (i.e. Pages) list in the generated documentation
set(source_files
main.md
news.md
quick.md
moving.md
compile.md
build.md
intro.md
context.md
monitor.md
window.md
input.md
vulkan.md
compat.md
internal.md)
main.dox
news.dox
quick.dox
moving.dox
compile.dox
build.dox
intro.dox
context.dox
monitor.dox
window.dox
input.dox
vulkan.dox
compat.dox
internal.dox)
set(extra_files DoxygenLayout.xml header.html footer.html extra.css spaces.svg)
@ -31,13 +31,8 @@ foreach(file IN LISTS source_files)
string(APPEND GLFW_DOXYGEN_INPUT " \\\n\"${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/${file}\"")
endforeach()
set(DOXYGEN_SKIP_DOT TRUE)
find_package(Doxygen)
if (NOT DOXYGEN_FOUND OR DOXYGEN_VERSION VERSION_LESS "1.9.8")
message(STATUS "Documentation generation requires Doxygen 1.9.8 or later")
else()
configure_file(Doxyfile.in Doxyfile @ONLY)
add_custom_command(OUTPUT "html/index.html"
COMMAND "${DOXYGEN_EXECUTABLE}"
WORKING_DIRECTORY "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}"
@ -49,9 +44,3 @@ else()
add_custom_target(docs ALL SOURCES "html/index.html")
set_target_properties(docs PROPERTIES FOLDER "GLFW3")
if (GLFW_INSTALL)
install(DIRECTORY "${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/docs/html"
DESTINATION "${CMAKE_INSTALL_DOCDIR}")
endif()
endif()

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@ -23,12 +23,13 @@ Questions about how to use GLFW should be asked either in the [support
section](https://discourse.glfw.org/c/support) of the forum, under the [Stack
Overflow tag](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/glfw) or [Game
Development tag](https://gamedev.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/glfw) on
Stack Exchange.
Stack Exchange or in the IRC channel `#glfw` on
[Libera.Chat](https://libera.chat/).
Questions about the design or implementation of GLFW or about future plans
should be asked in the [dev section](https://discourse.glfw.org/c/dev) of the
forum. Please don't open a GitHub issue to discuss design questions without
first checking with a maintainer.
forum or in the IRC channel. Please don't open a GitHub issue to discuss design
questions without first checking with a maintainer.
## Reporting a bug
@ -326,7 +327,7 @@ a thousand line one, if that is the appropriate size for the fix.
In addition to the code, a complete bug fix includes:
- Change log entry in `README.md`, describing the incorrect behavior
- Credits entries in `CONTRIBUTORS.md` for all authors of the bug fix
- Credits entries for all authors of the bug fix
Bug fixes will not be rejected because they don't include all the above parts,
but please keep in mind that maintainer time is finite and that there are many
@ -357,11 +358,11 @@ feature.
In addition to the code, a complete feature includes:
- Change log entry in `README.md`, listing all new symbols
- News page entry in `docs/news.md`, briefly describing the feature
- Guide documentation, with minimal examples, in the relevant guide in the `docs` folder
- News page entry, briefly describing the feature
- Guide documentation, with minimal examples, in the relevant guide
- Reference documentation, with all applicable tags
- Cross-references and mentions in appropriate places
- Credits entries in `CONTRIBUTORS.md` for all authors of the feature
- Credits entries for all authors of the feature
If the feature requires platform-specific code, at minimum stubs must be added
for the new platform function to all supported and experimental platforms.
@ -373,7 +374,7 @@ If it adds a new monitor property, support for it must be added to
If it adds a new OpenGL, OpenGL ES or Vulkan option or extension, support
for it must be added to `tests/glfwinfo.c` and the behavior of the library when
the extension is missing documented in `docs/compat.md`.
the extension is missing documented in `docs/compat.dox`.
If you haven't already, read the excellent article [How to Write a Git Commit
Message](https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/).

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@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
<tab type="mainpage" visible="yes" title="Introduction"/>
<tab type="user" url="quick_guide.html" title="Tutorial"/>
<tab type="pages" visible="yes" title="Guides" intro=""/>
<tab type="topics" visible="yes" title="Reference" intro=""/>
<tab type="modules" visible="yes" title="Reference" intro=""/>
<tab type="filelist" visible="yes" title="Files"/>
</navindex>

View File

@ -4,7 +4,8 @@ See the [latest documentation](https://www.glfw.org/docs/latest/) for tutorials,
guides and the API reference.
If you have questions about using GLFW, we have a
[forum](https://discourse.glfw.org/).
[forum](https://discourse.glfw.org/), and the `#glfw` IRC channel on
[Libera.Chat](https://libera.chat/).
Bugs are reported to our [issue tracker](https://github.com/glfw/glfw/issues).
Please check the [contribution

View File

@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Building applications {#build_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page build_guide Building applications
@tableofcontents
This is about compiling and linking applications that use GLFW. For information on
how to write such applications, start with the
@ -14,14 +16,14 @@ and linking process should be explained in your C programming material and in
the documentation for your development environment.
## Including the GLFW header file {#build_include}
@section build_include Including the GLFW header file
You should include the GLFW header in the source files where you use OpenGL or
GLFW.
```c
@code
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
This header defines all the constants and declares all the types and function
prototypes of the GLFW API. By default, it also includes the OpenGL header from
@ -41,18 +43,17 @@ In other words:
- Do not include window system headers unless you will use those APIs directly
- If you do need such headers, include them before the GLFW header
If you are using an OpenGL extension loading library such as [glad][], the
extension loader header should be included before the GLFW one. GLFW attempts
to detect any OpenGL or OpenGL ES header or extension loader header included
before it and will then disable the inclusion of the default OpenGL header.
Most extension loaders also define macros that disable similar headers below it.
If you are using an OpenGL extension loading library such as
[glad](https://github.com/Dav1dde/glad), the extension loader header should
be included before the GLFW one. GLFW attempts to detect any OpenGL or OpenGL
ES header or extension loader header included before it and will then disable
the inclusion of the default OpenGL header. Most extension loaders also define
macros that disable similar headers below it.
[glad]: https://github.com/Dav1dde/glad
```c
@code
#include <glad/gl.h>
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
Both of these mechanisms depend on the extension loader header defining a known
macro. If yours doesn't or you don't know which one your users will pick, the
@ -60,14 +61,14 @@ macro. If yours doesn't or you don't know which one your users will pick, the
including the OpenGL header. This will also allow you to include the two
headers in any order.
```c
@code
#define GLFW_INCLUDE_NONE
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
#include <glad/gl.h>
```
@endcode
### GLFW header option macros {#build_macros}
@subsection build_macros GLFW header option macros
These macros may be defined before the inclusion of the GLFW header and affect
its behavior.
@ -81,9 +82,8 @@ Only one of these may be defined at a time.
@note GLFW does not provide any of the API headers mentioned below. They are
provided by your development environment or your OpenGL, OpenGL ES or Vulkan
SDK, and most of them can be downloaded from the [Khronos Registry][registry].
[registry]: https://www.khronos.org/registry/
SDK, and most of them can be downloaded from the
[Khronos Registry](https://www.khronos.org/registry/).
@anchor GLFW_INCLUDE_GLCOREARB
__GLFW_INCLUDE_GLCOREARB__ makes the GLFW header include the modern
@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ If your build includes GLFW and you define any these in your build files, make
sure they are not applied to the GLFW sources.
## Link with the right libraries {#build_link}
@section build_link Link with the right libraries
GLFW is essentially a wrapper of various platform-specific APIs and therefore
needs to link against many different system libraries. If you are using GLFW as
@ -155,104 +155,28 @@ hard-coded into your build environment. See the section for your development
environment below. On Linux and other Unix-like operating systems, the list
varies but can be retrieved in various ways as described below.
A good general introduction to linking is [Beginner's Guide to
Linkers][linker_guide] by David Drysdale.
[linker_guide]: https://www.lurklurk.org/linkers/linkers.html
A good general introduction to linking is
[Beginner's Guide to Linkers](https://www.lurklurk.org/linkers/linkers.html) by
David Drysdale.
### With Visual C++ and GLFW binaries {#build_link_win32}
@subsection build_link_win32 With MinGW or Visual C++ on Windows
If you are using a downloaded [binary
archive](https://www.glfw.org/download.html), first make sure you have the
archive matching the architecture you are building for (32-bit or 64-bit), or
you will get link errors. Also make sure you are using the binaries for your
version of Visual C++ or you may get other link errors.
The static version of the GLFW library is named `glfw3`. When using this
version, it is also necessary to link with some libraries that GLFW uses.
There are two version of the static GLFW library in the binary archive, because
it needs to use the same base run-time library variant as the rest of your
executable.
When using MinGW to link an application with the static version of GLFW, you
must also explicitly link with `gdi32`. Other toolchains including MinGW-w64
include it in the set of default libraries along with other dependencies like
`user32` and `kernel32`.
One is named `glfw3.lib` and is for projects with the _Runtime Library_ project
option set to _Multi-threaded DLL_ or _Multi-threaded Debug DLL_. The other is
named `glfw3_mt.lib` and is for projects with _Runtime Library_ set to
_Multi-threaded_ or _Multi-threaded Debug_. To use the static GLFW library you
will need to add `path/to/glfw3.lib` or `path/to/glfw3_mt.lib` to the
_Additional Dependencies_ project option.
If you compiled a GLFW static library yourself then there will only be one,
named `glfw3.lib`, and you have to make sure the run-time library variant
matches.
The DLL version of the GLFW library is named `glfw3.dll`, but you will be
linking against the `glfw3dll.lib` link library. To use the DLL you will need
to add `path/to/glfw3dll.lib` to the _Additional Dependencies_ project option.
All of its dependencies are already listed there by default, but when building
with the DLL version of GLFW, you also need to define the @ref GLFW_DLL. This
can be done either in the _Preprocessor Definitions_ project option or by
defining it in your source code before including the GLFW header.
```c
#define GLFW_DLL
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
All link-time dependencies for GLFW are already listed in the _Additional
Dependencies_ option by default.
The link library for the GLFW DLL is named `glfw3dll`. When compiling an
application that uses the DLL version of GLFW, you need to define the @ref
GLFW_DLL macro _before_ any inclusion of the GLFW header. This can be done
either with a compiler switch or by defining it in your source code.
### With MinGW-w64 and GLFW binaries {#build_link_mingw}
This is intended for building a program from the command-line or by writing
a makefile, on Windows with [MinGW-w64][] and GLFW binaries. These can be from
a downloaded and extracted [binary archive](https://www.glfw.org/download.html)
or by compiling GLFW yourself. The paths below assume a binary archive is used.
If you are using a downloaded binary archive, first make sure you have the
archive matching the architecture you are building for (32-bit or 64-bit) or you
will get link errors.
Note that the order of source files and libraries matter for GCC. Dependencies
must be listed after the files that depend on them. Any source files that
depend on GLFW must be listed before the GLFW library. GLFW in turn depends on
`gdi32` and must be listed before it.
[MinGW-w64]: https://www.mingw-w64.org/
If you are using the static version of the GLFW library, which is named
`libglfw3.a`, do:
```sh
gcc -o myprog myprog.c -I path/to/glfw/include path/to/glfw/lib-mingw-w64/libglfw3.a -lgdi32
```
If you are using the DLL version of the GLFW library, which is named
`glfw3.dll`, you will need to use the `libglfw3dll.a` link library.
```sh
gcc -o myprog myprog.c -I path/to/glfw/include path/to/glfw/lib-mingw-w64/libglfw3dll.a -lgdi32
```
The resulting executable will need to find `glfw3.dll` to run, typically by
keeping both files in the same directory.
When you are building with the DLL version of GLFW, you will also need to define
the @ref GLFW_DLL macro. This can be done in your source files, as long as it
done before including the GLFW header:
```c
#define GLFW_DLL
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
It can also be done on the command-line:
```sh
gcc -o myprog myprog.c -D GLFW_DLL -I path/to/glfw/include path/to/glfw/lib-mingw-w64/libglfw3dll.a -lgdi32
```
### With CMake and GLFW source {#build_link_cmake_source}
@subsection build_link_cmake_source With CMake and GLFW source
This section is about using CMake to compile and link GLFW along with your
application. If you want to use an installed binary instead, see @ref
@ -264,18 +188,18 @@ built along with your application.
Add the root directory of the GLFW source tree to your project. This will add
the `glfw` target to your project.
```cmake
@code{.cmake}
add_subdirectory(path/to/glfw)
```
@endcode
Once GLFW has been added, link your application against the `glfw` target.
This adds the GLFW library and its link-time dependencies as it is currently
configured, the include directory for the GLFW header and, when applicable, the
@ref GLFW_DLL macro.
```cmake
@code{.cmake}
target_link_libraries(myapp glfw)
```
@endcode
Note that the `glfw` target does not depend on OpenGL, as GLFW loads any OpenGL,
OpenGL ES or Vulkan libraries it needs at runtime. If your application calls
@ -283,24 +207,22 @@ OpenGL directly, instead of using a modern
[extension loader library](@ref context_glext_auto), use the OpenGL CMake
package.
```cmake
@code{.cmake}
find_package(OpenGL REQUIRED)
```
@endcode
If OpenGL is found, the `OpenGL::GL` target is added to your project, containing
library and include directory paths. Link against this like any other library.
```cmake
@code{.cmake}
target_link_libraries(myapp OpenGL::GL)
```
@endcode
For a minimal example of a program and GLFW sources built with CMake, see the
[GLFW CMake Starter][cmake_starter] on GitHub.
[cmake_starter]: https://github.com/juliettef/GLFW-CMake-starter
[GLFW CMake Starter](https://github.com/juliettef/GLFW-CMake-starter) on GitHub.
### With CMake and installed GLFW binaries {#build_link_cmake_package}
@subsection build_link_cmake_package With CMake and installed GLFW binaries
This section is about using CMake to link GLFW after it has been built and
installed. If you want to build it along with your application instead, see
@ -309,17 +231,17 @@ installed. If you want to build it along with your application instead, see
With a few changes to your `CMakeLists.txt` you can locate the package and
target files generated when GLFW is installed.
```cmake
find_package(glfw3 3.5 REQUIRED)
```
@code{.cmake}
find_package(glfw3 3.4 REQUIRED)
@endcode
Once GLFW has been added to the project, link against it with the `glfw` target.
This adds the GLFW library and its link-time dependencies, the include directory
for the GLFW header and, when applicable, the @ref GLFW_DLL macro.
```cmake
@code{.cmake}
target_link_libraries(myapp glfw)
```
@endcode
Note that the `glfw` target does not depend on OpenGL, as GLFW loads any OpenGL,
OpenGL ES or Vulkan libraries it needs at runtime. If your application calls
@ -327,51 +249,47 @@ OpenGL directly, instead of using a modern
[extension loader library](@ref context_glext_auto), use the OpenGL CMake
package.
```cmake
@code{.cmake}
find_package(OpenGL REQUIRED)
```
@endcode
If OpenGL is found, the `OpenGL::GL` target is added to your project, containing
library and include directory paths. Link against this like any other library.
```cmake
@code{.cmake}
target_link_libraries(myapp OpenGL::GL)
```
@endcode
### With pkg-config and GLFW binaries on Unix {#build_link_pkgconfig}
@subsection build_link_pkgconfig With makefiles and pkg-config on Unix
This is intended for building a program from the command-line or by writing
a makefile, on macOS or any Unix-like system like Linux, FreeBSD and Cygwin.
GLFW supports [pkg-config][], and the `glfw3.pc` pkg-config file is generated
when the GLFW library is built and is installed along with it. A pkg-config
file describes all necessary compile-time and link-time flags and dependencies
needed to use a library. When they are updated or if they differ between
systems, you will get the correct ones automatically.
[pkg-config]: https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/pkg-config/
GLFW supports [pkg-config](https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/pkg-config/),
and the `glfw3.pc` pkg-config file is generated when the GLFW library is built
and is installed along with it. A pkg-config file describes all necessary
compile-time and link-time flags and dependencies needed to use a library. When
they are updated or if they differ between systems, you will get the correct
ones automatically.
A typical compile and link command-line when using the static version of the
GLFW library may look like this:
```sh
@code{.sh}
cc $(pkg-config --cflags glfw3) -o myprog myprog.c $(pkg-config --static --libs glfw3)
```
@endcode
If you are using the shared version of the GLFW library, omit the `--static`
flag.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cc $(pkg-config --cflags glfw3) -o myprog myprog.c $(pkg-config --libs glfw3)
```
@endcode
You can also use the `glfw3.pc` file without installing it first, by using the
`PKG_CONFIG_PATH` environment variable.
```sh
@code{.sh}
env PKG_CONFIG_PATH=path/to/glfw/src cc $(pkg-config --cflags glfw3) -o myprog myprog.c $(pkg-config --libs glfw3)
```
@endcode
The dependencies do not include OpenGL, as GLFW loads any OpenGL, OpenGL ES or
Vulkan libraries it needs at runtime. If your application calls OpenGL
@ -379,34 +297,34 @@ directly, instead of using a modern
[extension loader library](@ref context_glext_auto), you should add the `gl`
pkg-config package.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cc $(pkg-config --cflags glfw3 gl) -o myprog myprog.c $(pkg-config --libs glfw3 gl)
```
@endcode
### With Xcode on macOS {#build_link_xcode}
@subsection build_link_xcode With Xcode on macOS
If you are using the dynamic library version of GLFW, add it to the project
dependencies.
If you are using the static library version of GLFW, add it and the Cocoa,
OpenGL, IOKit and QuartzCore frameworks to the project as dependencies. They
can all be found in `/System/Library/Frameworks`.
OpenGL and IOKit frameworks to the project as dependencies. They can all be
found in `/System/Library/Frameworks`.
### With command-line or makefile on macOS {#build_link_osx}
@subsection build_link_osx With command-line on macOS
It is recommended that you use [pkg-config](@ref build_link_pkgconfig) when
using installed GLFW binaries from the command line on macOS. That way you will
get any new dependencies added automatically. If you still wish to build
manually, you need to add the required frameworks and libraries to your
command-line yourself using the `-l` and `-framework` switches.
building from the command line on macOS. That way you will get any new
dependencies added automatically. If you still wish to build manually, you need
to add the required frameworks and libraries to your command-line yourself using
the `-l` and `-framework` switches.
If you are using the dynamic GLFW library, which is named `libglfw.3.dylib`, do:
```sh
cc -o myprog myprog.c -lglfw -framework Cocoa -framework OpenGL -framework IOKit -framework QuartzCore
```
@code{.sh}
cc -o myprog myprog.c -lglfw -framework Cocoa -framework OpenGL -framework IOKit
@endcode
If you are using the static library, named `libglfw3.a`, substitute `-lglfw3`
for `-lglfw`.
@ -417,3 +335,4 @@ against it from the command-line.
@note Your machine may have `libGL.*.dylib` style OpenGL library, but that is
for the X Window System and will not work with the macOS native version of GLFW.
*/

View File

@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Standards conformance {#compat_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page compat_guide Standards conformance
@tableofcontents
This guide describes the various API extensions used by this version of GLFW.
It lists what are essentially implementation details, but which are nonetheless
@ -13,18 +15,18 @@ part of this information may change in future versions of GLFW and that will not
be considered a breaking API change.
## X11 extensions, protocols and IPC standards {#compat_x11}
@section compat_x11 X11 extensions, protocols and IPC standards
As GLFW uses Xlib directly, without any intervening toolkit library, it has sole
responsibility for interacting well with the many and varied window managers in
use on Unix-like systems. In order for applications and window managers to work
well together, a number of standards and conventions have been developed that
regulate behavior outside the scope of the X11 API; most importantly the
[Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual][ICCCM] (ICCCM) and [Extended
Window Manager Hints][EWMH] (EWMH) standards.
[ICCCM]: https://www.tronche.com/gui/x/icccm/
[EWMH]: https://standards.freedesktop.org/wm-spec/wm-spec-latest.html
As GLFW uses Xlib directly, without any intervening toolkit
library, it has sole responsibility for interacting well with the many and
varied window managers in use on Unix-like systems. In order for applications
and window managers to work well together, a number of standards and
conventions have been developed that regulate behavior outside the scope of the
X11 API; most importantly the
[Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual](https://www.tronche.com/gui/x/icccm/)
(ICCCM) and
[Extended Window Manager Hints](https://standards.freedesktop.org/wm-spec/wm-spec-latest.html)
(EWMH) standards.
GLFW uses the `_MOTIF_WM_HINTS` window property to support borderless windows.
If the running window manager does not support this property, the
@ -50,18 +52,16 @@ compositing window manager to un-redirect full screen GLFW windows. If the
running window manager uses compositing but does not support this property then
additional copying may be performed for each buffer swap of full screen windows.
GLFW uses the [clipboard manager protocol][ClipboardManager] to push a clipboard
string (i.e. selection) owned by a GLFW window about to be destroyed to the
clipboard manager. If there is no running clipboard manager, the clipboard
string will be unavailable once the window has been destroyed.
GLFW uses the
[clipboard manager protocol](https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/ClipboardManager/)
to push a clipboard string (i.e. selection) owned by a GLFW window about to be
destroyed to the clipboard manager. If there is no running clipboard manager,
the clipboard string will be unavailable once the window has been destroyed.
[clipboardManager]: https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/ClipboardManager/
GLFW uses the [X drag-and-drop protocol][XDND] to provide file drop events. If
the application originating the drag does not support this protocol, drag and
drop will not work.
[XDND]: https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/XDND/
GLFW uses the
[X drag-and-drop protocol](https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/XDND/)
to provide file drop events. If the application originating the drag does not
support this protocol, drag and drop will not work.
GLFW uses the XRandR 1.3 extension to provide multi-monitor support. If the
running X server does not support this version of this extension, multi-monitor
@ -93,73 +93,64 @@ conventions, the `GLFW_RESIZE_NWSE_CURSOR`, `GLFW_RESIZE_NESW_CURSOR` and
legacy images.
## Wayland protocols and IPC standards {#compat_wayland}
@section compat_wayland Wayland protocols and IPC standards
As GLFW uses libwayland directly, without any intervening toolkit library, it
has sole responsibility for interacting well with every compositor in use on
Unix-like systems. Most of the features are provided by the core protocol,
while cursor support is provided by the libwayland-cursor helper library, EGL
integration by libwayland-egl, and keyboard handling by
[libxkbcommon](https://xkbcommon.org/). In addition, GLFW uses some additional
Wayland protocols to implement certain features if the compositor supports them.
[libxkbcommon](https://xkbcommon.org/). In addition, GLFW uses some protocols
from wayland-protocols to provide additional features if the compositor
supports them.
GLFW uses xkbcommon 0.5.0 to provide key and text input support. Earlier
versions are not supported.
GLFW uses the [xdg-shell][] protocol to provide better window management. This
protocol is mandatory for GLFW to display a window.
GLFW uses the [xdg-shell
protocol](https://cgit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/tree/stable/xdg-shell/xdg-shell.xml)
to provide better window management. This protocol is part of
wayland-protocols 1.12, and is mandatory for GLFW to display a window.
[xdg-shell]: https://wayland.app/protocols/xdg-shell
GLFW uses the [relative pointer
protocol](https://cgit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/tree/unstable/relative-pointer/relative-pointer-unstable-v1.xml)
alongside the [pointer constraints
protocol](https://cgit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/tree/unstable/pointer-constraints/pointer-constraints-unstable-v1.xml)
to implement disabled cursor. These two protocols are part of
wayland-protocols 1.1, and mandatory at build time. If the running compositor
does not support both of these protocols, disabling the cursor will have no
effect.
GLFW uses the [relative-pointer-unstable-v1][] protocol alongside the
[pointer-constraints-unstable-v1][] protocol to implement disabled cursor. If
the running compositor does not support both of these protocols, disabling the
cursor will have no effect.
GLFW uses the [idle inhibit
protocol](https://cgit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/tree/unstable/idle-inhibit/idle-inhibit-unstable-v1.xml)
to prohibit the screensaver from starting. This protocol is part of
wayland-protocols 1.6, and mandatory at build time. If the running compositor
does not support this protocol, the screensaver may start even for full screen
windows.
[relative-pointer-unstable-v1]: https://wayland.app/protocols/relative-pointer-unstable-v1
[pointer-constraints-unstable-v1]: https://wayland.app/protocols/pointer-constraints-unstable-v1
GLFW uses the [libdecor library](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libdecor/libdecor)
for window decorations, where available. This in turn provides good quality
client-side decorations (drawn by the application) on desktop systems that do
not support server-side decorations (drawn by the window manager). On systems
that do not provide either libdecor or xdg-decoration, very basic window
decorations are provided. These do not include the window title or any caption
buttons.
GLFW uses the [idle-inhibit-unstable-v1][] protocol to prohibit the screensaver
from starting. If the running compositor does not support this protocol, the
screensaver may start even for full screen windows.
[idle-inhibit-unstable-v1]: https://wayland.app/protocols/idle-inhibit-unstable-v1
GLFW uses the [libdecor][] library for window decorations, where available.
This in turn provides good quality client-side decorations (drawn by the
application) on desktop systems that do not support server-side decorations
(drawn by the window manager). On systems that do not provide either libdecor
or xdg-decoration, very basic window decorations are provided. These do not
include the window title or any caption buttons.
[libdecor]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libdecor/libdecor
GLFW uses the [xdg-decoration-unstable-v1][] protocol to request decorations to
be drawn around its windows. This protocol is part of wayland-protocols 1.15,
and mandatory at build time. If the running compositor does not support this
protocol, a very simple frame will be drawn by GLFW itself, using the
[viewporter][] protocol alongside subsurfaces. If the running compositor does
not support these protocols either, no decorations will be drawn around windows.
[xdg-decoration-unstable-v1]: https://wayland.app/protocols/xdg-decoration-unstable-v1
[viewporter]: https://wayland.app/protocols/viewporter
GLFW uses the [xdg-activation-v1][] protocol to implement window focus and
attention requests. If the running compositor does not support this protocol,
window focus and attention requests do nothing.
[xdg-activation-v1]: https://wayland.app/protocols/xdg-activation-v1
GLFW uses the [fractional-scale-v1][] protocol to implement fine-grained
framebuffer scaling. If the running compositor does not support this protocol,
the @ref GLFW_SCALE_FRAMEBUFFER window hint will only be able to scale the
framebuffer by integer scales. This will typically be the smallest integer not
less than the actual scale.
[fractional-scale-v1]: https://wayland.app/protocols/fractional-scale-v1
GLFW uses the [xdg-decoration
protocol](https://cgit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/tree/unstable/xdg-decoration/xdg-decoration-unstable-v1.xml)
to request decorations to be drawn around its windows. This protocol is part
of wayland-protocols 1.15, and mandatory at build time. If the running
compositor does not support this protocol, a very simple frame will be drawn by
GLFW itself, using the [viewporter
protocol](https://cgit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/tree/stable/viewporter/viewporter.xml)
alongside
[subsurfaces](https://cgit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland/tree/protocol/wayland.xml#n2598).
This protocol is part of wayland-protocols 1.4, and mandatory at build time.
If the running compositor does not support this protocol either, no decorations
will be drawn around windows.
## GLX extensions {#compat_glx}
@section compat_glx GLX extensions
The GLX API is the default API used to create OpenGL contexts on Unix-like
systems using the X Window System.
@ -199,7 +190,7 @@ extensions to provide support for sRGB framebuffers. Where both of these
extensions are unavailable, the `GLFW_SRGB_CAPABLE` hint will have no effect.
## WGL extensions {#compat_wgl}
@section compat_wgl WGL extensions
The WGL API is used to create OpenGL contexts on Microsoft Windows and other
implementations of the Win32 API, such as Wine.
@ -240,32 +231,29 @@ extensions to provide support for sRGB framebuffers. When both of these
extensions are unavailable, the `GLFW_SRGB_CAPABLE` hint will have no effect.
## OpenGL on macOS {#compat_osx}
@section compat_osx OpenGL on macOS
macOS (as of version 14) still provides OpenGL but it has been deprecated by
Apple. While the API is still available, it is poorly maintained and frequently
develops new issues. On modern systems, OpenGL is implemented on top of Metal
and is not fully thread-safe.
Support for OpenGL 3.2 and above was introduced with OS X 10.7 and even then
only forward-compatible, core profile contexts are supported. Support for
OpenGL 4.1 was introduced with OS X 10.9, also limited to forward-compatible,
core profile contexts. There is also still no mechanism for requesting debug
contexts or no-error contexts. Versions of Mac OS X earlier than 10.7 support
at most OpenGL version 2.1.
macOS does not support OpenGL stereo rendering. If the `GLFW_STEREO` hint is
set to true, OpenGL context creation will always fail.
Because of this, on OS X 10.7 and later, the `GLFW_CONTEXT_VERSION_MAJOR` and
`GLFW_CONTEXT_VERSION_MINOR` hints will cause @ref glfwCreateWindow to fail if
given version 3.0 or 3.1. The `GLFW_OPENGL_PROFILE` hint must be set to
`GLFW_OPENGL_CORE_PROFILE` when creating OpenGL 3.2 and later contexts. The
`GLFW_CONTEXT_DEBUG` and `GLFW_CONTEXT_NO_ERROR` hints are ignored.
macOS only supports OpenGL core profile contexts that are forward-compatible,
but the `GLFW_OPENGL_FORWARD_COMPAT` hint is ignored since GLFW 3.4. Even if
this hint is set to false (the default), a forward-compatible context will be
returned if available.
macOS does not support OpenGL debug contexts, no-error contexts or robustness.
The `GLFW_CONTEXT_DEBUG`, `GLFW_CONTEXT_NO_ERROR` and `GLFW_CONTEXT_ROBUSTNESS`
hints will be ignored and a context without these features will be returned.
macOS does not flush OpenGL contexts when they are made non-current. The
`GLFW_CONTEXT_RELEASE_BEHAVIOR` hint is ignored and the release behavior will
always be the equivalent of `GLFW_RELEASE_BEHAVIOR_NONE`. If you need a context
to be flushed, call `glFlush` before making it non-current.
Also, on Mac OS X 10.6 and below, the `GLFW_CONTEXT_VERSION_MAJOR` and
`GLFW_CONTEXT_VERSION_MINOR` hints will fail if given a version above 2.1,
setting the `GLFW_OPENGL_PROFILE` or `GLFW_OPENGL_FORWARD_COMPAT` hints to
a non-default value will cause @ref glfwCreateWindow to fail and the
`GLFW_CONTEXT_DEBUG` hint is ignored.
## Vulkan loader and API {#compat_vulkan}
@section compat_vulkan Vulkan loader and API
By default, GLFW uses the standard system-wide Vulkan loader to access the
Vulkan API on all platforms except macOS. This is installed by both graphics
@ -275,7 +263,7 @@ all other Vulkan-related functions will fail with an @ref GLFW_API_UNAVAILABLE
error.
## Vulkan WSI extensions {#compat_wsi}
@section compat_wsi Vulkan WSI extensions
The Vulkan WSI extensions are used to create Vulkan surfaces for GLFW windows on
all supported platforms.
@ -301,3 +289,4 @@ surfaces on Wayland. If any of these extensions are not available, @ref
glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensions will return an empty list and window surface
creation will fail.
*/

View File

@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
# Compiling GLFW {#compile_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page compile_guide Compiling GLFW
@tableofcontents
This is about compiling the GLFW library itself. For information on how to
build applications that use GLFW, see @ref build_guide.
GLFW uses some C99 features and does not support Visual Studio 2012 and earlier.
## Using CMake {#compile_cmake}
@section compile_cmake Using CMake
GLFW behaves like most other libraries that use CMake so this guide mostly
describes the standard configure, generate and compile sequence. If you are already
@ -19,8 +19,8 @@ GLFW uses [CMake](https://cmake.org/) to generate project files or makefiles
for your chosen development environment. To compile GLFW, first generate these
files with CMake and then use them to compile the GLFW library.
If you are on Windows and macOS you can [download
CMake](https://cmake.org/download/) from their site.
If you are on Windows and macOS you can
[download CMake](https://cmake.org/download/) from their site.
If you are on a Unix-like system such as Linux, FreeBSD or Cygwin or have
a package system like Fink, MacPorts or Homebrew, you can install its CMake
@ -28,65 +28,90 @@ package.
CMake is a complex tool and this guide will only show a few of the possible ways
to set up and compile GLFW. The CMake project has their own much more detailed
[CMake user guide][cmake-guide] that includes everything in this guide not
specific to GLFW. It may be a useful companion to this one.
[cmake-guide]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/guide/user-interaction/
[CMake user guide](https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/guide/user-interaction/)
that includes everything in this guide not specific to GLFW. It may be a useful
companion to this one.
### Installing dependencies {#compile_deps}
@subsection compile_deps Installing dependencies
The C/C++ development environments in Visual Studio, Xcode and MinGW come with
all necessary dependencies for compiling GLFW, but on Unix-like systems like
Linux and FreeBSD you will need a few extra packages.
#### Dependencies for Wayland and X11 {#compile_deps_wayland}
@subsubsection compile_deps_x11 Dependencies for X11
By default, both the Wayland and X11 backends are enabled on Linux and other Unix-like
systems (except macOS). To disable one or both of these, set the @ref GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND
or @ref GLFW_BUILD_X11 CMake options in the next step when generating build files.
To compile GLFW for X11, you need to have the X11 development packages
installed. They are not needed to build or run programs that use GLFW.
To compile GLFW for both Wayland and X11, you need to have the X11, Wayland and xkbcommon
development packages installed. On some systems a few other packages are also required.
None of the development packages above are needed to build or run programs that use an
already compiled GLFW library.
On Debian and derivatives like Ubuntu and Linux Mint the `xorg-dev` meta-package
pulls in the development packages for all of X11.
On Debian and derivatives like Ubuntu and Linux Mint you will need the `libwayland-dev`
and `libxkbcommon-dev` packages to compile for Wayland and the `xorg-dev` meta-package to
compile for X11. These will pull in all other dependencies.
@code{.sh}
sudo apt install xorg-dev
@endcode
```sh
sudo apt install libwayland-dev libxkbcommon-dev xorg-dev
```
On Fedora and derivatives like Red Hat the X11 extension packages
`libXcursor-devel`, `libXi-devel`, `libXinerama-devel` and `libXrandr-devel`
required by GLFW pull in all its other dependencies.
On Fedora and derivatives like Red Hat you will need the `wayland-devel` and
`libxkbcommon-devel` packages to compile for Wayland and the `libXcursor-devel`,
`libXi-devel`, `libXinerama-devel` and `libXrandr-devel` packages to compile for X11.
These will pull in all other dependencies.
@code{.sh}
sudo dnf install libXcursor-devel libXi-devel libXinerama-devel libXrandr-devel
@endcode
```sh
sudo dnf install wayland-devel libxkbcommon-devel libXcursor-devel libXi-devel libXinerama-devel libXrandr-devel
```
On FreeBSD the X11 headers are installed along the end-user X11 packages, so if
you have an X server running you should have the headers as well. If not,
install the `xorgproto` package.
On FreeBSD you will need the `wayland`, `libxkbcommon` and `evdev-proto` packages to
compile for Wayland. The X11 headers are installed along the end-user X11 packages, so if
you have an X server running you should have the headers as well. If not, install the
`xorgproto` package to compile for X11.
@code{.sh}
pkg install xorgproto
@endcode
```sh
pkg install wayland libxkbcommon evdev-proto xorgproto
```
On Cygwin Wayland is not supported but you will need the `libXcursor-devel`,
`libXi-devel`, `libXinerama-devel`, `libXrandr-devel` and `libXrender-devel` packages to
compile for X11. These can be found in the Libs section of the GUI installer and will
pull in all other dependencies.
On Cygwin the `libXcursor-devel`, `libXi-devel`, `libXinerama-devel`,
`libXrandr-devel` and `libXrender-devel` packages in the Libs section of the GUI
installer will install all the headers and other development related files GLFW
requires for X11.
Once you have the required dependencies, move on to @ref compile_generate.
### Generating build files with CMake {#compile_generate}
@subsubsection compile_deps_wayland Dependencies for Wayland and X11
To compile GLFW for both Wayland and X11, you need to have the X11, Wayland and xkbcommon
development packages installed. They are not needed to build or run programs that use
GLFW. You will also need to set the @ref GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND CMake option in the next
step when generating build files.
On Debian and derivatives like Ubuntu and Linux Mint you will need the `libwayland-dev`,
`libxkbcommon-dev` and `wayland-protocols` packages and the `xorg-dev` meta-package.
These will pull in all other dependencies.
@code{.sh}
sudo apt install libwayland-dev libxkbcommon-dev wayland-protocols xorg-dev
@endcode
On Fedora and derivatives like Red Hat you will need the `wayland-devel`,
`libxkbcommon-devel`, `wayland-protocols-devel`, `libXcursor-devel`, `libXi-devel`,
`libXinerama-devel` and `libXrandr-devel` packages. These will pull in all other
dependencies.
@code{.sh}
sudo dnf install wayland-devel libxkbcommon-devel wayland-protocols-devel libXcursor-devel libXi-devel libXinerama-devel libXrandr-devel
@endcode
On FreeBSD you will need the `wayland`, `libxkbcommon` and `wayland-protocols` packages.
The X11 headers are installed along the end-user X11 packages, so if you have an X server
running you should have the headers as well. If not, install the `xorgproto` package.
@code{.sh}
pkg install wayland libxkbcommon wayland-protocols xorgproto
@endcode
Once you have the required dependencies, move on to @ref compile_generate.
@subsection compile_generate Generating build files with CMake
Once you have all necessary dependencies it is time to generate the project
files or makefiles for your development environment. CMake needs two paths for
@ -108,7 +133,7 @@ A common pattern when building a single configuration is to have a build
directory named `build` in the root of the source tree.
#### Generating with the CMake GUI {#compile_generate_gui}
@subsubsection compile_generate_gui Generating with the CMake GUI
Start the CMake GUI and set the paths to the source and build directories
described above. Then press _Configure_ and _Generate_.
@ -117,54 +142,53 @@ If you wish change any CMake variables in the list, press _Configure_ and then
_Generate_ to have the new values take effect. The variable list will be
populated after the first configure step.
By default, GLFW will use Wayland and X11 on Linux and other Unix-like systems other than
macOS. To disable support for one or both of these, set the @ref GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND
and/or @ref GLFW_BUILD_X11 option in the GLFW section of the variable list, then apply the
new value as described above.
By default, GLFW will use X11 on Linux and other Unix-like systems other than macOS. To
include support for Wayland as well, set the @ref GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND option in the GLFW
section of the variable list, then apply the new value as described above.
Once you have generated the project files or makefiles for your chosen
development environment, move on to @ref compile_compile.
#### Generating with command-line CMake {#compile_generate_cli}
@subsubsection compile_generate_cli Generating with command-line CMake
To make a build directory, pass the source and build directories to the `cmake`
command. These can be relative or absolute paths. The build directory is
created if it doesn't already exist.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cmake -S path/to/glfw -B path/to/build
```
@endcode
It is common to name the build directory `build` and place it in the root of the
source tree when only planning to build a single configuration.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cd path/to/glfw
cmake -S . -B build
```
@endcode
Without other flags these will generate Visual Studio project files on Windows
and makefiles on other platforms. You can choose other targets using the `-G`
flag.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cmake -S path/to/glfw -B path/to/build -G Xcode
```
@endcode
By default, GLFW will use Wayland and X11 on Linux and other Unix-like systems other than
macOS. To disable support for one or both of these, set the @ref GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND
and/or @ref GLFW_BUILD_X11 CMake option.
By default, GLFW will use X11 on Linux and other Unix-like systems other
than macOS. To also include support for Wayland, set the @ref GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND CMake
option.
```sh
cmake -S path/to/glfw -B path/to/build -D GLFW_BUILD_X11=0
```
@code{.sh}
cmake -S path/to/glfw -B path/to/build -D GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND=1
@endcode
Once you have generated the project files or makefiles for your chosen
development environment, move on to @ref compile_compile.
### Compiling the library {#compile_compile}
@subsection compile_compile Compiling the library
You should now have all required dependencies and the project files or makefiles
necessary to compile GLFW. Go ahead and compile the actual GLFW library with
@ -175,24 +199,24 @@ With Visual Studio open `GLFW.sln` and use the Build menu. With Xcode open
With Linux, macOS and other forms of Unix, run `make`.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cd path/to/build
make
```
@endcode
With MinGW, it is `mingw32-make`.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cd path/to/build
mingw32-make
```
@endcode
Any CMake build directory can also be built with the `cmake` command and the
`--build` flag.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cmake --build path/to/build
```
@endcode
This will run the platform specific build tool the directory was generated for.
@ -200,7 +224,7 @@ Once the GLFW library is compiled you are ready to build your application,
linking it to the GLFW library. See @ref build_guide for more information.
## CMake options {#compile_options}
@section compile_options CMake options
The CMake files for GLFW provide a number of options, although not all are
available on all supported platforms. Some of these are de facto standards
@ -215,12 +239,12 @@ distributions based on Debian GNU/Linux have this tool in a separate
Finally, if you don't want to use any GUI, you can set options from the `cmake`
command-line with the `-D` flag.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cmake -S path/to/glfw -B path/to/build -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
```
@endcode
### Shared CMake options {#compile_options_shared}
@subsection compile_options_shared Shared CMake options
@anchor BUILD_SHARED_LIBS
__BUILD_SHARED_LIBS__ determines whether GLFW is built as a static library or as
@ -252,7 +276,7 @@ with the library. This is enabled by default if
[Doxygen](https://www.doxygen.nl/) is found by CMake during configuration.
### Win32 specific CMake options {#compile_options_win32}
@subsection compile_options_win32 Win32 specific CMake options
@anchor GLFW_BUILD_WIN32
__GLFW_BUILD_WIN32__ determines whether to include support for Win32 when compiling the
@ -264,11 +288,10 @@ __USE_MSVC_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_DLL__ determines whether to use the DLL version or th
static library version of the Visual C++ runtime library. When enabled, the
DLL version of the Visual C++ library is used. This is enabled by default.
On CMake 3.15 and later you can set the standard CMake [CMAKE_MSVC_RUNTIME_LIBRARY][]
On CMake 3.15 and later you can set the standard CMake
[CMAKE_MSVC_RUNTIME_LIBRARY](https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_MSVC_RUNTIME_LIBRARY.html)
variable instead of this GLFW-specific option.
[CMAKE_MSVC_RUNTIME_LIBRARY]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_MSVC_RUNTIME_LIBRARY.html
@anchor GLFW_USE_HYBRID_HPG
__GLFW_USE_HYBRID_HPG__ determines whether to export the `NvOptimusEnablement` and
`AmdPowerXpressRequestHighPerformance` symbols, which force the use of the
@ -278,7 +301,7 @@ will not work if GLFW is built as a DLL. This is disabled by default, letting
the operating system and driver decide.
### macOS specific CMake options {#compile_options_macos}
@subsection compile_options_macos macOS specific CMake options
@anchor GLFW_BUILD_COCOA
__GLFW_BUILD_COCOA__ determines whether to include support for Cocoa when compiling the
@ -286,12 +309,12 @@ library. This option is only available when compiling for macOS. This is enabl
default.
### Unix-like system specific CMake options {#compile_options_unix}
@subsection compile_options_unix Unix-like system specific CMake options
@anchor GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND
__GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND__ determines whether to include support for Wayland when compiling
the library. This option is only available when compiling for Linux and other Unix-like
systems other than macOS. This is enabled by default.
systems other than macOS. This is disabled by default.
@anchor GLFW_BUILD_X11
__GLFW_BUILD_X11__ determines whether to include support for X11 when compiling the
@ -299,7 +322,7 @@ library. This option is only available when compiling for Linux and other Unix-
systems other than macOS. This is enabled by default.
## Cross-compilation with CMake and MinGW {#compile_mingw_cross}
@section compile_mingw_cross Cross-compilation with CMake and MinGW
Both Cygwin and many Linux distributions have MinGW or MinGW-w64 packages. For
example, Cygwin has the `mingw64-i686-gcc` and `mingw64-x86_64-gcc` packages
@ -311,9 +334,9 @@ cross-compilation of Windows binaries. To use these files you set the
`CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE` CMake variable with the `-D` flag add an option when
configuring and generating the build files.
```sh
@code{.sh}
cmake -S path/to/glfw -B path/to/build -D CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=path/to/file
```
@endcode
The exact toolchain file to use depends on the prefix used by the MinGW or
MinGW-w64 binaries on your system. You can usually see this in the /usr
@ -321,19 +344,18 @@ directory. For example, both the Ubuntu and Cygwin MinGW-w64 packages have
`/usr/x86_64-w64-mingw32` for the 64-bit compilers, so the correct invocation
would be:
```sh
@code{.sh}
cmake -S path/to/glfw -B path/to/build -D CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=CMake/x86_64-w64-mingw32.cmake
```
@endcode
The path to the toolchain file is relative to the path to the GLFW source tree
passed to the `-S` flag, not to the current directory.
For more details see the [CMake toolchain guide][cmake-toolchains].
[cmake-toolchains]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-toolchains.7.html
For more details see the
[CMake toolchain guide](https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-toolchains.7.html).
## Compiling GLFW manually {#compile_manual}
@section compile_manual Compiling GLFW manually
If you wish to compile GLFW without its CMake build environment then you will have to do
at least some platform-detection yourself. There are preprocessor macros for
@ -350,8 +372,8 @@ clipboard. The options are:
- @b _GLFW_COCOA to use the Cocoa frameworks
- @b _GLFW_WIN32 to use the Win32 API
- @b _GLFW_WAYLAND to use the Wayland protocol
- @b _GLFW_X11 to use the X Window System
- @b _GLFW_WAYLAND to use the Wayland API (incomplete)
The @b _GLFW_WAYLAND and @b _GLFW_X11 macros may be combined and produces a library that
attempts to detect the appropriate platform at initialization.
@ -369,3 +391,4 @@ _GLFW_GLESV2_LIBRARY. Otherwise, GLFW will use the built-in default names.
GLFW. If you define any of these in your build files, make sure they are not
applied to the GLFW sources.
*/

View File

@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Context guide {#context_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page context_guide Context guide
@tableofcontents
This guide introduces the OpenGL and OpenGL ES context related functions of
GLFW. For details on a specific function in this category, see the @ref
@ -13,7 +15,7 @@ context. There are also guides for the other areas of the GLFW API.
- @ref input_guide
## Context objects {#context_object}
@section context_object Context objects
A window object encapsulates both a top-level window and an OpenGL or OpenGL ES
context. It is created with @ref glfwCreateWindow and destroyed with @ref
@ -32,22 +34,22 @@ context creation by setting the [GLFW_CLIENT_API](@ref GLFW_CLIENT_API_hint)
hint to `GLFW_NO_API`. For more information, see the @ref vulkan_guide.
### Context creation hints {#context_hints}
@subsection context_hints Context creation hints
There are a number of hints, specified using @ref glfwWindowHint, related to
what kind of context is created. See
[context related hints](@ref window_hints_ctx) in the window guide.
### Context object sharing {#context_sharing}
@subsection context_sharing Context object sharing
When creating a window and its OpenGL or OpenGL ES context with @ref
glfwCreateWindow, you can specify another window whose context the new one
should share its objects (textures, vertex and element buffers, etc.) with.
```c
@code
GLFWwindow* second_window = glfwCreateWindow(640, 480, "Second Window", NULL, first_window);
```
@endcode
Object sharing is implemented by the operating system and graphics driver. On
platforms where it is possible to choose which types of objects are shared, GLFW
@ -62,17 +64,17 @@ Contexts_.
GLFW comes with a bare-bones object sharing example program called `sharing`.
### Offscreen contexts {#context_offscreen}
@subsection context_offscreen Offscreen contexts
GLFW doesn't support creating contexts without an associated window. However,
contexts with hidden windows can be created with the
[GLFW_VISIBLE](@ref GLFW_VISIBLE_hint) window hint.
```c
@code
glfwWindowHint(GLFW_VISIBLE, GLFW_FALSE);
GLFWwindow* offscreen_context = glfwCreateWindow(640, 480, "", NULL, NULL);
```
@endcode
The window never needs to be shown and its context can be used as a plain
offscreen context. Depending on the window manager, the size of a hidden
@ -83,7 +85,7 @@ You should still [process events](@ref events) as long as you have at least one
window, even if none of them are visible.
### Windows without contexts {#context_less}
@subsection context_less Windows without contexts
You can disable context creation by setting the
[GLFW_CLIENT_API](@ref GLFW_CLIENT_API_hint) hint to `GLFW_NO_API`.
@ -92,7 +94,7 @@ Windows without contexts should not be passed to @ref glfwMakeContextCurrent or
@ref glfwSwapBuffers. Doing this generates a @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT error.
## Current context {#context_current}
@section context_current Current context
Before you can make OpenGL or OpenGL ES calls, you need to have a current
context of the correct type. A context can only be current for a single thread
@ -103,15 +105,15 @@ thread before making it current on the new one.
The context of a window is made current with @ref glfwMakeContextCurrent.
```c
@code
glfwMakeContextCurrent(window);
```
@endcode
The window of the current context is returned by @ref glfwGetCurrentContext.
```c
@code
GLFWwindow* window = glfwGetCurrentContext();
```
@endcode
The following GLFW functions require a context to be current. Calling any these
functions without a current context will generate a @ref GLFW_NO_CURRENT_CONTEXT
@ -122,12 +124,12 @@ error.
- @ref glfwGetProcAddress
## Buffer swapping {#context_swap}
@section context_swap Buffer swapping
See @ref buffer_swap in the window guide.
## OpenGL and OpenGL ES extensions {#context_glext}
@section context_glext OpenGL and OpenGL ES extensions
One of the benefits of OpenGL and OpenGL ES is their extensibility.
Hardware vendors may include extensions in their implementations that extend the
@ -150,7 +152,7 @@ their specifications, can be found at the
[OpenGL ES Registry](https://www.khronos.org/registry/gles/).
### Loading extension with a loader library {#context_glext_auto}
@subsection context_glext_auto Loading extension with a loader library
An extension loader library is the easiest and best way to access both OpenGL and
OpenGL ES extensions and modern versions of the core OpenGL or OpenGL ES APIs.
@ -167,9 +169,9 @@ both GLFW and glad, but loaders for OpenGL ES, as well as loaders for specific
API versions and extension sets can be generated. The generated files are
written to the `output` directory.
```sh
@code{.sh}
python main.py --generator c --no-loader --out-path output
```
@endcode
The `--no-loader` option is added because GLFW already provides a function for
loading OpenGL and OpenGL ES function pointers, one that automatically uses the
@ -183,14 +185,14 @@ include the glad header file, which will replace the OpenGL header of your
development environment. By including the glad header before the GLFW header,
it suppresses the development environment's OpenGL or OpenGL ES header.
```c
@code
#include <glad/glad.h>
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
Finally, you need to initialize glad once you have a suitable current context.
```c
@code
window = glfwCreateWindow(640, 480, "My Window", NULL, NULL);
if (!window)
{
@ -200,7 +202,7 @@ if (!window)
glfwMakeContextCurrent(window);
gladLoadGLLoader((GLADloadproc) glfwGetProcAddress);
```
@endcode
Once glad has been loaded, you have access to all OpenGL core and extension
functions supported by both the context you created and the glad loader you
@ -213,25 +215,25 @@ check the actual OpenGL or OpenGL ES version with
a specific version is supported by the current context with the
`GLAD_GL_VERSION_x_x` booleans.
```c
@code
if (GLAD_GL_VERSION_3_2)
{
// Call OpenGL 3.2+ specific code
}
```
@endcode
To check whether a specific extension is supported, use the `GLAD_GL_xxx`
booleans.
```c
@code
if (GLAD_GL_ARB_gl_spirv)
{
// Use GL_ARB_gl_spirv
}
```
@endcode
### Loading extensions manually {#context_glext_manual}
@subsection context_glext_manual Loading extensions manually
__Do not use this technique__ unless it is absolutely necessary. An
[extension loader library](@ref context_glext_auto) will save you a ton of
@ -246,7 +248,7 @@ This section will demonstrate manual loading of OpenGL extensions. The loading
of OpenGL ES extensions is identical except for the name of the extension header.
#### The glext.h header {#context_glext_header}
@subsubsection context_glext_header The glext.h header
The `glext.h` extension header is a continually updated file that defines the
interfaces for all OpenGL extensions. The latest version of this can always be
@ -265,41 +267,41 @@ to function) and `PROC` (procedure) are added to the ends.
To include the extension header, define @ref GLFW_INCLUDE_GLEXT before including
the GLFW header.
```c
@code
#define GLFW_INCLUDE_GLEXT
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
#### Checking for extensions {#context_glext_string}
@subsubsection context_glext_string Checking for extensions
A given machine may not actually support the extension (it may have older
drivers or a graphics card that lacks the necessary hardware features), so it
is necessary to check at run-time whether the context supports the extension.
This is done with @ref glfwExtensionSupported.
```c
@code
if (glfwExtensionSupported("GL_ARB_gl_spirv"))
{
// The extension is supported by the current context
}
```
@endcode
The argument is a null terminated ASCII string with the extension name. If the
extension is supported, @ref glfwExtensionSupported returns `GLFW_TRUE`,
otherwise it returns `GLFW_FALSE`.
#### Fetching function pointers {#context_glext_proc}
@subsubsection context_glext_proc Fetching function pointers
Many extensions, though not all, require the use of new OpenGL functions.
These functions often do not have entry points in the client API libraries of
your operating system, making it necessary to fetch them at run time. You can
retrieve pointers to these functions with @ref glfwGetProcAddress.
```c
@code
PFNGLSPECIALIZESHADERARBPROC pfnSpecializeShaderARB = glfwGetProcAddress("glSpecializeShaderARB");
```
@endcode
In general, you should avoid giving the function pointer variables the (exact)
same name as the function, as this may confuse your linker. Instead, you can
@ -308,7 +310,7 @@ use a different prefix, like above, or some other naming scheme.
Now that all the pieces have been introduced, here is what they might look like
when used together.
```c
@code
#define GLFW_INCLUDE_GLEXT
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
@ -336,5 +338,6 @@ void some_function(void)
glSpecializeShaderARB(...);
}
}
```
@endcode
*/

File diff suppressed because one or more lines are too long

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{
"version": 3,
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"sources": ["extra.scss"],
"names": [],
"file": "extra.css"

View File

@ -255,10 +255,6 @@ address.footer {
align-content: stretch;
}
#main-menu a:focus {
outline-style: none;
}
#main-menu a,#main-menu a:visited,#main-menu a:hover,#main-menu li {
color:$navbar-link-color;
}

View File

@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Input guide {#input_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page input_guide Input guide
@tableofcontents
This guide introduces the input related functions of GLFW. For details on
a specific function in this category, see the @ref input. There are also guides
@ -27,7 +29,7 @@ out all arguments provided for every event, along with time and sequence
information.
## Event processing {#events}
@section events Event processing
GLFW needs to poll the window system for events both to provide input to the
application and to prove to the window system that the application hasn't locked
@ -40,18 +42,18 @@ There are three functions for processing pending events. @ref glfwPollEvents,
processes only those events that have already been received and then returns
immediately.
```c
@code
glfwPollEvents();
```
@endcode
This is the best choice when rendering continuously, like most games do.
If you only need to update the contents of the window when you receive new
input, @ref glfwWaitEvents is a better choice.
```c
@code
glfwWaitEvents();
```
@endcode
It puts the thread to sleep until at least one event has been received and then
processes all received events. This saves a great deal of CPU cycles and is
@ -60,9 +62,9 @@ useful for, for example, editing tools.
If you want to wait for events but have UI elements or other tasks that need
periodic updates, @ref glfwWaitEventsTimeout lets you specify a timeout.
```c
@code
glfwWaitEventsTimeout(0.7);
```
@endcode
It puts the thread to sleep until at least one event has been received, or until
the specified number of seconds have elapsed. It then processes any received
@ -72,9 +74,9 @@ If the main thread is sleeping in @ref glfwWaitEvents, you can wake it from
another thread by posting an empty event to the event queue with @ref
glfwPostEmptyEvent.
```c
@code
glfwPostEmptyEvent();
```
@endcode
Do not assume that callbacks will _only_ be called in response to the above
functions. While it is necessary to process events in one or more of the ways
@ -89,7 +91,7 @@ a [window size callback](@ref window_size) GLFW will call it in turn with the
new size before everything returns back out of the @ref glfwSetWindowSize call.
## Keyboard input {#input_keyboard}
@section input_keyboard Keyboard input
GLFW divides keyboard input into two categories; key events and character
events. Key events relate to actual physical keyboard keys, whereas character
@ -101,25 +103,25 @@ may not be the case on your machine, but your users are likely not all using the
same keyboard layout, input method or even operating system as you.
### Key input {#input_key}
@subsection input_key Key input
If you wish to be notified when a physical key is pressed or released or when it
repeats, set a key callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetKeyCallback(window, key_callback);
```
@endcode
The callback function receives the [keyboard key](@ref keys), platform-specific
scancode, key action and [modifier bits](@ref mods).
```c
@code
void key_callback(GLFWwindow* window, int key, int scancode, int action, int mods)
{
if (key == GLFW_KEY_E && action == GLFW_PRESS)
activate_airship();
}
```
@endcode
The action is one of `GLFW_PRESS`, `GLFW_REPEAT` or `GLFW_RELEASE`. Events with
`GLFW_PRESS` and `GLFW_RELEASE` actions are emitted for every key press. Most
@ -147,21 +149,21 @@ different scancodes depending on the platform but they are safe to save to disk.
You can query the scancode for any [key token](@ref keys) supported on the
current platform with @ref glfwGetKeyScancode.
```c
@code
const int scancode = glfwGetKeyScancode(GLFW_KEY_X);
set_key_mapping(scancode, swap_weapons);
```
@endcode
The last reported state for every physical key with a [key token](@ref keys) is
also saved in per-window state arrays that can be polled with @ref glfwGetKey.
```c
@code
int state = glfwGetKey(window, GLFW_KEY_E);
if (state == GLFW_PRESS)
{
activate_airship();
}
```
@endcode
The returned state is one of `GLFW_PRESS` or `GLFW_RELEASE`.
@ -175,9 +177,9 @@ If a pressed key is released again before you poll its state, you will have
missed the key press. The recommended solution for this is to use a
key callback, but there is also the `GLFW_STICKY_KEYS` input mode.
```c
@code
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_STICKY_KEYS, GLFW_TRUE);
```
@endcode
When sticky keys mode is enabled, the pollable state of a key will remain
`GLFW_PRESS` until the state of that key is polled with @ref glfwGetKey. Once
@ -188,9 +190,9 @@ the state will reset to `GLFW_RELEASE`, otherwise it will remain `GLFW_PRESS`.
If you wish to know what the state of the Caps Lock and Num Lock keys was when
input events were generated, set the `GLFW_LOCK_KEY_MODS` input mode.
```c
@code
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_LOCK_KEY_MODS, GLFW_TRUE);
```
@endcode
When this input mode is enabled, any callback that receives
[modifier bits](@ref mods) will have the @ref GLFW_MOD_CAPS_LOCK bit set if Caps
@ -201,7 +203,7 @@ The `GLFW_KEY_LAST` constant holds the highest value of any
[key token](@ref keys).
### Text input {#input_char}
@subsection input_char Text input
GLFW supports text input in the form of a stream of
[Unicode code points](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode), as produced by the
@ -215,30 +217,30 @@ you can treat the code point argument as native endian UTF-32.
If you wish to offer regular text input, set a character callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetCharCallback(window, character_callback);
```
@endcode
The callback function receives Unicode code points for key events that would
have led to regular text input and generally behaves as a standard text field on
that platform.
```c
@code
void character_callback(GLFWwindow* window, unsigned int codepoint)
{
}
```
@endcode
### Key names {#input_key_name}
@subsection input_key_name Key names
If you wish to refer to keys by name, you can query the keyboard layout
dependent name of printable keys with @ref glfwGetKeyName.
```c
@code
const char* key_name = glfwGetKeyName(GLFW_KEY_W, 0);
show_tutorial_hint("Press %s to move forward", key_name);
```
@endcode
This function can handle both [keys and scancodes](@ref input_key). If the
specified key is `GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN` then the scancode is used, otherwise it is
@ -246,42 +248,42 @@ ignored. This matches the behavior of the key callback, meaning the callback
arguments can always be passed unmodified to this function.
## Mouse input {#input_mouse}
@section input_mouse Mouse input
Mouse input comes in many forms, including mouse motion, button presses and
scrolling offsets. The cursor appearance can also be changed, either to
a custom image or a standard cursor shape from the system theme.
### Cursor position {#cursor_pos}
@subsection cursor_pos Cursor position
If you wish to be notified when the cursor moves over the window, set a cursor
position callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetCursorPosCallback(window, cursor_position_callback);
```
@endcode
The callback functions receives the cursor position, measured in screen
coordinates but relative to the top-left corner of the window content area. On
platforms that provide it, the full sub-pixel cursor position is passed on.
```c
@code
static void cursor_position_callback(GLFWwindow* window, double xpos, double ypos)
{
}
```
@endcode
The cursor position is also saved per-window and can be polled with @ref
glfwGetCursorPos.
```c
@code
double xpos, ypos;
glfwGetCursorPos(window, &xpos, &ypos);
```
@endcode
### Cursor mode {#cursor_mode}
@subsection cursor_mode Cursor mode
@anchor GLFW_CURSOR
The `GLFW_CURSOR` input mode provides several cursor modes for special forms of
@ -293,9 +295,9 @@ If you wish to implement mouse motion based camera controls or other input
schemes that require unlimited mouse movement, set the cursor mode to
`GLFW_CURSOR_DISABLED`.
```c
@code
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_CURSOR, GLFW_CURSOR_DISABLED);
```
@endcode
This will hide the cursor and lock it to the specified window. GLFW will then
take care of all the details of cursor re-centering and offset calculation and
@ -309,18 +311,18 @@ other features of GLFW. It is not supported and will not work as robustly as
If you only wish the cursor to become hidden when it is over a window but still
want it to behave normally, set the cursor mode to `GLFW_CURSOR_HIDDEN`.
```c
@code
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_CURSOR, GLFW_CURSOR_HIDDEN);
```
@endcode
This mode puts no limit on the motion of the cursor.
If you wish the cursor to be visible but confined to the content area of the
window, set the cursor mode to `GLFW_CURSOR_CAPTURED`.
```c
@code
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_CURSOR, GLFW_CURSOR_CAPTURED);
```
@endcode
The cursor will behave normally inside the content area but will not be able to
leave unless the window loses focus.
@ -328,15 +330,15 @@ leave unless the window loses focus.
To exit out of either of these special modes, restore the `GLFW_CURSOR_NORMAL`
cursor mode.
```c
@code
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_CURSOR, GLFW_CURSOR_NORMAL);
```
@endcode
If the cursor was disabled, this will move it back to its last visible position.
@anchor GLFW_RAW_MOUSE_MOTION
### Raw mouse motion {#raw_mouse_motion}
@subsection raw_mouse_motion Raw mouse motion
When the cursor is disabled, raw (unscaled and unaccelerated) mouse motion can
be enabled if available.
@ -351,16 +353,16 @@ Call @ref glfwRawMouseMotionSupported to check if the current machine provides
raw motion and set the `GLFW_RAW_MOUSE_MOTION` input mode to enable it. It is
disabled by default.
```c
@code
if (glfwRawMouseMotionSupported())
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_RAW_MOUSE_MOTION, GLFW_TRUE);
```
@endcode
If supported, raw mouse motion can be enabled or disabled per-window and at any
time but it will only be provided when the cursor is disabled.
### Cursor objects {#cursor_object}
@subsection cursor_object Cursor objects
GLFW supports creating both custom and system theme cursor images, encapsulated
as @ref GLFWcursor objects. They are created with @ref glfwCreateCursor or @ref
@ -368,13 +370,13 @@ glfwCreateStandardCursor and destroyed with @ref glfwDestroyCursor, or @ref
glfwTerminate, if any remain.
#### Custom cursor creation {#cursor_custom}
@subsubsection cursor_custom Custom cursor creation
A custom cursor is created with @ref glfwCreateCursor, which returns a handle to
the created cursor object. For example, this creates a 16x16 white square
cursor with the hot-spot in the upper-left corner:
```c
@code
unsigned char pixels[16 * 16 * 4];
memset(pixels, 0xff, sizeof(pixels));
@ -384,7 +386,7 @@ image.height = 16;
image.pixels = pixels;
GLFWcursor* cursor = glfwCreateCursor(&image, 0, 0);
```
@endcode
If cursor creation fails, `NULL` will be returned, so it is necessary to check
the return value.
@ -394,14 +396,14 @@ per channel with the red channel first. The pixels are arranged canonically as
sequential rows, starting from the top-left corner.
#### Standard cursor creation {#cursor_standard}
@subsubsection cursor_standard Standard cursor creation
A cursor with a [standard shape](@ref shapes) from the current system cursor
theme can be created with @ref glfwCreateStandardCursor.
```c
@code
GLFWcursor* url_cursor = glfwCreateStandardCursor(GLFW_POINTING_HAND_CURSOR);
```
@endcode
These cursor objects behave in the exact same way as those created with @ref
glfwCreateCursor except that the system cursor theme provides the actual image.
@ -410,26 +412,26 @@ A few of these shapes are not available everywhere. If a shape is unavailable,
`NULL` is returned. See @ref glfwCreateStandardCursor for details.
#### Cursor destruction {#cursor_destruction}
@subsubsection cursor_destruction Cursor destruction
When a cursor is no longer needed, destroy it with @ref glfwDestroyCursor.
```c
@code
glfwDestroyCursor(cursor);
```
@endcode
Cursor destruction always succeeds. If the cursor is current for any window,
that window will revert to the default cursor. This does not affect the cursor
mode. All remaining cursors are destroyed when @ref glfwTerminate is called.
#### Cursor setting {#cursor_set}
@subsubsection cursor_set Cursor setting
A cursor can be set as current for a window with @ref glfwSetCursor.
```c
@code
glfwSetCursor(window, cursor);
```
@endcode
Once set, the cursor image will be used as long as the system cursor is over the
content area of the window and the [cursor mode](@ref cursor_mode) is set
@ -439,26 +441,26 @@ A single cursor may be set for any number of windows.
To revert to the default cursor, set the cursor of that window to `NULL`.
```c
@code
glfwSetCursor(window, NULL);
```
@endcode
When a cursor is destroyed, any window that has it set will revert to the
default cursor. This does not affect the cursor mode.
### Cursor enter/leave events {#cursor_enter}
@subsection cursor_enter Cursor enter/leave events
If you wish to be notified when the cursor enters or leaves the content area of
a window, set a cursor enter/leave callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetCursorEnterCallback(window, cursor_enter_callback);
```
@endcode
The callback function receives the new classification of the cursor.
```c
@code
void cursor_enter_callback(GLFWwindow* window, int entered)
{
if (entered)
@ -470,71 +472,52 @@ void cursor_enter_callback(GLFWwindow* window, int entered)
// The cursor left the content area of the window
}
}
```
@endcode
You can query whether the cursor is currently inside the content area of the
window with the [GLFW_HOVERED](@ref GLFW_HOVERED_attrib) window attribute.
```c
@code
if (glfwGetWindowAttrib(window, GLFW_HOVERED))
{
highlight_interface();
}
```
@endcode
### Mouse button input {#input_mouse_button}
@subsection input_mouse_button Mouse button input
If you wish to be notified when a mouse button is pressed or released, set
a mouse button callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetMouseButtonCallback(window, mouse_button_callback);
```
@anchor GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS
To handle all mouse buttons in the callback, instead of only ones with associated
[button tokens](@ref buttons), set the @ref GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS
input mode.
```c
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS, GLFW_TRUE);
```
When this input mode is enabled, GLFW doesn't limit the reported mouse buttons
to only those that have an associated button token, for compatibility with
earlier versions of GLFW, which never reported any buttons over
@ref GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST, on which users could have relied on.
@endcode
The callback function receives the [mouse button](@ref buttons), button action
and [modifier bits](@ref mods).
```c
@code
void mouse_button_callback(GLFWwindow* window, int button, int action, int mods)
{
if (button == GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_RIGHT && action == GLFW_PRESS)
popup_menu();
}
```
The mouse button is an integer that can be one of the
[mouse button tokens](@ref buttons) or, if the
@ref GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS input mode is set, any other positive value.
@endcode
The action is one of `GLFW_PRESS` or `GLFW_RELEASE`.
The last reported state for every [mouse button token](@ref buttons) is also
The last reported state for every [supported mouse button](@ref buttons) is also
saved in per-window state arrays that can be polled with @ref
glfwGetMouseButton. This is not effected by the @ref GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS
input mode.
glfwGetMouseButton.
```c
@code
int state = glfwGetMouseButton(window, GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LEFT);
if (state == GLFW_PRESS)
{
upgrade_cow();
}
```
@endcode
The returned state is one of `GLFW_PRESS` or `GLFW_RELEASE`.
@ -548,9 +531,9 @@ missed the button press. The recommended solution for this is to use a
mouse button callback, but there is also the `GLFW_STICKY_MOUSE_BUTTONS`
input mode.
```c
@code
glfwSetInputMode(window, GLFW_STICKY_MOUSE_BUTTONS, GLFW_TRUE);
```
@endcode
When sticky mouse buttons mode is enabled, the pollable state of a mouse button
will remain `GLFW_PRESS` until the state of that button is polled with @ref
@ -559,30 +542,30 @@ had been processed in the meantime, the state will reset to `GLFW_RELEASE`,
otherwise it will remain `GLFW_PRESS`.
The `GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST` constant holds the highest value of any
[mouse button token](@ref buttons).
[supported mouse button](@ref buttons).
### Scroll input {#scrolling}
@subsection scrolling Scroll input
If you wish to be notified when the user scrolls, whether with a mouse wheel or
touchpad gesture, set a scroll callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetScrollCallback(window, scroll_callback);
```
@endcode
The callback function receives two-dimensional scroll offsets.
```c
@code
void scroll_callback(GLFWwindow* window, double xoffset, double yoffset)
{
}
```
@endcode
A normal mouse wheel, being vertical, provides offsets along the Y-axis.
## Joystick input {#joystick}
@section joystick Joystick input
The joystick functions expose connected joysticks and controllers, with both
referred to as joysticks. It supports up to sixteen joysticks, ranging from
@ -590,9 +573,9 @@ referred to as joysticks. It supports up to sixteen joysticks, ranging from
`GLFW_JOYSTICK_LAST`. You can test whether a [joystick](@ref joysticks) is
present with @ref glfwJoystickPresent.
```c
@code
int present = glfwJoystickPresent(GLFW_JOYSTICK_1);
```
@endcode
Each joystick has zero or more axes, zero or more buttons, zero or more hats,
a human-readable name, a user pointer and an SDL compatible GUID.
@ -612,30 +595,30 @@ To see all the properties of all connected joysticks in real-time, run the
`joysticks` test program.
### Joystick axis states {#joystick_axis}
@subsection joystick_axis Joystick axis states
The positions of all axes of a joystick are returned by @ref
glfwGetJoystickAxes. See the reference documentation for the lifetime of the
returned array.
```c
@code
int count;
const float* axes = glfwGetJoystickAxes(GLFW_JOYSTICK_5, &count);
```
@endcode
Each element in the returned array is a value between -1.0 and 1.0.
### Joystick button states {#joystick_button}
@subsection joystick_button Joystick button states
The states of all buttons of a joystick are returned by @ref
glfwGetJoystickButtons. See the reference documentation for the lifetime of the
returned array.
```c
@code
int count;
const unsigned char* buttons = glfwGetJoystickButtons(GLFW_JOYSTICK_3, &count);
```
@endcode
Each element in the returned array is either `GLFW_PRESS` or `GLFW_RELEASE`.
@ -644,15 +627,15 @@ glfwGetJoystickHats, the button array by default also includes all hats. See
the reference documentation for @ref glfwGetJoystickButtons for details.
### Joystick hat states {#joystick_hat}
@subsection joystick_hat Joystick hat states
The states of all hats are returned by @ref glfwGetJoystickHats. See the
reference documentation for the lifetime of the returned array.
```c
@code
int count;
const unsigned char* hats = glfwGetJoystickHats(GLFW_JOYSTICK_7, &count);
```
@endcode
Each element in the returned array is one of the following:
@ -672,34 +655,34 @@ The diagonal directions are bitwise combinations of the primary (up, right, down
and left) directions and you can test for these individually by ANDing it with
the corresponding direction.
```c
@code
if (hats[2] & GLFW_HAT_RIGHT)
{
// State of hat 2 could be right-up, right or right-down
}
```
@endcode
For backward compatibility with earlier versions that did not have @ref
glfwGetJoystickHats, all hats are by default also included in the button array.
See the reference documentation for @ref glfwGetJoystickButtons for details.
### Joystick name {#joystick_name}
@subsection joystick_name Joystick name
The human-readable, UTF-8 encoded name of a joystick is returned by @ref
glfwGetJoystickName. See the reference documentation for the lifetime of the
returned string.
```c
@code
const char* name = glfwGetJoystickName(GLFW_JOYSTICK_4);
```
@endcode
Joystick names are not guaranteed to be unique. Two joysticks of the same model
and make may have the same name. Only the [joystick ID](@ref joysticks) is
guaranteed to be unique, and only until that joystick is disconnected.
### Joystick user pointer {#joystick_userptr}
@subsection joystick_userptr Joystick user pointer
Each joystick has a user pointer that can be set with @ref
glfwSetJoystickUserPointer and queried with @ref glfwGetJoystickUserPointer.
@ -710,19 +693,19 @@ terminated.
The initial value of the pointer is `NULL`.
### Joystick configuration changes {#joystick_event}
@subsection joystick_event Joystick configuration changes
If you wish to be notified when a joystick is connected or disconnected, set
a joystick callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetJoystickCallback(joystick_callback);
```
@endcode
The callback function receives the ID of the joystick that has been connected
and disconnected and the event that occurred.
```c
@code
void joystick_callback(int jid, int event)
{
if (event == GLFW_CONNECTED)
@ -734,7 +717,7 @@ void joystick_callback(int jid, int event)
// The joystick was disconnected
}
}
```
@endcode
For joystick connection and disconnection events to be delivered on all
platforms, you need to call one of the [event processing](@ref events)
@ -747,17 +730,15 @@ useful values for a disconnected joystick and only before the monitor callback
returns.
### Gamepad input {#gamepad}
@subsection gamepad Gamepad input
The joystick functions provide unlabeled axes, buttons and hats, with no
indication of where they are located on the device. Their order may also vary
between platforms even with the same device.
To solve this problem the SDL community crowdsourced the
[SDL_GameControllerDB][] project, a database of mappings from many different
devices to an Xbox-like gamepad.
[SDL_GameControllerDB]: https://github.com/gabomdq/SDL_GameControllerDB
[SDL_GameControllerDB](https://github.com/gabomdq/SDL_GameControllerDB) project,
a database of mappings from many different devices to an Xbox-like gamepad.
GLFW supports this mapping format and contains a copy of the mappings
available at the time of release. See @ref gamepad_mapping for how to update
@ -767,12 +748,12 @@ a joystick is connected or the mappings are updated.
You can check whether a joystick is both present and has a gamepad mapping with
@ref glfwJoystickIsGamepad.
```c
@code
if (glfwJoystickIsGamepad(GLFW_JOYSTICK_2))
{
// Use as gamepad
}
```
@endcode
If you are only interested in gamepad input you can use this function instead of
@ref glfwJoystickPresent.
@ -781,13 +762,13 @@ You can query the human-readable name provided by the gamepad mapping with @ref
glfwGetGamepadName. This may or may not be the same as the
[joystick name](@ref joystick_name).
```c
@code
const char* name = glfwGetGamepadName(GLFW_JOYSTICK_7);
```
@endcode
To retrieve the gamepad state of a joystick, call @ref glfwGetGamepadState.
```c
@code
GLFWgamepadstate state;
if (glfwGetGamepadState(GLFW_JOYSTICK_3, &state))
@ -799,7 +780,7 @@ if (glfwGetGamepadState(GLFW_JOYSTICK_3, &state))
input_speed(state.axes[GLFW_GAMEPAD_AXIS_RIGHT_TRIGGER]);
}
```
@endcode
The @ref GLFWgamepadstate struct has two arrays; one for button states and one
for axis states. The values for each button and axis are the same as for the
@ -830,17 +811,18 @@ The `GLFW_GAMEPAD_BUTTON_LAST` and `GLFW_GAMEPAD_AXIS_LAST` constants equal
the largest available index for each array.
### Gamepad mappings {#gamepad_mapping}
@subsection gamepad_mapping Gamepad mappings
GLFW contains a copy of the mappings available in [SDL_GameControllerDB][] at
the time of release. Newer ones can be added at runtime with @ref
GLFW contains a copy of the mappings available in
[SDL_GameControllerDB](https://github.com/gabomdq/SDL_GameControllerDB) at the
time of release. Newer ones can be added at runtime with @ref
glfwUpdateGamepadMappings.
```c
@code
const char* mappings = load_file_contents("game/data/gamecontrollerdb.txt");
glfwUpdateGamepadMappings(mappings);
```
@endcode
This function supports everything from single lines up to and including the
unmodified contents of the whole `gamecontrollerdb.txt` file.
@ -900,25 +882,25 @@ one built into GLFW for Xbox controllers accessed via the XInput API on Windows.
This example has been broken into several lines to fit on the page, but real
gamepad mappings must be a single line.
```
@code{.unparsed}
78696e70757401000000000000000000,XInput Gamepad (GLFW),platform:Windows,a:b0,
b:b1,x:b2,y:b3,leftshoulder:b4,rightshoulder:b5,back:b6,start:b7,leftstick:b8,
rightstick:b9,leftx:a0,lefty:a1,rightx:a2,righty:a3,lefttrigger:a4,
righttrigger:a5,dpup:h0.1,dpright:h0.2,dpdown:h0.4,dpleft:h0.8,
```
@endcode
@note GLFW does not yet support the output range and modifiers `+` and `-` that
were recently added to SDL. The input modifiers `+`, `-` and `~` are supported
and described above.
## Time input {#time}
@section time Time input
GLFW provides high-resolution time input, in seconds, with @ref glfwGetTime.
```c
@code
double seconds = glfwGetTime();
```
@endcode
It returns the number of seconds since the library was initialized with @ref
glfwInit. The platform-specific time sources used typically have micro- or
@ -926,9 +908,9 @@ nanosecond resolution.
You can modify the base time with @ref glfwSetTime.
```c
@code
glfwSetTime(4.0);
```
@endcode
This sets the time to the specified time, in seconds, and it continues to count
from there.
@ -936,32 +918,32 @@ from there.
You can also access the raw timer used to implement the functions above,
with @ref glfwGetTimerValue.
```c
@code
uint64_t value = glfwGetTimerValue();
```
@endcode
This value is in 1&nbsp;/&nbsp;frequency seconds. The frequency of the raw
timer varies depending on the operating system and hardware. You can query the
frequency, in Hz, with @ref glfwGetTimerFrequency.
```c
@code
uint64_t frequency = glfwGetTimerFrequency();
```
@endcode
## Clipboard input and output {#clipboard}
@section clipboard Clipboard input and output
If the system clipboard contains a UTF-8 encoded string or if it can be
converted to one, you can retrieve it with @ref glfwGetClipboardString. See the
reference documentation for the lifetime of the returned string.
```c
@code
const char* text = glfwGetClipboardString(NULL);
if (text)
{
insert_text(text);
}
```
@endcode
If the clipboard is empty or if its contents could not be converted, `NULL` is
returned.
@ -969,32 +951,33 @@ returned.
The contents of the system clipboard can be set to a UTF-8 encoded string with
@ref glfwSetClipboardString.
```c
@code
glfwSetClipboardString(NULL, "A string with words in it");
```
@endcode
## Path drop input {#path_drop}
@section path_drop Path drop input
If you wish to receive the paths of files and/or directories dropped on
a window, set a file drop callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetDropCallback(window, drop_callback);
```
@endcode
The callback function receives an array of paths encoded as UTF-8.
```c
@code
void drop_callback(GLFWwindow* window, int count, const char** paths)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
handle_dropped_file(paths[i]);
}
```
@endcode
The path array and its strings are only valid until the file drop callback
returns, as they may have been generated specifically for that event. You need
to make a deep copy of the array if you want to keep the paths.
*/

View File

@ -1,12 +1,14 @@
# Internal structure {#internals_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page internals_guide Internal structure
@tableofcontents
There are several interfaces inside GLFW. Each interface has its own area of
responsibility and its own naming conventions.
## Public interface {#internals_public}
@section internals_public Public interface
The most well-known is the public interface, described in the glfw3.h header
file. This is implemented in source files shared by all platforms and these
@ -20,7 +22,7 @@ it use headless camel case.
Examples: `glfwCreateWindow`, `GLFWwindow`, `GLFW_RED_BITS`
## Native interface {#internals_native}
@section internals_native Native interface
The [native interface](@ref native) is a small set of publicly available
but platform-specific functions, described in the glfw3native.h header file and
@ -34,7 +36,7 @@ from.
Examples: `glfwGetX11Window`, `glfwGetWGLContext`
## Internal interface {#internals_internal}
@section internals_internal Internal interface
The internal interface consists of utility functions used by all other
interfaces. It is shared code implemented in the same shared source files as
@ -50,7 +52,7 @@ global names have a leading underscore.
Examples: `_glfwIsValidContextConfig`, `_GLFWwindow`, `_glfw.monitorCount`
## Platform interface {#internals_platform}
@section internals_platform Platform interface
The platform interface implements all platform-specific operations as a service
to the public interface. This includes event processing. The platform
@ -88,7 +90,7 @@ prevents shared code from accidentally using these members.
Examples: `window->win32.handle`, `_glfw.x11.display`
## Event interface {#internals_event}
@section internals_event Event interface
The event interface is implemented in the same shared source files as the public
interface and is responsible for delivering the events it receives to the
@ -100,7 +102,7 @@ ObjectEvent pattern.
Examples: `_glfwInputWindowFocus`, `_glfwInputCursorPos`
## Static functions {#internals_static}
@section internals_static Static functions
Static functions may be used by any interface and have no prefixes or suffixes.
These use headless camel case.
@ -108,7 +110,7 @@ These use headless camel case.
Examples: `isValidElementForJoystick`
## Configuration macros {#internals_config}
@section internals_config Configuration macros
GLFW uses a number of configuration macros to select at compile time which
interfaces and code paths to use. They are defined in the GLFW CMake target.
@ -118,3 +120,4 @@ with a leading underscore.
Examples: `_GLFW_WIN32`, `_GLFW_BUILD_DLL`
*/

View File

@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Introduction to the API {#intro_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page intro_guide Introduction to the API
@tableofcontents
This guide introduces the basic concepts of GLFW and describes initialization,
error handling and API guarantees and limitations. For a broad but shallow
@ -16,7 +18,7 @@ There are also guides for the other areas of GLFW.
- @ref input_guide
## Initialization and termination {#intro_init}
@section intro_init Initialization and termination
Before most GLFW functions may be called, the library must be initialized.
This initialization checks what features are available on the machine,
@ -41,17 +43,17 @@ Calling any other function before successful initialization will cause a @ref
GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED error.
### Initializing GLFW {#intro_init_init}
@subsection intro_init_init Initializing GLFW
The library is initialized with @ref glfwInit, which returns `GLFW_FALSE` if an
error occurred.
```c
@code
if (!glfwInit())
{
// Handle initialization failure
}
```
@endcode
If any part of initialization fails, any parts that succeeded are terminated as
if @ref glfwTerminate had been called. The library only needs to be initialized
@ -69,14 +71,14 @@ main menu and dock icon can be disabled with the @ref GLFW_COCOA_MENUBAR init
hint.
### Initialization hints {#init_hints}
@subsection init_hints Initialization hints
Initialization hints are set before @ref glfwInit and affect how the library
behaves until termination. Hints are set with @ref glfwInitHint.
```c
@code
glfwInitHint(GLFW_JOYSTICK_HAT_BUTTONS, GLFW_FALSE);
```
@endcode
The values you set hints to are never reset by GLFW, but they only take effect
during initialization. Once GLFW has been initialized, any values you set will
@ -87,12 +89,12 @@ will only affect their specific platform. Other platforms will ignore them.
Setting these hints requires no platform specific headers or functions.
#### Shared init hints {#init_hints_shared}
@subsubsection init_hints_shared Shared init hints
@anchor GLFW_PLATFORM
__GLFW_PLATFORM__ specifies the platform to use for windowing and input.
Possible values are `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32`,
`GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_X11` and
`GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_X11`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND` and
`GLFW_PLATFORM_NULL`. The default value is `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM`, which will
choose any platform the library includes support for except for the Null
backend.
@ -105,21 +107,20 @@ glfwGetJoystickHats. Possible values are `GLFW_TRUE` and `GLFW_FALSE`.
@anchor GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_hint
__GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE__ specifies the platform type (rendering backend) to
request when using OpenGL ES and EGL via [ANGLE][]. If the requested platform
type is unavailable, ANGLE will use its default. Possible values are one of
`GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_NONE`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_OPENGL`,
request when using OpenGL ES and EGL via
[ANGLE](https://chromium.googlesource.com/angle/angle/). If the requested
platform type is unavailable, ANGLE will use its default. Possible values are
one of `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_NONE`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_OPENGL`,
`GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_OPENGLES`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_D3D9`,
`GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_D3D11`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_VULKAN` and
`GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_METAL`.
[ANGLE]: https://chromium.googlesource.com/angle/angle/
The ANGLE platform type is specified via the `EGL_ANGLE_platform_angle`
extension. This extension is not used if this hint is
`GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_NONE`, which is the default value.
#### macOS specific init hints {#init_hints_osx}
@subsubsection init_hints_osx macOS specific init hints
@anchor GLFW_COCOA_CHDIR_RESOURCES_hint
__GLFW_COCOA_CHDIR_RESOURCES__ specifies whether to set the current directory to
@ -134,17 +135,7 @@ a nib or manually by GLFW. Possible values are `GLFW_TRUE` and `GLFW_FALSE`.
This is ignored on other platforms.
#### Wayland specific init hints {#init_hints_wayland}
@anchor GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR_hint
__GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR__ specifies whether to use [libdecor][] for window
decorations where available. Possible values are `GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR`
and `GLFW_WAYLAND_DISABLE_LIBDECOR`. This is ignored on other platforms.
[libdecor]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libdecor/libdecor
#### X11 specific init hints {#init_hints_x11}
@subsubsection init_hints_x11 X11 specific init hints
@anchor GLFW_X11_XCB_VULKAN_SURFACE_hint
__GLFW_X11_XCB_VULKAN_SURFACE__ specifies whether to prefer the
@ -153,67 +144,76 @@ the `VK_KHR_xlib_surface` extension. Possible values are `GLFW_TRUE` and
`GLFW_FALSE`. This is ignored on other platforms.
#### Supported and default values {#init_hints_values}
@subsubsection init_hints_wayland Wayland specific init hints
@anchor GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR_hint
__GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR__ specifies whether to use
[libdecor](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libdecor/libdecor) for window
decorations where available. Possible values are `GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR`
and `GLFW_WAYLAND_DISABLE_LIBDECOR`. This is ignored on other platforms.
@subsubsection init_hints_values Supported and default values
Initialization hint | Default value | Supported values
-------------------------------- | ------------------------------- | ----------------
@ref GLFW_PLATFORM | `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM` | `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_X11` or `GLFW_PLATFORM_NULL`
@ref GLFW_PLATFORM | `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM` | `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_X11`, `GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND` or `GLFW_PLATFORM_NULL`
@ref GLFW_JOYSTICK_HAT_BUTTONS | `GLFW_TRUE` | `GLFW_TRUE` or `GLFW_FALSE`
@ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE | `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_NONE` | `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_NONE`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_OPENGL`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_OPENGLES`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_D3D9`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_D3D11`, `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_VULKAN` or `GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_METAL`
@ref GLFW_COCOA_CHDIR_RESOURCES | `GLFW_TRUE` | `GLFW_TRUE` or `GLFW_FALSE`
@ref GLFW_COCOA_MENUBAR | `GLFW_TRUE` | `GLFW_TRUE` or `GLFW_FALSE`
@ref GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR | `GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR` | `GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR` or `GLFW_WAYLAND_DISABLE_LIBDECOR`
@ref GLFW_X11_XCB_VULKAN_SURFACE | `GLFW_TRUE` | `GLFW_TRUE` or `GLFW_FALSE`
@ref GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR | `GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR` | `GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR` or `GLFW_WAYLAND_DISABLE_LIBDECOR`
### Runtime platform selection {#platform}
@subsection platform Runtime platform selection
GLFW can be compiled for more than one platform (window system) at once. This lets
a single library binary support both Wayland and X11 on Linux and other Unix-like systems.
a single library binary support both X11 and Wayland on Linux and other Unix-like systems.
You can control platform selection via the @ref GLFW_PLATFORM initialization hint. By
default, this is set to @ref GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM, which will look for supported window
systems in order of priority and select the first one it finds. It can also be set to any
specific platform to have GLFW only look for that one.
```c
@code
glfwInitHint(GLFW_PLATFORM, GLFW_PLATFORM_X11);
```
@endcode
This mechanism also provides the Null platform, which is always supported but needs to be
explicitly requested. This platform is effectively a stub, emulating a window system on
a single 1080p monitor, but will not interact with any actual window system.
```c
@code
glfwInitHint(GLFW_PLATFORM, GLFW_PLATFORM_NULL);
```
@endcode
You can test whether a library binary was compiled with support for a specific platform
with @ref glfwPlatformSupported.
```c
@code
if (glfwPlatformSupported(GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND))
glfwInitHint(GLFW_PLATFORM, GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND);
```
@endcode
Once GLFW has been initialized, you can query which platform was selected with @ref
glfwGetPlatform.
```c
@code
int platform = glfwGetPlatform();
```
@endcode
If you are using any [native access functions](@ref native), especially on Linux and other
Unix-like systems, then you may need to check that you are calling the ones matching the
selected platform.
### Custom heap memory allocator {#init_allocator}
@subsection init_allocator Custom heap memory allocator
The heap memory allocator can be customized before initialization with @ref
glfwInitAllocator.
```c
@code
GLFWallocator allocator;
allocator.allocate = my_malloc;
allocator.reallocate = my_realloc;
@ -221,11 +221,11 @@ allocator.deallocate = my_free;
allocator.user = NULL;
glfwInitAllocator(&allocator);
```
@endcode
The allocator will be made active at the beginning of initialization and will be used by
GLFW until the library has been fully terminated. Any allocator set after initialization
will be picked up only at the next initialization.
The allocator will be picked up at the beginning of initialization and will be
used until GLFW has been fully terminated. Any allocator set after
initialization will be picked up only at the next initialization.
The allocator will only be used for allocations that would have been made with
the C standard library. Memory allocations that must be made with platform
@ -235,54 +235,45 @@ The allocation function must have a signature matching @ref GLFWallocatefun. It
the desired size, in bytes, and the user pointer passed to @ref glfwInitAllocator and
returns the address to the allocated memory block.
```c
@code
void* my_malloc(size_t size, void* user)
{
...
}
```
The documentation for @ref GLFWallocatefun also lists the requirements and limitations for
an allocation function. If the active one does not meet all of these, GLFW may fail.
@endcode
The reallocation function must have a function signature matching @ref GLFWreallocatefun.
It receives the memory block to be reallocated, the new desired size, in bytes, and the user
pointer passed to @ref glfwInitAllocator and returns the address to the resized memory
block.
```c
@code
void* my_realloc(void* block, size_t size, void* user)
{
...
}
```
The documentation for @ref GLFWreallocatefun also lists the requirements and limitations
for a reallocation function. If the active one does not meet all of these, GLFW may fail.
@endcode
The deallocation function must have a function signature matching @ref GLFWdeallocatefun.
It receives the memory block to be deallocated and the user pointer passed to @ref
glfwInitAllocator.
```c
@code
void my_free(void* block, void* user)
{
...
}
```
The documentation for @ref GLFWdeallocatefun also lists the requirements and limitations
for a deallocation function. If the active one does not meet all of these, GLFW may fail.
@endcode
### Terminating GLFW {#intro_init_terminate}
@subsection intro_init_terminate Terminating GLFW
Before your application exits, you should terminate the GLFW library if it has
been initialized. This is done with @ref glfwTerminate.
```c
@code
glfwTerminate();
```
@endcode
This will destroy any remaining window, monitor and cursor objects, restore any
modified gamma ramps, re-enable the screensaver if it had been disabled and free
@ -294,7 +285,7 @@ library was not initialized or had already been terminated, it returns
immediately.
## Error handling {#error_handling}
@section error_handling Error handling
Some GLFW functions have return values that indicate an error, but this is often
not very helpful when trying to figure out what happened or why it occurred.
@ -305,12 +296,12 @@ values.
The last [error code](@ref errors) for the calling thread can be queried at any
time with @ref glfwGetError.
```c
@code
int code = glfwGetError(NULL);
if (code != GLFW_NO_ERROR)
handle_error(code);
```
@endcode
If no error has occurred since the last call, @ref GLFW_NO_ERROR (zero) is
returned. The error is cleared before the function returns.
@ -324,13 +315,13 @@ can retrieve a UTF-8 encoded human-readable description along with the error
code. If no error has occurred since the last call, the description is set to
`NULL`.
```c
@code
const char* description;
int code = glfwGetError(&description);
if (description)
display_error_message(code, description);
```
@endcode
The retrieved description string is only valid until the next error occurs.
This means you must make a copy of it if you want to keep it.
@ -338,19 +329,19 @@ This means you must make a copy of it if you want to keep it.
You can also set an error callback, which will be called each time an error
occurs. It is set with @ref glfwSetErrorCallback.
```c
@code
glfwSetErrorCallback(error_callback);
```
@endcode
The error callback receives the same error code and human-readable description
returned by @ref glfwGetError.
```c
@code
void error_callback(int code, const char* description)
{
display_error_message(code, description);
}
```
@endcode
The error callback is called after the error is stored, so calling @ref
glfwGetError from within the error callback returns the same values as the
@ -369,7 +360,7 @@ Do not rely on a currently invalid call to generate a specific error, as in the
future that same call may generate a different error or become valid.
## Coordinate systems {#coordinate_systems}
@section coordinate_systems Coordinate systems
GLFW has two primary coordinate systems: the _virtual screen_ and the window
_content area_ or _content area_. Both use the same unit: _virtual screen
@ -406,7 +397,7 @@ between screen coordinates and pixels may also change at run-time depending on
which monitor the window is currently considered to be on.
## Guarantees and limitations {#guarantees_limitations}
@section guarantees_limitations Guarantees and limitations
This section describes the conditions under which GLFW can be expected to
function, barring bugs in the operating system or drivers. Use of GLFW outside
@ -415,7 +406,7 @@ time, or on some versions of GLFW, but it may break at any time and this will
not be considered a bug.
### Pointer lifetimes {#lifetime}
@subsection lifetime Pointer lifetimes
GLFW will never free any pointer you provide to it, and you must never free any
pointer it provides to you.
@ -435,7 +426,7 @@ Pointer lifetimes are guaranteed not to be shortened in future minor or patch
releases.
### Reentrancy {#reentrancy}
@subsection reentrancy Reentrancy
GLFW event processing and object destruction are not reentrant. This means that
the following functions must not be called from any callback function:
@ -451,7 +442,7 @@ These functions may be made reentrant in future minor or patch releases, but
functions not on this list will not be made non-reentrant.
### Thread safety {#thread_safety}
@subsection thread_safety Thread safety
Most GLFW functions must only be called from the main thread (the thread that
calls main), but some may be called from any thread once the library has been
@ -532,7 +523,7 @@ but functions that are currently limited to the main thread may be updated to
allow calls from any thread in future releases.
### Version compatibility {#compatibility}
@subsection compatibility Version compatibility
GLFW uses [Semantic Versioning](https://semver.org/). This guarantees source
and binary backward compatibility with earlier minor versions of the API. This
@ -552,14 +543,14 @@ fixed in the next release. The reference documentation will also take
precedence over anything stated in a guide.
### Event order {#event_order}
@subsection event_order Event order
The order of arrival of related events is not guaranteed to be consistent
across platforms. The exception is synthetic key and mouse button release
events, which are always delivered after the window defocus event.
## Version management {#intro_version}
@section intro_version Version management
GLFW provides mechanisms for identifying what version of GLFW your application
was compiled against as well as what version it is currently running against.
@ -567,33 +558,33 @@ If you are loading GLFW dynamically (not just linking dynamically), you can use
this to verify that the library binary is compatible with your application.
### Compile-time version {#intro_version_compile}
@subsection intro_version_compile Compile-time version
The compile-time version of GLFW is provided by the GLFW header with the
`GLFW_VERSION_MAJOR`, `GLFW_VERSION_MINOR` and `GLFW_VERSION_REVISION` macros.
```c
@code
printf("Compiled against GLFW %i.%i.%i\n",
GLFW_VERSION_MAJOR,
GLFW_VERSION_MINOR,
GLFW_VERSION_REVISION);
```
@endcode
### Run-time version {#intro_version_runtime}
@subsection intro_version_runtime Run-time version
The run-time version can be retrieved with @ref glfwGetVersion, a function that
may be called regardless of whether GLFW is initialized.
```c
@code
int major, minor, revision;
glfwGetVersion(&major, &minor, &revision);
printf("Running against GLFW %i.%i.%i\n", major, minor, revision);
```
@endcode
### Version string {#intro_version_string}
@subsection intro_version_string Version string
GLFW 3 also provides a compile-time generated version string that describes the
version, platform, compiler and any platform-specific compile-time options.
@ -621,17 +612,18 @@ The format of the string is as follows:
- The names of the always supported context creation APIs EGL and OSMesa
- Any additional compile-time options, APIs and (on Windows) what compiler was used
For example, compiling GLFW 3.5 with MinGW as a DLL for Windows, may result in a version string
For example, compiling GLFW 3.4 with MinGW as a DLL for Windows, may result in a version string
like this:
```c
3.5.0 Win32 WGL Null EGL OSMesa MinGW DLL
```
@code
3.4.0 Win32 WGL Null EGL OSMesa MinGW DLL
@endcode
Compiling GLFW as a static library for Linux, with both Wayland and X11 enabled, may
result in a version string like this:
```c
3.5.0 Wayland X11 GLX Null EGL OSMesa monotonic
```
@code
3.4.0 Wayland X11 GLX Null EGL OSMesa monotonic
@endcode
*/

View File

@ -1,10 +1,14 @@
# Introduction {#mainpage}
/*!
@mainpage notitle
@section main_intro Introduction
GLFW is a free, Open Source, multi-platform library for OpenGL, OpenGL ES and
Vulkan application development. It provides a simple, platform-independent API
for creating windows, contexts and surfaces, reading input, handling events, etc.
@ref news list new features, caveats and deprecations.
@ref news_34 list new features, caveats and deprecations.
@ref quick_guide is a guide for users new to GLFW. It takes you through how to
write a small but complete program.
@ -29,6 +33,9 @@ use the new API.
There is a section on @ref guarantees_limitations for pointer lifetimes,
reentrancy, thread safety, event order and backward and forward compatibility.
The [FAQ](https://www.glfw.org/faq.html) answers many common questions about the
design, implementation and use of GLFW.
Finally, @ref compat_guide explains what APIs, standards and protocols GLFW uses
and what happens when they are not present on a given machine.
@ -36,3 +43,4 @@ This documentation was generated with Doxygen. The sources for it are available
in both the [source distribution](https://www.glfw.org/download.html) and
[GitHub repository](https://github.com/glfw/glfw).
*/

View File

@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Monitor guide {#monitor_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page monitor_guide Monitor guide
@tableofcontents
This guide introduces the monitor related functions of GLFW. For details on
a specific function in this category, see the @ref monitor. There are also
@ -13,7 +15,7 @@ guides for the other areas of GLFW.
- @ref input_guide
## Monitor objects {#monitor_object}
@section monitor_object Monitor objects
A monitor object represents a currently connected monitor and is represented as
a pointer to the [opaque](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opaque_data_type) type
@ -34,42 +36,42 @@ To see how GLFW views your monitor setup and its available video modes, run the
`monitors` test program.
### Retrieving monitors {#monitor_monitors}
@subsection monitor_monitors Retrieving monitors
The primary monitor is returned by @ref glfwGetPrimaryMonitor. It is the user's
preferred monitor and is usually the one with global UI elements like task bar
or menu bar.
```c
@code
GLFWmonitor* primary = glfwGetPrimaryMonitor();
```
@endcode
You can retrieve all currently connected monitors with @ref glfwGetMonitors.
See the reference documentation for the lifetime of the returned array.
```c
@code
int count;
GLFWmonitor** monitors = glfwGetMonitors(&count);
```
@endcode
The primary monitor is always the first monitor in the returned array, but other
monitors may be moved to a different index when a monitor is connected or
disconnected.
### Monitor configuration changes {#monitor_event}
@subsection monitor_event Monitor configuration changes
If you wish to be notified when a monitor is connected or disconnected, set
a monitor callback.
```c
@code
glfwSetMonitorCallback(monitor_callback);
```
@endcode
The callback function receives the handle for the monitor that has been
connected or disconnected and the event that occurred.
```c
@code
void monitor_callback(GLFWmonitor* monitor, int event)
{
if (event == GLFW_CONNECTED)
@ -81,7 +83,7 @@ void monitor_callback(GLFWmonitor* monitor, int event)
// The monitor was disconnected
}
}
```
@endcode
If a monitor is disconnected, all windows that are full screen on it will be
switched to windowed mode before the callback is called. Only @ref
@ -89,14 +91,14 @@ glfwGetMonitorName and @ref glfwGetMonitorUserPointer will return useful values
for a disconnected monitor and only before the monitor callback returns.
## Monitor properties {#monitor_properties}
@section monitor_properties Monitor properties
Each monitor has a current video mode, a list of supported video modes,
a virtual position, a content scale, a human-readable name, a user pointer, an
estimated physical size and a gamma ramp.
### Video modes {#monitor_modes}
@subsection monitor_modes Video modes
GLFW generally does a good job selecting a suitable video mode when you create
a full screen window, change its video mode or make a windowed one full
@ -107,93 +109,101 @@ Video modes are represented as @ref GLFWvidmode structures. You can get an
array of the video modes supported by a monitor with @ref glfwGetVideoModes.
See the reference documentation for the lifetime of the returned array.
```c
@code
int count;
GLFWvidmode* modes = glfwGetVideoModes(monitor, &count);
```
@endcode
To get the current video mode of a monitor call @ref glfwGetVideoMode. See the
reference documentation for the lifetime of the returned pointer.
```c
@code
const GLFWvidmode* mode = glfwGetVideoMode(monitor);
```
@endcode
The resolution of a video mode is specified in
[screen coordinates](@ref coordinate_systems), not pixels.
### Physical size {#monitor_size}
@subsection monitor_size Physical size
The physical size of a monitor in millimetres, or an estimation of it, can be
retrieved with @ref glfwGetMonitorPhysicalSize. This has no relation to its
current _resolution_, i.e. the width and height of its current
[video mode](@ref monitor_modes).
```c
@code
int width_mm, height_mm;
glfwGetMonitorPhysicalSize(monitor, &width_mm, &height_mm);
```
@endcode
While this can be used to calculate the raw DPI of a monitor, this is often not
useful. Instead, use the [monitor content scale](@ref monitor_scale) and
[window content scale](@ref window_scale) to scale your content.
### Content scale {#monitor_scale}
@subsection monitor_scale Content scale
The content scale for a monitor can be retrieved with @ref
glfwGetMonitorContentScale.
```c
@code
float xscale, yscale;
glfwGetMonitorContentScale(monitor, &xscale, &yscale);
```
@endcode
For more information on what the content scale is and how to use it, see
[window content scale](@ref window_scale).
The content scale is the ratio between the current DPI and the platform's
default DPI. This is especially important for text and any UI elements. If the
pixel dimensions of your UI scaled by this look appropriate on your machine then
it should appear at a reasonable size on other machines regardless of their DPI
and scaling settings. This relies on the system DPI and scaling settings being
somewhat correct.
The content scale may depend on both the monitor resolution and pixel density
and on user settings. It may be very different from the raw DPI calculated from
the physical size and current resolution.
### Virtual position {#monitor_pos}
@subsection monitor_pos Virtual position
The position of the monitor on the virtual desktop, in
[screen coordinates](@ref coordinate_systems), can be retrieved with @ref
glfwGetMonitorPos.
```c
@code
int xpos, ypos;
glfwGetMonitorPos(monitor, &xpos, &ypos);
```
@endcode
### Work area {#monitor_workarea}
@subsection monitor_workarea Work area
The area of a monitor not occupied by global task bars or menu bars is the work
area. This is specified in [screen coordinates](@ref coordinate_systems) and
can be retrieved with @ref glfwGetMonitorWorkarea.
```c
@code
int xpos, ypos, width, height;
glfwGetMonitorWorkarea(monitor, &xpos, &ypos, &width, &height);
```
@endcode
### Human-readable name {#monitor_name}
@subsection monitor_name Human-readable name
The human-readable, UTF-8 encoded name of a monitor is returned by @ref
glfwGetMonitorName. See the reference documentation for the lifetime of the
returned string.
```c
@code
const char* name = glfwGetMonitorName(monitor);
```
@endcode
Monitor names are not guaranteed to be unique. Two monitors of the same model
and make may have the same name. Only the monitor handle is guaranteed to be
unique, and only until that monitor is disconnected.
### User pointer {#monitor_userptr}
@subsection monitor_userptr User pointer
Each monitor has a user pointer that can be set with @ref
glfwSetMonitorUserPointer and queried with @ref glfwGetMonitorUserPointer. This
@ -204,12 +214,12 @@ terminated.
The initial value of the pointer is `NULL`.
### Gamma ramp {#monitor_gamma}
@subsection monitor_gamma Gamma ramp
The gamma ramp of a monitor can be set with @ref glfwSetGammaRamp, which accepts
a monitor handle and a pointer to a @ref GLFWgammaramp structure.
```c
@code
GLFWgammaramp ramp;
unsigned short red[256], green[256], blue[256];
@ -224,7 +234,7 @@ for (i = 0; i < ramp.size; i++)
}
glfwSetGammaRamp(monitor, &ramp);
```
@endcode
The gamma ramp data is copied before the function returns, so there is no need
to keep it around once the ramp has been set.
@ -235,17 +245,17 @@ ramp for that monitor.
The current gamma ramp for a monitor is returned by @ref glfwGetGammaRamp. See
the reference documentation for the lifetime of the returned structure.
```c
@code
const GLFWgammaramp* ramp = glfwGetGammaRamp(monitor);
```
@endcode
If you wish to set a regular gamma ramp, you can have GLFW calculate it for you
from the desired exponent with @ref glfwSetGamma, which in turn calls @ref
glfwSetGammaRamp with the resulting ramp.
```c
@code
glfwSetGamma(monitor, 1.0);
```
@endcode
To experiment with gamma correction via the @ref glfwSetGamma function, run the
`gamma` test program.
@ -255,3 +265,4 @@ hardware gamma correction, which today is typically an approximation of sRGB
gamma. This means that setting a perfectly linear ramp, or gamma 1.0, will
produce the default (usually sRGB-like) behavior.
*/

View File

@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Moving from GLFW 2 to 3 {#moving_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page moving_guide Moving from GLFW 2 to 3
@tableofcontents
This is a transition guide for moving from GLFW 2 to 3. It describes what has
changed or been removed, but does _not_ include
@ -9,64 +11,61 @@ base onto the new API. For example, the new multi-monitor functions are
required to create full screen windows with GLFW 3.
## Changed and removed features {#moving_removed}
@section moving_removed Changed and removed features
### Renamed library and header file {#moving_renamed_files}
@subsection moving_renamed_files Renamed library and header file
The GLFW 3 header is named @ref glfw3.h and moved to the `GLFW` directory, to
avoid collisions with the headers of other major versions. Similarly, the GLFW
3 library is named `glfw3,` except when it's installed as a shared library on
Unix-like systems, where it uses the [soname][] `libglfw.so.3`.
Unix-like systems, where it uses the
[soname](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/soname) `libglfw.so.3`.
[soname]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/soname
__Old syntax__
```c
@par Old syntax
@code
#include <GL/glfw.h>
```
@endcode
__New syntax__
```c
@par New syntax
@code
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
### Removal of threading functions {#moving_threads}
@subsection moving_threads Removal of threading functions
The threading functions have been removed, including the per-thread sleep
function. They were fairly primitive, under-used, poorly integrated and took
time away from the focus of GLFW (i.e. context, input and window). There are
better threading libraries available and native threading support is available
in both [C++11][] and [C11][], both of which are gaining traction.
[C++11]: https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread
[C11]: https://en.cppreference.com/w/c/thread
in both [C++11](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread) and
[C11](https://en.cppreference.com/w/c/thread), both of which are gaining
traction.
If you wish to use the C++11 or C11 facilities but your compiler doesn't yet
support them, see the [TinyThread++][] and [TinyCThread][] projects created by
support them, see the
[TinyThread++](https://gitorious.org/tinythread/tinythreadpp) and
[TinyCThread](https://github.com/tinycthread/tinycthread) projects created by
the original author of GLFW. These libraries implement a usable subset of the
threading APIs in C++11 and C11, and in fact some GLFW 3 test programs use
TinyCThread.
[TinyThread++]: https://gitorious.org/tinythread/tinythreadpp
[TinyCThread]: https://github.com/tinycthread/tinycthread
However, GLFW 3 has better support for _use from multiple threads_ than GLFW
2 had. Contexts can be made current on any thread, although only a single
thread at a time, and the documentation explicitly states which functions may be
used from any thread and which must only be used from the main thread.
__Removed functions__
> `glfwSleep`, `glfwCreateThread`, `glfwDestroyThread`, `glfwWaitThread`,
> `glfwGetThreadID`, `glfwCreateMutex`, `glfwDestroyMutex`, `glfwLockMutex`,
> `glfwUnlockMutex`, `glfwCreateCond`, `glfwDestroyCond`, `glfwWaitCond`,
> `glfwSignalCond`, `glfwBroadcastCond` and `glfwGetNumberOfProcessors`.
@par Removed functions
`glfwSleep`, `glfwCreateThread`, `glfwDestroyThread`, `glfwWaitThread`,
`glfwGetThreadID`, `glfwCreateMutex`, `glfwDestroyMutex`, `glfwLockMutex`,
`glfwUnlockMutex`, `glfwCreateCond`, `glfwDestroyCond`, `glfwWaitCond`,
`glfwSignalCond`, `glfwBroadcastCond` and `glfwGetNumberOfProcessors`.
__Removed types__
> `GLFWthreadfun`
@par Removed types
`GLFWthreadfun`
### Removal of image and texture loading {#moving_image}
@subsection moving_image Removal of image and texture loading
The image and texture loading functions have been removed. They only supported
the Targa image format, making them mostly useful for beginner level examples.
@ -80,97 +79,94 @@ As there already are libraries doing this, it is unnecessary both to duplicate
the work and to tie the duplicate to GLFW. The resulting library would also be
platform-independent, as both OpenGL and stdio are available wherever GLFW is.
__Removed functions__
> `glfwReadImage`, `glfwReadMemoryImage`, `glfwFreeImage`, `glfwLoadTexture2D`,
> `glfwLoadMemoryTexture2D` and `glfwLoadTextureImage2D`.
@par Removed functions
`glfwReadImage`, `glfwReadMemoryImage`, `glfwFreeImage`, `glfwLoadTexture2D`,
`glfwLoadMemoryTexture2D` and `glfwLoadTextureImage2D`.
### Removal of GLFWCALL macro {#moving_stdcall}
@subsection moving_stdcall Removal of GLFWCALL macro
The `GLFWCALL` macro, which made callback functions use [\_\_stdcall][stdcall]
on Windows, has been removed. GLFW is written in C, not Pascal. Removing this
macro means there's one less thing for application programmers to remember, i.e.
the requirement to mark all callback functions with `GLFWCALL`. It also
simplifies the creation of DLLs and DLL link libraries, as there's no need to
explicitly disable `@n` entry point suffixes.
The `GLFWCALL` macro, which made callback functions use
[__stdcall](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/zxk0tw93.aspx) on Windows,
has been removed. GLFW is written in C, not Pascal. Removing this macro means
there's one less thing for application programmers to remember, i.e. the
requirement to mark all callback functions with `GLFWCALL`. It also simplifies
the creation of DLLs and DLL link libraries, as there's no need to explicitly
disable `@n` entry point suffixes.
[stdcall]: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/zxk0tw93.aspx
__Old syntax__
```c
@par Old syntax
@code
void GLFWCALL callback_function(...);
```
@endcode
__New syntax__
```c
@par New syntax
@code
void callback_function(...);
```
@endcode
### Window handle parameters {#moving_window_handles}
@subsection moving_window_handles Window handle parameters
Because GLFW 3 supports multiple windows, window handle parameters have been
added to all window-related GLFW functions and callbacks. The handle of
a newly created window is returned by @ref glfwCreateWindow (formerly
`glfwOpenWindow`). Window handles are pointers to the
[opaque][opaque-type] type @ref GLFWwindow.
[opaque](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opaque_data_type) type @ref GLFWwindow.
[opaque-type]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opaque_data_type
__Old syntax__
```c
@par Old syntax
@code
glfwSetWindowTitle("New Window Title");
```
@endcode
__New syntax__
```c
@par New syntax
@code
glfwSetWindowTitle(window, "New Window Title");
```
@endcode
### Explicit monitor selection {#moving_monitor}
@subsection moving_monitor Explicit monitor selection
GLFW 3 provides support for multiple monitors. To request a full screen mode window,
instead of passing `GLFW_FULLSCREEN` you specify which monitor you wish the
window to use. The @ref glfwGetPrimaryMonitor function returns the monitor that
GLFW 2 would have selected, but there are many other
[monitor functions](@ref monitor_guide). Monitor handles are pointers to the
[opaque][opaque-type] type @ref GLFWmonitor.
[opaque](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opaque_data_type) type @ref GLFWmonitor.
__Old basic full screen__
```c
@par Old basic full screen
@code
glfwOpenWindow(640, 480, 8, 8, 8, 0, 24, 0, GLFW_FULLSCREEN);
```
@endcode
__New basic full screen__
```c
@par New basic full screen
@code
window = glfwCreateWindow(640, 480, "My Window", glfwGetPrimaryMonitor(), NULL);
```
@endcode
@note The framebuffer bit depth parameters of `glfwOpenWindow` have been turned
into [window hints](@ref window_hints), but as they have been given
[sane defaults](@ref window_hints_values) you rarely need to set these hints.
### Removal of automatic event polling {#moving_autopoll}
@subsection moving_autopoll Removal of automatic event polling
GLFW 3 does not automatically poll for events in @ref glfwSwapBuffers, meaning
you need to call @ref glfwPollEvents or @ref glfwWaitEvents yourself. Unlike
buffer swap, which acts on a single window, the event processing functions act
on all windows at once.
__Old basic main loop__
```c
@par Old basic main loop
@code
while (...)
{
// Process input
// Render output
glfwSwapBuffers();
}
```
@endcode
__New basic main loop__
```c
@par New basic main loop
@code
while (...)
{
// Process input
@ -178,10 +174,10 @@ while (...)
glfwSwapBuffers(window);
glfwPollEvents();
}
```
@endcode
### Explicit context management {#moving_context}
@subsection moving_context Explicit context management
Each GLFW 3 window has its own OpenGL context and only you, the application
programmer, can know which context should be current on which thread at any
@ -191,7 +187,7 @@ This means that you need to call @ref glfwMakeContextCurrent after creating
a window before you can call any OpenGL functions.
### Separation of window and framebuffer sizes {#moving_hidpi}
@subsection moving_hidpi Separation of window and framebuffer sizes
Window positions and sizes now use screen coordinates, which may not be the same
as pixels on machines with high-DPI monitors. This is important as OpenGL uses
@ -201,20 +197,20 @@ been added. You can retrieve the size of the framebuffer of a window with @ref
glfwGetFramebufferSize function. A framebuffer size callback has also been
added, which can be set with @ref glfwSetFramebufferSizeCallback.
__Old basic viewport setup__
```c
@par Old basic viewport setup
@code
glfwGetWindowSize(&width, &height);
glViewport(0, 0, width, height);
```
@endcode
__New basic viewport setup__
```c
@par New basic viewport setup
@code
glfwGetFramebufferSize(window, &width, &height);
glViewport(0, 0, width, height);
```
@endcode
### Window closing changes {#moving_window_close}
@subsection moving_window_close Window closing changes
The `GLFW_OPENED` window parameter has been removed. As long as the window has
not been destroyed, whether through @ref glfwDestroyWindow or @ref
@ -230,43 +226,43 @@ the window, take some other action or ignore the request.
You can query the close flag at any time with @ref glfwWindowShouldClose and set
it at any time with @ref glfwSetWindowShouldClose.
__Old basic main loop__
```c
@par Old basic main loop
@code
while (glfwGetWindowParam(GLFW_OPENED))
{
...
}
```
@endcode
__New basic main loop__
```c
@par New basic main loop
@code
while (!glfwWindowShouldClose(window))
{
...
}
```
@endcode
The close callback no longer returns a value. Instead, it is called after the
close flag has been set, so it can optionally override its value, before
event processing completes. You may however not call @ref glfwDestroyWindow
from the close callback (or any other window related callback).
__Old syntax__
```c
@par Old syntax
@code
int GLFWCALL window_close_callback(void);
```
@endcode
__New syntax__
```c
@par New syntax
@code
void window_close_callback(GLFWwindow* window);
```
@endcode
@note GLFW never clears the close flag to `GLFW_FALSE`, meaning you can use it
for other reasons to close the window as well, for example the user choosing
Quit from an in-game menu.
### Persistent window hints {#moving_hints}
@subsection moving_hints Persistent window hints
The `glfwOpenWindowHint` function has been renamed to @ref glfwWindowHint.
@ -275,7 +271,7 @@ instead retain their values until modified by @ref glfwWindowHint or @ref
glfwDefaultWindowHints, or until the library is terminated and re-initialized.
### Video mode enumeration {#moving_video_modes}
@subsection moving_video_modes Video mode enumeration
Video mode enumeration is now per-monitor. The @ref glfwGetVideoModes function
now returns all available modes for a specific monitor instead of requiring you
@ -284,7 +280,7 @@ had poorly defined behavior, has been replaced by @ref glfwGetVideoMode, which
returns the current mode of a monitor.
### Removal of character actions {#moving_char_up}
@subsection moving_char_up Removal of character actions
The action parameter of the [character callback](@ref GLFWcharfun) has been
removed. This was an artefact of the origin of GLFW, i.e. being developed in
@ -292,18 +288,18 @@ English by a Swede. However, many keyboard layouts require more than one key to
produce characters with diacritical marks. Even the Swedish keyboard layout
requires this for uncommon cases like ü.
__Old syntax__
```c
@par Old syntax
@code
void GLFWCALL character_callback(int character, int action);
```
@endcode
__New syntax__
```c
@par New syntax
@code
void character_callback(GLFWwindow* window, int character);
```
@endcode
### Cursor position changes {#moving_cursorpos}
@subsection moving_cursorpos Cursor position changes
The `glfwGetMousePos` function has been renamed to @ref glfwGetCursorPos,
`glfwSetMousePos` to @ref glfwSetCursorPos and `glfwSetMousePosCallback` to @ref
@ -319,7 +315,7 @@ glfwSetCursorPos (formerly `glfwSetMousePos`) when that window is active.
Unless the window is active, the function fails silently.
### Wheel position replaced by scroll offsets {#moving_wheel}
@subsection moving_wheel Wheel position replaced by scroll offsets
The `glfwGetMouseWheel` function has been removed. Scrolling is the input of
offsets and has no absolute position. The mouse wheel callback has been
@ -327,21 +323,21 @@ replaced by a [scroll callback](@ref GLFWscrollfun) that receives
two-dimensional floating point scroll offsets. This allows you to receive
precise scroll data from for example modern touchpads.
__Old syntax__
```c
@par Old syntax
@code
void GLFWCALL mouse_wheel_callback(int position);
```
@endcode
__New syntax__
```c
@par New syntax
@code
void scroll_callback(GLFWwindow* window, double xoffset, double yoffset);
```
@endcode
__Removed functions__
> `glfwGetMouseWheel`
@par Removed functions
`glfwGetMouseWheel`
### Key repeat action {#moving_repeat}
@subsection moving_repeat Key repeat action
The `GLFW_KEY_REPEAT` enable has been removed and key repeat is always enabled
for both keys and characters. A new key action, `GLFW_REPEAT`, has been added
@ -350,7 +346,7 @@ from a repeat. Note that @ref glfwGetKey still returns only `GLFW_PRESS` or
`GLFW_RELEASE`.
### Physical key input {#moving_keys}
@subsection moving_keys Physical key input
GLFW 3 key tokens map to physical keys, unlike in GLFW 2 where they mapped to
the values generated by the current keyboard layout. The tokens are named
@ -370,7 +366,7 @@ having to remember whether to check for `a` or `A`, you now check for
@ref GLFW_KEY_A.
### Joystick function changes {#moving_joystick}
@subsection moving_joystick Joystick function changes
The `glfwGetJoystickPos` function has been renamed to @ref glfwGetJoystickAxes.
@ -380,19 +376,18 @@ function as well as axis and button counts returned by the @ref
glfwGetJoystickAxes and @ref glfwGetJoystickButtons functions.
### Win32 MBCS support {#moving_mbcs}
@subsection moving_mbcs Win32 MBCS support
The Win32 port of GLFW 3 will not compile in [MBCS mode][MBCS]. However,
because the use of the Unicode version of the Win32 API doesn't affect the
process as a whole, but only those windows created using it, it's perfectly
The Win32 port of GLFW 3 will not compile in
[MBCS mode](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/5z097dxa.aspx).
However, because the use of the Unicode version of the Win32 API doesn't affect
the process as a whole, but only those windows created using it, it's perfectly
possible to call MBCS functions from other parts of the same application.
Therefore, even if an application using GLFW has MBCS mode code, there's no need
for GLFW itself to support it.
[MBCS]: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/5z097dxa.aspx
### Support for versions of Windows older than XP {#moving_windows}
@subsection moving_windows Support for versions of Windows older than XP
All explicit support for version of Windows older than XP has been removed.
There is no code that actively prevents GLFW 3 from running on these earlier
@ -412,7 +407,7 @@ runtime checking for a number of functions that are present only on modern
version of Windows.
### Capture of system-wide hotkeys {#moving_syskeys}
@subsection moving_syskeys Capture of system-wide hotkeys
The ability to disable and capture system-wide hotkeys like Alt+Tab has been
removed. Modern applications, whether they're games, scientific visualisations
@ -420,7 +415,7 @@ or something else, are nowadays expected to be good desktop citizens and allow
these hotkeys to function even when running in full screen mode.
### Automatic termination {#moving_terminate}
@subsection moving_terminate Automatic termination
GLFW 3 does not register @ref glfwTerminate with `atexit` at initialization,
because `exit` calls registered functions from the calling thread and while it
@ -433,41 +428,37 @@ destroys all windows not already destroyed with @ref glfwDestroyWindow,
invalidating any window handles you may still have.
### GLU header inclusion {#moving_glu}
@subsection moving_glu GLU header inclusion
GLFW 3 does not by default include the GLU header and GLU itself has been
deprecated by [Khronos][]. __New projects should not use GLU__, but if you need
it for legacy code that has been moved to GLFW 3, you can request that the GLFW
header includes it by defining @ref GLFW_INCLUDE_GLU before the inclusion of the
GLFW header.
deprecated by [Khronos](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khronos_Group). __New
projects should not use GLU__, but if you need it for legacy code that
has been moved to GLFW 3, you can request that the GLFW header includes it by
defining @ref GLFW_INCLUDE_GLU before the inclusion of the GLFW header.
[Khronos]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khronos_Group
__Old syntax__
```c
@par Old syntax
@code
#include <GL/glfw.h>
```
@endcode
__New syntax__
```c
@par New syntax
@code
#define GLFW_INCLUDE_GLU
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
There are many libraries that offer replacements for the functionality offered
by GLU. For the matrix helper functions, see math libraries like [GLM][] (for
C++), [linmath.h][] (for C) and others. For the tessellation functions, see for
example [libtess2][].
[GLM]: https://github.com/g-truc/glm
[linmath.h]: https://github.com/datenwolf/linmath.h
[libtess2]: https://github.com/memononen/libtess2
by GLU. For the matrix helper functions, see math libraries like
[GLM](https://github.com/g-truc/glm) (for C++),
[linmath.h](https://github.com/datenwolf/linmath.h) (for C) and others. For the
tessellation functions, see for example
[libtess2](https://github.com/memononen/libtess2).
## Name change tables {#moving_tables}
@section moving_tables Name change tables
### Renamed functions {#moving_renamed_functions}
@subsection moving_renamed_functions Renamed functions
| GLFW 2 | GLFW 3 | Notes |
| --------------------------- | ----------------------------- | ----- |
@ -487,7 +478,7 @@ example [libtess2][].
| `glfwGetJoystickParam` | @ref glfwJoystickPresent | The axis and button counts are provided by @ref glfwGetJoystickAxes and @ref glfwGetJoystickButtons |
### Renamed types {#moving_renamed_types}
@subsection moving_renamed_types Renamed types
| GLFW 2 | GLFW 3 | Notes |
| ------------------- | --------------------- | |
@ -495,7 +486,7 @@ example [libtess2][].
| `GLFWmouseposfun` | @ref GLFWcursorposfun | |
### Renamed tokens {#moving_renamed_tokens}
@subsection moving_renamed_tokens Renamed tokens
| GLFW 2 | GLFW 3 | Notes |
| --------------------------- | ---------------------------- | ----- |
@ -519,3 +510,4 @@ example [libtess2][].
| `GLFW_KEY_RALT` | `GLFW_KEY_RIGHT_ALT` | |
| `GLFW_KEY_RSUPER` | `GLFW_KEY_RIGHT_SUPER` | |
*/

293
docs/news.dox Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,293 @@
/*!
@page news Release notes
@tableofcontents
@section news_34 Release notes for version 3.4
@subsection features_34 New features in version 3.4
@subsubsection runtime_platform_34 Runtime platform selection
GLFW now supports being compiled for multiple backends and selecting between
them at runtime with the @ref GLFW_PLATFORM init hint. After initialization the
selected platform can be queried with @ref glfwGetPlatform. You can check if
support for a given platform is compiled in with @ref glfwPlatformSupported.
@subsubsection standard_cursors_34 More standard cursors
GLFW now provides the standard cursor shapes @ref GLFW_RESIZE_NWSE_CURSOR and
@ref GLFW_RESIZE_NESW_CURSOR for diagonal resizing, @ref GLFW_RESIZE_ALL_CURSOR
for omnidirectional resizing and @ref GLFW_NOT_ALLOWED_CURSOR for showing an
action is not allowed.
Unlike the original set, these shapes may not be available everywhere and
creation will then fail with the new @ref GLFW_CURSOR_UNAVAILABLE error.
The cursors for horizontal and vertical resizing are now referred to as @ref
GLFW_RESIZE_EW_CURSOR and @ref GLFW_RESIZE_NS_CURSOR, and the pointing hand
cursor is now referred to as @ref GLFW_POINTING_HAND_CURSOR. The older names
are still available.
For more information see @ref cursor_standard.
@subsubsection mouse_passthrough_34 Mouse event passthrough
GLFW now provides the [GLFW_MOUSE_PASSTHROUGH](@ref GLFW_MOUSE_PASSTHROUGH_hint)
window hint for making a window transparent to mouse input, lettings events pass
to whatever window is behind it. This can also be changed after window
creation with the matching [window attribute](@ref GLFW_MOUSE_PASSTHROUGH_attrib).
@subsubsection wayland_libdecor_34 Wayland libdecor decorations
GLFW now supports improved fallback window decorations via
[libdecor](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libdecor/libdecor).
Support for libdecor can be toggled before GLFW is initialized with the
[GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR](@ref GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR_hint) init hint. It is
enabled by default.
@subsubsection wayland_app_id_34 Wayland app_id specification
GLFW now supports specifying the app_id for a Wayland window using the
[GLFW_WAYLAND_APP_ID](@ref GLFW_WAYLAND_APP_ID_hint) window hint string.
@subsubsection features_34_angle_backend Support for ANGLE rendering backend selection
GLFW now provides the
[GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE](@ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_hint) init hint for
requesting a specific rendering backend when using
[ANGLE](https://chromium.googlesource.com/angle/angle/) to create OpenGL ES
contexts.
@subsubsection captured_cursor_34 Captured cursor mode
GLFW now supports confining the cursor to the window content area with the @ref
GLFW_CURSOR_CAPTURED cursor mode.
For more information see @ref cursor_mode.
@subsubsection features_34_init_allocator Support for custom memory allocator
GLFW now supports plugging a custom memory allocator at initialization with @ref
glfwInitAllocator. The allocator is a struct of type @ref GLFWallocator with
function pointers corresponding to the standard library functions `malloc`,
`realloc` and `free`.
For more information see @ref init_allocator.
@subsubsection features_34_position_hint Window hints for initial position
GLFW now provides the @ref GLFW_POSITION_X and @ref GLFW_POSITION_Y window hints for
specifying the initial position of the window. This removes the need to create a hidden
window, move it and then show it. The default value of these hints is
`GLFW_ANY_POSITION`, which selects the previous behavior.
@subsubsection features_34_win32_keymenu Support for keyboard access to Windows window menu
GLFW now provides the
[GLFW_WIN32_KEYBOARD_MENU](@ref GLFW_WIN32_KEYBOARD_MENU_hint) window hint for
enabling keyboard access to the window menu via the Alt+Space and
Alt-and-then-Space shortcuts. This may be useful for more GUI-oriented
applications.
@subsection caveats Caveats for version 3.4
@subsubsection native_34 Multiple sets of native access functions
Because GLFW now supports runtime selection of platform (window system), a library binary
may export native access functions for multiple platforms. Starting with version 3.4 you
must not assume that GLFW is running on a platform just because it exports native access
functions for it. After initialization, you can query the selected platform with @ref
glfwGetPlatform.
@subsubsection version_string_34 Version string format has been changed
Because GLFW now supports runtime selection of platform (window system), the version
string returned by @ref glfwGetVersionString has been expanded. It now contains the names
of all APIs for all the platforms that the library binary supports.
@subsubsection joysticks_34 Joystick support is initialized on demand
The joystick part of GLFW is now initialized when first used, primarily to work
around faulty Windows drivers that cause DirectInput to take up to several
seconds to enumerate devices.
This change will usually not be observable. However, if your application waits
for events without having first called any joystick function or created any
visible windows, the wait may never unblock as GLFW may not yet have subscribed
to joystick related OS events.
To work around this, call any joystick function before waiting for events, for
example by setting a [joystick callback](@ref joystick_event).
@subsubsection wayland_alpha_34 Frambuffer may lack alpha channel on older Wayland systems
On Wayland, when creating an EGL context on a machine lacking the new
`EGL_EXT_present_opaque` extension, the @ref GLFW_ALPHA_BITS window hint will be
ignored and the framebuffer will have no alpha channel. This is because some
Wayland compositors treat any buffer with an alpha channel as per-pixel
transparent.
If you want a per-pixel transparent window, see the
[GLFW_TRANSPARENT_FRAMEBUFFER](@ref GLFW_TRANSPARENT_FRAMEBUFFER_hint) window
hint.
@subsubsection standalone_34 Tests and examples are disabled when built as a subproject
GLFW now does not build the tests and examples when it is added as
a subdirectory of another CMake project. To enable these, set the @ref
GLFW_BUILD_TESTS and @ref GLFW_BUILD_EXAMPLES cache variables before adding the
GLFW subdirectory.
@code{.cmake}
set(GLFW_BUILD_EXAMPLES ON CACHE BOOL "" FORCE)
set(GLFW_BUILD_TESTS ON CACHE BOOL "" FORCE)
add_subdirectory(path/to/glfw)
@endcode
@subsubsection initmenu_34 macOS main menu now created at initialization
GLFW now creates the main menu and completes the initialization of NSApplication
during initialization. Programs that do not want a main menu can disable it
with the [GLFW_COCOA_MENUBAR](@ref GLFW_COCOA_MENUBAR_hint) init hint.
@subsubsection corevideo_34 CoreVideo dependency has been removed
GLFW no longer depends on the CoreVideo framework on macOS and it no longer
needs to be specified during compilation or linking.
@subsubsection caveat_fbtransparency_34 Framebuffer transparency requires DWM transparency
GLFW no longer supports framebuffer transparency enabled via @ref
GLFW_TRANSPARENT_FRAMEBUFFER on Windows 7 if DWM transparency is off
(the Transparency setting under Personalization > Window Color).
@subsubsection emptyevents_34 Empty events on X11 no longer round-trip to server
Events posted with @ref glfwPostEmptyEvent now use a separate unnamed pipe
instead of sending an X11 client event to the helper window.
@subsection deprecations_34 Deprecations in version 3.4
@subsection removals_34 Removals in 3.4
@subsubsection vulkan_static_34 GLFW_VULKAN_STATIC CMake option has been removed
This option was used to compile GLFW directly linked with the Vulkan loader, instead of
using dynamic loading to get hold of `vkGetInstanceProcAddr` at initialization. This is
now done by calling the @ref glfwInitVulkanLoader function before initialization.
If you need backward compatibility, this macro can still be defined for GLFW 3.4 and will
have no effect. The call to @ref glfwInitVulkanLoader can be conditionally enabled in
your code by checking the @ref GLFW_VERSION_MAJOR and @ref GLFW_VERSION_MINOR macros.
@subsubsection osmesa_option_34 GLFW_USE_OSMESA CMake option has been removed
This option was used to compile GLFW for the Null platform. The Null platform is now
always supported. To produce a library binary that only supports this platform, the way
this CMake option used to do, you will instead need to disable the default platform for
the target OS. This means setting the @ref GLFW_BUILD_WIN32, @ref GLFW_BUILD_COCOA or
@ref GLFW_BUILD_X11 CMake option to false.
You can set all of them to false and the ones that don't apply for the target OS will be
ignored.
@subsubsection wl_shell_34 Support for the wl_shell protocol has been removed
Support for the wl_shell protocol has been removed and GLFW now only supports
the XDG-Shell protocol. If your Wayland compositor does not support XDG-Shell
then GLFW will fail to initialize.
@subsection symbols_34 New symbols in version 3.4
@subsubsection functions_34 New functions in version 3.4
- @ref glfwInitAllocator
- @ref glfwGetPlatform
- @ref glfwPlatformSupported
- @ref glfwInitVulkanLoader
@subsubsection types_34 New types in version 3.4
- @ref GLFWallocator
- @ref GLFWallocatefun
- @ref GLFWreallocatefun
- @ref GLFWdeallocatefun
@subsubsection constants_34 New constants in version 3.4
- @ref GLFW_PLATFORM
- @ref GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM
- @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32
- @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA
- @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND
- @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_X11
- @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_NULL
- @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE
- @ref GLFW_POINTING_HAND_CURSOR
- @ref GLFW_RESIZE_EW_CURSOR
- @ref GLFW_RESIZE_NS_CURSOR
- @ref GLFW_RESIZE_NWSE_CURSOR
- @ref GLFW_RESIZE_NESW_CURSOR
- @ref GLFW_RESIZE_ALL_CURSOR
- @ref GLFW_MOUSE_PASSTHROUGH
- @ref GLFW_NOT_ALLOWED_CURSOR
- @ref GLFW_CURSOR_UNAVAILABLE
- @ref GLFW_WIN32_KEYBOARD_MENU
- @ref GLFW_CONTEXT_DEBUG
- @ref GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE
- @ref GLFW_FEATURE_UNIMPLEMENTED
- @ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE
- @ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_NONE
- @ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_OPENGL
- @ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_OPENGLES
- @ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_D3D9
- @ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_D3D11
- @ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_VULKAN
- @ref GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_METAL
- @ref GLFW_X11_XCB_VULKAN_SURFACE
- @ref GLFW_CURSOR_CAPTURED
- @ref GLFW_POSITION_X
- @ref GLFW_POSITION_Y
- @ref GLFW_ANY_POSITION
- @ref GLFW_WAYLAND_APP_ID
- @ref GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR
- @ref GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR
- @ref GLFW_WAYLAND_DISABLE_LIBDECOR
@section news_archive Release notes for earlier versions
- [Release notes for 3.3](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.3/news.html)
- [Release notes for 3.2](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.2/news.html)
- [Release notes for 3.1](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.1/news.html)
- [Release notes for 3.0](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.0/news.html)
*/

View File

@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
# Release notes for version 3.5 {#news}
[TOC]
## New features {#features}
### Unlimited mouse buttons {#unlimited_mouse_buttons}
GLFW now has an input mode which allows an unlimited number of mouse buttons to
be reported by the mouse buttton callback, rather than just the associated
[mouse button tokens](@ref buttons). This allows using mouse buttons with
values over 8. For compatibility with older versions, the
@ref GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS input mode needs to be set to make use of
this.
## Caveats {#caveats}
## Deprecations {#deprecations}
## Removals {#removals}
## New symbols {#new_symbols}
### New functions {#new_functions}
### New types {#new_types}
### New constants {#new_constants}
- @ref GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS
## Release notes for earlier versions {#news_archive}
- [Release notes for 3.4](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.4/news.html)
- [Release notes for 3.3](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.3/news.html)
- [Release notes for 3.2](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.2/news.html)
- [Release notes for 3.1](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.1/news.html)
- [Release notes for 3.0](https://www.glfw.org/docs/3.0/news.html)

View File

@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Getting started {#quick_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page quick_guide Getting started
@tableofcontents
This guide takes you through writing a small application using GLFW 3. The
application will create a window and OpenGL context, render a rotating triangle
@ -12,16 +14,16 @@ have used GLFW 2 in the past, read @ref moving_guide, as some functions
behave differently in GLFW 3.
## Step by step {#quick_steps}
@section quick_steps Step by step
### Including the GLFW header {#quick_include}
@subsection quick_include Including the GLFW header
In the source files of your application where you use GLFW, you need to include
its header file.
```c
@code
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
This header provides all the constants, types and function prototypes of the
GLFW API.
@ -36,51 +38,51 @@ This example uses files generated by [glad](https://gen.glad.sh/). The GLFW
header can detect most such headers if they are included first and will then not
include the one from your development environment.
```c
@code
#include <glad/gl.h>
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
To make sure there will be no header conflicts, you can define @ref
GLFW_INCLUDE_NONE before the GLFW header to explicitly disable inclusion of the
development environment header. This also allows the two headers to be included
in any order.
```c
@code
#define GLFW_INCLUDE_NONE
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
#include <glad/gl.h>
```
@endcode
### Initializing and terminating GLFW {#quick_init_term}
@subsection quick_init_term Initializing and terminating GLFW
Before you can use most GLFW functions, the library must be initialized. On
successful initialization, `GLFW_TRUE` is returned. If an error occurred,
`GLFW_FALSE` is returned.
```c
@code
if (!glfwInit())
{
// Initialization failed
}
```
@endcode
Note that `GLFW_TRUE` and `GLFW_FALSE` are and will always be one and zero.
When you are done using GLFW, typically just before the application exits, you
need to terminate GLFW.
```c
@code
glfwTerminate();
```
@endcode
This destroys any remaining windows and releases any other resources allocated by
GLFW. After this call, you must initialize GLFW again before using any GLFW
functions that require it.
### Setting an error callback {#quick_capture_error}
@subsection quick_capture_error Setting an error callback
Most events are reported through callbacks, whether it's a key being pressed,
a GLFW window being moved, or an error occurring. Callbacks are C functions (or
@ -90,36 +92,36 @@ In case a GLFW function fails, an error is reported to the GLFW error callback.
You can receive these reports with an error callback. This function must have
the signature below but may do anything permitted in other callbacks.
```c
@code
void error_callback(int error, const char* description)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error: %s\n", description);
}
```
@endcode
Callback functions must be set, so GLFW knows to call them. The function to set
the error callback is one of the few GLFW functions that may be called before
initialization, which lets you be notified of errors both during and after
initialization.
```c
@code
glfwSetErrorCallback(error_callback);
```
@endcode
### Creating a window and context {#quick_create_window}
@subsection quick_create_window Creating a window and context
The window and its OpenGL context are created with a single call to @ref
glfwCreateWindow, which returns a handle to the created combined window and
context object
```c
@code
GLFWwindow* window = glfwCreateWindow(640, 480, "My Title", NULL, NULL);
if (!window)
{
// Window or OpenGL context creation failed
}
```
@endcode
This creates a 640 by 480 windowed mode window with an OpenGL context. If
window or OpenGL context creation fails, `NULL` will be returned. You should
@ -136,7 +138,7 @@ You can select the OpenGL profile by setting the `GLFW_OPENGL_PROFILE` hint.
This program uses the core profile as that is the only profile macOS supports
for OpenGL 3.x and 4.x.
```c
@code
glfwWindowHint(GLFW_CONTEXT_VERSION_MAJOR, 3);
glfwWindowHint(GLFW_CONTEXT_VERSION_MINOR, 3);
glfwWindowHint(GLFW_OPENGL_PROFILE, GLFW_OPENGL_CORE_PROFILE);
@ -145,25 +147,25 @@ if (!window)
{
// Window or context creation failed
}
```
@endcode
When a window and context is no longer needed, destroy it.
```c
@code
glfwDestroyWindow(window);
```
@endcode
Once this function is called, no more events will be delivered for that window
and its handle becomes invalid.
### Making the OpenGL context current {#quick_context_current}
@subsection quick_context_current Making the OpenGL context current
Before you can use the OpenGL API, you must have a current OpenGL context.
```c
@code
glfwMakeContextCurrent(window);
```
@endcode
The context will remain current until you make another context current or until
the window owning the current context is destroyed.
@ -174,12 +176,12 @@ a current context to load from. This example uses
[glad](https://github.com/Dav1dde/glad), but the same rule applies to all such
libraries.
```c
@code
gladLoadGL(glfwGetProcAddress);
```
@endcode
### Checking the window close flag {#quick_window_close}
@subsection quick_window_close Checking the window close flag
Each window has a flag indicating whether the window should be closed.
@ -189,12 +191,12 @@ Note that __the window isn't actually closed__, so you are expected to monitor
this flag and either destroy the window or give some kind of feedback to the
user.
```c
@code
while (!glfwWindowShouldClose(window))
{
// Keep running
}
```
@endcode
You can be notified when the user is attempting to close the window by setting
a close callback with @ref glfwSetWindowCloseCallback. The callback will be
@ -205,41 +207,41 @@ useful if you want to interpret other kinds of input as closing the window, like
for example pressing the _Escape_ key.
### Receiving input events {#quick_key_input}
@subsection quick_key_input Receiving input events
Each window has a large number of callbacks that can be set to receive all the
various kinds of events. To receive key press and release events, create a key
callback function.
```c
@code
static void key_callback(GLFWwindow* window, int key, int scancode, int action, int mods)
{
if (key == GLFW_KEY_ESCAPE && action == GLFW_PRESS)
glfwSetWindowShouldClose(window, GLFW_TRUE);
}
```
@endcode
The key callback, like other window related callbacks, are set per-window.
```c
@code
glfwSetKeyCallback(window, key_callback);
```
@endcode
In order for event callbacks to be called when events occur, you need to process
events as described below.
### Rendering with OpenGL {#quick_render}
@subsection quick_render Rendering with OpenGL
Once you have a current OpenGL context, you can use OpenGL normally. In this
tutorial, a multicolored rotating triangle will be rendered. The framebuffer
size needs to be retrieved for `glViewport`.
```c
@code
int width, height;
glfwGetFramebufferSize(window, &width, &height);
glViewport(0, 0, width, height);
```
@endcode
You can also set a framebuffer size callback using @ref
glfwSetFramebufferSizeCallback and be notified when the size changes.
@ -256,19 +258,19 @@ These all happen to use GLFW, but OpenGL itself works the same whatever API you
use to create the window and context.
### Reading the timer {#quick_timer}
@subsection quick_timer Reading the timer
To create smooth animation, a time source is needed. GLFW provides a timer that
returns the number of seconds since initialization. The time source used is the
most accurate on each platform and generally has micro- or nanosecond
resolution.
```c
@code
double time = glfwGetTime();
```
@endcode
### Swapping buffers {#quick_swap_buffers}
@subsection quick_swap_buffers Swapping buffers
GLFW windows by default use double buffering. That means that each window has
two rendering buffers; a front buffer and a back buffer. The front buffer is
@ -277,9 +279,9 @@ the one being displayed and the back buffer the one you render to.
When the entire frame has been rendered, the buffers need to be swapped with one
another, so the back buffer becomes the front buffer and vice versa.
```c
@code
glfwSwapBuffers(window);
```
@endcode
The swap interval indicates how many frames to wait until swapping the buffers,
commonly known as _vsync_. By default, the swap interval is zero, meaning
@ -294,15 +296,15 @@ For these reasons, applications will typically want to set the swap interval to
one. It can be set to higher values, but this is usually not recommended,
because of the input latency it leads to.
```c
@code
glfwSwapInterval(1);
```
@endcode
This function acts on the current context and will fail unless a context is
current.
### Processing events {#quick_process_events}
@subsection quick_process_events Processing events
GLFW needs to communicate regularly with the window system both in order to
receive events and to show that the application hasn't locked up. Event
@ -313,9 +315,9 @@ There are two methods for processing pending events; polling and waiting. This
example will use event polling, which processes only those events that have
already been received and then returns immediately.
```c
@code
glfwPollEvents();
```
@endcode
This is the best choice when rendering continually, like most games do. If
instead you only need to update your rendering once you have received new input,
@ -325,7 +327,7 @@ all received events. This saves a great deal of CPU cycles and is useful for,
for example, many kinds of editing tools.
## Putting it together {#quick_example}
@section quick_example Putting it together
Now that you know how to initialize GLFW, create a window and poll for
keyboard input, it's possible to create a small program.
@ -336,14 +338,13 @@ presses _Escape_ or closes the window.
@snippet triangle-opengl.c code
The program above can be found in the [source package][download] as
The program above can be found in the
[source package](https://www.glfw.org/download.html) as
`examples/triangle-opengl.c` and is compiled along with all other examples when
you build GLFW. If you built GLFW from the source package then you already have
this as `triangle-opengl.exe` on Windows, `triangle-opengl` on Linux or
`triangle-opengl.app` on macOS.
[download]: https://www.glfw.org/download.html
This tutorial used only a few of the many functions GLFW provides. There are
guides for each of the areas covered by GLFW. Each guide will introduce all the
functions for that category.
@ -363,3 +364,4 @@ environment you are using and is best explained by the documentation for that
environment. To learn about the details that are specific to GLFW, see
@ref build_guide.
*/

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@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Vulkan guide {#vulkan_guide}
/*!
[TOC]
@page vulkan_guide Vulkan guide
@tableofcontents
This guide is intended to fill the gaps between the official [Vulkan
resources](https://www.khronos.org/vulkan/) and the rest of the GLFW
@ -27,7 +29,7 @@ are also guides for the other areas of the GLFW API.
- @ref input_guide
## Finding the Vulkan loader {#vulkan_loader}
@section vulkan_loader Finding the Vulkan loader
GLFW itself does not ever need to be linked against the Vulkan loader.
@ -43,32 +45,32 @@ you will need to direct GLFW to it. Pass your version of `vkGetInstanceProcAddr
glfwInitVulkanLoader before initializing GLFW and it will use that function for all Vulkan
entry point retrieval. This prevents GLFW from dynamically loading the Vulkan loader.
```c
@code
glfwInitVulkanLoader(vkGetInstanceProcAddr);
```
@endcode
@macos To make your application be redistributable you will need to set up the application
bundle according to the LunarG SDK documentation. This is explained in more detail in the
[SDK documentation for macOS](https://vulkan.lunarg.com/doc/sdk/latest/mac/getting_started.html).
## Including the Vulkan header file {#vulkan_include}
@section vulkan_include Including the Vulkan header file
To have GLFW include the Vulkan header, define @ref GLFW_INCLUDE_VULKAN before including
the GLFW header.
```c
@code
#define GLFW_INCLUDE_VULKAN
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
If you instead want to include the Vulkan header from a custom location or use
your own custom Vulkan header then do this before the GLFW header.
```c
@code
#include <path/to/vulkan.h>
#include <GLFW/glfw3.h>
```
@endcode
Unless a Vulkan header is included, either by the GLFW header or above it, the following
GLFW functions will not be declared, as depend on Vulkan types.
@ -82,7 +84,7 @@ The `VK_USE_PLATFORM_*_KHR` macros do not need to be defined for the Vulkan part
of GLFW to work. Define them only if you are using these extensions directly.
## Querying for Vulkan support {#vulkan_support}
@section vulkan_support Querying for Vulkan support
If you are linking directly against the Vulkan loader then you can skip this
section. The canonical desktop loader library exports all Vulkan core and
@ -92,12 +94,12 @@ If you are loading the Vulkan loader dynamically instead of linking directly
against it, you can check for the availability of a loader and ICD with @ref
glfwVulkanSupported.
```c
@code
if (glfwVulkanSupported())
{
// Vulkan is available, at least for compute
}
```
@endcode
This function returns `GLFW_TRUE` if the Vulkan loader and any minimally
functional ICD was found.
@ -106,24 +108,24 @@ If one or both were not found, calling any other Vulkan related GLFW function
will generate a @ref GLFW_API_UNAVAILABLE error.
### Querying Vulkan function pointers {#vulkan_proc}
@subsection vulkan_proc Querying Vulkan function pointers
To load any Vulkan core or extension function from the found loader, call @ref
glfwGetInstanceProcAddress. To load functions needed for instance creation,
pass `NULL` as the instance.
```c
@code
PFN_vkCreateInstance pfnCreateInstance = (PFN_vkCreateInstance)
glfwGetInstanceProcAddress(NULL, "vkCreateInstance");
```
@endcode
Once you have created an instance, you can load from it all other Vulkan core
functions and functions from any instance extensions you enabled.
```c
@code
PFN_vkCreateDevice pfnCreateDevice = (PFN_vkCreateDevice)
glfwGetInstanceProcAddress(instance, "vkCreateDevice");
```
@endcode
This function in turn calls `vkGetInstanceProcAddr`. If that fails, the
function falls back to a platform-specific query of the Vulkan loader (i.e.
@ -135,17 +137,17 @@ Vulkan also provides `vkGetDeviceProcAddr` for loading device-specific versions
of Vulkan function. This function can be retrieved from an instance with @ref
glfwGetInstanceProcAddress.
```c
@code
PFN_vkGetDeviceProcAddr pfnGetDeviceProcAddr = (PFN_vkGetDeviceProcAddr)
glfwGetInstanceProcAddress(instance, "vkGetDeviceProcAddr");
```
@endcode
Device-specific functions may execute a little faster, due to not having to
dispatch internally based on the device passed to them. For more information
about `vkGetDeviceProcAddr`, see the Vulkan documentation.
## Querying required Vulkan extensions {#vulkan_ext}
@section vulkan_ext Querying required Vulkan extensions
To do anything useful with Vulkan you need to create an instance. If you want
to use Vulkan to render to a window, you must enable the instance extensions
@ -154,10 +156,10 @@ GLFW requires to create Vulkan surfaces.
To query the instance extensions required, call @ref
glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensions.
```c
@code
uint32_t count;
const char** extensions = glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensions(&count);
```
@endcode
These extensions must all be enabled when creating instances that are going to
be passed to @ref glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport and @ref
@ -172,14 +174,14 @@ If successful the returned array will always include `VK_KHR_surface`, so if
you don't require any additional extensions you can pass this list directly to
the `VkInstanceCreateInfo` struct.
```c
@code
VkInstanceCreateInfo ici;
memset(&ici, 0, sizeof(ici));
ici.enabledExtensionCount = count;
ici.ppEnabledExtensionNames = extensions;
...
```
@endcode
Additional extensions may be required by future versions of GLFW. You should
check whether any extensions you wish to enable are already in the returned
@ -194,52 +196,52 @@ info flags for MoltenVK to show up in the list of physical devices. For more
information, see the Vulkan and MoltenVK documentation.
## Querying for Vulkan presentation support {#vulkan_present}
@section vulkan_present Querying for Vulkan presentation support
Not every queue family of every Vulkan device can present images to surfaces.
To check whether a specific queue family of a physical device supports image
presentation without first having to create a window and surface, call @ref
glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport.
```c
@code
if (glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport(instance, physical_device, queue_family_index))
{
// Queue family supports image presentation
}
```
@endcode
The `VK_KHR_surface` extension additionally provides the
`vkGetPhysicalDeviceSurfaceSupportKHR` function, which performs the same test on
an existing Vulkan surface.
## Creating the window {#vulkan_window}
@section vulkan_window Creating the window
Unless you will be using OpenGL or OpenGL ES with the same window as Vulkan,
there is no need to create a context. You can disable context creation with the
[GLFW_CLIENT_API](@ref GLFW_CLIENT_API_hint) hint.
```c
@code
glfwWindowHint(GLFW_CLIENT_API, GLFW_NO_API);
GLFWwindow* window = glfwCreateWindow(640, 480, "Window Title", NULL, NULL);
```
@endcode
See @ref context_less for more information.
## Creating a Vulkan window surface {#vulkan_surface}
@section vulkan_surface Creating a Vulkan window surface
You can create a Vulkan surface (as defined by the `VK_KHR_surface` extension)
for a GLFW window with @ref glfwCreateWindowSurface.
```c
@code
VkSurfaceKHR surface;
VkResult err = glfwCreateWindowSurface(instance, window, NULL, &surface);
if (err)
{
// Window surface creation failed
}
```
@endcode
If an OpenGL or OpenGL ES context was created on the window, the context has
ownership of the presentation on the window and a Vulkan surface cannot be
@ -248,3 +250,4 @@ created.
It is your responsibility to destroy the surface. GLFW does not destroy it for
you. Call `vkDestroySurfaceKHR` function from the same extension to destroy it.
*/

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@ -31,6 +31,7 @@
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include "getopt.h"
#include "linmath.h"
static const char* vertex_shader_text =

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/*************************************************************************
* GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
* GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
* A library for OpenGL, window and input
*------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
@ -291,7 +291,7 @@ extern "C" {
* features are added to the API but it remains backward-compatible.
* @ingroup init
*/
#define GLFW_VERSION_MINOR 5
#define GLFW_VERSION_MINOR 4
/*! @brief The revision number of the GLFW header.
*
* The revision number of the GLFW header. This is incremented when a bug fix
@ -827,11 +827,11 @@ extern "C" {
#define GLFW_FEATURE_UNIMPLEMENTED 0x0001000D
/*! @brief Platform unavailable or no matching platform was found.
*
* If emitted during initialization, no matching platform was found. If the @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM init hint was set to `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM`, GLFW could not detect any of
* the platforms supported by this library binary, except for the Null platform. If the
* init hint was set to a specific platform, it is either not supported by this library
* binary or GLFW was not able to detect it.
* If emitted during initialization, no matching platform was found. If @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM is set to `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM`, GLFW could not detect any of the
* platforms supported by this library binary, except for the Null platform. If set to
* a specific platform, it is either not supported by this library binary or GLFW was not
* able to detect it.
*
* If emitted by a native access function, GLFW was initialized for a different platform
* than the function is for.
@ -1098,15 +1098,8 @@ extern "C" {
* [window hint](@ref GLFW_SCALE_TO_MONITOR).
*/
#define GLFW_SCALE_TO_MONITOR 0x0002200C
/*! @brief Window framebuffer scaling
* [window hint](@ref GLFW_SCALE_FRAMEBUFFER_hint).
*/
#define GLFW_SCALE_FRAMEBUFFER 0x0002200D
/*! @brief Legacy name for compatibility.
*
* This is an alias for the
* [GLFW_SCALE_FRAMEBUFFER](@ref GLFW_SCALE_FRAMEBUFFER_hint) window hint for
* compatibility with earlier versions.
/*! @brief macOS specific
* [window hint](@ref GLFW_COCOA_RETINA_FRAMEBUFFER_hint).
*/
#define GLFW_COCOA_RETINA_FRAMEBUFFER 0x00023001
/*! @brief macOS specific
@ -1126,9 +1119,6 @@ extern "C" {
*/
#define GLFW_X11_INSTANCE_NAME 0x00024002
#define GLFW_WIN32_KEYBOARD_MENU 0x00025001
/*! @brief Win32 specific [window hint](@ref GLFW_WIN32_SHOWDEFAULT_hint).
*/
#define GLFW_WIN32_SHOWDEFAULT 0x00025002
/*! @brief Wayland specific
* [window hint](@ref GLFW_WAYLAND_APP_ID_hint).
*
@ -1154,7 +1144,6 @@ extern "C" {
#define GLFW_STICKY_MOUSE_BUTTONS 0x00033003
#define GLFW_LOCK_KEY_MODS 0x00033004
#define GLFW_RAW_MOUSE_MOTION 0x00033005
#define GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS 0x00033006
#define GLFW_CURSOR_NORMAL 0x00034001
#define GLFW_CURSOR_HIDDEN 0x00034002
@ -1231,11 +1220,11 @@ extern "C" {
* @note @macos This shape is provided by a private system API and may fail
* with @ref GLFW_CURSOR_UNAVAILABLE in the future.
*
* @note @wayland This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by
* all cursor themes.
*
* @note @x11 This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by all
* cursor themes.
*
* @note @wayland This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by
* all cursor themes.
*/
#define GLFW_RESIZE_NWSE_CURSOR 0x00036007
/*! @brief The top-right to bottom-left diagonal resize/move arrow shape.
@ -1246,11 +1235,11 @@ extern "C" {
* @note @macos This shape is provided by a private system API and may fail
* with @ref GLFW_CURSOR_UNAVAILABLE in the future.
*
* @note @wayland This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by
* all cursor themes.
*
* @note @x11 This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by all
* cursor themes.
*
* @note @wayland This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by
* all cursor themes.
*/
#define GLFW_RESIZE_NESW_CURSOR 0x00036008
/*! @brief The omni-directional resize/move cursor shape.
@ -1264,11 +1253,11 @@ extern "C" {
* The operation-not-allowed shape. This is usually a circle with a diagonal
* line through it.
*
* @note @wayland This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by
* all cursor themes.
*
* @note @x11 This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by all
* cursor themes.
*
* @note @wayland This shape is provided by a newer standard not supported by
* all cursor themes.
*/
#define GLFW_NOT_ALLOWED_CURSOR 0x0003600A
/*! @brief Legacy name for compatibility.
@ -1480,25 +1469,16 @@ typedef struct GLFWcursor GLFWcursor;
* or `NULL` if allocation failed. Note that not all parts of GLFW handle allocation
* failures gracefully yet.
*
* This function must support being called during @ref glfwInit but before the library is
* flagged as initialized, as well as during @ref glfwTerminate after the library is no
* longer flagged as initialized.
* This function may be called during @ref glfwInit but before the library is
* flagged as initialized, as well as during @ref glfwTerminate after the
* library is no longer flagged as initialized.
*
* Any memory allocated via this function will be deallocated via the same allocator
* during library termination or earlier.
*
* Any memory allocated via this function must be suitably aligned for any object type.
* If you are using C99 or earlier, this alignment is platform-dependent but will be the
* same as what `malloc` provides. If you are using C11 or later, this is the value of
* `alignof(max_align_t)`.
* Any memory allocated by this function will be deallocated during library
* termination or earlier.
*
* The size will always be greater than zero. Allocations of size zero are filtered out
* before reaching the custom allocator.
*
* If this function returns `NULL`, GLFW will emit @ref GLFW_OUT_OF_MEMORY.
*
* This function must not call any GLFW function.
*
* @param[in] size The minimum size, in bytes, of the memory block.
* @param[in] user The user-defined pointer from the allocator.
* @return The address of the newly allocated memory block, or `NULL` if an
@ -1509,8 +1489,7 @@ typedef struct GLFWcursor GLFWcursor;
*
* @reentrancy This function should not call any GLFW function.
*
* @thread_safety This function must support being called from any thread that calls GLFW
* functions.
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread that calls GLFW functions.
*
* @sa @ref init_allocator
* @sa @ref GLFWallocator
@ -1533,26 +1512,16 @@ typedef void* (* GLFWallocatefun)(size_t size, void* user);
* `NULL` if allocation failed. Note that not all parts of GLFW handle allocation
* failures gracefully yet.
*
* This function must support being called during @ref glfwInit but before the library is
* flagged as initialized, as well as during @ref glfwTerminate after the library is no
* longer flagged as initialized.
* This function may be called during @ref glfwInit but before the library is
* flagged as initialized, as well as during @ref glfwTerminate after the
* library is no longer flagged as initialized.
*
* Any memory allocated via this function will be deallocated via the same allocator
* during library termination or earlier.
*
* Any memory allocated via this function must be suitably aligned for any object type.
* If you are using C99 or earlier, this alignment is platform-dependent but will be the
* same as what `realloc` provides. If you are using C11 or later, this is the value of
* `alignof(max_align_t)`.
* Any memory allocated by this function will be deallocated during library
* termination or earlier.
*
* The block address will never be `NULL` and the size will always be greater than zero.
* Reallocations of a block to size zero are converted into deallocations before reaching
* the custom allocator. Reallocations of `NULL` to a non-zero size are converted into
* regular allocations before reaching the custom allocator.
*
* If this function returns `NULL`, GLFW will emit @ref GLFW_OUT_OF_MEMORY.
*
* This function must not call any GLFW function.
* Reallocations of a block to size zero are converted into deallocations. Reallocations
* of `NULL` to a non-zero size are converted into regular allocations.
*
* @param[in] block The address of the memory block to reallocate.
* @param[in] size The new minimum size, in bytes, of the memory block.
@ -1565,8 +1534,7 @@ typedef void* (* GLFWallocatefun)(size_t size, void* user);
*
* @reentrancy This function should not call any GLFW function.
*
* @thread_safety This function must support being called from any thread that calls GLFW
* functions.
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread that calls GLFW functions.
*
* @sa @ref init_allocator
* @sa @ref GLFWallocator
@ -1588,17 +1556,13 @@ typedef void* (* GLFWreallocatefun)(void* block, size_t size, void* user);
* This function may deallocate the specified memory block. This memory block
* will have been allocated with the same allocator.
*
* This function must support being called during @ref glfwInit but before the library is
* flagged as initialized, as well as during @ref glfwTerminate after the library is no
* longer flagged as initialized.
* This function may be called during @ref glfwInit but before the library is
* flagged as initialized, as well as during @ref glfwTerminate after the
* library is no longer flagged as initialized.
*
* The block address will never be `NULL`. Deallocations of `NULL` are filtered out
* before reaching the custom allocator.
*
* If this function returns `NULL`, GLFW will emit @ref GLFW_OUT_OF_MEMORY.
*
* This function must not call any GLFW function.
*
* @param[in] block The address of the memory block to deallocate.
* @param[in] user The user-defined pointer from the allocator.
*
@ -1607,8 +1571,7 @@ typedef void* (* GLFWreallocatefun)(void* block, size_t size, void* user);
*
* @reentrancy This function should not call any GLFW function.
*
* @thread_safety This function must support being called from any thread that calls GLFW
* functions.
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread that calls GLFW functions.
*
* @sa @ref init_allocator
* @sa @ref GLFWallocator
@ -2176,10 +2139,7 @@ typedef struct GLFWgamepadstate
float axes[6];
} GLFWgamepadstate;
/*! @brief Custom heap memory allocator.
*
* This describes a custom heap memory allocator for GLFW. To set an allocator, pass it
* to @ref glfwInitAllocator before initializing the library.
/*! @brief
*
* @sa @ref init_allocator
* @sa @ref glfwInitAllocator
@ -2190,21 +2150,9 @@ typedef struct GLFWgamepadstate
*/
typedef struct GLFWallocator
{
/*! The memory allocation function. See @ref GLFWallocatefun for details about
* allocation function.
*/
GLFWallocatefun allocate;
/*! The memory reallocation function. See @ref GLFWreallocatefun for details about
* reallocation function.
*/
GLFWreallocatefun reallocate;
/*! The memory deallocation function. See @ref GLFWdeallocatefun for details about
* deallocation function.
*/
GLFWdeallocatefun deallocate;
/*! The user pointer for this custom allocator. This value will be passed to the
* allocator functions.
*/
void* user;
} GLFWallocator;
@ -2249,13 +2197,6 @@ typedef struct GLFWallocator
* and dock icon can be disabled entirely with the @ref GLFW_COCOA_MENUBAR init
* hint.
*
* @remark __Wayland, X11:__ If the library was compiled with support for both
* Wayland and X11, and the @ref GLFW_PLATFORM init hint is set to
* `GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM`, the `XDG_SESSION_TYPE` environment variable affects
* which platform is picked. If the environment variable is not set, or is set
* to something other than `wayland` or `x11`, the regular detection mechanism
* will be used instead.
*
* @remark @x11 This function will set the `LC_CTYPE` category of the
* application locale according to the current environment if that category is
* still "C". This is because the "C" locale breaks Unicode text input.
@ -2344,12 +2285,8 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwInitHint(int hint, int value);
* To use the default allocator, call this function with a `NULL` argument.
*
* If you specify an allocator struct, every member must be a valid function
* pointer. If any member is `NULL`, this function will emit @ref
* GLFW_INVALID_VALUE and the init allocator will be unchanged.
*
* The functions in the allocator must fulfil a number of requirements. See the
* documentation for @ref GLFWallocatefun, @ref GLFWreallocatefun and @ref
* GLFWdeallocatefun for details.
* pointer. If any member is `NULL`, this function emits @ref
* GLFW_INVALID_VALUE and the init allocator is unchanged.
*
* @param[in] allocator The allocator to use at the next initialization, or
* `NULL` to use the default one.
@ -2716,10 +2653,9 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorWorkarea(GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos,
* specified monitor.
*
* Some platforms do not provide accurate monitor size information, either
* because the monitor [EDID][] data is incorrect or because the driver does
* not report it accurately.
*
* [EDID]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_display_identification_data
* because the monitor
* [EDID](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_display_identification_data)
* data is incorrect or because the driver does not report it accurately.
*
* Any or all of the size arguments may be `NULL`. If an error occurs, all
* non-`NULL` size arguments will be set to zero.
@ -2766,9 +2702,6 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorPhysicalSize(GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* widthMM, int*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
*
* @remark @wayland Fractional scaling information is not yet available for
* monitors, so this function only returns integer content scales.
*
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
* @sa @ref monitor_scale
@ -3209,8 +3142,8 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwWindowHintString(int hint, const char* value);
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_INVALID_ENUM, @ref GLFW_INVALID_VALUE, @ref GLFW_API_UNAVAILABLE, @ref
* GLFW_VERSION_UNAVAILABLE, @ref GLFW_FORMAT_UNAVAILABLE, @ref
* GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
* GLFW_VERSION_UNAVAILABLE, @ref GLFW_FORMAT_UNAVAILABLE and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
*
* @remark @win32 Window creation will fail if the Microsoft GDI software
* OpenGL implementation is the only one available.
@ -3232,35 +3165,23 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwWindowHintString(int hint, const char* value);
* @remark @macos The GLFW window has no icon, as it is not a document
* window, but the dock icon will be the same as the application bundle's icon.
* For more information on bundles, see the
* [Bundle Programming Guide][bundle-guide] in the Mac Developer Library.
* [Bundle Programming Guide](https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/CoreFoundation/Conceptual/CFBundles/)
* in the Mac Developer Library.
*
* [bundle-guide]: https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/CoreFoundation/Conceptual/CFBundles/
*
* @remark @macos The window frame will not be rendered at full resolution on
* Retina displays unless the
* [GLFW_SCALE_FRAMEBUFFER](@ref GLFW_SCALE_FRAMEBUFFER_hint)
* @remark @macos On OS X 10.10 and later the window frame will not be rendered
* at full resolution on Retina displays unless the
* [GLFW_COCOA_RETINA_FRAMEBUFFER](@ref GLFW_COCOA_RETINA_FRAMEBUFFER_hint)
* hint is `GLFW_TRUE` and the `NSHighResolutionCapable` key is enabled in the
* application bundle's `Info.plist`. For more information, see
* [High Resolution Guidelines for OS X][hidpi-guide] in the Mac Developer
* Library. The GLFW test and example programs use a custom `Info.plist`
* template for this, which can be found as `CMake/Info.plist.in` in the source
* tree.
*
* [hidpi-guide]: https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/GraphicsAnimation/Conceptual/HighResolutionOSX/Explained/Explained.html
* [High Resolution Guidelines for OS X](https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/GraphicsAnimation/Conceptual/HighResolutionOSX/Explained/Explained.html)
* in the Mac Developer Library. The GLFW test and example programs use
* a custom `Info.plist` template for this, which can be found as
* `CMake/Info.plist.in` in the source tree.
*
* @remark @macos When activating frame autosaving with
* [GLFW_COCOA_FRAME_NAME](@ref GLFW_COCOA_FRAME_NAME_hint), the specified
* window size and position may be overridden by previously saved values.
*
* @remark @wayland GLFW uses [libdecor][] where available to create its window
* decorations. This in turn uses server-side XDG decorations where available
* and provides high quality client-side decorations on compositors like GNOME.
* If both XDG decorations and libdecor are unavailable, GLFW falls back to
* a very simple set of window decorations that only support moving, resizing
* and the window manager's right-click menu.
*
* [libdecor]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libdecor/libdecor
*
* @remark @x11 Some window managers will not respect the placement of
* initially hidden windows.
*
@ -3277,6 +3198,20 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwWindowHintString(int hint, const char* value);
* [GLFW_X11_INSTANCE_NAME](@ref GLFW_X11_INSTANCE_NAME_hint) window hints to
* override this.
*
* @remark @wayland Compositors should implement the xdg-decoration protocol
* for GLFW to decorate the window properly. If this protocol isn't
* supported, or if the compositor prefers client-side decorations, a very
* simple fallback frame will be drawn using the wp_viewporter protocol. A
* compositor can still emit close, maximize or fullscreen events, using for
* instance a keybind mechanism. If neither of these protocols is supported,
* the window won't be decorated.
*
* @remark @wayland A full screen window will not attempt to change the mode,
* no matter what the requested size or refresh rate.
*
* @remark @wayland Screensaver inhibition requires the idle-inhibit protocol
* to be implemented in the user's compositor.
*
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
* @sa @ref window_creation
@ -3359,38 +3294,6 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwWindowShouldClose(GLFWwindow* window);
*/
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowShouldClose(GLFWwindow* window, int value);
/*! @brief Returns the title of the specified window.
*
* This function returns the window title, encoded as UTF-8, of the specified
* window. This is the title set previously by @ref glfwCreateWindow
* or @ref glfwSetWindowTitle.
*
* @param[in] window The window to query.
* @return The UTF-8 encoded window title, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @remark The returned title is currently a copy of the title last set by @ref
* glfwCreateWindow or @ref glfwSetWindowTitle. It does not include any
* additional text which may be appended by the platform or another program.
*
* @pointer_lifetime The returned string is allocated and freed by GLFW. You
* should not free it yourself. It is valid until the next call to @ref
* glfwGetWindowTitle or @ref glfwSetWindowTitle, or until the library is
* terminated.
*
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
* @sa @ref window_title
* @sa @ref glfwSetWindowTitle
*
* @since Added in version 3.4.
*
* @ingroup window
*/
GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetWindowTitle(GLFWwindow* window);
/*! @brief Sets the title of the specified window.
*
* This function sets the window title, encoded as UTF-8, of the specified
@ -3408,7 +3311,6 @@ GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetWindowTitle(GLFWwindow* window);
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
* @sa @ref window_title
* @sa @ref glfwGetWindowTitle
*
* @since Added in version 1.0.
* @glfw3 Added window handle parameter.
@ -3448,9 +3350,8 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowTitle(GLFWwindow* window, const char* title);
* @remark @macos Regular windows do not have icons on macOS. This function
* will emit @ref GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE. The dock icon will be the same as
* the application bundle's icon. For more information on bundles, see the
* [Bundle Programming Guide][bundle-guide] in the Mac Developer Library.
*
* [bundle-guide]: https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/CoreFoundation/Conceptual/CFBundles/
* [Bundle Programming Guide](https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/CoreFoundation/Conceptual/CFBundles/)
* in the Mac Developer Library.
*
* @remark @wayland There is no existing protocol to change an icon, the
* window will thus inherit the one defined in the application's desktop file.
@ -3714,6 +3615,9 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowAspectRatio(GLFWwindow* window, int numer, int denom);
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
*
* @remark @wayland A full screen window will not attempt to change the mode,
* no matter what the requested size.
*
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
* @sa @ref window_size
@ -4045,11 +3949,11 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwHideWindow(GLFWwindow* window);
*
* @param[in] window The window to give input focus.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR and @ref GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE (see remarks).
*
* @remark @wayland The compositor will likely ignore focus requests unless
* another window created by the same application already has input focus.
* @remark @wayland It is not possible for an application to set the input
* focus. This function will emit @ref GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE.
*
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
@ -4154,6 +4058,9 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWmonitor* glfwGetWindowMonitor(GLFWwindow* window);
* @remark @wayland The desired window position is ignored, as there is no way
* for an application to set this property.
*
* @remark @wayland Setting the window to full screen will not attempt to
* change the mode, no matter what the requested size or refresh rate.
*
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
* @sa @ref window_monitor
@ -4227,14 +4134,11 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetWindowAttrib(GLFWwindow* window, int attrib);
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_INVALID_ENUM, @ref GLFW_INVALID_VALUE, @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR and @ref
* GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE (see remarks).
* GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE.
*
* @remark Calling @ref glfwGetWindowAttrib will always return the latest
* value, even if that value is ignored by the current mode of the window.
*
* @remark @wayland The [GLFW_FLOATING](@ref GLFW_FLOATING_attrib) window attribute is
* not supported. Setting this will emit @ref GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE.
*
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
* @sa @ref window_attribs
@ -4770,8 +4674,8 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetInputMode(GLFWwindow* window, int mode);
*
* This function sets an input mode option for the specified window. The mode
* must be one of @ref GLFW_CURSOR, @ref GLFW_STICKY_KEYS,
* @ref GLFW_STICKY_MOUSE_BUTTONS, @ref GLFW_LOCK_KEY_MODS
* @ref GLFW_RAW_MOUSE_MOTION, or @ref GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS.
* @ref GLFW_STICKY_MOUSE_BUTTONS, @ref GLFW_LOCK_KEY_MODS or
* @ref GLFW_RAW_MOUSE_MOTION.
*
* If the mode is `GLFW_CURSOR`, the value must be one of the following cursor
* modes:
@ -4811,11 +4715,6 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetInputMode(GLFWwindow* window, int mode);
* attempting to set this will emit @ref GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE. Call @ref
* glfwRawMouseMotionSupported to check for support.
*
* If the mode is `GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS`, the value must be either
* `GLFW_TRUE` to disable the mouse button limit when calling the mouse button
* callback, or `GLFW_FALSE` to limit the mouse buttons sent to the callback
* to the mouse button token values up to `GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST`.
*
* @param[in] window The window whose input mode to set.
* @param[in] mode One of `GLFW_CURSOR`, `GLFW_STICKY_KEYS`,
* `GLFW_STICKY_MOUSE_BUTTONS`, `GLFW_LOCK_KEY_MODS` or
@ -5010,11 +4909,8 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetKey(GLFWwindow* window, int key);
* returns `GLFW_PRESS` the first time you call it for a mouse button that was
* pressed, even if that mouse button has already been released.
*
* The @ref GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS input mode does not effect the
* limit on buttons which can be polled with this function.
*
* @param[in] window The desired window.
* @param[in] button The desired [mouse button token](@ref buttons).
* @param[in] button The desired [mouse button](@ref buttons).
* @return One of `GLFW_PRESS` or `GLFW_RELEASE`.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
@ -5390,15 +5286,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWcharmodsfun glfwSetCharModsCallback(GLFWwindow* window, GLFWcharmods
* is called when a mouse button is pressed or released.
*
* When a window loses input focus, it will generate synthetic mouse button
* release events for all pressed mouse buttons with associated button tokens.
* You can tell these events from user-generated events by the fact that the
* synthetic ones are generated after the focus loss event has been processed,
* i.e. after the [window focus callback](@ref glfwSetWindowFocusCallback) has
* been called.
*
* The reported `button` value can be higher than `GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST` if
* the button does not have an associated [button token](@ref buttons) and the
* @ref GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS input mode is set.
* release events for all pressed mouse buttons. You can tell these events
* from user-generated events by the fact that the synthetic ones are generated
* after the focus loss event has been processed, i.e. after the
* [window focus callback](@ref glfwSetWindowFocusCallback) has been called.
*
* @param[in] window The window whose callback to set.
* @param[in] callback The new callback, or `NULL` to remove the currently set
@ -5548,6 +5439,8 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWscrollfun glfwSetScrollCallback(GLFWwindow* window, GLFWscrollfun ca
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @remark @wayland File drop is currently unimplemented.
*
* @thread_safety This function must only be called from the main thread.
*
* @sa @ref path_drop
@ -6014,11 +5907,6 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetGamepadState(int jid, GLFWgamepadstate* state);
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
*
* @remark @win32 The clipboard on Windows has a single global lock for reading and
* writing. GLFW tries to acquire it a few times, which is almost always enough. If it
* cannot acquire the lock then this function emits @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR and returns.
* It is safe to try this multiple times.
*
* @pointer_lifetime The specified string is copied before this function
* returns.
*
@ -6047,11 +5935,6 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetClipboardString(GLFWwindow* window, const char* string);
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_FORMAT_UNAVAILABLE and @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
*
* @remark @win32 The clipboard on Windows has a single global lock for reading and
* writing. GLFW tries to acquire it a few times, which is almost always enough. If it
* cannot acquire the lock then this function emits @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR and returns.
* It is safe to try this multiple times.
*
* @pointer_lifetime The returned string is allocated and freed by GLFW. You
* should not free it yourself. It is valid until the next call to @ref
* glfwGetClipboardString or @ref glfwSetClipboardString, or until the library

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/*************************************************************************
* GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
* GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
* A library for OpenGL, window and input
*------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
@ -169,8 +169,7 @@ extern "C" {
* of the specified monitor, or `NULL` if an [error](@ref error_handling)
* occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -187,8 +186,7 @@ GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetWin32Adapter(GLFWmonitor* monitor);
* `\\.\DISPLAY1\Monitor0`) of the specified monitor, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -204,8 +202,7 @@ GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetWin32Monitor(GLFWmonitor* monitor);
* @return The `HWND` of the specified window, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @remark The `HDC` associated with the window can be queried with the
* [GetDC](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winuser/nf-winuser-getdc)
@ -231,8 +228,8 @@ GLFWAPI HWND glfwGetWin32Window(GLFWwindow* window);
* @return The `HGLRC` of the specified window, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE and @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @remark The `HDC` associated with the window can be queried with the
* [GetDC](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winuser/nf-winuser-getdc)
@ -258,8 +255,7 @@ GLFWAPI HGLRC glfwGetWGLContext(GLFWwindow* window);
* @return The `CGDirectDisplayID` of the specified monitor, or
* `kCGNullDirectDisplay` if an [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -275,8 +271,7 @@ GLFWAPI CGDirectDisplayID glfwGetCocoaMonitor(GLFWmonitor* monitor);
* @return The `NSWindow` of the specified window, or `nil` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -286,23 +281,6 @@ GLFWAPI CGDirectDisplayID glfwGetCocoaMonitor(GLFWmonitor* monitor);
* @ingroup native
*/
GLFWAPI id glfwGetCocoaWindow(GLFWwindow* window);
/*! @brief Returns the `NSView` of the specified window.
*
* @return The `NSView` of the specified window, or `nil` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
*
* @since Added in version 3.4.
*
* @ingroup native
*/
GLFWAPI id glfwGetCocoaView(GLFWwindow* window);
#endif
#if defined(GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_NSGL)
@ -311,8 +289,8 @@ GLFWAPI id glfwGetCocoaView(GLFWwindow* window);
* @return The `NSOpenGLContext` of the specified window, or `nil` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE and @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -330,8 +308,7 @@ GLFWAPI id glfwGetNSGLContext(GLFWwindow* window);
* @return The `Display` used by GLFW, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -347,8 +324,7 @@ GLFWAPI Display* glfwGetX11Display(void);
* @return The `RRCrtc` of the specified monitor, or `None` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -364,8 +340,7 @@ GLFWAPI RRCrtc glfwGetX11Adapter(GLFWmonitor* monitor);
* @return The `RROutput` of the specified monitor, or `None` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -381,8 +356,7 @@ GLFWAPI RROutput glfwGetX11Monitor(GLFWmonitor* monitor);
* @return The `Window` of the specified window, or `None` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -397,8 +371,8 @@ GLFWAPI Window glfwGetX11Window(GLFWwindow* window);
*
* @param[in] string A UTF-8 encoded string.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE and @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
*
* @pointer_lifetime The specified string is copied before this function
* returns.
@ -423,8 +397,8 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetX11SelectionString(const char* string);
* @return The contents of the selection as a UTF-8 encoded string, or `NULL`
* if an [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE and @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR.
*
* @pointer_lifetime The returned string is allocated and freed by GLFW. You
* should not free it yourself. It is valid until the next call to @ref
@ -450,8 +424,8 @@ GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetX11SelectionString(void);
* @return The `GLXContext` of the specified window, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -467,8 +441,8 @@ GLFWAPI GLXContext glfwGetGLXContext(GLFWwindow* window);
* @return The `GLXWindow` of the specified window, or `None` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED, @ref
* GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -486,8 +460,7 @@ GLFWAPI GLXWindow glfwGetGLXWindow(GLFWwindow* window);
* @return The `struct wl_display*` used by GLFW, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -503,8 +476,7 @@ GLFWAPI struct wl_display* glfwGetWaylandDisplay(void);
* @return The `struct wl_output*` of the specified monitor, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -520,8 +492,7 @@ GLFWAPI struct wl_output* glfwGetWaylandMonitor(GLFWmonitor* monitor);
* @return The main `struct wl_surface*` of the specified window, or `NULL` if
* an [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -558,8 +529,8 @@ GLFWAPI EGLDisplay glfwGetEGLDisplay(void);
* @return The `EGLContext` of the specified window, or `EGL_NO_CONTEXT` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -575,8 +546,8 @@ GLFWAPI EGLContext glfwGetEGLContext(GLFWwindow* window);
* @return The `EGLSurface` of the specified window, or `EGL_NO_SURFACE` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -601,8 +572,8 @@ GLFWAPI EGLSurface glfwGetEGLSurface(GLFWwindow* window);
* @return `GLFW_TRUE` if successful, or `GLFW_FALSE` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -625,8 +596,8 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetOSMesaColorBuffer(GLFWwindow* window, int* width, int* height
* @return `GLFW_TRUE` if successful, or `GLFW_FALSE` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.
@ -642,8 +613,8 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetOSMesaDepthBuffer(GLFWwindow* window, int* width, int* height
* @return The `OSMesaContext` of the specified window, or `NULL` if an
* [error](@ref error_handling) occurred.
*
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED and @ref
* GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT.
* @errors Possible errors include @ref GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT and @ref
* GLFW_NOT_INITIALIZED.
*
* @thread_safety This function may be called from any thread. Access is not
* synchronized.

View File

@ -73,38 +73,47 @@ if (GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND)
endif()
find_program(WAYLAND_SCANNER_EXECUTABLE NAMES wayland-scanner)
if (NOT WAYLAND_SCANNER_EXECUTABLE)
message(FATAL_ERROR "Failed to find wayland-scanner")
endif()
macro(generate_wayland_protocol protocol_file)
set(protocol_path "${GLFW_SOURCE_DIR}/deps/wayland/${protocol_file}")
include(FindPkgConfig)
pkg_check_modules(WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS REQUIRED wayland-protocols>=1.15)
pkg_get_variable(WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS_BASE wayland-protocols pkgdatadir)
pkg_get_variable(WAYLAND_CLIENT_PKGDATADIR wayland-client pkgdatadir)
string(REGEX REPLACE "\\.xml$" "-client-protocol.h" header_file ${protocol_file})
string(REGEX REPLACE "\\.xml$" "-client-protocol-code.h" code_file ${protocol_file})
add_custom_command(OUTPUT ${header_file}
COMMAND "${WAYLAND_SCANNER_EXECUTABLE}" client-header "${protocol_path}" ${header_file}
DEPENDS "${protocol_path}"
macro(wayland_generate protocol_file output_file)
add_custom_command(OUTPUT "${output_file}.h"
COMMAND "${WAYLAND_SCANNER_EXECUTABLE}" client-header "${protocol_file}" "${output_file}.h"
DEPENDS "${protocol_file}"
VERBATIM)
add_custom_command(OUTPUT ${code_file}
COMMAND "${WAYLAND_SCANNER_EXECUTABLE}" private-code "${protocol_path}" ${code_file}
DEPENDS "${protocol_path}"
add_custom_command(OUTPUT "${output_file}-code.h"
COMMAND "${WAYLAND_SCANNER_EXECUTABLE}" private-code "${protocol_file}" "${output_file}-code.h"
DEPENDS "${protocol_file}"
VERBATIM)
target_sources(glfw PRIVATE ${header_file} ${code_file})
target_sources(glfw PRIVATE "${output_file}.h" "${output_file}-code.h")
endmacro()
generate_wayland_protocol("wayland.xml")
generate_wayland_protocol("viewporter.xml")
generate_wayland_protocol("xdg-shell.xml")
generate_wayland_protocol("idle-inhibit-unstable-v1.xml")
generate_wayland_protocol("pointer-constraints-unstable-v1.xml")
generate_wayland_protocol("relative-pointer-unstable-v1.xml")
generate_wayland_protocol("fractional-scale-v1.xml")
generate_wayland_protocol("xdg-activation-v1.xml")
generate_wayland_protocol("xdg-decoration-unstable-v1.xml")
wayland_generate(
"${WAYLAND_CLIENT_PKGDATADIR}/wayland.xml"
"${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/src/wayland-client-protocol")
wayland_generate(
"${WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS_BASE}/stable/xdg-shell/xdg-shell.xml"
"${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/src/wayland-xdg-shell-client-protocol")
wayland_generate(
"${WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS_BASE}/unstable/xdg-decoration/xdg-decoration-unstable-v1.xml"
"${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/src/wayland-xdg-decoration-client-protocol")
wayland_generate(
"${WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS_BASE}/stable/viewporter/viewporter.xml"
"${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/src/wayland-viewporter-client-protocol")
wayland_generate(
"${WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS_BASE}/unstable/relative-pointer/relative-pointer-unstable-v1.xml"
"${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/src/wayland-relative-pointer-unstable-v1-client-protocol")
wayland_generate(
"${WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS_BASE}/unstable/pointer-constraints/pointer-constraints-unstable-v1.xml"
"${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/src/wayland-pointer-constraints-unstable-v1-client-protocol")
wayland_generate(
"${WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS_BASE}/unstable/idle-inhibit/idle-inhibit-unstable-v1.xml"
"${GLFW_BINARY_DIR}/src/wayland-idle-inhibit-unstable-v1-client-protocol")
endif()
if (WIN32 AND GLFW_BUILD_SHARED_LIBRARY)
@ -152,16 +161,13 @@ endif()
if (GLFW_BUILD_COCOA)
target_link_libraries(glfw PRIVATE "-framework Cocoa"
"-framework IOKit"
"-framework CoreFoundation"
"-framework QuartzCore")
"-framework CoreFoundation")
set(glfw_PKG_DEPS "")
set(glfw_PKG_LIBS "-framework Cocoa -framework IOKit -framework CoreFoundation -framework QuartzCore")
set(glfw_PKG_LIBS "-framework Cocoa -framework IOKit -framework CoreFoundation")
endif()
if (GLFW_BUILD_WAYLAND)
include(FindPkgConfig)
pkg_check_modules(Wayland REQUIRED
wayland-client>=0.2.7
wayland-cursor>=0.2.7
@ -241,6 +247,17 @@ if (UNIX AND NOT APPLE)
endif()
endif()
# Make GCC warn about declarations that VS 2010 and 2012 won't accept for all
# source files that VS will build (Clang ignores this because we set -std=c99)
if (CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID STREQUAL "GNU")
set_source_files_properties(context.c init.c input.c monitor.c platform.c vulkan.c
window.c null_init.c null_joystick.c null_monitor.c
null_window.c win32_init.c win32_joystick.c win32_module.c
win32_monitor.c win32_time.c win32_thread.c win32_window.c
wgl_context.c egl_context.c osmesa_context.c PROPERTIES
COMPILE_FLAGS -Wdeclaration-after-statement)
endif()
if (WIN32)
if (GLFW_USE_HYBRID_HPG)
target_compile_definitions(glfw PRIVATE _GLFW_USE_HYBRID_HPG)
@ -285,6 +302,20 @@ if (MSVC OR CMAKE_C_SIMULATE_ID STREQUAL "MSVC")
target_compile_definitions(glfw PRIVATE _CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS)
endif()
# Workaround for VS 2008 not shipping with stdint.h
if (MSVC90)
target_include_directories(glfw PUBLIC "${GLFW_SOURCE_DIR}/deps/vs2008")
endif()
# Check for the DirectX 9 SDK as it is not included with VS 2008
if (MSVC90)
include(CheckIncludeFile)
check_include_file(dinput.h DINPUT_H_FOUND)
if (NOT DINPUT_H_FOUND)
message(FATAL_ERROR "DirectX 9 headers not found; install DirectX 9 SDK")
endif()
endif()
# Workaround for -std=c99 on Linux disabling _DEFAULT_SOURCE (POSIX 2008 and more)
if (CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME STREQUAL "Linux")
target_compile_definitions(glfw PRIVATE _DEFAULT_SOURCE)

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 macOS - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 macOS - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2009-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -493,79 +495,79 @@ GLFWbool _glfwConnectCocoa(int platformID, _GLFWplatform* platform)
{
const _GLFWplatform cocoa =
{
.platformID = GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA,
.init = _glfwInitCocoa,
.terminate = _glfwTerminateCocoa,
.getCursorPos = _glfwGetCursorPosCocoa,
.setCursorPos = _glfwSetCursorPosCocoa,
.setCursorMode = _glfwSetCursorModeCocoa,
.setRawMouseMotion = _glfwSetRawMouseMotionCocoa,
.rawMouseMotionSupported = _glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedCocoa,
.createCursor = _glfwCreateCursorCocoa,
.createStandardCursor = _glfwCreateStandardCursorCocoa,
.destroyCursor = _glfwDestroyCursorCocoa,
.setCursor = _glfwSetCursorCocoa,
.getScancodeName = _glfwGetScancodeNameCocoa,
.getKeyScancode = _glfwGetKeyScancodeCocoa,
.setClipboardString = _glfwSetClipboardStringCocoa,
.getClipboardString = _glfwGetClipboardStringCocoa,
.initJoysticks = _glfwInitJoysticksCocoa,
.terminateJoysticks = _glfwTerminateJoysticksCocoa,
.pollJoystick = _glfwPollJoystickCocoa,
.getMappingName = _glfwGetMappingNameCocoa,
.updateGamepadGUID = _glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDCocoa,
.freeMonitor = _glfwFreeMonitorCocoa,
.getMonitorPos = _glfwGetMonitorPosCocoa,
.getMonitorContentScale = _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleCocoa,
.getMonitorWorkarea = _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaCocoa,
.getVideoModes = _glfwGetVideoModesCocoa,
.getVideoMode = _glfwGetVideoModeCocoa,
.getGammaRamp = _glfwGetGammaRampCocoa,
.setGammaRamp = _glfwSetGammaRampCocoa,
.createWindow = _glfwCreateWindowCocoa,
.destroyWindow = _glfwDestroyWindowCocoa,
.setWindowTitle = _glfwSetWindowTitleCocoa,
.setWindowIcon = _glfwSetWindowIconCocoa,
.setWindowProgressIndicator = _glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorCocoa,
.getWindowPos = _glfwGetWindowPosCocoa,
.setWindowPos = _glfwSetWindowPosCocoa,
.getWindowSize = _glfwGetWindowSizeCocoa,
.setWindowSize = _glfwSetWindowSizeCocoa,
.setWindowSizeLimits = _glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsCocoa,
.setWindowAspectRatio = _glfwSetWindowAspectRatioCocoa,
.getFramebufferSize = _glfwGetFramebufferSizeCocoa,
.getWindowFrameSize = _glfwGetWindowFrameSizeCocoa,
.getWindowContentScale = _glfwGetWindowContentScaleCocoa,
.iconifyWindow = _glfwIconifyWindowCocoa,
.restoreWindow = _glfwRestoreWindowCocoa,
.maximizeWindow = _glfwMaximizeWindowCocoa,
.showWindow = _glfwShowWindowCocoa,
.hideWindow = _glfwHideWindowCocoa,
.requestWindowAttention = _glfwRequestWindowAttentionCocoa,
.focusWindow = _glfwFocusWindowCocoa,
.setWindowMonitor = _glfwSetWindowMonitorCocoa,
.windowFocused = _glfwWindowFocusedCocoa,
.windowIconified = _glfwWindowIconifiedCocoa,
.windowVisible = _glfwWindowVisibleCocoa,
.windowMaximized = _glfwWindowMaximizedCocoa,
.windowHovered = _glfwWindowHoveredCocoa,
.framebufferTransparent = _glfwFramebufferTransparentCocoa,
.getWindowOpacity = _glfwGetWindowOpacityCocoa,
.setWindowResizable = _glfwSetWindowResizableCocoa,
.setWindowDecorated = _glfwSetWindowDecoratedCocoa,
.setWindowFloating = _glfwSetWindowFloatingCocoa,
.setWindowOpacity = _glfwSetWindowOpacityCocoa,
.setWindowMousePassthrough = _glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughCocoa,
.pollEvents = _glfwPollEventsCocoa,
.waitEvents = _glfwWaitEventsCocoa,
.waitEventsTimeout = _glfwWaitEventsTimeoutCocoa,
.postEmptyEvent = _glfwPostEmptyEventCocoa,
.getEGLPlatform = _glfwGetEGLPlatformCocoa,
.getEGLNativeDisplay = _glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayCocoa,
.getEGLNativeWindow = _glfwGetEGLNativeWindowCocoa,
.getRequiredInstanceExtensions = _glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsCocoa,
.getPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport = _glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportCocoa,
.createWindowSurface = _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceCocoa
GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA,
_glfwInitCocoa,
_glfwTerminateCocoa,
_glfwGetCursorPosCocoa,
_glfwSetCursorPosCocoa,
_glfwSetCursorModeCocoa,
_glfwSetRawMouseMotionCocoa,
_glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedCocoa,
_glfwCreateCursorCocoa,
_glfwCreateStandardCursorCocoa,
_glfwDestroyCursorCocoa,
_glfwSetCursorCocoa,
_glfwGetScancodeNameCocoa,
_glfwGetKeyScancodeCocoa,
_glfwSetClipboardStringCocoa,
_glfwGetClipboardStringCocoa,
_glfwInitJoysticksCocoa,
_glfwTerminateJoysticksCocoa,
_glfwPollJoystickCocoa,
_glfwGetMappingNameCocoa,
_glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDCocoa,
_glfwFreeMonitorCocoa,
_glfwGetMonitorPosCocoa,
_glfwGetMonitorContentScaleCocoa,
_glfwGetMonitorWorkareaCocoa,
_glfwGetVideoModesCocoa,
_glfwGetVideoModeCocoa,
_glfwGetGammaRampCocoa,
_glfwSetGammaRampCocoa,
_glfwCreateWindowCocoa,
_glfwDestroyWindowCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowTitleCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowIconCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorCocoa,
_glfwGetWindowPosCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowPosCocoa,
_glfwGetWindowSizeCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowSizeCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowAspectRatioCocoa,
_glfwGetFramebufferSizeCocoa,
_glfwGetWindowFrameSizeCocoa,
_glfwGetWindowContentScaleCocoa,
_glfwIconifyWindowCocoa,
_glfwRestoreWindowCocoa,
_glfwMaximizeWindowCocoa,
_glfwShowWindowCocoa,
_glfwHideWindowCocoa,
_glfwRequestWindowAttentionCocoa,
_glfwFocusWindowCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowMonitorCocoa,
_glfwWindowFocusedCocoa,
_glfwWindowIconifiedCocoa,
_glfwWindowVisibleCocoa,
_glfwWindowMaximizedCocoa,
_glfwWindowHoveredCocoa,
_glfwFramebufferTransparentCocoa,
_glfwGetWindowOpacityCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowResizableCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowDecoratedCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowFloatingCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowOpacityCocoa,
_glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughCocoa,
_glfwPollEventsCocoa,
_glfwWaitEventsCocoa,
_glfwWaitEventsTimeoutCocoa,
_glfwPostEmptyEventCocoa,
_glfwGetEGLPlatformCocoa,
_glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayCocoa,
_glfwGetEGLNativeWindowCocoa,
_glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsCocoa,
_glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportCocoa,
_glfwCreateWindowSurfaceCocoa,
};
*platform = cocoa;

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Cocoa - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Cocoa - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Cocoa - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Cocoa - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2009-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
// Copyright (c) 2012 Torsten Walluhn <tw@mad-cad.net>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 macOS - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 macOS - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -32,7 +34,6 @@
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <IOKit/graphics/IOGraphicsLib.h>
#include <ApplicationServices/ApplicationServices.h>
@ -137,7 +138,7 @@ static GLFWbool modeIsGood(CGDisplayModeRef mode)
if (flags & kDisplayModeStretchedFlag)
return GLFW_FALSE;
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED == 101100
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED <= 101100
CFStringRef format = CGDisplayModeCopyPixelEncoding(mode);
if (CFStringCompare(format, CFSTR(IO16BitDirectPixels), 0) &&
CFStringCompare(format, CFSTR(IO32BitDirectPixels), 0))
@ -164,7 +165,7 @@ static GLFWvidmode vidmodeFromCGDisplayMode(CGDisplayModeRef mode,
if (result.refreshRate == 0)
result.refreshRate = (int) round(fallbackRefreshRate);
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED == 101100
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED <= 101100
CFStringRef format = CGDisplayModeCopyPixelEncoding(mode);
if (CFStringCompare(format, CFSTR(IO16BitDirectPixels), 0) == 0)
{
@ -180,7 +181,7 @@ static GLFWvidmode vidmodeFromCGDisplayMode(CGDisplayModeRef mode,
result.blueBits = 8;
}
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED == 101100
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED <= 101100
CFRelease(format);
#endif /* MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED */
return result;
@ -550,20 +551,13 @@ GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* count)
} // autoreleasepool
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode *mode)
void _glfwGetVideoModeCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode *mode)
{
@autoreleasepool {
CGDisplayModeRef native = CGDisplayCopyDisplayMode(monitor->ns.displayID);
if (!native)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR, "Cocoa: Failed to query display mode");
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
*mode = vidmodeFromCGDisplayMode(native, monitor->ns.fallbackRefreshRate);
CGDisplayModeRelease(native);
return GLFW_TRUE;
} // autoreleasepool
}
@ -628,17 +622,8 @@ void _glfwSetGammaRampCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
GLFWAPI CGDirectDisplayID glfwGetCocoaMonitor(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(kCGNullDirectDisplay);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE, "Cocoa: Platform not initialized");
return kCGNullDirectDisplay;
}
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(kCGNullDirectDisplay);
return monitor->ns.displayID;
}

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 macOS - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 macOS - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2009-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ typedef struct _GLFWwindowNS
GLFWbool maximized;
GLFWbool occluded;
GLFWbool scaleFramebuffer;
GLFWbool retina;
// Cached window properties to filter out duplicate events
int width, height;
@ -294,7 +294,7 @@ void _glfwGetMonitorPosCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos);
void _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, float* xscale, float* yscale);
void _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos, int* width, int* height);
GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* count);
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode);
void _glfwGetVideoModeCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode);
GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp);
void _glfwSetGammaRampCocoa(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp);

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 macOS - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 macOS - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2009-2016 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 macOS - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 macOS - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2009-2021 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 macOS - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 macOS - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2009-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,16 +23,15 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
#if defined(_GLFW_COCOA)
#import <QuartzCore/CAMetalLayer.h>
#include <float.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <assert.h>
// HACK: This enum value is missing from framework headers on OS X 10.11 despite
// having been (according to documentation) added in Mac OS X 10.7
@ -389,6 +388,7 @@ static void setDockProgressIndicator(int progressState, double value)
- (void)windowDidChangeOcclusionState:(NSNotification* )notification
{
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED >= 1090
if ([window->ns.object respondsToSelector:@selector(occlusionState)])
{
if ([window->ns.object occlusionState] & NSWindowOcclusionStateVisible)
@ -396,6 +396,7 @@ static void setDockProgressIndicator(int progressState, double value)
else
window->ns.occluded = GLFW_TRUE;
}
#endif
}
@end
@ -591,7 +592,7 @@ static void setDockProgressIndicator(int progressState, double value)
if (xscale != window->ns.xscale || yscale != window->ns.yscale)
{
if (window->ns.scaleFramebuffer && window->ns.layer)
if (window->ns.retina && window->ns.layer)
[window->ns.layer setContentsScale:[window->ns.object backingScaleFactor]];
window->ns.xscale = xscale;
@ -950,7 +951,7 @@ static GLFWbool createNativeWindow(_GLFWwindow* window,
[window->ns.object setFrameAutosaveName:@(wndconfig->ns.frameName)];
window->ns.view = [[GLFWContentView alloc] initWithGlfwWindow:window];
window->ns.scaleFramebuffer = wndconfig->scaleFramebuffer;
window->ns.retina = wndconfig->ns.retina;
if (fbconfig->transparent)
{
@ -1793,15 +1794,14 @@ const char* _glfwGetScancodeNameCocoa(int scancode)
{
@autoreleasepool {
if (scancode < 0 || scancode > 0xff)
if (scancode < 0 || scancode > 0xff ||
_glfw.ns.keycodes[scancode] == GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_VALUE, "Invalid scancode %i", scancode);
return NULL;
}
const int key = _glfw.ns.keycodes[scancode];
if (key == GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN)
return NULL;
UInt32 deadKeyState = 0;
UniChar characters[4];
@ -2085,8 +2085,19 @@ VkResult _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceCocoa(VkInstance instance,
{
@autoreleasepool {
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED >= 101100
// HACK: Dynamically load Core Animation to avoid adding an extra
// dependency for the majority who don't use MoltenVK
NSBundle* bundle = [NSBundle bundleWithPath:@"/System/Library/Frameworks/QuartzCore.framework"];
if (!bundle)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR,
"Cocoa: Failed to find QuartzCore.framework");
return VK_ERROR_EXTENSION_NOT_PRESENT;
}
// NOTE: Create the layer here as makeBackingLayer should not return nil
window->ns.layer = [CAMetalLayer layer];
window->ns.layer = [[bundle classNamed:@"CAMetalLayer"] layer];
if (!window->ns.layer)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR,
@ -2094,7 +2105,7 @@ VkResult _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceCocoa(VkInstance instance,
return VK_ERROR_EXTENSION_NOT_PRESENT;
}
if (window->ns.scaleFramebuffer)
if (window->ns.retina)
[window->ns.layer setContentsScale:[window->ns.object backingScaleFactor]];
[window->ns.view setLayer:window->ns.layer];
@ -2151,6 +2162,9 @@ VkResult _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceCocoa(VkInstance instance,
}
return err;
#else
return VK_ERROR_EXTENSION_NOT_PRESENT;
#endif
} // autoreleasepool
}
@ -2162,37 +2176,18 @@ VkResult _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceCocoa(VkInstance instance,
GLFWAPI id glfwGetCocoaWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(nil);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE,
"Cocoa: Platform not initialized");
return nil;
return NULL;
}
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
return window->ns.object;
}
GLFWAPI id glfwGetCocoaView(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(nil);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE,
"Cocoa: Platform not initialized");
return nil;
}
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
return window->ns.view;
}
#endif // _GLFW_COCOA

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2016 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -615,11 +617,11 @@ GLFWbool _glfwStringInExtensionString(const char* string, const char* extensions
GLFWAPI void glfwMakeContextCurrent(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
_GLFWwindow* previous;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
previous = _glfwPlatformGetTls(&_glfw.contextSlot);
if (window && window->context.client == GLFW_NO_API)
@ -647,11 +649,11 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindow* glfwGetCurrentContext(void)
GLFWAPI void glfwSwapBuffers(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
if (window->context.client == GLFW_NO_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT,

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 EGL - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 EGL - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -92,7 +94,7 @@ static GLFWbool chooseEGLConfig(const _GLFWctxconfig* ctxconfig,
EGLConfig* nativeConfigs;
_GLFWfbconfig* usableConfigs;
const _GLFWfbconfig* closest;
int i, nativeCount, usableCount, apiBit, surfaceTypeBit;
int i, nativeCount, usableCount, apiBit;
GLFWbool wrongApiAvailable = GLFW_FALSE;
if (ctxconfig->client == GLFW_OPENGL_ES_API)
@ -105,11 +107,6 @@ static GLFWbool chooseEGLConfig(const _GLFWctxconfig* ctxconfig,
else
apiBit = EGL_OPENGL_BIT;
if (_glfw.egl.platform == EGL_PLATFORM_SURFACELESS_MESA)
surfaceTypeBit = EGL_PBUFFER_BIT;
else
surfaceTypeBit = EGL_WINDOW_BIT;
if (fbconfig->stereo)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_FORMAT_UNAVAILABLE, "EGL: Stereo rendering not supported");
@ -138,7 +135,8 @@ static GLFWbool chooseEGLConfig(const _GLFWctxconfig* ctxconfig,
if (getEGLConfigAttrib(n, EGL_COLOR_BUFFER_TYPE) != EGL_RGB_BUFFER)
continue;
if (!(getEGLConfigAttrib(n, EGL_SURFACE_TYPE) & surfaceTypeBit))
// Only consider window EGLConfigs
if (!(getEGLConfigAttrib(n, EGL_SURFACE_TYPE) & EGL_WINDOW_BIT))
continue;
#if defined(_GLFW_X11)
@ -424,8 +422,6 @@ GLFWbool _glfwInitEGL(void)
_glfwPlatformGetModuleSymbol(_glfw.egl.handle, "eglDestroyContext");
_glfw.egl.CreateWindowSurface = (PFN_eglCreateWindowSurface)
_glfwPlatformGetModuleSymbol(_glfw.egl.handle, "eglCreateWindowSurface");
_glfw.egl.CreatePbufferSurface = (PFN_eglCreatePbufferSurface)
_glfwPlatformGetModuleSymbol(_glfw.egl.handle, "eglCreatePbufferSurface");
_glfw.egl.MakeCurrent = (PFN_eglMakeCurrent)
_glfwPlatformGetModuleSymbol(_glfw.egl.handle, "eglMakeCurrent");
_glfw.egl.SwapBuffers = (PFN_eglSwapBuffers)
@ -448,7 +444,6 @@ GLFWbool _glfwInitEGL(void)
!_glfw.egl.DestroySurface ||
!_glfw.egl.DestroyContext ||
!_glfw.egl.CreateWindowSurface ||
!_glfw.egl.CreatePbufferSurface ||
!_glfw.egl.MakeCurrent ||
!_glfw.egl.SwapBuffers ||
!_glfw.egl.SwapInterval ||
@ -484,8 +479,6 @@ GLFWbool _glfwInitEGL(void)
_glfwStringInExtensionString("EGL_ANGLE_platform_angle_vulkan", extensions);
_glfw.egl.ANGLE_platform_angle_metal =
_glfwStringInExtensionString("EGL_ANGLE_platform_angle_metal", extensions);
_glfw.egl.MESA_platform_surfaceless =
_glfwStringInExtensionString("EGL_MESA_platform_surfaceless", extensions);
}
if (_glfw.egl.EXT_platform_base)
@ -717,36 +710,20 @@ GLFWbool _glfwCreateContextEGL(_GLFWwindow* window,
SET_ATTRIB(EGL_PRESENT_OPAQUE_EXT, !fbconfig->transparent);
}
if (_glfw.egl.platform == EGL_PLATFORM_SURFACELESS_MESA)
{
int width, height;
_glfw.platform.getFramebufferSize(window, &width, &height);
SET_ATTRIB(EGL_WIDTH, width);
SET_ATTRIB(EGL_HEIGHT, height);
}
SET_ATTRIB(EGL_NONE, EGL_NONE);
native = _glfw.platform.getEGLNativeWindow(window);
if (!_glfw.egl.platform || _glfw.egl.platform == EGL_PLATFORM_ANGLE_ANGLE)
// HACK: ANGLE does not implement eglCreatePlatformWindowSurfaceEXT
// despite reporting EGL_EXT_platform_base
if (_glfw.egl.platform && _glfw.egl.platform != EGL_PLATFORM_ANGLE_ANGLE)
{
// HACK: Also use non-platform function for ANGLE, as it does not
// implement eglCreatePlatformWindowSurfaceEXT despite reporting
// support for EGL_EXT_platform_base
window->context.egl.surface =
eglCreateWindowSurface(_glfw.egl.display, config, native, attribs);
}
else if (_glfw.egl.platform == EGL_PLATFORM_SURFACELESS_MESA)
{
// HACK: Use a pbuffer surface as the default framebuffer
window->context.egl.surface =
eglCreatePbufferSurface(_glfw.egl.display, config, attribs);
eglCreatePlatformWindowSurfaceEXT(_glfw.egl.display, config, native, attribs);
}
else
{
window->context.egl.surface =
eglCreatePlatformWindowSurfaceEXT(_glfw.egl.display, config, native, attribs);
eglCreateWindowSurface(_glfw.egl.display, config, native, attribs);
}
if (window->context.egl.surface == EGL_NO_SURFACE)
@ -908,39 +885,27 @@ GLFWAPI EGLDisplay glfwGetEGLDisplay(void)
GLFWAPI EGLContext glfwGetEGLContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(EGL_NO_CONTEXT);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(EGL_NO_CONTEXT);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_EGL_CONTEXT_API)
{
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND ||
window->context.source != GLFW_NATIVE_CONTEXT_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT, NULL);
return EGL_NO_CONTEXT;
}
}
return window->context.egl.handle;
}
GLFWAPI EGLSurface glfwGetEGLSurface(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(EGL_NO_SURFACE);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(EGL_NO_SURFACE);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_EGL_CONTEXT_API)
{
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND ||
window->context.source != GLFW_NATIVE_CONTEXT_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT, NULL);
return EGL_NO_CONTEXT;
}
return EGL_NO_SURFACE;
}
return window->context.egl.surface;

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 GLX - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 GLX - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -677,6 +679,7 @@ GLFWbool _glfwChooseVisualGLX(const _GLFWwndconfig* wndconfig,
GLFWAPI GLXContext glfwGetGLXContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_X11)
@ -685,9 +688,6 @@ GLFWAPI GLXContext glfwGetGLXContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
return NULL;
}
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_NATIVE_CONTEXT_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT, NULL);
@ -699,6 +699,7 @@ GLFWAPI GLXContext glfwGetGLXContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
GLFWAPI GLXWindow glfwGetGLXWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(None);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_X11)
@ -707,9 +708,6 @@ GLFWAPI GLXWindow glfwGetGLXWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
return None;
}
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_NATIVE_CONTEXT_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT, NULL);

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2018 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -49,22 +51,19 @@ static GLFWerrorfun _glfwErrorCallback;
static GLFWallocator _glfwInitAllocator;
static _GLFWinitconfig _glfwInitHints =
{
.hatButtons = GLFW_TRUE,
.angleType = GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_NONE,
.platformID = GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM,
.vulkanLoader = NULL,
.ns =
GLFW_TRUE, // hat buttons
GLFW_ANGLE_PLATFORM_TYPE_NONE, // ANGLE backend
GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM, // preferred platform
NULL, // vkGetInstanceProcAddr function
{
.menubar = GLFW_TRUE,
.chdir = GLFW_TRUE
GLFW_TRUE, // macOS menu bar
GLFW_TRUE // macOS bundle chdir
},
.x11 =
{
.xcbVulkanSurface = GLFW_TRUE,
GLFW_TRUE, // X11 XCB Vulkan surface
},
.wl =
{
.libdecorMode = GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR
GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR // Wayland libdecor mode
},
};
@ -246,6 +245,30 @@ int _glfw_max(int a, int b)
return a > b ? a : b;
}
float _glfw_fminf(float a, float b)
{
if (a != a)
return b;
else if (b != b)
return a;
else if (a < b)
return a;
else
return b;
}
float _glfw_fmaxf(float a, float b)
{
if (a != a)
return b;
else if (b != b)
return a;
else if (a > b)
return a;
else
return b;
}
void* _glfw_calloc(size_t count, size_t size)
{
if (count && size)

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
#include "mappings.h"
@ -348,22 +350,20 @@ void _glfwInputMouseClick(_GLFWwindow* window, int button, int action, int mods)
{
assert(window != NULL);
assert(button >= 0);
assert(button <= GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST);
assert(action == GLFW_PRESS || action == GLFW_RELEASE);
assert(mods == (mods & GLFW_MOD_MASK));
if (button < 0 || (!window->disableMouseButtonLimit && button > GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST))
if (button < 0 || button > GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST)
return;
if (!window->lockKeyMods)
mods &= ~(GLFW_MOD_CAPS_LOCK | GLFW_MOD_NUM_LOCK);
if (button <= GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST)
{
if (action == GLFW_RELEASE && window->stickyMouseButtons)
window->mouseButtons[button] = _GLFW_STICK;
else
window->mouseButtons[button] = (char) action;
}
if (window->callbacks.mouseButton)
window->callbacks.mouseButton((GLFWwindow*) window, button, action, mods);
@ -561,11 +561,11 @@ void _glfwCenterCursorInContentArea(_GLFWwindow* window)
GLFWAPI int glfwGetInputMode(GLFWwindow* handle, int mode)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(0);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(0);
switch (mode)
{
case GLFW_CURSOR:
@ -578,8 +578,6 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetInputMode(GLFWwindow* handle, int mode)
return window->lockKeyMods;
case GLFW_RAW_MOUSE_MOTION:
return window->rawMouseMotion;
case GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS:
return window->disableMouseButtonLimit;
}
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_ENUM, "Invalid input mode 0x%08X", mode);
@ -588,11 +586,11 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetInputMode(GLFWwindow* handle, int mode)
GLFWAPI void glfwSetInputMode(GLFWwindow* handle, int mode, int value)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
switch (mode)
{
case GLFW_CURSOR:
@ -687,12 +685,6 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetInputMode(GLFWwindow* handle, int mode, int value)
_glfw.platform.setRawMouseMotion(window, value);
return;
}
case GLFW_UNLIMITED_MOUSE_BUTTONS:
{
window->disableMouseButtonLimit = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
return;
}
}
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_ENUM, "Invalid input mode 0x%08X", mode);
@ -731,7 +723,7 @@ GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetKeyName(int key, int scancode)
GLFWAPI int glfwGetKeyScancode(int key)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(0);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(-1);
if (key < GLFW_KEY_SPACE || key > GLFW_KEY_LAST)
{
@ -744,11 +736,11 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetKeyScancode(int key)
GLFWAPI int glfwGetKey(GLFWwindow* handle, int key)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_RELEASE);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_RELEASE);
if (key < GLFW_KEY_SPACE || key > GLFW_KEY_LAST)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_ENUM, "Invalid key %i", key);
@ -767,11 +759,11 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetKey(GLFWwindow* handle, int key)
GLFWAPI int glfwGetMouseButton(GLFWwindow* handle, int button)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_RELEASE);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_RELEASE);
if (button < GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_1 || button > GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_ENUM, "Invalid mouse button %i", button);
@ -790,6 +782,9 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetMouseButton(GLFWwindow* handle, int button)
GLFWAPI void glfwGetCursorPos(GLFWwindow* handle, double* xpos, double* ypos)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (xpos)
*xpos = 0;
if (ypos)
@ -797,9 +792,6 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetCursorPos(GLFWwindow* handle, double* xpos, double* ypos)
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (window->cursorMode == GLFW_CURSOR_DISABLED)
{
if (xpos)
@ -813,11 +805,11 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetCursorPos(GLFWwindow* handle, double* xpos, double* ypos)
GLFWAPI void glfwSetCursorPos(GLFWwindow* handle, double xpos, double ypos)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
if (xpos != xpos || xpos < -DBL_MAX || xpos > DBL_MAX ||
ypos != ypos || ypos < -DBL_MAX || ypos > DBL_MAX)
{
@ -907,10 +899,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWcursor* glfwCreateStandardCursor(int shape)
GLFWAPI void glfwDestroyCursor(GLFWcursor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWcursor* cursor = (_GLFWcursor*) handle;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
if (cursor == NULL)
return;
@ -942,12 +934,12 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwDestroyCursor(GLFWcursor* handle)
GLFWAPI void glfwSetCursor(GLFWwindow* windowHandle, GLFWcursor* cursorHandle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) windowHandle;
_GLFWcursor* cursor = (_GLFWcursor*) cursorHandle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
window->cursor = cursor;
_glfw.platform.setCursor(window, cursor);
@ -955,33 +947,30 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetCursor(GLFWwindow* windowHandle, GLFWcursor* cursorHandle)
GLFWAPI GLFWkeyfun glfwSetKeyCallback(GLFWwindow* handle, GLFWkeyfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWkeyfun, window->callbacks.key, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
GLFWAPI GLFWcharfun glfwSetCharCallback(GLFWwindow* handle, GLFWcharfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWcharfun, window->callbacks.character, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
GLFWAPI GLFWcharmodsfun glfwSetCharModsCallback(GLFWwindow* handle, GLFWcharmodsfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWcharmodsfun, window->callbacks.charmods, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -989,11 +978,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWcharmodsfun glfwSetCharModsCallback(GLFWwindow* handle, GLFWcharmods
GLFWAPI GLFWmousebuttonfun glfwSetMouseButtonCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWmousebuttonfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWmousebuttonfun, window->callbacks.mouseButton, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1001,11 +989,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWmousebuttonfun glfwSetMouseButtonCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWcursorposfun glfwSetCursorPosCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWcursorposfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWcursorposfun, window->callbacks.cursorPos, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1013,11 +1000,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWcursorposfun glfwSetCursorPosCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWcursorenterfun glfwSetCursorEnterCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWcursorenterfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWcursorenterfun, window->callbacks.cursorEnter, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1025,22 +1011,20 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWcursorenterfun glfwSetCursorEnterCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWscrollfun glfwSetScrollCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWscrollfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWscrollfun, window->callbacks.scroll, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
GLFWAPI GLFWdropfun glfwSetDropCallback(GLFWwindow* handle, GLFWdropfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWdropfun, window->callbacks.drop, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1456,7 +1440,7 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetGamepadState(int jid, GLFWgamepadstate* state)
if (e->type == _GLFW_JOYSTICK_AXIS)
{
const float value = js->axes[e->index] * e->axisScale + e->axisOffset;
state->axes[i] = fminf(fmaxf(value, -1.f), 1.f);
state->axes[i] = _glfw_fminf(_glfw_fmaxf(value, -1.f), 1.f);
}
else if (e->type == _GLFW_JOYSTICK_HATBIT)
{

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -48,8 +48,6 @@
#define GLFW_INCLUDE_NONE
#include "../include/GLFW/glfw3.h"
#include <stdbool.h>
#define _GLFW_INSERT_FIRST 0
#define _GLFW_INSERT_LAST 1
@ -110,6 +108,12 @@ typedef const GLubyte* (APIENTRY * PFNGLGETSTRINGPROC)(GLenum);
typedef void (APIENTRY * PFNGLGETINTEGERVPROC)(GLenum,GLint*);
typedef const GLubyte* (APIENTRY * PFNGLGETSTRINGIPROC)(GLenum,GLuint);
#if defined(_GLFW_WIN32)
#define EGLAPIENTRY __stdcall
#else
#define EGLAPIENTRY
#endif
#define EGL_SUCCESS 0x3000
#define EGL_NOT_INITIALIZED 0x3001
#define EGL_BAD_ACCESS 0x3002
@ -152,9 +156,6 @@ typedef const GLubyte* (APIENTRY * PFNGLGETSTRINGIPROC)(GLenum,GLuint);
#define EGL_NO_DISPLAY ((EGLDisplay) 0)
#define EGL_NO_CONTEXT ((EGLContext) 0)
#define EGL_DEFAULT_DISPLAY ((EGLNativeDisplayType) 0)
#define EGL_PBUFFER_BIT 0x0001
#define EGL_WIDTH 0x3057
#define EGL_HEIGHT 0x3056
#define EGL_CONTEXT_OPENGL_FORWARD_COMPATIBLE_BIT_KHR 0x00000002
#define EGL_CONTEXT_OPENGL_CORE_PROFILE_BIT_KHR 0x00000001
@ -186,7 +187,6 @@ typedef const GLubyte* (APIENTRY * PFNGLGETSTRINGIPROC)(GLenum,GLuint);
#define EGL_PLATFORM_ANGLE_TYPE_VULKAN_ANGLE 0x3450
#define EGL_PLATFORM_ANGLE_TYPE_METAL_ANGLE 0x3489
#define EGL_PLATFORM_ANGLE_NATIVE_PLATFORM_TYPE_ANGLE 0x348f
#define EGL_PLATFORM_SURFACELESS_MESA 0x31dd
typedef int EGLint;
typedef unsigned int EGLBoolean;
@ -200,23 +200,22 @@ typedef void* EGLNativeDisplayType;
typedef void* EGLNativeWindowType;
// EGL function pointer typedefs
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglGetConfigAttrib)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig,EGLint,EGLint*);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglGetConfigs)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig*,EGLint,EGLint*);
typedef EGLDisplay (APIENTRY * PFN_eglGetDisplay)(EGLNativeDisplayType);
typedef EGLint (APIENTRY * PFN_eglGetError)(void);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglInitialize)(EGLDisplay,EGLint*,EGLint*);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglTerminate)(EGLDisplay);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglBindAPI)(EGLenum);
typedef EGLContext (APIENTRY * PFN_eglCreateContext)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig,EGLContext,const EGLint*);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglDestroySurface)(EGLDisplay,EGLSurface);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglDestroyContext)(EGLDisplay,EGLContext);
typedef EGLSurface (APIENTRY * PFN_eglCreateWindowSurface)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig,EGLNativeWindowType,const EGLint*);
typedef EGLSurface (APIENTRY * PFN_eglCreatePbufferSurface)(EGLDisplay,EGLContext,const EGLint*);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglMakeCurrent)(EGLDisplay,EGLSurface,EGLSurface,EGLContext);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglSwapBuffers)(EGLDisplay,EGLSurface);
typedef EGLBoolean (APIENTRY * PFN_eglSwapInterval)(EGLDisplay,EGLint);
typedef const char* (APIENTRY * PFN_eglQueryString)(EGLDisplay,EGLint);
typedef GLFWglproc (APIENTRY * PFN_eglGetProcAddress)(const char*);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglGetConfigAttrib)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig,EGLint,EGLint*);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglGetConfigs)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig*,EGLint,EGLint*);
typedef EGLDisplay (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglGetDisplay)(EGLNativeDisplayType);
typedef EGLint (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglGetError)(void);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglInitialize)(EGLDisplay,EGLint*,EGLint*);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglTerminate)(EGLDisplay);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglBindAPI)(EGLenum);
typedef EGLContext (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglCreateContext)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig,EGLContext,const EGLint*);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglDestroySurface)(EGLDisplay,EGLSurface);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglDestroyContext)(EGLDisplay,EGLContext);
typedef EGLSurface (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglCreateWindowSurface)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig,EGLNativeWindowType,const EGLint*);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglMakeCurrent)(EGLDisplay,EGLSurface,EGLSurface,EGLContext);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglSwapBuffers)(EGLDisplay,EGLSurface);
typedef EGLBoolean (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglSwapInterval)(EGLDisplay,EGLint);
typedef const char* (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglQueryString)(EGLDisplay,EGLint);
typedef GLFWglproc (EGLAPIENTRY * PFN_eglGetProcAddress)(const char*);
#define eglGetConfigAttrib _glfw.egl.GetConfigAttrib
#define eglGetConfigs _glfw.egl.GetConfigs
#define eglGetDisplay _glfw.egl.GetDisplay
@ -228,15 +227,14 @@ typedef GLFWglproc (APIENTRY * PFN_eglGetProcAddress)(const char*);
#define eglDestroySurface _glfw.egl.DestroySurface
#define eglDestroyContext _glfw.egl.DestroyContext
#define eglCreateWindowSurface _glfw.egl.CreateWindowSurface
#define eglCreatePbufferSurface _glfw.egl.CreatePbufferSurface
#define eglMakeCurrent _glfw.egl.MakeCurrent
#define eglSwapBuffers _glfw.egl.SwapBuffers
#define eglSwapInterval _glfw.egl.SwapInterval
#define eglQueryString _glfw.egl.QueryString
#define eglGetProcAddress _glfw.egl.GetProcAddress
typedef EGLDisplay (APIENTRY * PFNEGLGETPLATFORMDISPLAYEXTPROC)(EGLenum,void*,const EGLint*);
typedef EGLSurface (APIENTRY * PFNEGLCREATEPLATFORMWINDOWSURFACEEXTPROC)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig,void*,const EGLint*);
typedef EGLDisplay (EGLAPIENTRY * PFNEGLGETPLATFORMDISPLAYEXTPROC)(EGLenum,void*,const EGLint*);
typedef EGLSurface (EGLAPIENTRY * PFNEGLCREATEPLATFORMWINDOWSURFACEEXTPROC)(EGLDisplay,EGLConfig,void*,const EGLint*);
#define eglGetPlatformDisplayEXT _glfw.egl.GetPlatformDisplayEXT
#define eglCreatePlatformWindowSurfaceEXT _glfw.egl.CreatePlatformWindowSurfaceEXT
@ -285,7 +283,6 @@ typedef enum VkStructureType
VK_STRUCTURE_TYPE_WIN32_SURFACE_CREATE_INFO_KHR = 1000009000,
VK_STRUCTURE_TYPE_MACOS_SURFACE_CREATE_INFO_MVK = 1000123000,
VK_STRUCTURE_TYPE_METAL_SURFACE_CREATE_INFO_EXT = 1000217000,
VK_STRUCTURE_TYPE_HEADLESS_SURFACE_CREATE_INFO_EXT = 1000256000,
VK_STRUCTURE_TYPE_MAX_ENUM = 0x7FFFFFFF
} VkStructureType;
@ -333,9 +330,6 @@ typedef VkResult (APIENTRY * PFN_vkEnumerateInstanceExtensionProperties)(const c
#include "platform.h"
#define GLFW_NATIVE_INCLUDE_NONE
#include "../include/GLFW/glfw3native.h"
// Checks for whether the library has been initialized
#define _GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT() \
if (!_glfw.initialized) \
@ -414,8 +408,8 @@ struct _GLFWwndconfig
GLFWbool focusOnShow;
GLFWbool mousePassthrough;
GLFWbool scaleToMonitor;
GLFWbool scaleFramebuffer;
struct {
GLFWbool retina;
char frameName[256];
} ns;
struct {
@ -424,7 +418,6 @@ struct _GLFWwndconfig
} x11;
struct {
GLFWbool keymenu;
GLFWbool showDefault;
} win32;
struct {
char appId[256];
@ -544,7 +537,6 @@ struct _GLFWwindow
GLFWvidmode videoMode;
_GLFWmonitor* monitor;
_GLFWcursor* cursor;
char* title;
int minwidth, minheight;
int maxwidth, maxheight;
@ -553,7 +545,6 @@ struct _GLFWwindow
GLFWbool stickyKeys;
GLFWbool stickyMouseButtons;
GLFWbool lockKeyMods;
GLFWbool disableMouseButtonLimit;
int cursorMode;
char mouseButtons[GLFW_MOUSE_BUTTON_LAST + 1];
char keys[GLFW_KEY_LAST + 1];
@ -710,7 +701,7 @@ struct _GLFWplatform
void (*getMonitorContentScale)(_GLFWmonitor*,float*,float*);
void (*getMonitorWorkarea)(_GLFWmonitor*,int*,int*,int*,int*);
GLFWvidmode* (*getVideoModes)(_GLFWmonitor*,int*);
GLFWbool (*getVideoMode)(_GLFWmonitor*,GLFWvidmode*);
void (*getVideoMode)(_GLFWmonitor*,GLFWvidmode*);
GLFWbool (*getGammaRamp)(_GLFWmonitor*,GLFWgammaramp*);
void (*setGammaRamp)(_GLFWmonitor*,const GLFWgammaramp*);
// window
@ -822,7 +813,6 @@ struct _GLFWlibrary
GLFWbool ANGLE_platform_angle_d3d;
GLFWbool ANGLE_platform_angle_vulkan;
GLFWbool ANGLE_platform_angle_metal;
GLFWbool MESA_platform_surfaceless;
void* handle;
@ -837,7 +827,6 @@ struct _GLFWlibrary
PFN_eglDestroySurface DestroySurface;
PFN_eglDestroyContext DestroyContext;
PFN_eglCreateWindowSurface CreateWindowSurface;
PFN_eglCreatePbufferSurface CreatePbufferSurface;
PFN_eglMakeCurrent MakeCurrent;
PFN_eglSwapBuffers SwapBuffers;
PFN_eglSwapInterval SwapInterval;
@ -873,7 +862,6 @@ struct _GLFWlibrary
GLFWbool KHR_xlib_surface;
GLFWbool KHR_xcb_surface;
GLFWbool KHR_wayland_surface;
GLFWbool EXT_headless_surface;
} vk;
struct {
@ -1017,6 +1005,8 @@ char** _glfwParseUriList(char* text, int* count);
char* _glfw_strdup(const char* source);
int _glfw_min(int a, int b);
int _glfw_max(int a, int b);
float _glfw_fminf(float a, float b);
float _glfw_fmaxf(float a, float b);
void* _glfw_calloc(size_t count, size_t size);
void* _glfw_realloc(void* pointer, size_t size);

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Linux - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Linux - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -135,7 +137,7 @@ static GLFWbool openJoystickDevice(const char* path)
}
_GLFWjoystickLinux linjs = {0};
linjs.fd = open(path, O_RDONLY | O_NONBLOCK | O_CLOEXEC);
linjs.fd = open(path, O_RDONLY | O_NONBLOCK);
if (linjs.fd == -1)
return GLFW_FALSE;

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Linux - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Linux - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2014 Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
//

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2006-2018 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2006-2018 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -325,6 +327,9 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWmonitor* glfwGetPrimaryMonitor(void)
GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorPos(GLFWmonitor* handle, int* xpos, int* ypos)
{
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
if (xpos)
*xpos = 0;
if (ypos)
@ -332,9 +337,6 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorPos(GLFWmonitor* handle, int* xpos, int* ypos)
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_glfw.platform.getMonitorPos(monitor, xpos, ypos);
}
@ -342,6 +344,9 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorWorkarea(GLFWmonitor* handle,
int* xpos, int* ypos,
int* width, int* height)
{
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
if (xpos)
*xpos = 0;
if (ypos)
@ -353,14 +358,14 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorWorkarea(GLFWmonitor* handle,
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_glfw.platform.getMonitorWorkarea(monitor, xpos, ypos, width, height);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorPhysicalSize(GLFWmonitor* handle, int* widthMM, int* heightMM)
{
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
if (widthMM)
*widthMM = 0;
if (heightMM)
@ -368,9 +373,6 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorPhysicalSize(GLFWmonitor* handle, int* widthMM, int*
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
if (widthMM)
*widthMM = monitor->widthMM;
if (heightMM)
@ -380,46 +382,42 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorPhysicalSize(GLFWmonitor* handle, int* widthMM, int*
GLFWAPI void glfwGetMonitorContentScale(GLFWmonitor* handle,
float* xscale, float* yscale)
{
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
if (xscale)
*xscale = 0.f;
if (yscale)
*yscale = 0.f;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_glfw.platform.getMonitorContentScale(monitor, xscale, yscale);
}
GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetMonitorName(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
return monitor->name;
}
GLFWAPI void glfwSetMonitorUserPointer(GLFWmonitor* handle, void* pointer)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
monitor->userPointer = pointer;
}
GLFWAPI void* glfwGetMonitorUserPointer(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
return monitor->userPointer;
}
@ -432,15 +430,14 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWmonitorfun glfwSetMonitorCallback(GLFWmonitorfun cbfun)
GLFWAPI const GLFWvidmode* glfwGetVideoModes(GLFWmonitor* handle, int* count)
{
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
assert(count != NULL);
*count = 0;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
if (!refreshVideoModes(monitor))
return NULL;
@ -450,14 +447,12 @@ GLFWAPI const GLFWvidmode* glfwGetVideoModes(GLFWmonitor* handle, int* count)
GLFWAPI const GLFWvidmode* glfwGetVideoMode(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
if (!_glfw.platform.getVideoMode(monitor, &monitor->currentMode))
return NULL;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_glfw.platform.getVideoMode(monitor, &monitor->currentMode);
return &monitor->currentMode;
}
@ -467,13 +462,12 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetGamma(GLFWmonitor* handle, float gamma)
unsigned short* values;
GLFWgammaramp ramp;
const GLFWgammaramp* original;
assert(handle != NULL);
assert(gamma > 0.f);
assert(gamma <= FLT_MAX);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
assert(handle != NULL);
if (gamma != gamma || gamma <= 0.f || gamma > FLT_MAX)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_VALUE, "Invalid gamma value %f", gamma);
@ -495,7 +489,7 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetGamma(GLFWmonitor* handle, float gamma)
// Apply gamma curve
value = powf(value, 1.f / gamma) * 65535.f + 0.5f;
// Clamp to value range
value = fminf(value, 65535.f);
value = _glfw_fminf(value, 65535.f);
values[i] = (unsigned short) value;
}
@ -511,11 +505,11 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetGamma(GLFWmonitor* handle, float gamma)
GLFWAPI const GLFWgammaramp* glfwGetGammaRamp(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_glfwFreeGammaArrays(&monitor->currentRamp);
if (!_glfw.platform.getGammaRamp(monitor, &monitor->currentRamp))
return NULL;
@ -525,6 +519,8 @@ GLFWAPI const GLFWgammaramp* glfwGetGammaRamp(GLFWmonitor* handle)
GLFWAPI void glfwSetGammaRamp(GLFWmonitor* handle, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
{
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
assert(ramp != NULL);
assert(ramp->size > 0);
assert(ramp->red != NULL);
@ -533,9 +529,6 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetGammaRamp(GLFWmonitor* handle, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
if (ramp->size <= 0)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_VALUE,

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 macOS - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 macOS - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2009-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -30,7 +32,6 @@
#include <unistd.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <assert.h>
static void makeContextCurrentNSGL(_GLFWwindow* window)
{
@ -162,7 +163,7 @@ GLFWbool _glfwCreateContextNSGL(_GLFWwindow* window,
if (ctxconfig->client == GLFW_OPENGL_ES_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_API_UNAVAILABLE,
"NSGL: OpenGL ES is not available via NSGL");
"NSGL: OpenGL ES is not available on macOS");
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
@ -176,23 +177,16 @@ GLFWbool _glfwCreateContextNSGL(_GLFWwindow* window,
}
}
if (ctxconfig->major >= 3 && ctxconfig->profile == GLFW_OPENGL_COMPAT_PROFILE)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_VERSION_UNAVAILABLE,
"NSGL: The compatibility profile is not available on macOS");
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
// Context robustness modes (GL_KHR_robustness) are not supported by
// Context robustness modes (GL_KHR_robustness) are not yet supported by
// macOS but are not a hard constraint, so ignore and continue
// Context release behaviors (GL_KHR_context_flush_control) are not
// Context release behaviors (GL_KHR_context_flush_control) are not yet
// supported by macOS but are not a hard constraint, so ignore and continue
// Debug contexts (GL_KHR_debug) are not supported by macOS but are not
// Debug contexts (GL_KHR_debug) are not yet supported by macOS but are not
// a hard constraint, so ignore and continue
// No-error contexts (GL_KHR_no_error) are not supported by macOS but
// No-error contexts (GL_KHR_no_error) are not yet supported by macOS but
// are not a hard constraint, so ignore and continue
#define ADD_ATTRIB(a) \
@ -218,11 +212,14 @@ GLFWbool _glfwCreateContextNSGL(_GLFWwindow* window,
ADD_ATTRIB(kCGLPFASupportsAutomaticGraphicsSwitching);
}
#if MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED >= 101000
if (ctxconfig->major >= 4)
{
SET_ATTRIB(NSOpenGLPFAOpenGLProfile, NSOpenGLProfileVersion4_1Core);
}
else if (ctxconfig->major >= 3)
else
#endif /*MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED*/
if (ctxconfig->major >= 3)
{
SET_ATTRIB(NSOpenGLPFAOpenGLProfile, NSOpenGLProfileVersion3_2Core);
}
@ -338,7 +335,7 @@ GLFWbool _glfwCreateContextNSGL(_GLFWwindow* window,
forParameter:NSOpenGLContextParameterSurfaceOpacity];
}
[window->ns.view setWantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface:window->ns.scaleFramebuffer];
[window->ns.view setWantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface:window->ns.retina];
[window->context.nsgl.object setView:window->ns.view];
@ -359,6 +356,7 @@ GLFWbool _glfwCreateContextNSGL(_GLFWwindow* window,
GLFWAPI id glfwGetNSGLContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(nil);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA)
@ -368,9 +366,6 @@ GLFWAPI id glfwGetNSGLContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
return nil;
}
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_NATIVE_CONTEXT_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT, NULL);

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2016 Google Inc.
// Copyright (c) 2016-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -39,79 +41,79 @@ GLFWbool _glfwConnectNull(int platformID, _GLFWplatform* platform)
{
const _GLFWplatform null =
{
.platformID = GLFW_PLATFORM_NULL,
.init = _glfwInitNull,
.terminate = _glfwTerminateNull,
.getCursorPos = _glfwGetCursorPosNull,
.setCursorPos = _glfwSetCursorPosNull,
.setCursorMode = _glfwSetCursorModeNull,
.setRawMouseMotion = _glfwSetRawMouseMotionNull,
.rawMouseMotionSupported = _glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedNull,
.createCursor = _glfwCreateCursorNull,
.createStandardCursor = _glfwCreateStandardCursorNull,
.destroyCursor = _glfwDestroyCursorNull,
.setCursor = _glfwSetCursorNull,
.getScancodeName = _glfwGetScancodeNameNull,
.getKeyScancode = _glfwGetKeyScancodeNull,
.setClipboardString = _glfwSetClipboardStringNull,
.getClipboardString = _glfwGetClipboardStringNull,
.initJoysticks = _glfwInitJoysticksNull,
.terminateJoysticks = _glfwTerminateJoysticksNull,
.pollJoystick = _glfwPollJoystickNull,
.getMappingName = _glfwGetMappingNameNull,
.updateGamepadGUID = _glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDNull,
.freeMonitor = _glfwFreeMonitorNull,
.getMonitorPos = _glfwGetMonitorPosNull,
.getMonitorContentScale = _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleNull,
.getMonitorWorkarea = _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaNull,
.getVideoModes = _glfwGetVideoModesNull,
.getVideoMode = _glfwGetVideoModeNull,
.getGammaRamp = _glfwGetGammaRampNull,
.setGammaRamp = _glfwSetGammaRampNull,
.createWindow = _glfwCreateWindowNull,
.destroyWindow = _glfwDestroyWindowNull,
.setWindowTitle = _glfwSetWindowTitleNull,
.setWindowIcon = _glfwSetWindowIconNull,
.setWindowProgressIndicator = _glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorNull,
.getWindowPos = _glfwGetWindowPosNull,
.setWindowPos = _glfwSetWindowPosNull,
.getWindowSize = _glfwGetWindowSizeNull,
.setWindowSize = _glfwSetWindowSizeNull,
.setWindowSizeLimits = _glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsNull,
.setWindowAspectRatio = _glfwSetWindowAspectRatioNull,
.getFramebufferSize = _glfwGetFramebufferSizeNull,
.getWindowFrameSize = _glfwGetWindowFrameSizeNull,
.getWindowContentScale = _glfwGetWindowContentScaleNull,
.iconifyWindow = _glfwIconifyWindowNull,
.restoreWindow = _glfwRestoreWindowNull,
.maximizeWindow = _glfwMaximizeWindowNull,
.showWindow = _glfwShowWindowNull,
.hideWindow = _glfwHideWindowNull,
.requestWindowAttention = _glfwRequestWindowAttentionNull,
.focusWindow = _glfwFocusWindowNull,
.setWindowMonitor = _glfwSetWindowMonitorNull,
.windowFocused = _glfwWindowFocusedNull,
.windowIconified = _glfwWindowIconifiedNull,
.windowVisible = _glfwWindowVisibleNull,
.windowMaximized = _glfwWindowMaximizedNull,
.windowHovered = _glfwWindowHoveredNull,
.framebufferTransparent = _glfwFramebufferTransparentNull,
.getWindowOpacity = _glfwGetWindowOpacityNull,
.setWindowResizable = _glfwSetWindowResizableNull,
.setWindowDecorated = _glfwSetWindowDecoratedNull,
.setWindowFloating = _glfwSetWindowFloatingNull,
.setWindowOpacity = _glfwSetWindowOpacityNull,
.setWindowMousePassthrough = _glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughNull,
.pollEvents = _glfwPollEventsNull,
.waitEvents = _glfwWaitEventsNull,
.waitEventsTimeout = _glfwWaitEventsTimeoutNull,
.postEmptyEvent = _glfwPostEmptyEventNull,
.getEGLPlatform = _glfwGetEGLPlatformNull,
.getEGLNativeDisplay = _glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayNull,
.getEGLNativeWindow = _glfwGetEGLNativeWindowNull,
.getRequiredInstanceExtensions = _glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsNull,
.getPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport = _glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportNull,
.createWindowSurface = _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceNull
GLFW_PLATFORM_NULL,
_glfwInitNull,
_glfwTerminateNull,
_glfwGetCursorPosNull,
_glfwSetCursorPosNull,
_glfwSetCursorModeNull,
_glfwSetRawMouseMotionNull,
_glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedNull,
_glfwCreateCursorNull,
_glfwCreateStandardCursorNull,
_glfwDestroyCursorNull,
_glfwSetCursorNull,
_glfwGetScancodeNameNull,
_glfwGetKeyScancodeNull,
_glfwSetClipboardStringNull,
_glfwGetClipboardStringNull,
_glfwInitJoysticksNull,
_glfwTerminateJoysticksNull,
_glfwPollJoystickNull,
_glfwGetMappingNameNull,
_glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDNull,
_glfwFreeMonitorNull,
_glfwGetMonitorPosNull,
_glfwGetMonitorContentScaleNull,
_glfwGetMonitorWorkareaNull,
_glfwGetVideoModesNull,
_glfwGetVideoModeNull,
_glfwGetGammaRampNull,
_glfwSetGammaRampNull,
_glfwCreateWindowNull,
_glfwDestroyWindowNull,
_glfwSetWindowTitleNull,
_glfwSetWindowIconNull,
_glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorNull,
_glfwGetWindowPosNull,
_glfwSetWindowPosNull,
_glfwGetWindowSizeNull,
_glfwSetWindowSizeNull,
_glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsNull,
_glfwSetWindowAspectRatioNull,
_glfwGetFramebufferSizeNull,
_glfwGetWindowFrameSizeNull,
_glfwGetWindowContentScaleNull,
_glfwIconifyWindowNull,
_glfwRestoreWindowNull,
_glfwMaximizeWindowNull,
_glfwShowWindowNull,
_glfwHideWindowNull,
_glfwRequestWindowAttentionNull,
_glfwFocusWindowNull,
_glfwSetWindowMonitorNull,
_glfwWindowFocusedNull,
_glfwWindowIconifiedNull,
_glfwWindowVisibleNull,
_glfwWindowMaximizedNull,
_glfwWindowHoveredNull,
_glfwFramebufferTransparentNull,
_glfwGetWindowOpacityNull,
_glfwSetWindowResizableNull,
_glfwSetWindowDecoratedNull,
_glfwSetWindowFloatingNull,
_glfwSetWindowOpacityNull,
_glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughNull,
_glfwPollEventsNull,
_glfwWaitEventsNull,
_glfwWaitEventsTimeoutNull,
_glfwPostEmptyEventNull,
_glfwGetEGLPlatformNull,
_glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayNull,
_glfwGetEGLNativeWindowNull,
_glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsNull,
_glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportNull,
_glfwCreateWindowSurfaceNull,
};
*platform = null;

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2016-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2016 Google Inc.
// Copyright (c) 2016-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -109,10 +111,9 @@ GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* found)
return mode;
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
void _glfwGetVideoModeNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
{
*mode = getVideoMode();
return GLFW_TRUE;
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
@ -129,7 +130,7 @@ GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
float value;
value = i / (float) (monitor->null.ramp.size - 1);
value = powf(value, 1.f / gamma) * 65535.f + 0.5f;
value = fminf(value, 65535.f);
value = _glfw_fminf(value, 65535.f);
monitor->null.ramp.red[i] = (unsigned short) value;
monitor->null.ramp.green[i] = (unsigned short) value;

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2016 Google Inc.
// Copyright (c) 2016-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -156,17 +156,6 @@
#define GLFW_NULL_SC_MENU 120
#define GLFW_NULL_SC_LAST GLFW_NULL_SC_MENU
typedef VkFlags VkHeadlessSurfaceCreateFlagsEXT;
typedef struct VkHeadlessSurfaceCreateInfoEXT
{
VkStructureType sType;
const void* pNext;
VkHeadlessSurfaceCreateFlagsEXT flags;
} VkHeadlessSurfaceCreateInfoEXT;
typedef VkResult (APIENTRY *PFN_vkCreateHeadlessSurfaceEXT)(VkInstance,const VkHeadlessSurfaceCreateInfoEXT*,const VkAllocationCallbacks*,VkSurfaceKHR*);
// Null-specific per-window data
//
typedef struct _GLFWwindowNull
@ -175,6 +164,7 @@ typedef struct _GLFWwindowNull
int ypos;
int width;
int height;
char* title;
GLFWbool visible;
GLFWbool iconified;
GLFWbool maximized;
@ -215,7 +205,7 @@ void _glfwGetMonitorPosNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos);
void _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, float* xscale, float* yscale);
void _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos, int* width, int* height);
GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* found);
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode);
void _glfwGetVideoModeNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode);
GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp);
void _glfwSetGammaRampNull(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp);

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2016 Google Inc.
// Copyright (c) 2016-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,11 +24,12 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
static void applySizeLimits(_GLFWwindow* window, int* width, int* height)
{
@ -263,9 +264,8 @@ void _glfwSetWindowSizeNull(_GLFWwindow* window, int width, int height)
{
window->null.width = width;
window->null.height = height;
_glfwInputFramebufferSize(window, width, height);
_glfwInputWindowDamage(window);
_glfwInputWindowSize(window, width, height);
_glfwInputFramebufferSize(window, width, height);
}
}
@ -557,15 +557,12 @@ const char* _glfwGetClipboardStringNull(void)
EGLenum _glfwGetEGLPlatformNull(EGLint** attribs)
{
if (_glfw.egl.EXT_platform_base && _glfw.egl.MESA_platform_surfaceless)
return EGL_PLATFORM_SURFACELESS_MESA;
else
return 0;
}
EGLNativeDisplayType _glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayNull(void)
{
return EGL_DEFAULT_DISPLAY;
return 0;
}
EGLNativeWindowType _glfwGetEGLNativeWindowNull(_GLFWwindow* window)
@ -707,18 +704,13 @@ int _glfwGetKeyScancodeNull(int key)
void _glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsNull(char** extensions)
{
if (!_glfw.vk.KHR_surface || !_glfw.vk.EXT_headless_surface)
return;
extensions[0] = "VK_KHR_surface";
extensions[1] = "VK_EXT_headless_surface";
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportNull(VkInstance instance,
VkPhysicalDevice device,
uint32_t queuefamily)
{
return GLFW_TRUE;
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
VkResult _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceNull(VkInstance instance,
@ -726,28 +718,7 @@ VkResult _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceNull(VkInstance instance,
const VkAllocationCallbacks* allocator,
VkSurfaceKHR* surface)
{
PFN_vkCreateHeadlessSurfaceEXT vkCreateHeadlessSurfaceEXT =
(PFN_vkCreateHeadlessSurfaceEXT)
vkGetInstanceProcAddr(instance, "vkCreateHeadlessSurfaceEXT");
if (!vkCreateHeadlessSurfaceEXT)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_API_UNAVAILABLE,
"Null: Vulkan instance missing VK_EXT_headless_surface extension");
// This seems like the most appropriate error to return here
return VK_ERROR_EXTENSION_NOT_PRESENT;
}
VkHeadlessSurfaceCreateInfoEXT sci;
memset(&sci, 0, sizeof(sci));
sci.sType = VK_STRUCTURE_TYPE_HEADLESS_SURFACE_CREATE_INFO_EXT;
const VkResult err = vkCreateHeadlessSurfaceEXT(instance, &sci, allocator, surface);
if (err)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR,
"Null: Failed to create Vulkan surface: %s",
_glfwGetVulkanResultString(err));
}
return err;
}

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 OSMesa - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 OSMesa - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2016 Google Inc.
// Copyright (c) 2016-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,13 +24,16 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include "internal.h"
static void makeContextCurrentOSMesa(_GLFWwindow* window)
{
if (window)
@ -296,12 +299,11 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetOSMesaColorBuffer(GLFWwindow* handle, int* width,
{
void* mesaBuffer;
GLint mesaWidth, mesaHeight, mesaFormat;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_FALSE);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_FALSE);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_OSMESA_CONTEXT_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT, NULL);
@ -336,12 +338,11 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetOSMesaDepthBuffer(GLFWwindow* handle,
{
void* mesaBuffer;
GLint mesaWidth, mesaHeight, mesaBytes;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_FALSE);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_FALSE);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_OSMESA_CONTEXT_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT, NULL);
@ -371,10 +372,8 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetOSMesaDepthBuffer(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI OSMesaContext glfwGetOSMesaContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_OSMESA_CONTEXT_API)
{

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2018 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,12 +24,11 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
// These construct a string literal from individual numeric constants
#define _GLFW_CONCAT_VERSION(m, n, r) #m "." #n "." #r
#define _GLFW_MAKE_VERSION(m, n, r) _GLFW_CONCAT_VERSION(m, n, r)
@ -50,12 +49,12 @@ static const struct
#if defined(_GLFW_COCOA)
{ GLFW_PLATFORM_COCOA, _glfwConnectCocoa },
#endif
#if defined(_GLFW_WAYLAND)
{ GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND, _glfwConnectWayland },
#endif
#if defined(_GLFW_X11)
{ GLFW_PLATFORM_X11, _glfwConnectX11 },
#endif
#if defined(_GLFW_WAYLAND)
{ GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND, _glfwConnectWayland },
#endif
};
GLFWbool _glfwSelectPlatform(int desiredID, _GLFWplatform* platform)
@ -83,22 +82,6 @@ GLFWbool _glfwSelectPlatform(int desiredID, _GLFWplatform* platform)
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
#if defined(_GLFW_WAYLAND) && defined(_GLFW_X11)
if (desiredID == GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM)
{
const char* const session = getenv("XDG_SESSION_TYPE");
if (session)
{
// Only follow XDG_SESSION_TYPE if it is set correctly and the
// environment looks plausble; otherwise fall back to detection
if (strcmp(session, "wayland") == 0 && getenv("WAYLAND_DISPLAY"))
desiredID = GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND;
else if (strcmp(session, "x11") == 0 && getenv("DISPLAY"))
desiredID = GLFW_PLATFORM_X11;
}
}
#endif
if (desiredID == GLFW_ANY_PLATFORM)
{
// If there is exactly one platform available for auto-selection, let it emit the

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2018 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -38,13 +38,9 @@
#endif
#include "null_platform.h"
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_EGL
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_OSMESA
#if defined(_GLFW_WIN32)
#include "win32_platform.h"
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_WIN32
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_WGL
#else
#define GLFW_WIN32_WINDOW_STATE
#define GLFW_WIN32_MONITOR_STATE
@ -56,8 +52,6 @@
#if defined(_GLFW_COCOA)
#include "cocoa_platform.h"
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_COCOA
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_NSGL
#else
#define GLFW_COCOA_WINDOW_STATE
#define GLFW_COCOA_MONITOR_STATE
@ -69,7 +63,6 @@
#if defined(_GLFW_WAYLAND)
#include "wl_platform.h"
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_WAYLAND
#else
#define GLFW_WAYLAND_WINDOW_STATE
#define GLFW_WAYLAND_MONITOR_STATE
@ -79,8 +72,6 @@
#if defined(_GLFW_X11)
#include "x11_platform.h"
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_X11
#define GLFW_EXPOSE_NATIVE_GLX
#else
#define GLFW_X11_WINDOW_STATE
#define GLFW_X11_MONITOR_STATE

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 POSIX - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 POSIX - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2021 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 POSIX - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 POSIX - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2022 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#define _GNU_SOURCE

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 POSIX - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 POSIX - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2022 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include <poll.h>

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 POSIX - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 POSIX - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 POSIX - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 POSIX - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 POSIX - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 POSIX - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 POSIX - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 POSIX - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2018 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -142,8 +144,6 @@ GLFWbool _glfwInitVulkan(int mode)
_glfw.vk.KHR_xcb_surface = GLFW_TRUE;
else if (strcmp(ep[i].extensionName, "VK_KHR_wayland_surface") == 0)
_glfw.vk.KHR_wayland_surface = GLFW_TRUE;
else if (strcmp(ep[i].extensionName, "VK_EXT_headless_surface") == 0)
_glfw.vk.EXT_headless_surface = GLFW_TRUE;
}
_glfw_free(ep);
@ -274,11 +274,11 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport(VkInstance instance,
VkPhysicalDevice device,
uint32_t queuefamily)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_FALSE);
assert(instance != VK_NULL_HANDLE);
assert(device != VK_NULL_HANDLE);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(GLFW_FALSE);
if (!_glfwInitVulkan(_GLFW_REQUIRE_LOADER))
return GLFW_FALSE;
@ -299,16 +299,15 @@ GLFWAPI VkResult glfwCreateWindowSurface(VkInstance instance,
const VkAllocationCallbacks* allocator,
VkSurfaceKHR* surface)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(instance != VK_NULL_HANDLE);
assert(window != NULL);
assert(surface != NULL);
*surface = VK_NULL_HANDLE;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(VK_ERROR_INITIALIZATION_FAILED);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
assert(instance != VK_NULL_HANDLE);
if (!_glfwInitVulkan(_GLFW_REQUIRE_LOADER))
return VK_ERROR_INITIALIZATION_FAILED;

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 WGL - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 WGL - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -115,23 +117,6 @@ static int choosePixelFormatWGL(_GLFWwindow* window,
if (_glfw.wgl.EXT_colorspace)
ADD_ATTRIB(WGL_COLORSPACE_EXT);
}
// NOTE: In a Parallels VM WGL_ARB_pixel_format returns fewer pixel formats than
// DescribePixelFormat, violating the guarantees of the extension spec
// HACK: Iterate through the minimum of both counts
const int attrib = WGL_NUMBER_PIXEL_FORMATS_ARB;
int extensionCount;
if (!wglGetPixelFormatAttribivARB(window->context.wgl.dc,
1, 0, 1, &attrib, &extensionCount))
{
_glfwInputErrorWin32(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR,
"WGL: Failed to retrieve pixel format attribute");
return 0;
}
nativeCount = _glfw_min(nativeCount, extensionCount);
}
usableConfigs = _glfw_calloc(nativeCount, sizeof(_GLFWfbconfig));
@ -775,6 +760,7 @@ GLFWbool _glfwCreateContextWGL(_GLFWwindow* window,
GLFWAPI HGLRC glfwGetWGLContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32)
@ -784,9 +770,6 @@ GLFWAPI HGLRC glfwGetWGLContext(GLFWwindow* handle)
return NULL;
}
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (window->context.source != GLFW_NATIVE_CONTEXT_API)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT, NULL);

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -430,6 +432,7 @@ static GLFWbool createHelperWindow(void)
return GLFW_TRUE;
}
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
////// GLFW internal API //////
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
@ -602,79 +605,79 @@ GLFWbool _glfwConnectWin32(int platformID, _GLFWplatform* platform)
{
const _GLFWplatform win32 =
{
.platformID = GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32,
.init = _glfwInitWin32,
.terminate = _glfwTerminateWin32,
.getCursorPos = _glfwGetCursorPosWin32,
.setCursorPos = _glfwSetCursorPosWin32,
.setCursorMode = _glfwSetCursorModeWin32,
.setRawMouseMotion = _glfwSetRawMouseMotionWin32,
.rawMouseMotionSupported = _glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedWin32,
.createCursor = _glfwCreateCursorWin32,
.createStandardCursor = _glfwCreateStandardCursorWin32,
.destroyCursor = _glfwDestroyCursorWin32,
.setCursor = _glfwSetCursorWin32,
.getScancodeName = _glfwGetScancodeNameWin32,
.getKeyScancode = _glfwGetKeyScancodeWin32,
.setClipboardString = _glfwSetClipboardStringWin32,
.getClipboardString = _glfwGetClipboardStringWin32,
.initJoysticks = _glfwInitJoysticksWin32,
.terminateJoysticks = _glfwTerminateJoysticksWin32,
.pollJoystick = _glfwPollJoystickWin32,
.getMappingName = _glfwGetMappingNameWin32,
.updateGamepadGUID = _glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDWin32,
.freeMonitor = _glfwFreeMonitorWin32,
.getMonitorPos = _glfwGetMonitorPosWin32,
.getMonitorContentScale = _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleWin32,
.getMonitorWorkarea = _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaWin32,
.getVideoModes = _glfwGetVideoModesWin32,
.getVideoMode = _glfwGetVideoModeWin32,
.getGammaRamp = _glfwGetGammaRampWin32,
.setGammaRamp = _glfwSetGammaRampWin32,
.createWindow = _glfwCreateWindowWin32,
.destroyWindow = _glfwDestroyWindowWin32,
.setWindowTitle = _glfwSetWindowTitleWin32,
.setWindowIcon = _glfwSetWindowIconWin32,
.setWindowProgressIndicator = _glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorWin32,
.getWindowPos = _glfwGetWindowPosWin32,
.setWindowPos = _glfwSetWindowPosWin32,
.getWindowSize = _glfwGetWindowSizeWin32,
.setWindowSize = _glfwSetWindowSizeWin32,
.setWindowSizeLimits = _glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsWin32,
.setWindowAspectRatio = _glfwSetWindowAspectRatioWin32,
.getFramebufferSize = _glfwGetFramebufferSizeWin32,
.getWindowFrameSize = _glfwGetWindowFrameSizeWin32,
.getWindowContentScale = _glfwGetWindowContentScaleWin32,
.iconifyWindow = _glfwIconifyWindowWin32,
.restoreWindow = _glfwRestoreWindowWin32,
.maximizeWindow = _glfwMaximizeWindowWin32,
.showWindow = _glfwShowWindowWin32,
.hideWindow = _glfwHideWindowWin32,
.requestWindowAttention = _glfwRequestWindowAttentionWin32,
.focusWindow = _glfwFocusWindowWin32,
.setWindowMonitor = _glfwSetWindowMonitorWin32,
.windowFocused = _glfwWindowFocusedWin32,
.windowIconified = _glfwWindowIconifiedWin32,
.windowVisible = _glfwWindowVisibleWin32,
.windowMaximized = _glfwWindowMaximizedWin32,
.windowHovered = _glfwWindowHoveredWin32,
.framebufferTransparent = _glfwFramebufferTransparentWin32,
.getWindowOpacity = _glfwGetWindowOpacityWin32,
.setWindowResizable = _glfwSetWindowResizableWin32,
.setWindowDecorated = _glfwSetWindowDecoratedWin32,
.setWindowFloating = _glfwSetWindowFloatingWin32,
.setWindowOpacity = _glfwSetWindowOpacityWin32,
.setWindowMousePassthrough = _glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughWin32,
.pollEvents = _glfwPollEventsWin32,
.waitEvents = _glfwWaitEventsWin32,
.waitEventsTimeout = _glfwWaitEventsTimeoutWin32,
.postEmptyEvent = _glfwPostEmptyEventWin32,
.getEGLPlatform = _glfwGetEGLPlatformWin32,
.getEGLNativeDisplay = _glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayWin32,
.getEGLNativeWindow = _glfwGetEGLNativeWindowWin32,
.getRequiredInstanceExtensions = _glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsWin32,
.getPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport = _glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportWin32,
.createWindowSurface = _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceWin32
GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32,
_glfwInitWin32,
_glfwTerminateWin32,
_glfwGetCursorPosWin32,
_glfwSetCursorPosWin32,
_glfwSetCursorModeWin32,
_glfwSetRawMouseMotionWin32,
_glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedWin32,
_glfwCreateCursorWin32,
_glfwCreateStandardCursorWin32,
_glfwDestroyCursorWin32,
_glfwSetCursorWin32,
_glfwGetScancodeNameWin32,
_glfwGetKeyScancodeWin32,
_glfwSetClipboardStringWin32,
_glfwGetClipboardStringWin32,
_glfwInitJoysticksWin32,
_glfwTerminateJoysticksWin32,
_glfwPollJoystickWin32,
_glfwGetMappingNameWin32,
_glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDWin32,
_glfwFreeMonitorWin32,
_glfwGetMonitorPosWin32,
_glfwGetMonitorContentScaleWin32,
_glfwGetMonitorWorkareaWin32,
_glfwGetVideoModesWin32,
_glfwGetVideoModeWin32,
_glfwGetGammaRampWin32,
_glfwSetGammaRampWin32,
_glfwCreateWindowWin32,
_glfwDestroyWindowWin32,
_glfwSetWindowTitleWin32,
_glfwSetWindowIconWin32,
_glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorWin32,
_glfwGetWindowPosWin32,
_glfwSetWindowPosWin32,
_glfwGetWindowSizeWin32,
_glfwSetWindowSizeWin32,
_glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsWin32,
_glfwSetWindowAspectRatioWin32,
_glfwGetFramebufferSizeWin32,
_glfwGetWindowFrameSizeWin32,
_glfwGetWindowContentScaleWin32,
_glfwIconifyWindowWin32,
_glfwRestoreWindowWin32,
_glfwMaximizeWindowWin32,
_glfwShowWindowWin32,
_glfwHideWindowWin32,
_glfwRequestWindowAttentionWin32,
_glfwFocusWindowWin32,
_glfwSetWindowMonitorWin32,
_glfwWindowFocusedWin32,
_glfwWindowIconifiedWin32,
_glfwWindowVisibleWin32,
_glfwWindowMaximizedWin32,
_glfwWindowHoveredWin32,
_glfwFramebufferTransparentWin32,
_glfwGetWindowOpacityWin32,
_glfwSetWindowResizableWin32,
_glfwSetWindowDecoratedWin32,
_glfwSetWindowFloatingWin32,
_glfwSetWindowOpacityWin32,
_glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughWin32,
_glfwPollEventsWin32,
_glfwWaitEventsWin32,
_glfwWaitEventsTimeoutWin32,
_glfwPostEmptyEventWin32,
_glfwGetEGLPlatformWin32,
_glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayWin32,
_glfwGetEGLNativeWindowWin32,
_glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsWin32,
_glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportWin32,
_glfwCreateWindowSurfaceWin32,
};
*platform = win32;
@ -705,9 +708,6 @@ int _glfwInitWin32(void)
void _glfwTerminateWin32(void)
{
if (_glfw.win32.blankCursor)
DestroyIcon((HICON) _glfw.win32.blankCursor);
if (_glfw.win32.deviceNotificationHandle)
UnregisterDeviceNotification(_glfw.win32.deviceNotificationHandle);

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2021 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -33,7 +35,6 @@
#include <string.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <wchar.h>
#include <assert.h>
// Callback for EnumDisplayMonitors in createMonitor
@ -471,17 +472,13 @@ GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* count)
return result;
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
void _glfwGetVideoModeWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
{
DEVMODEW dm;
ZeroMemory(&dm, sizeof(dm));
dm.dmSize = sizeof(dm);
if (!EnumDisplaySettingsW(monitor->win32.adapterName, ENUM_CURRENT_SETTINGS, &dm))
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR, "Win32: Failed to query display settings");
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
EnumDisplaySettingsW(monitor->win32.adapterName, ENUM_CURRENT_SETTINGS, &dm);
mode->width = dm.dmPelsWidth;
mode->height = dm.dmPelsHeight;
@ -490,8 +487,6 @@ GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
&mode->redBits,
&mode->greenBits,
&mode->blueBits);
return GLFW_TRUE;
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
@ -540,33 +535,15 @@ void _glfwSetGammaRampWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetWin32Adapter(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE, "Win32: Platform not initialized");
return NULL;
}
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
return monitor->win32.publicAdapterName;
}
GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetWin32Monitor(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE, "Win32: Platform not initialized");
return NULL;
}
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
return monitor->win32.publicDisplayName;
}

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -497,7 +497,6 @@ typedef struct _GLFWwindowWin32
GLFWbool transparent;
GLFWbool scaleToMonitor;
GLFWbool keymenu;
GLFWbool showDefault;
// Cached size used to filter out duplicate events
int width, height;
@ -534,8 +533,6 @@ typedef struct _GLFWlibraryWin32
RAWINPUT* rawInput;
int rawInputSize;
UINT mouseTrailSize;
// The cursor handle to use to hide the cursor (NULL or a transparent cursor)
HCURSOR blankCursor;
struct {
HINSTANCE instance;
@ -685,7 +682,7 @@ void _glfwGetMonitorPosWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos);
void _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, float* xscale, float* yscale);
void _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos, int* width, int* height);
GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* count);
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode);
void _glfwGetVideoModeWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode);
GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp);
void _glfwSetGammaRampWin32(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp);

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -25,11 +25,6 @@
//
//========================================================================
// This is a workaround for the fact that glfw3.h needs to export APIENTRY (for
// example to allow applications to correctly declare a GL_KHR_debug callback)
// but windows.h assumes no one will define APIENTRY before it does
#undef APIENTRY
#include <windows.h>
#define GLFW_WIN32_TLS_STATE _GLFWtlsWin32 win32;

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -25,11 +25,6 @@
//
//========================================================================
// This is a workaround for the fact that glfw3.h needs to export APIENTRY (for
// example to allow applications to correctly declare a GL_KHR_debug callback)
// but windows.h assumes no one will define APIENTRY before it does
#undef APIENTRY
#include <windows.h>
#define GLFW_WIN32_LIBRARY_TIMER_STATE _GLFWtimerWin32 win32;

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Win32 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Win32 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -32,7 +34,6 @@
#include <limits.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <windowsx.h>
#include <shellapi.h>
@ -233,12 +234,7 @@ static void updateCursorImage(_GLFWwindow* window)
SetCursor(LoadCursorW(NULL, IDC_ARROW));
}
else
{
// NOTE: Via Remote Desktop, setting the cursor to NULL does not hide it.
// HACK: When running locally, it is set to NULL, but when connected via Remote
// Desktop, this is a transparent cursor.
SetCursor(_glfw.win32.blankCursor);
}
SetCursor(NULL);
}
// Sets the cursor clip rect to the window content area
@ -930,28 +926,8 @@ static LRESULT CALLBACK windowProc(HWND hWnd, UINT uMsg, WPARAM wParam, LPARAM l
data = _glfw.win32.rawInput;
if (data->data.mouse.usFlags & MOUSE_MOVE_ABSOLUTE)
{
POINT pos = {0};
int width, height;
if (data->data.mouse.usFlags & MOUSE_VIRTUAL_DESKTOP)
{
pos.x += GetSystemMetrics(SM_XVIRTUALSCREEN);
pos.y += GetSystemMetrics(SM_YVIRTUALSCREEN);
width = GetSystemMetrics(SM_CXVIRTUALSCREEN);
height = GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYVIRTUALSCREEN);
}
else
{
width = GetSystemMetrics(SM_CXSCREEN);
height = GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYSCREEN);
}
pos.x += (int) ((data->data.mouse.lLastX / 65535.f) * width);
pos.y += (int) ((data->data.mouse.lLastY / 65535.f) * height);
ScreenToClient(window->win32.handle, &pos);
dx = pos.x - window->win32.lastCursorPosX;
dy = pos.y - window->win32.lastCursorPosY;
dx = data->data.mouse.lLastX - window->win32.lastCursorPosX;
dy = data->data.mouse.lLastY - window->win32.lastCursorPosY;
}
else
{
@ -1327,34 +1303,6 @@ static int createNativeWindow(_GLFWwindow* window,
}
}
if (GetSystemMetrics(SM_REMOTESESSION))
{
// NOTE: On Remote Desktop, setting the cursor to NULL does not hide it
// HACK: Create a transparent cursor and always set that instead of NULL
// When not on Remote Desktop, this handle is NULL and normal hiding is used
if (!_glfw.win32.blankCursor)
{
const int cursorWidth = GetSystemMetrics(SM_CXCURSOR);
const int cursorHeight = GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYCURSOR);
unsigned char* cursorPixels = _glfw_calloc(cursorWidth * cursorHeight, 4);
if (!cursorPixels)
return GLFW_FALSE;
// NOTE: Windows checks whether the image is fully transparent and if so
// just ignores the alpha channel and makes the whole cursor opaque
// HACK: Make one pixel slightly less transparent
cursorPixels[3] = 1;
const GLFWimage cursorImage = { cursorWidth, cursorHeight, cursorPixels };
_glfw.win32.blankCursor = createIcon(&cursorImage, 0, 0, FALSE);
_glfw_free(cursorPixels);
if (!_glfw.win32.blankCursor)
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
}
if (window->monitor)
{
MONITORINFO mi = { sizeof(mi) };
@ -1435,7 +1383,6 @@ static int createNativeWindow(_GLFWwindow* window,
window->win32.scaleToMonitor = wndconfig->scaleToMonitor;
window->win32.keymenu = wndconfig->win32.keymenu;
window->win32.showDefault = wndconfig->win32.showDefault;
if (!window->monitor)
{
@ -1868,23 +1815,7 @@ void _glfwMaximizeWindowWin32(_GLFWwindow* window)
void _glfwShowWindowWin32(_GLFWwindow* window)
{
int showCommand = SW_SHOWNA;
if (window->win32.showDefault)
{
// NOTE: GLFW windows currently do not seem to match the Windows 10 definition of
// a main window, so even SW_SHOWDEFAULT does nothing
// This definition is undocumented and can change (source: Raymond Chen)
// HACK: Apply the STARTUPINFO show command manually if available
STARTUPINFOW si = { sizeof(si) };
GetStartupInfoW(&si);
if (si.dwFlags & STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW)
showCommand = si.wShowWindow;
window->win32.showDefault = GLFW_FALSE;
}
ShowWindow(window->win32.handle, showCommand);
ShowWindow(window->win32.handle, SW_SHOWNA);
}
void _glfwHideWindowWin32(_GLFWwindow* window)
@ -2239,7 +2170,6 @@ void _glfwPollEventsWin32(void)
// NOTE: Re-center the cursor only if it has moved since the last call,
// to avoid breaking glfwWaitEvents with WM_MOUSEMOVE
// The re-center is required in order to prevent the mouse cursor stopping at the edges of the screen.
if (window->win32.lastCursorPosX != width / 2 ||
window->win32.lastCursorPosY != height / 2)
{
@ -2335,17 +2265,14 @@ void _glfwSetCursorModeWin32(_GLFWwindow* window, int mode)
const char* _glfwGetScancodeNameWin32(int scancode)
{
if (scancode < 0 || scancode > (KF_EXTENDED | 0xff))
if (scancode < 0 || scancode > (KF_EXTENDED | 0xff) ||
_glfw.win32.keycodes[scancode] == GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_VALUE, "Invalid scancode %i", scancode);
return NULL;
}
const int key = _glfw.win32.keycodes[scancode];
if (key == GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN)
return NULL;
return _glfw.win32.keynames[key];
return _glfw.win32.keynames[_glfw.win32.keycodes[scancode]];
}
int _glfwGetKeyScancodeWin32(int key)
@ -2432,7 +2359,7 @@ void _glfwSetCursorWin32(_GLFWwindow* window, _GLFWcursor* cursor)
void _glfwSetClipboardStringWin32(const char* string)
{
int characterCount, tries = 0;
int characterCount;
HANDLE object;
WCHAR* buffer;
@ -2460,21 +2387,13 @@ void _glfwSetClipboardStringWin32(const char* string)
MultiByteToWideChar(CP_UTF8, 0, string, -1, buffer, characterCount);
GlobalUnlock(object);
// NOTE: Retry clipboard opening a few times as some other application may have it
// open and also the Windows Clipboard History reads it after each update
while (!OpenClipboard(_glfw.win32.helperWindowHandle))
{
Sleep(1);
tries++;
if (tries == 3)
if (!OpenClipboard(_glfw.win32.helperWindowHandle))
{
_glfwInputErrorWin32(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR,
"Win32: Failed to open clipboard");
GlobalFree(object);
return;
}
}
EmptyClipboard();
SetClipboardData(CF_UNICODETEXT, object);
@ -2485,22 +2404,13 @@ const char* _glfwGetClipboardStringWin32(void)
{
HANDLE object;
WCHAR* buffer;
int tries = 0;
// NOTE: Retry clipboard opening a few times as some other application may have it
// open and also the Windows Clipboard History reads it after each update
while (!OpenClipboard(_glfw.win32.helperWindowHandle))
{
Sleep(1);
tries++;
if (tries == 3)
if (!OpenClipboard(_glfw.win32.helperWindowHandle))
{
_glfwInputErrorWin32(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR,
"Win32: Failed to open clipboard");
return NULL;
}
}
object = GetClipboardData(CF_UNICODETEXT);
if (!object)
@ -2643,6 +2553,7 @@ VkResult _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceWin32(VkInstance instance,
GLFWAPI HWND glfwGetWin32Window(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_WIN32)
@ -2652,9 +2563,6 @@ GLFWAPI HWND glfwGetWin32Window(GLFWwindow* handle)
return NULL;
}
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
return window->win32.handle;
}

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -25,6 +25,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// Please use C89 style variable declarations in this file because VS 2010
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -242,7 +244,6 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindow* glfwCreateWindow(int width, int height,
window->maxheight = GLFW_DONT_CARE;
window->numer = GLFW_DONT_CARE;
window->denom = GLFW_DONT_CARE;
window->title = _glfw_strdup(title);
if (!_glfw.platform.createWindow(window, &wndconfig, &ctxconfig, &fbconfig))
{
@ -275,7 +276,6 @@ void glfwDefaultWindowHints(void)
_glfw.hints.window.focusOnShow = GLFW_TRUE;
_glfw.hints.window.xpos = GLFW_ANY_POSITION;
_glfw.hints.window.ypos = GLFW_ANY_POSITION;
_glfw.hints.window.scaleFramebuffer = GLFW_TRUE;
// The default is 24 bits of color, 24 bits of depth and 8 bits of stencil,
// double buffered
@ -290,6 +290,9 @@ void glfwDefaultWindowHints(void)
// The default is to select the highest available refresh rate
_glfw.hints.refreshRate = GLFW_DONT_CARE;
// The default is to use full Retina resolution framebuffers
_glfw.hints.window.ns.retina = GLFW_TRUE;
}
GLFWAPI void glfwWindowHint(int hint, int value)
@ -373,22 +376,18 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwWindowHint(int hint, int value)
case GLFW_POSITION_Y:
_glfw.hints.window.ypos = value;
return;
case GLFW_COCOA_RETINA_FRAMEBUFFER:
_glfw.hints.window.ns.retina = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
return;
case GLFW_WIN32_KEYBOARD_MENU:
_glfw.hints.window.win32.keymenu = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
return;
case GLFW_WIN32_SHOWDEFAULT:
_glfw.hints.window.win32.showDefault = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
return;
case GLFW_COCOA_GRAPHICS_SWITCHING:
_glfw.hints.context.nsgl.offline = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
return;
case GLFW_SCALE_TO_MONITOR:
_glfw.hints.window.scaleToMonitor = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
return;
case GLFW_SCALE_FRAMEBUFFER:
case GLFW_COCOA_RETINA_FRAMEBUFFER:
_glfw.hints.window.scaleFramebuffer = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
return;
case GLFW_CENTER_CURSOR:
_glfw.hints.window.centerCursor = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
return;
@ -467,10 +466,10 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwWindowHintString(int hint, const char* value)
GLFWAPI void glfwDestroyWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
// Allow closing of NULL (to match the behavior of free)
if (window == NULL)
return;
@ -495,69 +494,49 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwDestroyWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
*prev = window->next;
}
_glfw_free(window->title);
_glfw_free(window);
}
GLFWAPI int glfwWindowShouldClose(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(0);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(0);
return window->shouldClose;
}
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowShouldClose(GLFWwindow* handle, int value)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
window->shouldClose = value;
}
GLFWAPI const char* glfwGetWindowTitle(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
return window->title;
}
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowTitle(GLFWwindow* handle, const char* title)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
assert(title != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
char* prev = window->title;
window->title = _glfw_strdup(title);
_glfw.platform.setWindowTitle(window, title);
_glfw_free(prev);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowIcon(GLFWwindow* handle,
int count, const GLFWimage* images)
{
int i;
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
assert(count >= 0);
assert(count == 0 || images != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (count < 0)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_VALUE, "Invalid image count for window icon");
@ -606,26 +585,25 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowProgressIndicator(GLFWwindow* handle, int progressStat
GLFWAPI void glfwGetWindowPos(GLFWwindow* handle, int* xpos, int* ypos)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (xpos)
*xpos = 0;
if (ypos)
*ypos = 0;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_glfw.platform.getWindowPos(window, xpos, ypos);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowPos(GLFWwindow* handle, int xpos, int ypos)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
if (window->monitor)
return;
@ -634,29 +612,27 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowPos(GLFWwindow* handle, int xpos, int ypos)
GLFWAPI void glfwGetWindowSize(GLFWwindow* handle, int* width, int* height)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (width)
*width = 0;
if (height)
*height = 0;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_glfw.platform.getWindowSize(window, width, height);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowSize(GLFWwindow* handle, int width, int height)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
assert(width >= 0);
assert(height >= 0);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
window->videoMode.width = width;
window->videoMode.height = height;
@ -667,11 +643,11 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowSizeLimits(GLFWwindow* handle,
int minwidth, int minheight,
int maxwidth, int maxheight)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
if (minwidth != GLFW_DONT_CARE && minheight != GLFW_DONT_CARE)
{
if (minwidth < 0 || minheight < 0)
@ -710,14 +686,13 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowSizeLimits(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowAspectRatio(GLFWwindow* handle, int numer, int denom)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
assert(numer != 0);
assert(denom != 0);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (numer != GLFW_DONT_CARE && denom != GLFW_DONT_CARE)
{
if (numer <= 0 || denom <= 0)
@ -740,16 +715,15 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowAspectRatio(GLFWwindow* handle, int numer, int denom)
GLFWAPI void glfwGetFramebufferSize(GLFWwindow* handle, int* width, int* height)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (width)
*width = 0;
if (height)
*height = 0;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_glfw.platform.getFramebufferSize(window, width, height);
}
@ -757,6 +731,9 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetWindowFrameSize(GLFWwindow* handle,
int* left, int* top,
int* right, int* bottom)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (left)
*left = 0;
if (top)
@ -767,50 +744,43 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwGetWindowFrameSize(GLFWwindow* handle,
*bottom = 0;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_glfw.platform.getWindowFrameSize(window, left, top, right, bottom);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwGetWindowContentScale(GLFWwindow* handle,
float* xscale, float* yscale)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (xscale)
*xscale = 0.f;
if (yscale)
*yscale = 0.f;
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_glfw.platform.getWindowContentScale(window, xscale, yscale);
}
GLFWAPI float glfwGetWindowOpacity(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(0.f);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(1.f);
return _glfw.platform.getWindowOpacity(window);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowOpacity(GLFWwindow* handle, float opacity)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
assert(opacity == opacity);
assert(opacity >= 0.f);
assert(opacity <= 1.f);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
if (opacity != opacity || opacity < 0.f || opacity > 1.f)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_VALUE, "Invalid window opacity %f", opacity);
@ -822,31 +792,29 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowOpacity(GLFWwindow* handle, float opacity)
GLFWAPI void glfwIconifyWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_glfw.platform.iconifyWindow(window);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwRestoreWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_glfw.platform.restoreWindow(window);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwMaximizeWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
if (window->monitor)
return;
@ -855,11 +823,11 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwMaximizeWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
GLFWAPI void glfwShowWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
if (window->monitor)
return;
@ -871,21 +839,21 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwShowWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
GLFWAPI void glfwRequestWindowAttention(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_glfw.platform.requestWindowAttention(window);
}
GLFWAPI void glfwHideWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
if (window->monitor)
return;
@ -894,21 +862,21 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwHideWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
GLFWAPI void glfwFocusWindow(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_glfw.platform.focusWindow(window);
}
GLFWAPI int glfwGetWindowAttrib(GLFWwindow* handle, int attrib)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(0);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(0);
switch (attrib)
{
case GLFW_FOCUSED:
@ -967,11 +935,11 @@ GLFWAPI int glfwGetWindowAttrib(GLFWwindow* handle, int attrib)
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowAttrib(GLFWwindow* handle, int attrib, int value)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
value = value ? GLFW_TRUE : GLFW_FALSE;
switch (attrib)
@ -1013,11 +981,10 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowAttrib(GLFWwindow* handle, int attrib, int value)
GLFWAPI GLFWmonitor* glfwGetWindowMonitor(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
return (GLFWmonitor*) window->monitor;
}
@ -1027,15 +994,14 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowMonitor(GLFWwindow* wh,
int width, int height,
int refreshRate)
{
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) wh;
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) mh;
assert(window != NULL);
assert(width >= 0);
assert(height >= 0);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) wh;
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) mh;
assert(window != NULL);
if (width <= 0 || height <= 0)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_INVALID_VALUE,
@ -1063,32 +1029,29 @@ GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowMonitor(GLFWwindow* wh,
GLFWAPI void glfwSetWindowUserPointer(GLFWwindow* handle, void* pointer)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT();
window->userPointer = pointer;
}
GLFWAPI void* glfwGetWindowUserPointer(GLFWwindow* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
return window->userPointer;
}
GLFWAPI GLFWwindowposfun glfwSetWindowPosCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWwindowposfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWwindowposfun, window->callbacks.pos, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1096,11 +1059,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindowposfun glfwSetWindowPosCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWwindowsizefun glfwSetWindowSizeCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWwindowsizefun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWwindowsizefun, window->callbacks.size, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1108,11 +1070,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindowsizefun glfwSetWindowSizeCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWwindowclosefun glfwSetWindowCloseCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWwindowclosefun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWwindowclosefun, window->callbacks.close, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1120,11 +1081,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindowclosefun glfwSetWindowCloseCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWwindowrefreshfun glfwSetWindowRefreshCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWwindowrefreshfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWwindowrefreshfun, window->callbacks.refresh, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1132,11 +1092,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindowrefreshfun glfwSetWindowRefreshCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWwindowfocusfun glfwSetWindowFocusCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWwindowfocusfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWwindowfocusfun, window->callbacks.focus, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1144,11 +1103,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindowfocusfun glfwSetWindowFocusCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWwindowiconifyfun glfwSetWindowIconifyCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWwindowiconifyfun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWwindowiconifyfun, window->callbacks.iconify, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1156,11 +1114,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindowiconifyfun glfwSetWindowIconifyCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWwindowmaximizefun glfwSetWindowMaximizeCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWwindowmaximizefun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWwindowmaximizefun, window->callbacks.maximize, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1168,11 +1125,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWwindowmaximizefun glfwSetWindowMaximizeCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWAPI GLFWframebuffersizefun glfwSetFramebufferSizeCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWframebuffersizefun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWframebuffersizefun, window->callbacks.fbsize, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}
@ -1180,11 +1136,10 @@ GLFWAPI GLFWframebuffersizefun glfwSetFramebufferSizeCallback(GLFWwindow* handle
GLFWAPI GLFWwindowcontentscalefun glfwSetWindowContentScaleCallback(GLFWwindow* handle,
GLFWwindowcontentscalefun cbfun)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFWwindow* window = (_GLFWwindow*) handle;
assert(window != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
_GLFW_SWAP(GLFWwindowcontentscalefun, window->callbacks.scale, cbfun);
return cbfun;
}

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Wayland - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Wayland - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2014 Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -41,14 +43,12 @@
#include <assert.h>
#include "wayland-client-protocol.h"
#include "xdg-shell-client-protocol.h"
#include "xdg-decoration-unstable-v1-client-protocol.h"
#include "viewporter-client-protocol.h"
#include "relative-pointer-unstable-v1-client-protocol.h"
#include "pointer-constraints-unstable-v1-client-protocol.h"
#include "fractional-scale-v1-client-protocol.h"
#include "xdg-activation-v1-client-protocol.h"
#include "idle-inhibit-unstable-v1-client-protocol.h"
#include "wayland-xdg-shell-client-protocol.h"
#include "wayland-xdg-decoration-client-protocol.h"
#include "wayland-viewporter-client-protocol.h"
#include "wayland-relative-pointer-unstable-v1-client-protocol.h"
#include "wayland-pointer-constraints-unstable-v1-client-protocol.h"
#include "wayland-idle-inhibit-unstable-v1-client-protocol.h"
// NOTE: Versions of wayland-scanner prior to 1.17.91 named every global array of
// wl_interface pointers 'types', making it impossible to combine several unmodified
@ -60,35 +60,27 @@
#undef types
#define types _glfw_xdg_shell_types
#include "xdg-shell-client-protocol-code.h"
#include "wayland-xdg-shell-client-protocol-code.h"
#undef types
#define types _glfw_xdg_decoration_types
#include "xdg-decoration-unstable-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#include "wayland-xdg-decoration-client-protocol-code.h"
#undef types
#define types _glfw_viewporter_types
#include "viewporter-client-protocol-code.h"
#include "wayland-viewporter-client-protocol-code.h"
#undef types
#define types _glfw_relative_pointer_types
#include "relative-pointer-unstable-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#include "wayland-relative-pointer-unstable-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#undef types
#define types _glfw_pointer_constraints_types
#include "pointer-constraints-unstable-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#undef types
#define types _glfw_fractional_scale_types
#include "fractional-scale-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#undef types
#define types _glfw_xdg_activation_types
#include "xdg-activation-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#include "wayland-pointer-constraints-unstable-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#undef types
#define types _glfw_idle_inhibit_types
#include "idle-inhibit-unstable-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#include "wayland-idle-inhibit-unstable-v1-client-protocol-code.h"
#undef types
static void wmBaseHandlePing(void* userData,
@ -137,13 +129,6 @@ static void registryHandleGlobal(void* userData,
wl_registry_bind(registry, name, &wl_seat_interface,
_glfw_min(4, version));
_glfwAddSeatListenerWayland(_glfw.wl.seat);
if (wl_seat_get_version(_glfw.wl.seat) >=
WL_KEYBOARD_REPEAT_INFO_SINCE_VERSION)
{
_glfw.wl.keyRepeatTimerfd =
timerfd_create(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, TFD_CLOEXEC | TFD_NONBLOCK);
}
}
}
else if (strcmp(interface, "wl_data_device_manager") == 0)
@ -194,20 +179,6 @@ static void registryHandleGlobal(void* userData,
&zwp_idle_inhibit_manager_v1_interface,
1);
}
else if (strcmp(interface, "xdg_activation_v1") == 0)
{
_glfw.wl.activationManager =
wl_registry_bind(registry, name,
&xdg_activation_v1_interface,
1);
}
else if (strcmp(interface, "wp_fractional_scale_manager_v1") == 0)
{
_glfw.wl.fractionalScaleManager =
wl_registry_bind(registry, name,
&wp_fractional_scale_manager_v1_interface,
1);
}
}
static void registryHandleGlobalRemove(void* userData,
@ -436,87 +407,87 @@ GLFWbool _glfwConnectWayland(int platformID, _GLFWplatform* platform)
{
const _GLFWplatform wayland =
{
.platformID = GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND,
.init = _glfwInitWayland,
.terminate = _glfwTerminateWayland,
.getCursorPos = _glfwGetCursorPosWayland,
.setCursorPos = _glfwSetCursorPosWayland,
.setCursorMode = _glfwSetCursorModeWayland,
.setRawMouseMotion = _glfwSetRawMouseMotionWayland,
.rawMouseMotionSupported = _glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedWayland,
.createCursor = _glfwCreateCursorWayland,
.createStandardCursor = _glfwCreateStandardCursorWayland,
.destroyCursor = _glfwDestroyCursorWayland,
.setCursor = _glfwSetCursorWayland,
.getScancodeName = _glfwGetScancodeNameWayland,
.getKeyScancode = _glfwGetKeyScancodeWayland,
.setClipboardString = _glfwSetClipboardStringWayland,
.getClipboardString = _glfwGetClipboardStringWayland,
GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND,
_glfwInitWayland,
_glfwTerminateWayland,
_glfwGetCursorPosWayland,
_glfwSetCursorPosWayland,
_glfwSetCursorModeWayland,
_glfwSetRawMouseMotionWayland,
_glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedWayland,
_glfwCreateCursorWayland,
_glfwCreateStandardCursorWayland,
_glfwDestroyCursorWayland,
_glfwSetCursorWayland,
_glfwGetScancodeNameWayland,
_glfwGetKeyScancodeWayland,
_glfwSetClipboardStringWayland,
_glfwGetClipboardStringWayland,
#if defined(GLFW_BUILD_LINUX_JOYSTICK)
.initJoysticks = _glfwInitJoysticksLinux,
.terminateJoysticks = _glfwTerminateJoysticksLinux,
.pollJoystick = _glfwPollJoystickLinux,
.getMappingName = _glfwGetMappingNameLinux,
.updateGamepadGUID = _glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDLinux,
_glfwInitJoysticksLinux,
_glfwTerminateJoysticksLinux,
_glfwPollJoystickLinux,
_glfwGetMappingNameLinux,
_glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDLinux,
#else
.initJoysticks = _glfwInitJoysticksNull,
.terminateJoysticks = _glfwTerminateJoysticksNull,
.pollJoystick = _glfwPollJoystickNull,
.getMappingName = _glfwGetMappingNameNull,
.updateGamepadGUID = _glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDNull,
_glfwInitJoysticksNull,
_glfwTerminateJoysticksNull,
_glfwPollJoystickNull,
_glfwGetMappingNameNull,
_glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDNull,
#endif
.freeMonitor = _glfwFreeMonitorWayland,
.getMonitorPos = _glfwGetMonitorPosWayland,
.getMonitorContentScale = _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleWayland,
.getMonitorWorkarea = _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaWayland,
.getVideoModes = _glfwGetVideoModesWayland,
.getVideoMode = _glfwGetVideoModeWayland,
.getGammaRamp = _glfwGetGammaRampWayland,
.setGammaRamp = _glfwSetGammaRampWayland,
.createWindow = _glfwCreateWindowWayland,
.destroyWindow = _glfwDestroyWindowWayland,
.setWindowTitle = _glfwSetWindowTitleWayland,
.setWindowIcon = _glfwSetWindowIconWayland,
.setWindowProgressIndicator = _glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorWayland,
.getWindowPos = _glfwGetWindowPosWayland,
.setWindowPos = _glfwSetWindowPosWayland,
.getWindowSize = _glfwGetWindowSizeWayland,
.setWindowSize = _glfwSetWindowSizeWayland,
.setWindowSizeLimits = _glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsWayland,
.setWindowAspectRatio = _glfwSetWindowAspectRatioWayland,
.getFramebufferSize = _glfwGetFramebufferSizeWayland,
.getWindowFrameSize = _glfwGetWindowFrameSizeWayland,
.getWindowContentScale = _glfwGetWindowContentScaleWayland,
.iconifyWindow = _glfwIconifyWindowWayland,
.restoreWindow = _glfwRestoreWindowWayland,
.maximizeWindow = _glfwMaximizeWindowWayland,
.showWindow = _glfwShowWindowWayland,
.hideWindow = _glfwHideWindowWayland,
.requestWindowAttention = _glfwRequestWindowAttentionWayland,
.focusWindow = _glfwFocusWindowWayland,
.setWindowMonitor = _glfwSetWindowMonitorWayland,
.windowFocused = _glfwWindowFocusedWayland,
.windowIconified = _glfwWindowIconifiedWayland,
.windowVisible = _glfwWindowVisibleWayland,
.windowMaximized = _glfwWindowMaximizedWayland,
.windowHovered = _glfwWindowHoveredWayland,
.framebufferTransparent = _glfwFramebufferTransparentWayland,
.getWindowOpacity = _glfwGetWindowOpacityWayland,
.setWindowResizable = _glfwSetWindowResizableWayland,
.setWindowDecorated = _glfwSetWindowDecoratedWayland,
.setWindowFloating = _glfwSetWindowFloatingWayland,
.setWindowOpacity = _glfwSetWindowOpacityWayland,
.setWindowMousePassthrough = _glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughWayland,
.pollEvents = _glfwPollEventsWayland,
.waitEvents = _glfwWaitEventsWayland,
.waitEventsTimeout = _glfwWaitEventsTimeoutWayland,
.postEmptyEvent = _glfwPostEmptyEventWayland,
.getEGLPlatform = _glfwGetEGLPlatformWayland,
.getEGLNativeDisplay = _glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayWayland,
.getEGLNativeWindow = _glfwGetEGLNativeWindowWayland,
.getRequiredInstanceExtensions = _glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsWayland,
.getPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport = _glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportWayland,
.createWindowSurface = _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceWayland
_glfwFreeMonitorWayland,
_glfwGetMonitorPosWayland,
_glfwGetMonitorContentScaleWayland,
_glfwGetMonitorWorkareaWayland,
_glfwGetVideoModesWayland,
_glfwGetVideoModeWayland,
_glfwGetGammaRampWayland,
_glfwSetGammaRampWayland,
_glfwCreateWindowWayland,
_glfwDestroyWindowWayland,
_glfwSetWindowTitleWayland,
_glfwSetWindowIconWayland,
_glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorWayland,
_glfwGetWindowPosWayland,
_glfwSetWindowPosWayland,
_glfwGetWindowSizeWayland,
_glfwSetWindowSizeWayland,
_glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsWayland,
_glfwSetWindowAspectRatioWayland,
_glfwGetFramebufferSizeWayland,
_glfwGetWindowFrameSizeWayland,
_glfwGetWindowContentScaleWayland,
_glfwIconifyWindowWayland,
_glfwRestoreWindowWayland,
_glfwMaximizeWindowWayland,
_glfwShowWindowWayland,
_glfwHideWindowWayland,
_glfwRequestWindowAttentionWayland,
_glfwFocusWindowWayland,
_glfwSetWindowMonitorWayland,
_glfwWindowFocusedWayland,
_glfwWindowIconifiedWayland,
_glfwWindowVisibleWayland,
_glfwWindowMaximizedWayland,
_glfwWindowHoveredWayland,
_glfwFramebufferTransparentWayland,
_glfwGetWindowOpacityWayland,
_glfwSetWindowResizableWayland,
_glfwSetWindowDecoratedWayland,
_glfwSetWindowFloatingWayland,
_glfwSetWindowOpacityWayland,
_glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughWayland,
_glfwPollEventsWayland,
_glfwWaitEventsWayland,
_glfwWaitEventsTimeoutWayland,
_glfwPostEmptyEventWayland,
_glfwGetEGLPlatformWayland,
_glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayWayland,
_glfwGetEGLNativeWindowWayland,
_glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsWayland,
_glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportWayland,
_glfwCreateWindowSurfaceWayland,
};
void* module = _glfwPlatformLoadModule("libwayland-client.so.0");
@ -715,32 +686,6 @@ int _glfwInitWayland(void)
_glfw.wl.xkb.compose_state_get_one_sym = (PFN_xkb_compose_state_get_one_sym)
_glfwPlatformGetModuleSymbol(_glfw.wl.xkb.handle, "xkb_compose_state_get_one_sym");
if (!_glfw.wl.xkb.context_new ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.context_unref ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.keymap_new_from_string ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.keymap_unref ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.keymap_mod_get_index ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.keymap_key_repeats ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.keymap_key_get_syms_by_level ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.state_new ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.state_unref ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.state_key_get_syms ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.state_update_mask ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.state_key_get_layout ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.state_mod_index_is_active ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.compose_table_new_from_locale ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.compose_table_unref ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.compose_state_new ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.compose_state_unref ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.compose_state_feed ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.compose_state_get_status ||
!_glfw.wl.xkb.compose_state_get_one_sym)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR,
"Wayland: Failed to load all entry points from libxkbcommon");
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
if (_glfw.hints.init.wl.libdecorMode == GLFW_WAYLAND_PREFER_LIBDECOR)
_glfw.wl.libdecor.handle = _glfwPlatformLoadModule("libdecor-0.so.0");
@ -863,6 +808,14 @@ int _glfwInitWayland(void)
}
}
#ifdef WL_KEYBOARD_REPEAT_INFO_SINCE_VERSION
if (wl_seat_get_version(_glfw.wl.seat) >= WL_KEYBOARD_REPEAT_INFO_SINCE_VERSION)
{
_glfw.wl.keyRepeatTimerfd =
timerfd_create(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, TFD_CLOEXEC | TFD_NONBLOCK);
}
#endif
if (!_glfw.wl.wmBase)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR,
@ -896,15 +849,10 @@ void _glfwTerminateWayland(void)
_glfwTerminateEGL();
_glfwTerminateOSMesa();
if (_glfw.wl.libdecor.callback)
wl_callback_destroy(_glfw.wl.libdecor.callback);
if (_glfw.wl.libdecor.context)
{
// Allow libdecor to finish receiving all its requested globals
// and ensure the associated sync callback object is destroyed
while (!_glfw.wl.libdecor.ready)
_glfwWaitEventsWayland();
libdecor_unref(_glfw.wl.libdecor.context);
}
if (_glfw.wl.libdecor.handle)
{
@ -983,10 +931,6 @@ void _glfwTerminateWayland(void)
zwp_pointer_constraints_v1_destroy(_glfw.wl.pointerConstraints);
if (_glfw.wl.idleInhibitManager)
zwp_idle_inhibit_manager_v1_destroy(_glfw.wl.idleInhibitManager);
if (_glfw.wl.activationManager)
xdg_activation_v1_destroy(_glfw.wl.activationManager);
if (_glfw.wl.fractionalScaleManager)
wp_fractional_scale_manager_v1_destroy(_glfw.wl.fractionalScaleManager);
if (_glfw.wl.registry)
wl_registry_destroy(_glfw.wl.registry);
if (_glfw.wl.display)

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Wayland - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Wayland - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2014 Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
//
@ -23,6 +23,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -33,7 +35,6 @@
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include "wayland-client-protocol.h"
@ -113,22 +114,24 @@ static void outputHandleScale(void* userData,
{
struct _GLFWmonitor* monitor = userData;
monitor->wl.scale = factor;
monitor->wl.contentScale = factor;
for (_GLFWwindow* window = _glfw.windowListHead; window; window = window->next)
{
for (size_t i = 0; i < window->wl.outputScaleCount; i++)
for (int i = 0; i < window->wl.scaleCount; i++)
{
if (window->wl.outputScales[i].output == monitor->wl.output)
if (window->wl.scales[i].output == monitor->wl.output)
{
window->wl.outputScales[i].factor = monitor->wl.scale;
_glfwUpdateBufferScaleFromOutputsWayland(window);
window->wl.scales[i].factor = monitor->wl.contentScale;
_glfwUpdateContentScaleWayland(window);
break;
}
}
}
}
#ifdef WL_OUTPUT_NAME_SINCE_VERSION
void outputHandleName(void* userData, struct wl_output* wl_output, const char* name)
{
struct _GLFWmonitor* monitor = userData;
@ -142,14 +145,18 @@ void outputHandleDescription(void* userData,
{
}
#endif // WL_OUTPUT_NAME_SINCE_VERSION
static const struct wl_output_listener outputListener =
{
outputHandleGeometry,
outputHandleMode,
outputHandleDone,
outputHandleScale,
#ifdef WL_OUTPUT_NAME_SINCE_VERSION
outputHandleName,
outputHandleDescription,
#endif
};
@ -166,7 +173,11 @@ void _glfwAddOutputWayland(uint32_t name, uint32_t version)
return;
}
#ifdef WL_OUTPUT_NAME_SINCE_VERSION
version = _glfw_min(version, WL_OUTPUT_NAME_SINCE_VERSION);
#else
version = 2;
#endif
struct wl_output* output = wl_registry_bind(_glfw.wl.registry,
name,
@ -177,7 +188,7 @@ void _glfwAddOutputWayland(uint32_t name, uint32_t version)
// The actual name of this output will be set in the geometry handler
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = _glfwAllocMonitor("", 0, 0);
monitor->wl.scale = 1;
monitor->wl.contentScale = 1;
monitor->wl.output = output;
monitor->wl.name = name;
@ -208,9 +219,9 @@ void _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor,
float* xscale, float* yscale)
{
if (xscale)
*xscale = (float) monitor->wl.scale;
*xscale = (float) monitor->wl.contentScale;
if (yscale)
*yscale = (float) monitor->wl.scale;
*yscale = (float) monitor->wl.contentScale;
}
void _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor,
@ -233,10 +244,9 @@ GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* found)
return monitor->modes;
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
void _glfwGetVideoModeWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
{
*mode = monitor->modes[monitor->wl.currentMode];
return GLFW_TRUE;
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
@ -259,17 +269,8 @@ void _glfwSetGammaRampWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
GLFWAPI struct wl_output* glfwGetWaylandMonitor(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_WAYLAND)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE, "Wayland: Platform not initialized");
return NULL;
}
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(NULL);
return monitor->wl.output;
}

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 Wayland - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 Wayland - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2014 Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
//
@ -28,6 +28,8 @@
#include <xkbcommon/xkbcommon.h>
#include <xkbcommon/xkbcommon-compose.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
typedef VkFlags VkWaylandSurfaceCreateFlagsKHR;
typedef struct VkWaylandSurfaceCreateInfoKHR
@ -127,10 +129,6 @@ struct wl_output;
#define xdg_surface_interface _glfw_xdg_surface_interface
#define xdg_toplevel_interface _glfw_xdg_toplevel_interface
#define xdg_wm_base_interface _glfw_xdg_wm_base_interface
#define xdg_activation_v1_interface _glfw_xdg_activation_v1_interface
#define xdg_activation_token_v1_interface _glfw_xdg_activation_token_v1_interface
#define wl_surface_interface _glfw_wl_surface_interface
#define wp_fractional_scale_v1_interface _glfw_wp_fractional_scale_v1_interface
#define GLFW_WAYLAND_WINDOW_STATE _GLFWwindowWayland wl;
#define GLFW_WAYLAND_LIBRARY_WINDOW_STATE _GLFWlibraryWayland wl;
@ -323,12 +321,21 @@ typedef void (* PFN_libdecor_state_free)(struct libdecor_state*);
#define libdecor_state_new _glfw.wl.libdecor.libdecor_state_new_
#define libdecor_state_free _glfw.wl.libdecor.libdecor_state_free_
typedef struct _GLFWfallbackEdgeWayland
typedef enum _GLFWdecorationSideWayland
{
GLFW_MAIN_WINDOW,
GLFW_TOP_DECORATION,
GLFW_LEFT_DECORATION,
GLFW_RIGHT_DECORATION,
GLFW_BOTTOM_DECORATION
} _GLFWdecorationSideWayland;
typedef struct _GLFWdecorationWayland
{
struct wl_surface* surface;
struct wl_subsurface* subsurface;
struct wp_viewport* viewport;
} _GLFWfallbackEdgeWayland;
} _GLFWdecorationWayland;
typedef struct _GLFWofferWayland
{
@ -340,7 +347,7 @@ typedef struct _GLFWofferWayland
typedef struct _GLFWscaleWayland
{
struct wl_output* output;
int32_t factor;
int factor;
} _GLFWscaleWayland;
// Wayland-specific per-window data
@ -348,14 +355,12 @@ typedef struct _GLFWscaleWayland
typedef struct _GLFWwindowWayland
{
int width, height;
int fbWidth, fbHeight;
GLFWbool visible;
GLFWbool maximized;
GLFWbool activated;
GLFWbool fullscreen;
GLFWbool hovered;
GLFWbool transparent;
GLFWbool scaleFramebuffer;
struct wl_surface* surface;
struct wl_callback* callback;
@ -380,37 +385,33 @@ typedef struct _GLFWwindowWayland
struct {
struct libdecor_frame* frame;
int mode;
} libdecor;
_GLFWcursor* currentCursor;
double cursorPosX, cursorPosY;
char* title;
char* appId;
// We need to track the monitors the window spans on to calculate the
// optimal scaling factor.
int32_t bufferScale;
_GLFWscaleWayland* outputScales;
size_t outputScaleCount;
size_t outputScaleSize;
struct wp_viewport* scalingViewport;
uint32_t scalingNumerator;
struct wp_fractional_scale_v1* fractionalScale;
int contentScale;
_GLFWscaleWayland* scales;
int scaleCount;
int scaleSize;
struct zwp_relative_pointer_v1* relativePointer;
struct zwp_locked_pointer_v1* lockedPointer;
struct zwp_confined_pointer_v1* confinedPointer;
struct zwp_idle_inhibitor_v1* idleInhibitor;
struct xdg_activation_token_v1* activationToken;
struct {
GLFWbool decorations;
struct wl_buffer* buffer;
_GLFWfallbackEdgeWayland top, left, right, bottom;
struct wl_surface* focus;
} fallback;
_GLFWdecorationWayland top, left, right, bottom;
_GLFWdecorationSideWayland focus;
} decorations;
} _GLFWwindowWayland;
// Wayland-specific global data
@ -433,8 +434,6 @@ typedef struct _GLFWlibraryWayland
struct zwp_relative_pointer_manager_v1* relativePointerManager;
struct zwp_pointer_constraints_v1* pointerConstraints;
struct zwp_idle_inhibit_manager_v1* idleInhibitManager;
struct xdg_activation_v1* activationManager;
struct wp_fractional_scale_manager_v1* fractionalScaleManager;
_GLFWofferWayland* offers;
unsigned int offerCount;
@ -591,7 +590,7 @@ typedef struct _GLFWmonitorWayland
int x;
int y;
int32_t scale;
int contentScale;
} _GLFWmonitorWayland;
// Wayland-specific per-cursor data
@ -678,12 +677,12 @@ void _glfwGetMonitorPosWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos);
void _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, float* xscale, float* yscale);
void _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* xpos, int* ypos, int* width, int* height);
GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* count);
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode);
void _glfwGetVideoModeWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode);
GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp);
void _glfwSetGammaRampWayland(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp);
void _glfwAddOutputWayland(uint32_t name, uint32_t version);
void _glfwUpdateBufferScaleFromOutputsWayland(_GLFWwindow* window);
void _glfwUpdateContentScaleWayland(_GLFWwindow* window);
void _glfwAddSeatListenerWayland(struct wl_seat* seat);
void _glfwAddDataDeviceListenerWayland(struct wl_data_device* device);

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 X11 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 X11 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -1166,87 +1168,87 @@ GLFWbool _glfwConnectX11(int platformID, _GLFWplatform* platform)
{
const _GLFWplatform x11 =
{
.platformID = GLFW_PLATFORM_X11,
.init = _glfwInitX11,
.terminate = _glfwTerminateX11,
.getCursorPos = _glfwGetCursorPosX11,
.setCursorPos = _glfwSetCursorPosX11,
.setCursorMode = _glfwSetCursorModeX11,
.setRawMouseMotion = _glfwSetRawMouseMotionX11,
.rawMouseMotionSupported = _glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedX11,
.createCursor = _glfwCreateCursorX11,
.createStandardCursor = _glfwCreateStandardCursorX11,
.destroyCursor = _glfwDestroyCursorX11,
.setCursor = _glfwSetCursorX11,
.getScancodeName = _glfwGetScancodeNameX11,
.getKeyScancode = _glfwGetKeyScancodeX11,
.setClipboardString = _glfwSetClipboardStringX11,
.getClipboardString = _glfwGetClipboardStringX11,
GLFW_PLATFORM_X11,
_glfwInitX11,
_glfwTerminateX11,
_glfwGetCursorPosX11,
_glfwSetCursorPosX11,
_glfwSetCursorModeX11,
_glfwSetRawMouseMotionX11,
_glfwRawMouseMotionSupportedX11,
_glfwCreateCursorX11,
_glfwCreateStandardCursorX11,
_glfwDestroyCursorX11,
_glfwSetCursorX11,
_glfwGetScancodeNameX11,
_glfwGetKeyScancodeX11,
_glfwSetClipboardStringX11,
_glfwGetClipboardStringX11,
#if defined(GLFW_BUILD_LINUX_JOYSTICK)
.initJoysticks = _glfwInitJoysticksLinux,
.terminateJoysticks = _glfwTerminateJoysticksLinux,
.pollJoystick = _glfwPollJoystickLinux,
.getMappingName = _glfwGetMappingNameLinux,
.updateGamepadGUID = _glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDLinux,
_glfwInitJoysticksLinux,
_glfwTerminateJoysticksLinux,
_glfwPollJoystickLinux,
_glfwGetMappingNameLinux,
_glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDLinux,
#else
.initJoysticks = _glfwInitJoysticksNull,
.terminateJoysticks = _glfwTerminateJoysticksNull,
.pollJoystick = _glfwPollJoystickNull,
.getMappingName = _glfwGetMappingNameNull,
.updateGamepadGUID = _glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDNull,
_glfwInitJoysticksNull,
_glfwTerminateJoysticksNull,
_glfwPollJoystickNull,
_glfwGetMappingNameNull,
_glfwUpdateGamepadGUIDNull,
#endif
.freeMonitor = _glfwFreeMonitorX11,
.getMonitorPos = _glfwGetMonitorPosX11,
.getMonitorContentScale = _glfwGetMonitorContentScaleX11,
.getMonitorWorkarea = _glfwGetMonitorWorkareaX11,
.getVideoModes = _glfwGetVideoModesX11,
.getVideoMode = _glfwGetVideoModeX11,
.getGammaRamp = _glfwGetGammaRampX11,
.setGammaRamp = _glfwSetGammaRampX11,
.createWindow = _glfwCreateWindowX11,
.destroyWindow = _glfwDestroyWindowX11,
.setWindowTitle = _glfwSetWindowTitleX11,
.setWindowIcon = _glfwSetWindowIconX11,
.setWindowProgressIndicator = _glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorX11,
.getWindowPos = _glfwGetWindowPosX11,
.setWindowPos = _glfwSetWindowPosX11,
.getWindowSize = _glfwGetWindowSizeX11,
.setWindowSize = _glfwSetWindowSizeX11,
.setWindowSizeLimits = _glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsX11,
.setWindowAspectRatio = _glfwSetWindowAspectRatioX11,
.getFramebufferSize = _glfwGetFramebufferSizeX11,
.getWindowFrameSize = _glfwGetWindowFrameSizeX11,
.getWindowContentScale = _glfwGetWindowContentScaleX11,
.iconifyWindow = _glfwIconifyWindowX11,
.restoreWindow = _glfwRestoreWindowX11,
.maximizeWindow = _glfwMaximizeWindowX11,
.showWindow = _glfwShowWindowX11,
.hideWindow = _glfwHideWindowX11,
.requestWindowAttention = _glfwRequestWindowAttentionX11,
.focusWindow = _glfwFocusWindowX11,
.setWindowMonitor = _glfwSetWindowMonitorX11,
.windowFocused = _glfwWindowFocusedX11,
.windowIconified = _glfwWindowIconifiedX11,
.windowVisible = _glfwWindowVisibleX11,
.windowMaximized = _glfwWindowMaximizedX11,
.windowHovered = _glfwWindowHoveredX11,
.framebufferTransparent = _glfwFramebufferTransparentX11,
.getWindowOpacity = _glfwGetWindowOpacityX11,
.setWindowResizable = _glfwSetWindowResizableX11,
.setWindowDecorated = _glfwSetWindowDecoratedX11,
.setWindowFloating = _glfwSetWindowFloatingX11,
.setWindowOpacity = _glfwSetWindowOpacityX11,
.setWindowMousePassthrough = _glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughX11,
.pollEvents = _glfwPollEventsX11,
.waitEvents = _glfwWaitEventsX11,
.waitEventsTimeout = _glfwWaitEventsTimeoutX11,
.postEmptyEvent = _glfwPostEmptyEventX11,
.getEGLPlatform = _glfwGetEGLPlatformX11,
.getEGLNativeDisplay = _glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayX11,
.getEGLNativeWindow = _glfwGetEGLNativeWindowX11,
.getRequiredInstanceExtensions = _glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsX11,
.getPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport = _glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportX11,
.createWindowSurface = _glfwCreateWindowSurfaceX11
_glfwFreeMonitorX11,
_glfwGetMonitorPosX11,
_glfwGetMonitorContentScaleX11,
_glfwGetMonitorWorkareaX11,
_glfwGetVideoModesX11,
_glfwGetVideoModeX11,
_glfwGetGammaRampX11,
_glfwSetGammaRampX11,
_glfwCreateWindowX11,
_glfwDestroyWindowX11,
_glfwSetWindowTitleX11,
_glfwSetWindowIconX11,
_glfwSetWindowProgressIndicatorX11,
_glfwGetWindowPosX11,
_glfwSetWindowPosX11,
_glfwGetWindowSizeX11,
_glfwSetWindowSizeX11,
_glfwSetWindowSizeLimitsX11,
_glfwSetWindowAspectRatioX11,
_glfwGetFramebufferSizeX11,
_glfwGetWindowFrameSizeX11,
_glfwGetWindowContentScaleX11,
_glfwIconifyWindowX11,
_glfwRestoreWindowX11,
_glfwMaximizeWindowX11,
_glfwShowWindowX11,
_glfwHideWindowX11,
_glfwRequestWindowAttentionX11,
_glfwFocusWindowX11,
_glfwSetWindowMonitorX11,
_glfwWindowFocusedX11,
_glfwWindowIconifiedX11,
_glfwWindowVisibleX11,
_glfwWindowMaximizedX11,
_glfwWindowHoveredX11,
_glfwFramebufferTransparentX11,
_glfwGetWindowOpacityX11,
_glfwSetWindowResizableX11,
_glfwSetWindowDecoratedX11,
_glfwSetWindowFloatingX11,
_glfwSetWindowOpacityX11,
_glfwSetWindowMousePassthroughX11,
_glfwPollEventsX11,
_glfwWaitEventsX11,
_glfwWaitEventsTimeoutX11,
_glfwPostEmptyEventX11,
_glfwGetEGLPlatformX11,
_glfwGetEGLNativeDisplayX11,
_glfwGetEGLNativeWindowX11,
_glfwGetRequiredInstanceExtensionsX11,
_glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupportX11,
_glfwCreateWindowSurfaceX11,
};
// HACK: If the application has left the locale as "C" then both wide

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
//========================================================================
// GLFW 3.5 X11 - www.glfw.org
// GLFW 3.4 X11 - www.glfw.org
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Marcus Geelnard
// Copyright (c) 2006-2019 Camilla Löwy <elmindreda@glfw.org>
@ -24,6 +24,8 @@
// distribution.
//
//========================================================================
// It is fine to use C99 in this file because it will not be built with VS
//========================================================================
#include "internal.h"
@ -33,7 +35,6 @@
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <assert.h>
// Check whether the display mode should be included in enumeration
@ -492,31 +493,24 @@ GLFWvidmode* _glfwGetVideoModesX11(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, int* count)
return result;
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeX11(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
void _glfwGetVideoModeX11(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
{
if (_glfw.x11.randr.available && !_glfw.x11.randr.monitorBroken)
{
XRRScreenResources* sr =
XRRGetScreenResourcesCurrent(_glfw.x11.display, _glfw.x11.root);
const XRRModeInfo* mi = NULL;
XRRCrtcInfo* ci = XRRGetCrtcInfo(_glfw.x11.display, sr, monitor->x11.crtc);
if (ci)
{
mi = getModeInfo(sr, ci->mode);
if (mi)
const XRRModeInfo* mi = getModeInfo(sr, ci->mode);
if (mi) // mi can be NULL if the monitor has been disconnected
*mode = vidmodeFromModeInfo(mi, ci);
XRRFreeCrtcInfo(ci);
}
XRRFreeScreenResources(sr);
if (!mi)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR, "X11: Failed to query video mode");
return GLFW_FALSE;
}
}
else
{
@ -527,8 +521,6 @@ GLFWbool _glfwGetVideoModeX11(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWvidmode* mode)
_glfwSplitBPP(DefaultDepth(_glfw.x11.display, _glfw.x11.screen),
&mode->redBits, &mode->greenBits, &mode->blueBits);
}
return GLFW_TRUE;
}
GLFWbool _glfwGetGammaRampX11(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
@ -612,33 +604,15 @@ void _glfwSetGammaRampX11(_GLFWmonitor* monitor, const GLFWgammaramp* ramp)
GLFWAPI RRCrtc glfwGetX11Adapter(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(None);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_X11)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE, "X11: Platform not initialized");
return None;
}
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(None);
return monitor->x11.crtc;
}
GLFWAPI RROutput glfwGetX11Monitor(GLFWmonitor* handle)
{
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(None);
if (_glfw.platform.platformID != GLFW_PLATFORM_X11)
{
_glfwInputError(GLFW_PLATFORM_UNAVAILABLE, "X11: Platform not initialized");
return None;
}
_GLFWmonitor* monitor = (_GLFWmonitor*) handle;
assert(monitor != NULL);
_GLFW_REQUIRE_INIT_OR_RETURN(None);
return monitor->x11.output;
}

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