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![Alt](/doc/logo.png "GLM Logo")
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# GLM 0.9.9 Manual
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![Alt](/doc/manual/g-truc.png "G-Truc Logo")
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---
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## Table of Contents
+ [0. Licenses](#section0)
+ [1. Getting started](#section1)
+ [1.1. Setup](#section1_1)
+ [1.2. Faster program compilation](#section1_2)
+ [1.3. Use sample of GLM core](#section1_3)
+ [1.4. Dependencies](#section1_4)
+ [2. Swizzle operators](#section2)
+ [2.1. Standard C++98 implementation](#section2_1)
+ [2.2. Anonynous union member implementation](#section2_2)
+ [3. Preprocessor options](#section3)
+ [3.1. Default precision](#section3_1)
+ [3.2. Compile-time message system](#section3_2)
+ [3.3. C++ language detection](#section3_3)
+ [3.4. SIMD support](#section3_4)
+ [3.5. Force inline](#section3_5)
+ [3.6. Vector and matrix static size](#section3_6)
+ [3.7. Disabling default constructor initialization](#section3_7)
+ [3.8. Requiring explicit conversions](#section3_8)
+ [3.9. Removing genType restriction](#section3_9)
+ [4. Stable extensions](#section4)
+ [4.1. GLM_GTC_bitfield](#section4_1)
+ [4.2. GLM_GTC_color_space](#section4_2)
+ [4.3. GLM_GTC_constants](#section4_3)
+ [4.4. GLM_GTC_epsilon](#section4_4)
+ [4.5. GLM_GTC_functions](#section4_5)
+ [4.6. GLM_GTC_integer](#section4_6)
+ [4.7. GLM_GTC_matrix_access](#section4_7)
+ [4.8. GLM_GTC_matrix_integer](#section4_8)
+ [4.9. GLM_GTC_matrix_inverse](#section4_9)
+ [4.10. GLM_GTC_matrix_transform](#section4_10)
+ [4.11. GLM_GTC_noise](#section4_11)
+ [4.12. GLM_GTC_packing](#section4_12)
+ [4.13. GLM_GTC_quaternion](#section4_13)
+ [4.14. GLM_GTC_random](#section4_14)
+ [4.15. GLM_GTC_reciprocal](#section4_15)
+ [4.16. GLM_GTC_round](#section4_16)
+ [4.17. GLM_GTC_type_alignment](#section4_17)
+ [4.18. GLM_GTC_type_precision](#section4_18)
+ [4.19. GLM_GTC_type_ptr](#section4_19)
+ [4.20. GLM_GTC_ulp](#section4_20)
+ [4.21. GLM_GTC_vec1](#section4_21)
+ [5. OpenGL interoperability](#section5)
+ [5.1. GLM Replacements for deprecated OpenGL functions](#section5_1)
+ [5.2. GLM Replacements for GPU functions](#section5_2)
+ [6. Known issues](#section6)
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+ [6.1. Not function](#section6_1)
+ [6.2. Precision qualifiers support](#section6_2)
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+ [7. FAQ](#section7)
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+ [7.1 Why GLM follows GLSL specification and conventions?](#section7_1)
+ [7.2. Does GLM run GLSL programs?](#section7_2)
+ [7.3. Does a GLSL compiler build GLM codes?](#section7_3)
+ [7.4. Should I use GTX extensions?](#section7_4)
+ [7.5. Where can I ask my questions?](#section7_5)
+ [7.6. Where can I find the documentation of extensions?](#section7_6)
+ [7.7. Should I use 'using namespace glm;'?](#section7_7)
+ [7.8. Is GLM fast?](#section7_8)
+ [7.9. When I build with Visual C++ with /w4 warning level, I have warnings...](#section7_9)
+ [7.10. Why some GLM functions can crash because of division by zero?](#section7_10)
+ [7.11. What unit for angles us used in GLM?](#section7_11)
+ [8. Code samples](#section8)
+ [8.1. Compute a triangle normal](#section8_1)
+ [8.2. Matrix transform](#section8_2)
+ [8.3. Vector types](#section8_3)
+ [8.4. Lighting](#section8_4)
+ [9. References](#section9)
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+ [9.1. OpenGL specifications](#section9_1)
+ [9.2. External links](#section9_2)
+ [9.3. Projects using GLM](#section9_3)
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+ [9.4. Tutorials using GLM](#section9_4)
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+ [9.5. Equivalent for other languages](#section9_5)
+ [9.6. Alternatives to GLM](#section9_6)
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+ [9.8. Acknowledgements](#section9_8)
---
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## <a name="section0"></a> Licenses
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### The Happy Bunny License (Modified MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2005 - 2016 G-Truc Creation
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 shall be included
in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
Restrictions: By making use of the Software for military purposes, you
choose to make a Bunny unhappy.
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.
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![](https://github.com/g-truc/glm/blob/manual/doc/manual/frontpage1.png)
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### The MIT License
Copyright (c) 2005 - 2016 G-Truc Creation
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 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.
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![](https://github.com/g-truc/glm/blob/manual/doc/manual/frontpage2.png)
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---
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## <a name="section1"></a> 1. Getting started
### <a name="section1_1"></a> 1.1. Setup
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GLM is a header only library. Hence, there is nothing to build to use it. To use GLM, merely include &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt; header. This include provides all the GLSL features implemented by GLM.
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Core GLM features can be included using individual headers to allow faster user program compilations.
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```cpp
#include <glm/vec2.hpp> // vec2, bvec2, dvec2, ivec2 and uvec2
#include <glm/vec3.hpp> // vec3, bvec3, dvec3, ivec3 and uvec3
#include <glm/vec4.hpp> // vec4, bvec4, dvec4, ivec4 and uvec4
#include <glm/mat2x2.hpp> // mat2, dmat2
#include <glm/mat2x3.hpp> // mat2x3, dmat2x3
#include <glm/mat2x4.hpp> // mat2x4, dmat2x4
#include <glm/mat3x2.hpp> // mat3x2, dmat3x2
#include <glm/mat3x3.hpp> // mat3, dmat3
#include <glm/mat3x4.hpp> // mat3x4, dmat2
#include <glm/mat4x2.hpp> // mat4x2, dmat4x2
#include <glm/mat4x3.hpp> // mat4x3, dmat4x3
#include <glm/mat4x4.hpp> // mat4, dmat4
#include <glm/common.hpp> // all the GLSL common functions
#include <glm/exponential.hpp> // all the GLSL exponential functions
#include <glm/geometry.hpp> // all the GLSL geometry functions
#include <glm/integer.hpp> // all the GLSL integer functions
#include <glm/matrix.hpp> // all the GLSL matrix functions
#include <glm/packing.hpp> // all the GLSL packing functions
#include <glm/trigonometric.hpp> // all the GLSL trigonometric functions
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#include <glm/vector_relational.hpp> // all the GLSL vector relational functions
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```
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### <a name="section1_2"></a> 1.2. Faster program compilation
GLM is a header only library that makes a heavy usage of C++ templates.
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This design may significantly increase the compile time for files that use GLM. Hence, it is important to limit GLM inclusion to header and source files that actually use it. Likewise, GLM extensions should be
included only in program sources using them.
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To further help compilation time, GLM 0.9.5 introduced &lt;glm/fwd.hpp&gt; that provides forward declarations of GLM types.
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```cpp
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// Header file (forward declarations only)
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#include <glm/fwd.hpp>
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// Source file (actual implementation)
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#include <glm/glm.hpp>;
```
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### <a name="section1_3"></a> 1.3. Use sample of GLM core
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```cpp
// Include GLM core features
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#include <glm/vec3.hpp>
#include <glm/vec4.hpp>
#include <glm/mat4x4.hpp>
#include <glm/trigonometric.hpp>
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// Include GLM extensions
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#include <glm/gtc/matrix_transform.hpp>
glm::mat4 transform(glm::vec2 const& Orientation, glm::vec3 const& Translate, glm::vec3 const& Up)
{
glm::mat4 Proj = glm::perspective(glm::radians(45.f), 1.33f, 0.1f, 10.f);
glm::mat4 ViewTranslate = glm::translate(glm::mat4(1.f), Translate);
glm::mat4 ViewRotateX = glm::rotate(ViewTranslate, Orientation.y, Up);
glm::mat4 View = glm::rotate(ViewRotateX, Orientation.x, Up);
glm::mat4 Model = glm::mat4(1.0f);
return Proj * View * Model;
}
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```
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### <a name="section1_4"></a> 1.4. Dependencies
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When &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt; is included, GLM provides all the GLSL features it implements in C++.
There is no dependence with external libraries or external headers such as gl.h, [*glcorearb.h*](http://www.opengl.org/registry/api/GL/glcorearb.h), gl3.h, glu.h or windows.h. However, if &lt;boost/static\_assert.hpp&gt;
is included, [*Boost static assert*](http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_52_0/doc/html/boost_staticassert.html) will be used all over GLM code to provide compiled time errors unless
GLM is built with a C++ 11 compiler in which case [static\_assert](http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/static_assert).
If neither are detected, GLM will rely on its own implementation of static assert.
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---
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## <a name="section2"></a> 2. Swizzle operators
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A common feature of shader languages like GLSL is the swizzle operators. Those allow selecting multiple components of a vector and change their order. For example, “variable.x”, “variable.xzy” and “variable.zxyy”
form respectively a scalar, a three components vector and a four components vector. With GLSL, swizzle operators can be both R-values and L-values. Finally, vector components can be accessed using “xyzw”,
“rgba” or “stpq”.
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```cpp
vec4 A;
vec2 B;
...
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B.yx = A.wy;
B = A.xx;
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vec3 C = A.bgr;
```
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GLM supports a subset of this functionality as described in the following sub-sections. Swizzle operators are disabled by default. To enable them GLM\_SWIZZLE must be defined before any inclusion of
&lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt;. Enabling swizzle operators will massively increase the size of compiled files and the compilation time.
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### <a name="section2_1"></a> 2.1. Standard C++98 implementation
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The C++98 implementation exposes the R-value swizzle operators as member functions of vector types.
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```cpp
#define GLM_SWIZZLE
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
void foo()
{
glm::vec4 ColorRGBA(1.0f, 0.5f, 0.0f, 1.0f);
glm::vec3 ColorBGR = ColorRGBA.bgr();
...
glm::vec3 PositionA(1.0f, 0.5f, 0.0f, 1.0f);
glm::vec3 PositionB = PositionXYZ.xyz() \* 2.0f;
...
glm::vec2 TexcoordST(1.0f, 0.5f);
glm::vec4 TexcoordSTPQ = TexcoordST.stst();
...
}
```
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Swizzle operators return a copy of the component values hence they cant be used as L-values to change the value of the variables.
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_SWIZZLE
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
void foo()
{
glm::vec3 A(1.0f, 0.5f, 0.0f);
// /!\\ No compiler error but A is not affected
// This code modify the components of an anonymous copy.
A.bgr() = glm::vec3(2.0f, 1.5f, 1.0f); // A is not modified!
...
}
```
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### <a name="section2_2"></a> 2.2. Anonymous union member implementation
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Visual C++ supports anonymous structures in union, which is a non-standard language extension, but it enables a very powerful implementation of swizzle operators on Windows supporting both L-value
swizzle operators and a syntax that doesnt require parentheses in some cases. This implementation is only enabled when the language extension is enabled and GLM\_SWIZZLE is defined.
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_SWIZZLE
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo()
{
glm::vec4 ColorRGBA(1.0f, 0.5f, 0.0f, 1.0f);
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// l-value:
glm::vec4 ColorBGRA = ColorRGBA.bgra;
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// r-value:
ColorRGBA.bgra = ColorRGBA;
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// Both l-value and r-value
ColorRGBA.bgra = ColorRGBA.rgba;
...
}
```
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Anonymous union member swizzle operators dont return vector types (glm::vec2, glm::vec3 and glm::vec4) but implementation specific objects that can be automatically interpreted by other swizzle operators and
vector constructors. Unfortunately, those cant be interpreted by GLM functions so that the programmer must convert a swizzle operators to a vector type or call the () operator on a swizzle objects to pass it to another C++ functions.
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_SWIZZLE
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo()
{
glm::vec4 Color(1.0f, 0.5f, 0.0f, 1.0f);
...
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// Generates compiler errors. Color.rgba is not a vector type.
glm::vec4 ClampedA = glm::clamp(Color.rgba, 0.f, 1.f); // ERROR
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// We need to cast the swizzle operator into glm::vec4
// With by using a constructor
glm::vec4 ClampedB = glm::clamp(glm::vec4(Color.rgba), 0.f, 1.f); // OK
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// Or by using the () operator
glm::vec4 ClampedC = glm::clamp(Color.rgba(), 0.f, 1.f); // OK
...
}
```
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---
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## <a name="section3"></a> 3. Preprocessor options
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### <a name="section3_1"></a> 3.1. Default precision
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C++ does not provide a way to implement GLSL default precision selection (as defined in GLSL 4.10 specification section 4.5.3) with GLSL-like syntax.
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```cpp
precision mediump int;
precision highp float;
```
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To use the default precision functionality, GLM provides some defines that need to add before any include of glm.hpp:
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```cpp
#define GLM_PRECISION_MEDIUMP_INT
#define GLM_PRECISION_HIGHP_FLOAT
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
```
Available defines for floating point types (glm::vec\*, glm::mat\*):
GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_FLOAT: Low precision\
GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_FLOAT: Medium precision\
GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_FLOAT: High precision (default)
Available defines for floating point types (glm::dvec\*, glm::dmat\*):
GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_DOUBLE: Low precision\
GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_DOUBLE: Medium precision\
GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_DOUBLE: High precision (default)
Available defines for signed integer types (glm::ivec\*):
GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_INT: Low precision
GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_INT: Medium precision
GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_INT: High precision (default)
Available defines for unsigned integer types (glm::uvec\*):
GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_UINT: Low precision
GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_UINT: Medium precision
GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_UINT: High precision (default)
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### <a name="section3_2"></a> 3.2. Compile-time message system
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GLM includes a notification system which can display some information at build time:
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* Platform: Windows, Linux, Native Client, QNX, etc.
* Compiler: Visual C++, Clang, GCC, ICC, etc.
* Build model: 32bits or 64 bits
* C++ version : C++98, C++11, MS extensions, etc.
* Architecture: x86, SSE, AVX, etc.
* Included extensions
* etc.
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This system is disabled by default. To enable this system, define GLM\_FORCE\_MESSAGES before any inclusion of &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt;. The messages are generated only by compiler supporting \#program message and
only once per project build.
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_MESSAGES
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
```
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### <a name="section3_3"></a> 3.3. C++ language detection
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GLM will automatically take advantage of compilers language extensions when enabled. To increase cross platform compatibility and to avoid compiler extensions, a programmer can define GLM\_FORCE\_CXX98 before
any inclusion of &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt; to restrict the language feature set C++98:
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_CXX98
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
```
For C++11 and C++14, equivalent defines are available:
GLM\_FORCE\_CXX11, GLM\_FORCE\_CXX14.
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_CXX11
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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// If the compiler doesnt support C++11, compiler errors will happen.
```
GLM\_FORCE\_CXX14 overrides GLM\_FORCE\_CXX11 and GLM\_FORCE\_CXX11
overrides GLM\_FORCE\_CXX98 defines.
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### <a name="section3_4"></a> 3.4. SIMD support
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GLM provides some SIMD optimizations based on [compiler intrinsics](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/26td21ds.aspx).
These optimizations will be automatically thanks to compiler arguments.
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For example, if a program is compiled with Visual Studio using /arch:AVX, GLM will detect this argument and generate code using AVX instructions automatically when available.
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Its possible to avoid the instruction set detection by forcing the use of a specific instruction set with one of the fallowing define:
GLM\_FORCE\_SSE2, GLM\_FORCE\_SSE3, GLM\_FORCE\_SSSE3, GLM\_FORCE\_SSE41, GLM\_FORCE\_SSE42, GLM\_FORCE\_AVX, GLM\_FORCE\_AVX2 or GLM\_FORCE\_AVX512.
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The use of intrinsic functions by GLM implementation can be avoided using the define GLM\_FORCE\_PURE before any inclusion of GLM headers.
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_PURE
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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// GLM code will be compiled using pure C++ code without any intrinsics
```
```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_AVX2
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
// If the compiler doesnt support AVX2 instrinsics, compiler errors will happen.
```
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Additionally, GLM provides a low level SIMD API in glm/simd directory for users who are really interested in writing fast algorithms.
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### <a name="section3_5"></a> 3.5. Force inline
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To push further the software performance, a programmer can define GLM\_FORCE\_INLINE before any inclusion of &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt; to force the compiler to inline GLM code.
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_INLINE
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
```
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### <a name="section3_6"></a> 3.6. Vector and matrix static size
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GLSL supports the member function .length() for all vector and matrix types.
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo(vec4 const & v)
{
int Length = v.length();
...
}
```
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This function returns a int however this function typically interacts with STL size\_t based code. GLM provides GLM\_FORCE\_SIZE\_T\_LENGTH pre-processor option so that member functions length() return a size\_t.
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Additionally, GLM defines the type glm::length\_t to identify length() returned type, independently from GLM\_FORCE\_SIZE\_T\_LENGTH.
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_SIZE_T_LENGTH
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo(vec4 const & v)
{
glm::size_t Length = v.length();
...
}
```
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### <a name="section3_7"></a> 3.7. Disabling default constructor initialization
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By default and following GLSL specifications, vector and matrix default constructors initialize the components to zero. This is a reliable behavior but initialization has a cost and its not always necessary.
This behavior can be disable at compilation time by define GLM\_FORCE\_NO\_CTOR\_INIT before any inclusion of &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt; or other GLM include.
GLM default behavior:
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo()
{
glm::vec4 v; // v is (0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f)
...
}
```
GLM behavior using GLM\_FORCE\_NO\_CTOR\_INIT:
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_NO_CTOR_INIT
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo()
{
glm::vec4 v; // v is fill with garbage
...
}
```
Alternatively, GLM allows to explicitly not initialize a variable:
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo()
{
glm::vec4 v(glm::uninitialize);
...
}
```
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### <a name="section3_8"></a> 3.8. Require explicit conversions
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GLSL supports implicit conversions of vector and matrix types. For example, an ivec4 can be implicitly converted into vec4.
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Often, this behaviour is not desirable but following the spirit of the library, this behavior is supported in GLM. However, GLM 0.9.6 introduced the define GLM\_FORCE\_EXPLICIT\_CTOR to require explicit
conversion for GLM types.
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo()
{
glm::ivec4 a;
...
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glm::vec4 b(a); // Explicit conversion, OK
glm::vec4 c = a; // Implicit conversion, OK
...
}
```
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With GLM\_FORCE\_EXPLICIT\_CTOR define, implicit conversions are not allowed:
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_EXPLICIT_CTOR
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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void foo()
{
glm::ivec4 a;
{
glm::vec4 b(a); // Explicit conversion, OK
glm::vec4 c = a; // Implicit conversion, ERROR
...
}
```
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### <a name="section3_9"></a> 3.9. Removing genType restriction
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By default GLM only supports basic types as genType for vector, matrix and quaternion types:
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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typedef glm::tvec4<float> my_fvec4;
```
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GLM 0.9.8 introduced GLM\_FORCE\_UNRESTRICTED\_GENTYPE define to relax this restriction:
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```cpp
#define GLM_FORCE_UNRESTRICTED_GENTYPE
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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#include "half.hpp" // Define “half” class with equivalent behavior than “float”
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typedef glm::tvec4<half> my_hvec4;
```
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However, defining GLM\_FORCE\_UNRESTRICTED\_GENTYPE is not compatible with GLM\_FORCE\_SWIZZLE and will generate a compilation error if both are defined at the same time.
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---
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## <a name="section4"></a> 4. Stable extensions
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GLM extends the core GLSL feature set with extensions. These extensions include: quaternion, transformation, spline, matrix inverse, color spaces, etc.
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To include an extension, we only need to include the dedicated header file. Once included, the features are added to the GLM namespace.
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp>
#include <glm/gtc/matrix_transform.hpp>
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int foo()
{
glm::vec4 Position = glm::vec4(glm:: vec3(0.0f), 1.0f);
glm::mat4 Model = glm::translate(glm::mat4(1.0f), glm::vec3(1.0f));
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glm::vec4 Transformed = Model * Position;
...
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return 0;
}
```
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When an extension is included, all the dependent core functionalities and extensions will be included as well.
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### <a name="section4_1"></a> 4.1. GLM_GTC_bitfield
Fast bitfield operations on scalar and vector variables.
&lt;glm/gtc/bitfield.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_2"></a> 4.2. GLM_GTC_color_space
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Conversion between linear RGB and sRGB color spaces.
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&lt;glm/gtc/color\_space.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_3"></a> 4.3. GLM\_GTC\_constants
Provide a list of built-in constants.
&lt;glm/gtc/constants.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_4"></a> 4.4. GLM\_GTC\_epsilon
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Approximate equality comparisons for floating-point numbers, possibly with a user-defined epsilon.
&lt;glm/gtc/epsilon.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_5"></a> 4.5. GLM\_GTC\_functions
Useful functions.
&lt;glm/gtc/functions.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_6"></a> 4.6. GLM\_GTC\_integer
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Integer variants of core GLM functions.
&lt;glm/gtc/integer.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_7"></a> 4.7. GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_access
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Functions to conveniently access the individual rows or columns of a matrix.
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&lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_access.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_8"></a> 4.8. GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_integer
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Integer matrix types similar to the core floating-point matrices. Some operations (such as inverse and determinant) are not supported.
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&lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_integer.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_9"></a> 4.9. GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_inverse
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Additional matrix inverse functions.
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&lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_inverse.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_10"></a> 4.10. GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform
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Matrix transformation functions that follow the OpenGL fixed-function conventions.
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For example, the ***lookAt*** function generates a transformation matrix that projects world coordinates into eye coordinates suitable for projection matrices (e.g. ***perspective***, ***ortho***). See the OpenGL compatibility specifications for more information about the layout of these generated matrices.
The matrices generated by this extension use standard OpenGL fixed-function conventions. For example, the ***lookAt*** function generates a transform from world space into the specific eye space that the
projective matrix functions (***perspective***, ***ortho***, etc) are designed to expect. The OpenGL compatibility specifications define the particular layout of this eye space.
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&lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_11"></a> 4.11. GLM\_GTC\_noise
Define 2D, 3D and 4D procedural noise functions.
&lt;glm/gtc/noise.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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![](/doc/manual/noise-simplex1.jpg)
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Figure 4.11.1: glm::simplex(glm::vec2(x / 16.f, y / 16.f));
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![](/doc/manual/noise-simplex2.jpg)
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Figure 4.11.2: glm::simplex(glm::vec3(x / 16.f, y / 16.f, 0.5f));
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![](/doc/manual/noise-simplex3.jpg)
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Figure 4.11.3: glm::simplex(glm::vec4(x / 16.f, y / 16.f, 0.5f, 0.5f));
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![](/doc/manual/noise-perlin1.jpg)
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Figure 4.11.4: glm::perlin(glm::vec2(x / 16.f, y / 16.f));
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![](/doc/manual/noise-perlin2.jpg)
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Figure 4.11.5: glm::perlin(glm::vec3(x / 16.f, y / 16.f, 0.5f));
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![](/doc/manual/noise-perlin3.jpg)
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Figure 4.11.6: glm::perlin(glm::vec4(x / 16.f, y / 16.f, 0.5f, 0.5f)));
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![](/doc/manual/noise-perlin4.png)
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Figure 4.11.7: glm::perlin(glm::vec2(x / 16.f, y / 16.f), glm::vec2(2.0f));
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![](/doc/manual/noise-perlin5.png)
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Figure 4.11.8: glm::perlin(glm::vec3(x / 16.f, y / 16.f, 0.5f), glm::vec3(2.0f));
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![](/doc/manual/noise-perlin6.png)
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Figure 4.11.9: glm::perlin(glm::vec4(x / 16.f, y / 16.f, glm::vec2(0.5f)), glm::vec4(2.0f));
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### <a name="section4_12"></a> 4.12. GLM\_GTC\_packing
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Convert scalar and vector types to and from packed formats, saving space at the cost of precision. However, packing a value into a format that it was previously unpacked from is guaranteed to be lossless.
&lt;glm/gtc/packing.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_13"></a> 4.13. GLM\_GTC\_quaternion
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Quaternions and operations upon thereof.
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&lt;glm/gtc/quaternion.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_14"></a> 4.14. GLM\_GTC\_random
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Probability distributions in up to four dimensions.
&lt;glm/gtc/random.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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![](/doc/manual/random-linearrand.png)
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Figure 4.14.1: glm::vec4(glm::linearRand(glm::vec2(-1), glm::vec2(1)), 0, 1);
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![](/doc/manual/random-circularrand.png)
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Figure 4.14.2: glm::vec4(glm::circularRand(1.0f), 0, 1);
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![](/doc/manual/random-sphericalrand.png)
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Figure 4.14.3: glm::vec4(glm::sphericalRand(1.0f), 1);
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![](/doc/manual/random-diskrand.png)
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Figure 4.14.4: glm::vec4(glm::diskRand(1.0f), 0, 1);
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![](/doc/manual/random-ballrand.png)
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Figure 4.14.5: glm::vec4(glm::ballRand(1.0f), 1);
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![](/doc/manual/random-gaussrand.png)
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Figure 4.14.6: glm::vec4(glm::gaussRand(glm::vec3(0), glm::vec3(1)), 1);
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### <a name="section4_15"></a> 4.15. GLM\_GTC\_reciprocal
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Reciprocal trigonometric functions (e.g. secant, cosecant, tangent).
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&lt;glm/gtc/reciprocal.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these functionalities.
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### <a name="section4_16"></a> 4.16. GLM\_GTC\_round
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Various rounding operations and common special cases thereof.
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&lt;glm/gtc/round.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these functionalities.
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### <a name="section4_17"></a> 4.17. GLM\_GTC\_type\_aligned
Aligned vector types.
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&lt;glm/gtc/type\_aligned.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these functionalities.
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### <a name="section4_18"></a> 4.18. GLM\_GTC\_type\_precision
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Vector and matrix types with defined precisions, e.g. i8vec4, which is a 4D vector of signed 8-bit integers.
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This extension adds defines to set the default precision of each class of types added, in a manner identical to that described in section [Default precision](#section3_1).
Available defines for signed 8-bit integer types (glm::i8vec\*):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_INT8: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_INT8: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_INT8: High precision (default)
Available defines for unsigned 8-bit integer types (glm::u8vec\*):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_UINT8: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_UINT8: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_UINT8: High precision (default)
Available defines for signed 16-bit integer types (glm::i16vec\*):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_INT16: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_INT16: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_INT16: High precision (default)
Available defines for unsigned 16-bit integer types (glm::u16vec\*):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_UINT16: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_UINT16: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_UINT16: High precision (default)
Available defines for signed 32-bit integer types (glm::i32vec\*):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_INT32: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_INT32: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_INT32: High precision (default)
Available defines for unsigned 32-bit integer types (glm::u32vec\*):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_UINT32: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_UINT32: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_UINT32: High precision (default)
Available defines for signed 64-bit integer types (glm::i64vec\*):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_INT64: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_INT64: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_INT64: High precision (default)
Available defines for unsigned 64-bit integer types (glm::u64vec\*):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_UINT64: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_UINT64: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_UINT64: High precision (default)
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Available defines for 32-bit floating-point types (glm::f32vec\*, glm::f32mat\*, glm::f32quat):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_FLOAT32: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_FLOAT32: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_FLOAT32: High precision (default)
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Available defines for 64-bit floating-point types (glm::f64vec\*, glm::f64mat\*, glm::f64quat):
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* GLM\_PRECISION\_LOWP\_FLOAT64: Low precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_MEDIUMP\_FLOAT64: Medium precision
* GLM\_PRECISION\_HIGHP\_FLOAT64: High precision (default)
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&lt;glm/gtc/type\_precision.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these functionalities.
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### <a name="section4_19"></a> 4.19. GLM\_GTC\_type\_ptr
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Facilitate interactions between pointers to basic types (e.g. float*) and GLM types (e.g. mat4).
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This extension defines an overloaded function, glm::value_ptr, which returns a pointer to the memory layout of any GLM vector or matrix (vec3, mat4, etc.). Matrix types store their values in column-major order. This is useful for uploading data to matrices or for copying data to buffer objects.
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```cpp
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// GLM_GTC_type_ptr provides a safe solution:
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#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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#include <glm/gtc/type_ptr.hpp>
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void foo()
{
glm::vec4 v(0.0f);
glm::mat4 m(1.0f);
...
glVertex3fv(glm::value_ptr(v))
glLoadMatrixfv(glm::value_ptr(m));
}
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// Another solution, this one inspired by the STL:
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#include <glm/glm.hpp>
void foo()
{
glm::vec4 v(0.0f);
glm::mat4 m(1.0f);
...
glVertex3fv(&v\[0\]);
glLoadMatrixfv(&m\[0\]\[0\]);
}
```
*Note: It would be possible to implement [*glVertex3fv*](http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glVertex.xml)(glm::vec3(0)) in C++ with the appropriate cast operator that would result as an
implicit cast in this example. However cast operators may produce programs running with unexpected behaviours without build error or any form of notification. *
&lt;glm/gtc/type\_ptr.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_20"></a> 4.20. GLM\_GTC\_ulp
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Measure a function's accuracy given a reference implementation of it. This extension works on floating-point data and provides results in [ULP](http://ljk.imag.fr/membres/Carine.Lucas/TPScilab/JMMuller/ulp-toms.pdf).
&lt;glm/gtc/ulp.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
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### <a name="section4_21"></a> 4.21. GLM\_GTC\_vec1
Add \*vec1 types.
&lt;glm/gtc/vec1.hpp&gt; need to be included to use these features.
2016-11-01 14:23:28 +00:00
---
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## <a name="section5"></a> 5. OpenGL interoperability
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### <a name="section5_1"></a> 5.1. GLM replacements for deprecated OpenGL functions
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OpenGL 3.1 specification has deprecated some features that have been removed from OpenGL 3.2 core profile specification. GLM provides some replacement functions.
[***glRotate{f, d}:***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glRotate.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 glm::rotate(glm::mat4 const& m, float angle, glm::vec3 const& axis);
glm::dmat4 glm::rotate(glm::dmat4 const& m, double angle, glm::dvec3 const& axis);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
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[***glScale{f, d}: ***](http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glScale.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 glm::scale(glm::mat4 const& m, glm::vec3 const& factors);
glm::dmat4 glm::scale(glm::dmat4 const& m, glm::dvec3 const& factors);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
[***glTranslate{f, d}:***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glTranslate.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 glm::translate(glm::mat4 const& m, glm::vec3 const& translation);
glm::dmat4 glm::translate(glm::dmat4 const& m, glm::dvec3 const& translation);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
[***glLoadIdentity:***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glLoadIdentity.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4(1.0) or glm::mat4();
glm::dmat4(1.0) or glm::dmat4();
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```
From GLM core library: &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt;
[***glMultMatrix{f, d}: ***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glMultMatrix.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4() * glm::mat4();
glm::dmat4() * glm::dmat4();
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```
From GLM core library: &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt;
[***glLoadTransposeMatrix{f, d}: ***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glLoadTransposeMatrix.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::transpose(glm::mat4());
glm::transpose(glm::dmat4());
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```
From GLM core library: &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt;
[***glMultTransposeMatrix{f, d}: ***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glMultTransposeMatrix.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4() * glm::transpose(glm::mat4());
glm::dmat4() * glm::transpose(glm::dmat4());
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```
From GLM core library: &lt;glm/glm.hpp&gt;
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[***glFrustum:***](http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glFrustum.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 glm::frustum(float left, float right, float bottom, float top, float zNear, float zFar);
glm::dmat4 glm::frustum(double left, double right, double bottom, double top, double zNear, double zFar);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
[***glOrtho: ***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/glOrtho.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 glm::ortho(float left, float right, float bottom, float top, float zNear, float zFar);
glm::dmat4 glm::ortho(double left, double right, double bottom, double top, double zNear, double zFar);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
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### <a name="section5_2"></a> 5.2. GLM replacements for GLU functions
[***gluLookAt: ***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/gluLookAt.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 glm::lookAt(glm::vec3 const& eye, glm::vec3 const& center, glm::vec3 const& up);
glm::dmat4 glm::lookAt(glm::dvec3 const& eye, glm::dvec3 const& center, glm::dvec3 const& up);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
[***gluOrtho2D: ***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/gluOrtho2D.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 glm::ortho(float left, float right, float bottom, float top);
glm::dmat4 glm::ortho(double left, double right, double bottom, double top);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
[***gluPerspective: ***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/gluPerspective.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 perspective(float fovy, float aspect, float zNear, float zFar);
glm::dmat4 perspective(double fovy, double aspect, double zNear, double zFar);
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```
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Note that in GLM, fovy is expressed in radians, not degrees.
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
[***gluPickMatrix:***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/gluPickMatrix.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::mat4 pickMatrix(glm::vec2 const& center, glm::vec2 const& delta, glm::ivec4 const& viewport);
glm::dmat4 pickMatrix(glm::dvec2 const& center, glm::dvec2 const& delta, glm::ivec4 const& viewport);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
[**gluProject:**](http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/gluProject.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::vec3 project(glm::vec3 const& obj, glm::mat4 const& model, glm::mat4 const & proj, glm::ivec4 const& viewport);
glm::dvec3 project(glm::dvec3 const& obj, glm::dmat4 const & model, glm::dmat4 const & proj, glm::ivec4 const& viewport);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
[***gluUnProject: ***](https://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man2/xhtml/gluUnProject.xml)
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```cpp
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glm::vec3 unProject(glm::vec3 const& win, glm::mat4 const& model, glm::mat4 const& proj, glm::ivec4 const& viewport);
glm::dvec3 unProject(glm::dvec3 const& win, glm::dmat4 const& model, glm::dmat4 const& proj, glm::ivec4 const & viewport);
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```
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From GLM\_GTC\_matrix\_transform extension: &lt;glm/gtc/matrix\_transform.hpp&gt;
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---
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## <a name="section6"></a> 6. Known issues
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This section reports GLSL features that GLM can't accurately emulate due to language restrictions.
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### <a name="section6_1"></a> 6.1. not function
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The GLSL function 'not' is a keyword in C++. To prevent name collisions and ensure a consistent API, the name not\_ (note the underscore) is used instead.
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### <a name="section6_2"></a> 6.2. Precision qualifiers support
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GLM supports GLSL precision qualifiers through prefixes instead of qualifiers. For example, GLM exposes \verb|lowp_vec4|, \verb|mediump_vec4| and \verb|highp_vec4| as variations of \verb|vec4|.
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Similarly to GLSL, GLM precision qualifiers are used to trade precision of operations in term of [ULPs](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_in_the_last_place) for better performance. By default, all the types use high precision.
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```cpp
// Using precision qualifier in GLSL:
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ivec3 foo(in vec4 v)
{
highp vec4 a = v;
mediump vec4 b = a;
lowp ivec3 c = ivec3(b);
return c;
}
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// Using precision qualifier in GLM:
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#include <glm/glm.hpp>
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ivec3 foo(const vec4 & v)
{
highp_vec4 a = v;
medium_vec4 b = a;
lowp_ivec3 c = glm::ivec3(b);
return c;
}
```
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The syntax for default precision specifications in GLM differs from that in GLSL; for more information, see section Default Precision <a name="section3_1"></a>.
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---
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## <a name="section7"></a> 7. FAQ
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### <a name="section7_1"></a> 7.1 Why GLM follows GLSL specification and conventions?
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Following GLSL conventions is a really strict policy of GLM. It has been designed following the idea that everyone does its own math library with his own conventions. The idea is that brilliant developers (the OpenGL ARB) worked together and agreed to make GLSL. Following GLSL conventions
is a way to find consensus. Moreover, basically when a developer knows GLSL, he knows GLM.
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### <a name="section7_2"></a> 7.2. Does GLM run GLSL program?
No, GLM is a C++ implementation of a subset of GLSL.
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### <a name="section7_3"></a> 7.3. Does a GLSL compiler build GLM codes?
No, this is not what GLM attends to do.
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### <a name="section7_4"></a> 7.4. Should I use GTX extensions?
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GTX extensions are qualified to be experimental extensions. In GLM this means that these extensions might change from version to version without any restriction. In practice, it doesnt really change except time to
time. GTC extensions are stabled, tested and perfectly reliable in time. Many GTX extensions extend GTC extensions and provide a way to explore features and implementations and APIs and then are promoted to GTC
extensions. This is fairly the way OpenGL features are developed; through extensions.
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Stating with GLM 0.9.9, to use experimental extensions, an application but define GLM_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL.
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### <a name="section7_5"></a> 7.5. Where can I ask my questions?
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A good place is [stackoverflow](http://stackoverflow.com/search?q=GLM) using the GLM tag.
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### <a name="section7_6"></a> 7.6. Where can I find the documentation of extensions?
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The Doxygen generated documentation includes a complete list of all extensions available. Explore this [*API documentation*](http://glm.g-truc.net/html/index.html) to get a complete
view of all GLM capabilities!
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### <a name="section7_7"></a> 7.7. Should I use using namespace glm;?
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NO! Chances are that if using namespace glm; is called, especially in a header file, name collisions will happen as GLM is based on GLSL which uses common tokens for types and functions. Avoiding using namespace
glm; will a higher compatibility with third party library and SDKs.
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### <a name="section7_8"></a> 7.8. Is GLM fast?
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GLM is mainly designed to be convenient and that's why it is written against the GLSL specification.
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Following the Pareto principle where 20% of the code consumes 80% of the execution time, GLM operates perfectly on the 80% of the code that consumes 20% of the performances. Furthermore, thanks to the lowp,
mediump and highp qualifiers, GLM provides approximations which trade precision for performance. Finally, GLM can automatically produce SIMD optimized code for functions of its implementation.
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However, on performance critical code paths, we should expect that dedicated algorithms should be written to reach peak performance.
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### <a name="section7_9"></a> 7.9. When I build with Visual C++ with /W4 warning level, I have warnings...
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You should not have any warnings even in /W4 mode. However, if you expect such level for your code, then you should ask for the same level to the compiler by at least disabling the Visual C++ language extensions
(/Za) which generates warnings when used. If these extensions are enabled, then GLM will take advantage of them and the compiler will generate warnings.
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### <a name="section7_10"></a> 7.10. Why some GLM functions can crash because of division by zero?
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GLM functions crashing is the result of a domain error. Such behavior follows the precedent set by C and C++'s standard library. For example, its a domain error to pass a null vector (all zeroes) to glm::normalize function, or to pass a negative number into std::sqrt.
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### <a name="section7_11"></a> 7.11. What unit for angles is used in GLM?
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GLSL is using radians but GLU is using degrees to express angles. This has caused GLM to use inconsistent units for angles. Starting with GLM 0.9.6, all GLM functions are using radians. For more information, follow
the [link](http://www.g-truc.net/post-0693.html#menu).
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---
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## <a name="section8"></a> 8. Code samples
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This series of samples only shows various GLM features without consideration of any sort.
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### <a name="section8_1"></a> 8.1. Compute a triangle normal
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp> // vec3 normalize cross
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glm::vec3 computeNormal(glm::vec3 const& a, glm::vec3 const& b, glm::vec3 const& c)
{
return glm::normalize(glm::cross(c - a, b - a));
}
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// A much faster but less accurate alternative:
#include <glm/glm.hpp> // vec3 cross
#include <glm/gtx/fast_square_root.hpp> // fastNormalize
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glm::vec3 computeNormal(glm::vec3 const& a, glm::vec3 const& b, glm::vec3 const& c)
{
return glm::fastNormalize(glm::cross(c - a, b - a));
}
```
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### <a name="section8_2"></a> 8.2. Matrix transform
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp> // vec3, vec4, ivec4, mat4
#include <glm/gtc/matrix_transform.hpp> // translate, rotate, scale, perspective
#include <glm/gtc/type_ptr.hpp> // value_ptr
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void setUniformMVP(GLuint Location, glm::vec3 const& Translate, glm::vec3 const& Rotate)
{
glm::mat4 Projection = glm::perspective(45.0f, 4.0f / 3.0f, 0.1f, 100.f);
glm::mat4 ViewTranslate = glm::translate(
glm::mat4(1.0f), Translate);
glm::mat4 ViewRotateX = glm::rotate(
ViewTranslate, Rotate.y, glm::vec3(-1.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f));
glm::mat4 View = glm::rotate(ViewRotateX,
Rotate.x, glm::vec3(0.0f, 1.0f, 0.0f));
glm::mat4 Model = glm::scale(
glm::mat4(1.0f), glm::vec3(0.5f));
glm::mat4 MVP = Projection * View * Model;
glUniformMatrix4fv(Location, 1, GL_FALSE, glm::value_ptr(MVP));
}
```
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### <a name="section8_3"></a> 8.3. Vector types
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp> // vec2
#include <glm/gtc/type_precision.hpp> // hvec2, i8vec2, i32vec2
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std::size_t const VertexCount = 4;
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// Float quad geometry
std::size_t const PositionSizeF32 = VertexCount * sizeof(glm::vec2);
glm::vec2 const PositionDataF32[VertexCount] =
{
glm::vec2(-1.0f,-1.0f),
glm::vec2( 1.0f,-1.0f),
glm::vec2( 1.0f, 1.0f),
glm::vec2(-1.0f, 1.0f)
};
// Half-float quad geometry
std::size_t const PositionSizeF16 = VertexCount * sizeof(glm::hvec2);
glm::hvec2 const PositionDataF16[VertexCount] =
{
glm::hvec2(-1.0f, -1.0f),
glm::hvec2( 1.0f, -1.0f),
glm::hvec2( 1.0f, 1.0f),
glm::hvec2(-1.0f, 1.0f)
};
// 8 bits signed integer quad geometry
std::size_t const PositionSizeI8 = VertexCount * sizeof(glm::i8vec2);
glm::i8vec2 const PositionDataI8[VertexCount] =
{
glm::i8vec2(-1,-1),
glm::i8vec2( 1,-1),
glm::i8vec2( 1, 1),
glm::i8vec2(-1, 1)
};
// 32 bits signed integer quad geometry
std::size_t const PositionSizeI32 = VertexCount * sizeof(glm::i32vec2);
glm::i32vec2 const PositionDataI32[VertexCount] =
{
glm::i32vec2(-1,-1),
glm::i32vec2( 1,-1),
glm::i32vec2( 1, 1),
glm::i32vec2(-1, 1)
};
```
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### <a name="section8_4"></a> 8.4. Lighting
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```cpp
#include <glm/glm.hpp> // vec3 normalize reflect dot pow
#include <glm/gtc/random.hpp> // ballRand
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// vecRand3, generate a random and equiprobable normalized vec3
glm::vec3 lighting(intersection const& Intersection, material const& Material, light const& Light, glm::vec3 const& View)
{
glm::vec3 Color = glm::vec3(0.0f);
glm::vec3 LightVertor = glm::normalize(
Light.position() - Intersection.globalPosition() +
glm::ballRand(0.0f, Light.inaccuracy());
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if(!shadow(Intersection.globalPosition(), Light.position(), LightVertor))
{
float Diffuse = glm::dot(Intersection.normal(), LightVector);
if(Diffuse &lt;= 0.0f)
return Color;
if(Material.isDiffuse())
Color += Light.color() * Material.diffuse() * Diffuse;
if(Material.isSpecular())
{
glm::vec3 Reflect = glm::reflect(-LightVector, Intersection.normal());
float Dot = glm::dot(Reflect, View);
float Base = Dot &gt; 0.0f ? Dot : 0.0f;
float Specular = glm::pow(Base, Material.exponent());
Color += Material.specular() \* Specular;
}
}
return Color;
}
```
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---
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## <a name="section9"></a> 9. References
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### <a name="section9_1"></a> 9.1. OpenGL specifications
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* OpenGL 4.3 core specification
* [GLSL 4.30 specification](http://www.opengl.org/registry/doc/GLSLangSpec.4.30.7.diff.pdf)
![](media/image21.png){width="2.859722222222222in" height="1.6083333333333334in"}- [*GLU 1.3 specification*](http://www.opengl.org/documentation/specs/glu/glu1_3.pdf)
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### <a name="section9_2"></a> 9.2. External links
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* [GLM on stackoverflow](http://stackoverflow.com/search?q=GLM)
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### <a name="section9_3"></a> 9.3. Projects using GLM
***[Leos Forture](http://www.leosfortune.com/) ***
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Leos Fortune is a platform adventure game where you hunt down the cunning and mysterious thief that stole your gold. Available on PS4, Xbox One, PC, Mac, iOS and Android.
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Beautifully hand-crafted levels bring the story of Leo to life in this epic adventure.
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“I just returned home to find all my gold has been stolen! For some devious purpose, the thief has dropped pieces of my gold like breadcrumbs through the woods.”
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“Despite this pickle of a trap, I am left with no choice but to follow the trail.”
“Whatever lies ahead, I must recover my fortune.” -Leopold
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![](/doc/manual/references-leosfortune.jpeg)
![](/doc/manual/references-leosfortune2.jpg)
[***OpenGL 4.0 Shading Language Cookbook***](http://www.packtpub.com/opengl-4-0-shading-language-cookbook/book?tag=rk/opengl4-abr1/0811)
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A set of recipes that demonstrates a wide of techniques for producing high-quality, real-time 3D graphics with GLSL 4.0, such as:
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* Using GLSL 4.0 to implement lighting and shading techniques.
* Using the new features of GLSL 4.0 including tessellation and geometry shaders.
* Using textures in GLSL as part of a wide variety of techniques from basic texture mapping to deferred shading.
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Simple, easy-to-follow examples with GLSL source code are provided, as well as a basic description of the theory behind each technique.
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![](/doc/manual/references-glsl4book.jpg)
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[***Outerra***](http://outerra.com/)
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A 3D planetary engine for seamless planet rendering from space down to the surface. Can use arbitrary resolution of elevation data, refining it to centimetre resolution using fractal algorithms.
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![](/doc/manual/references-outerra1.jpg)
![](/doc/manual/references-outerra2.jpg)
![](/doc/manual/references-outerra3.jpg)
![](/doc/manual/references-outerra4.jpg)
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[***Falcor***](https://github.com/NVIDIA/Falcor)
Real-time rendering research framework by NVIDIA.
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[***Cinder***](https://libcinder.org/)
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Cinder is a free and open source library for professional-quality creative coding in C++.
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Cinder is a C++ library for programming with aesthetic intent - the sort of development often called creative coding. This includes domains like graphics, audio, video, and computational geometry. Cinder is cross-platform, with official support for OS X, Windows, iOS, and WinRT.
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Cinder is production-proven, powerful enough to be the primary tool for professionals, but still suitable for learning and experimentation. Cinder is released under the [2-Clause BSD License](http://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-2-Clause).
![](/doc/manual/references-cinder.png)
[***opencloth***](http://code.google.com/p/opencloth/)
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A collection of source codes implementing cloth simulation algorithms in OpenGL.
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Simple, easy-to-follow examples with GLSL source code, as well as a basic description of the theory behind each technique.
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![](/doc/manual/references-opencloth1.png)
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![](/doc/manual/references-opencloth3.png)
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[***LibreOffice***](https://www.libreoffice.org/)
LibreOffice includes several applications that make it the most powerful Free and Open Source office suite on the market.
[***Are you using GLM in a project?***](mailto:glm@g-truc.net)
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### <a name="section9_4"></a> 9.4. Tutorials using GLM
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* [Sascha Willems' Vulkan examples](https://github.com/SaschaWillems/Vulkan), Examples and demos for the new Vulkan API
* [VKTS](https://github.com/McNopper/Vulkan) Vulkan examples using VulKan ToolS (VKTS)
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* [*The OpenGL Samples Pack*](http://www.g-truc.net/project-0026.html#menu), samples that show how to set up all the different new features
* [*Learning Modern 3D Graphics programming*](http://www.arcsynthesis.org/gltut/), a great OpenGL tutorial using GLM by Jason L. McKesson
* [*Morten Nobel-Jørgensens*](http://blog.nobel-joergensen.com/2011/04/02/glm-brilliant-math-library-for-opengl/) review and use an [*OpenGL renderer*](https://github.com/mortennobel/RenderE)
* [*Swiftless OpenGL tutorial*](http://www.swiftless.com/opengltuts.html) using GLM by Donald Urquhart
* [*Rastergrid*](http://rastergrid.com/blog/), many technical articles with companion programs using GLM by Daniel Rákos\
* [*OpenGL Tutorial*](http://www.opengl-tutorial.org), tutorials for OpenGL 3.1 and later
* [*OpenGL Programming on Wikibooks*](http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/OpenGL_Programming): For beginners who are discovering OpenGL.
* [*3D Game Engine Programming*](http://3dgep.com/): Learning the latest 3D Game Engine Programming techniques.
* [Game Tutorials](mailto:http://www.gametutorials.com/opengl-4-matrices-and-glm/), graphics and game programming.
* [open.gl](mailto:https://open.gl/), OpenGL tutorial
* [c-jump](mailto:http://www.c-jump.com/bcc/common/Talk3/Math/GLM/GLM.html), GLM tutorial
* [Learn OpenGL](mailto:http://learnopengl.com/), OpenGL tutorial
** [Are you using GLM in a tutorial?](mailto:glm@g-truc.net)*
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### <a name="section9_5"></a> 9.5. Equivalent for other languages
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* [*GlmSharp*](https://github.com/Philip-Trettner/GlmSharp): Open-source semi-generated GLM-flavored math library for .NET/C\#.
* [glm-js](https://github.com/humbletim/glm-js): JavaScript adaptation of the OpenGL Mathematics (GLM) C++ library interfaces
* [Java OpenGL Mathematics (GLM)](https://github.com/java-graphics/glm)
* [JGLM](https://github.com/jroyalty/jglm) - Java OpenGL Mathematics Library
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* [SwiftGL Math Library](https://github.com/SwiftGL/Math/blob/master/Sources/glm.swift) GLM for Swift
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* [glm-go](https://github.com/jbowtie/glm-go): Simple linear algebra library similar in spirit to GLM
* [openll](https://github.com/Polkm/openll): Lua bindings for OpenGL, GLM, GLFW, OpenAL, SOIL and PhysicsFS
* [glm-rs](https://github.com/dche/glm-rs): GLSL mathematics for Rust programming language
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* [glmpython](https://github.com/Queatz/glmpython): GLM math library for Python
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### <a name="section9_6"></a> 9.6. Alternatives to GLM
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* [*CML*](http://cmldev.net/): The CML (Configurable Math Library) is a free C++ math library for games and graphics.
* [*Eigen*](http://eigen.tuxfamily.org/): A more heavy weight math library for general linear algebra in C++.
* [*glhlib*](http://glhlib.sourceforge.net/): A much more than glu C library.
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* Are you using or developing an alternative library to GLM?
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### <a name="section9_7"></a> 9.7. Acknowledgements
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GLM is developed and maintained by [*Christophe Riccio*](http://www.g-truc.net) but many contributors have made this project what it is.
Special thanks to:
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* Ashima Arts and Stefan Gustavson for their work on [*webgl-noise*](https://github.com/ashima/webgl-noise) which has been used for GLM noises implementation.
* [*Arthur Winters*](http://athile.net/library/wiki/index.php?title=Athile_Technologies) for the C++11 and Visual C++ swizzle operators implementation and tests.
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* Joshua Smith and Christoph Schied for the discussions and the experiments around the swizzle operators implementation issues.
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* Guillaume Chevallereau for providing and maintaining the [*nightlight build system*](http://my.cdash.org/index.php?project=GLM).
* Ghenadii Ursachi for GLM\_GTX\_matrix\_interpolation implementation.
* Mathieu Roumillac for providing some implementation ideas.
* [*Grant James*](http://www.zeuscmd.com/) for the implementation of all combination of none-squared matrix products.
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* Jesse Talavera-Greenberg for his work on the manual amount other things.
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* All the GLM users that have report bugs and hence help GLM to become a great library!