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In other words, emulating the old opengl flat shading model, so you could for example have a line strip where each segment is a distinct color rather than an interpolation of color across the segment?

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Not directly. GLSL for Desktop has the flat keyword, but GLSL ES doesn't have it (it's reserved). A trick to emulate this behaviour is to assign the same color at each vertex in a triangle (or in a segment), so the interpolation is between the same value.

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    right, but then you can't use strips...better than nothing though
    – RobbieC
    Aug 5, 2010 at 16:22
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    'Emulate'??? No. You abuse the word! The behaviour is NOT the same as taking a flat variable from a provoking vertex! As RobbieC pointed out, it means waving a sad goodbye to nice, efficient tri strips. To pass per-face data through the pipeline will force vertex duplication, just to have distinct variables each time a vertex is reused for a new tri. I'm sure RobbieC is aware of this 'trick' anyway; it's the way that tutorials tend to do things, even when 'flat' IS available. I think he was hoping to write better code than is found in those tutorials -- as was I Jun 17, 2016 at 0:17

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