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If you pass a varying view-space position from the vertex shader to a fragment shader then the fragment shader can know the fragment's position relative to the camera (0,0,0 in view-space). This is useful for per-pixel lighting etc. E.g.:

precision mediump float;
attribute vec3 vertex;
uniform mat4 pMatrix, mvMatrix;
varying vec4 pos;
void main() {
    pos = (mvMatrix * vec4(vertex,1.0));
    gl_Position = pMatrix * pos;
}

However, if you are rendering gl_POINTS and setting the gl_PointSize in the vertex shader, how can the fragment shader determine each fragment's position (as the pos passed in the example above will be for the sprite's centre-point)?

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Simple answer: stop using point sprites. Really, they're terrible.

Less simple answer: stop passing the view-space position to the fragment shader entirely. Instead, use gl_FragCoord to compute the view-space position, based on viewport data and so forth. There's even sample GLSL code for it:

vec4 ndcPos;
ndcPos.xy = ((2.0 * gl_FragCoord.xy) - (2.0 * viewport.xy)) / (viewport.zw) - 1;
ndcPos.z = (2.0 * gl_FragCoord.z - gl_DepthRange.near - gl_DepthRange.far) /
    (gl_DepthRange.far - gl_DepthRange.near);
ndcPos.w = 1.0;

vec4 clipPos = ndcPos / gl_FragCoord.w;
vec4 eyePos = invPersMatrix * clipPos;

You'll need to give your fragment shader the viewport and invPersMatrix values. gl_DepthRange is built-in. eyePos is what you're looking for.

There's probably a faster way to do it that takes advantage of the fact that you're drawing a screen-aligned quad. It would involve the point size and using gl_PointCoord.

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  • This is completely spot on and accepted. I had been trying to get something using point size and gl_PointCoord to work, and am very glad of this proper approach. But can you elaborate on why point sprites are terrible?
    – Will
    Feb 22, 2013 at 10:03
  • @Will: Well, let's see. 1) They clip against the viewport with the center of the sprite, thus causing them to disappear when the center goes off-screen. 2) The problem you just encountered: interpolating parameters across a point sprite is a big pain. 3) They can only be window-space squares, so if you need scaled particles or whatever, you have to move to quads anyway. Feb 22, 2013 at 10:15

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