3

I'm using THREE.js with WebGL shader. I want to declare an array of float numbers in fragment shader. The GLSL constant float array is defined like:

#define KERNEL_LENGTH 9
const float kernel[KERNEL_LENGTH] = {
    1.0/16.0, 2.0/16.0, 1.0/16.0,
    2.0/16.0, 4.0/16.0, 2.0/16.0,
    1.0/16.0, 2.0/16.0, 1.0/16.0
};

I've also tried with:

#define KERNEL_LENGTH 9
const float kernel[KERNEL_LENGTH] = float[KERNEL_LENGTH](
    1.0/16.0, 2.0/16.0, 1.0/16.0,
    2.0/16.0, 4.0/16.0, 2.0/16.0,
    1.0/16.0, 2.0/16.0, 1.0/16.0
);

But with WebGL, neither of them works. Error information:

ERROR: 0:44: 'kernel' : arrays may not be declared constant since they cannot be initialized ERROR: 0:44: '=' : syntax error

So how should I define an array of const float?

2 Answers 2

2

Just a walk-around:

float kernel[KERNEL_LENGTH];
kernel[0] = kernel[4] = kernel[20] = kernel[24] = 1.0/273.0;
kernel[1] = kernel[3] = kernel[5] = kernel[9] = kernel[15] = kernel[19] 
    = kernel[21] = kernel[23] = 4.0/273.0;
kernel[2] = kernel[10] = kernel[14] = kernel[22] = 7.0/273.0;
kernel[6] = kernel[8] = kernel[16] = kernel[18] = 16.0/273.0;
kernel[7] = kernel[11] = kernel[13] = kernel[17] = 26.0/273.0;
kernel[12] = 41.0/273.0;
1

pass the values as uniforms, rather than trying to do what it tells you you cannot: initialize an array as constants.

5
  • I don't want to pass them into the shader, because the values are always constant.
    – Ovilia
    Mar 7, 2013 at 5:10
  • 1
    a little secret: "constant" values are always passed as uniforms to the GPU
    – bjorke
    Mar 7, 2013 at 5:12
  • Are you sure that there're no const variables in WebGL?
    – Ovilia
    Mar 7, 2013 at 5:17
  • 1
    What will be faster: use an array-type uniform or hardcode the logic into the shader as in Ovilia's answer? Dec 23, 2014 at 15:58
  • I strongly suspect that the compiler would recognize both as equivalent.
    – bjorke
    Jan 8, 2015 at 3:14

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.