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Given a model-view-projection matrix, how would I determine if an object is displayed on the screen? Determining if it is within the clipping bounds is easy, but how do I use the numbers if the mvp matrix to determine if object is too far left/right/high/low given the object position and the screen width and height in pixels? (For simplicity, we can say that we only care about the object's center of mass)

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  • Are you trying to implement frustum culling?
    – peppe
    May 24, 2014 at 13:29
  • Its for a tessellation evaluation shader - I apply 0 level tessellation if the patch is outside of the viewer's view May 24, 2014 at 20:49

1 Answer 1

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simply apply the mvp matrixes to the center: centerInScreen = projMartix*viewMatrix*modelMatrix*center

then see if centerInScreen is inside the -1,-1 to 1,1 box, (which opengl maps to the viewport)

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    One additional condition actually remains: those coordinates are in clip-space, to test those coordinates the proper range for xyz is [-w,w]. You can either perform that test, or divide the coordinates by w; if you do the latter, then the range [-1,1] (NDC) you discussed applies. May 24, 2014 at 0:01
  • @AndonM.Coleman: actually, you always will have to test before the divide. Otherwise, you will get false positives (of objects which actually lie behind the camera), or situations with division by 0.
    – derhass
    May 24, 2014 at 15:49
  • @derhass I am not sure I follow. Division by 0.0 produces positive/negative infinity, which will fail the test. May 24, 2014 at 17:20
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    @AndonM.Coleman: Remember that with a typical GL projection matrix, w_clip=-z_eye. You cannot realy do the division to get to NDC space for vertices which lie in the camera plane z_eye=0. But you can easily exclude them as outside the frustum in clip space, since the condition -0 < {x,y,z} < 0 will never be satisfied. But, that is just a side node. The bigger issue are IMHO vertices which lie behind the camera. Note that x/w == -x/-w, so the images of such vertices are just mirrored, but even the z coord is mirrored to end up in front of the camera.
    – derhass
    May 24, 2014 at 17:28
  • @derhass I see what you mean. I was thinking in terms of vertices; vertices with w=0.0 in clip-space are clipped, but the test in this question is actually for visibility given the centroid of an object and not clipping. May 24, 2014 at 17:43

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