Why do we pass 0
as first two parameters in GLES20.glViewport(0, 0, width, height)
? What does it signify?
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1Looking at your recent questions, you should probably find an OpenGL ES tutorial and work through it, rather than asking about individual concepts on stackoverflow. Google search finds several; perhaps learnopengles.com/android-lesson-one-getting-started– faddenMar 13, 2015 at 5:25
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1 Answer
Have a look at the spec, it explains it all: Opengl spec.
The parameters x,y,width,height
basically define a rectangle on the window with the OpenGL context that you want to use for OpenGL. It's typically the whole window but it doesn't have to be.
x,y
is basically the bottom left coordinate of your rectangle.
Edit: you could draw an entire scene in the top half of your screen, change the viewport to the bottom half rectangle, then another scene in the bottom half or a different view of the first.
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I would add to this, that the viewport is actually part of the vertex transformation process. It is tempting to think that of it as a rectangle that you are allowed to draw into, but what it really does is map the corners of NDC space (after vertices are projected into clip-space and perspective divided) to 4 points in window-space. You can see this in action if you ever call
glViewport (...)
using dimensions smaller than the framebuffer, followed byglClear (...)
- the entire framebuffer will be cleared because that does not involve any vertex transformation.. Mar 13, 2015 at 11:22 -
You can still affect parts outside the viewport with commands that do not use vertex transformation. In modern GL, there are very few such commands.
glBlitFramebuffer (...)
(not even part of ES 2.0) andglClear (...)
are the only things that come to mind immediately. Mar 13, 2015 at 11:25