I know Kivy exposes its OpenGL context and some of its raw interfaces. If you tamper with OpenGL directly, or use lower-level modules like kivy.graphics.trasformation, what effect (in general) will this have on higher level widgets? Does everything cooperate seemlessly, or do the low level openGL functions have a habit of breaking layouts or making widgets buggy?
Are widgets fully 3D in implementation; although their interface is targeted for 2D? Should I flatten my 3D simulation, using python, and just stay away from the low-level api's?
I am not good enough to build full 3D objects from meshes, yet it would be nice to have a few simple hardware accelerated transformations and texture manipulation/blending/projection.
- Could I extend most built-in widgets with this Renderer template? GitHub
- Will multiple instances of Renderer work side-by-side? (assuming the built-ins will work fine)
- Nested? (Probably not, and limited if so)
I am hoping for answers with a list of caveats when mixing high and low level api, or, existing projects frameworks that were designed with 2.5D in mind (most of the projects I have seen commit pretty heavily to 3D object generation).
Project Notes
I would like to set up a scene that is displayed as several layered 2D planes (using sprites/drawingAPI/Widgets), but is technically modelled after a 3D scene. The depth of the scene does not need full 3D support, but could benefit from 3D camera translation/rotation.
I would like to use high-level Kivy for Widgets and drawing API's. Right now drawing order and scaling should give my scene the depth I desire. But I am not sure how to get certain zooming/panning effects.
I am hoping to use the garden.particlesystem (designed as a flat 2D widget to my understanding). I plan to stack 3 instances, ultimately to create a fluid piping simulation. I shouldn't need to do heavy 3D->2D projection first the first version, but eventually I can see it becoming a problem.