I am trying to draw a centered circle to fill in image with a shader in SpriteKit using Swift. I am using this link to learn about shaders, and the section I'm using for this looks like this:
vec2 center = vec2(uResolution.x/2., uResolution.y/2.);
float radius = uResolution.x/2.;
vec2 position = gl_FragCoord.xy - center;
if (length(position) > radius) {
gl_FragColor = vec4(vec3(0.), 1.);
} else {
gl_FragColor = vec4(vec3(1.), 1.);
}
But I wanted to use this with SpriteKit so I rewrote it as this:
void main() {
vec2 center = u_sprite_size / 2.0;
float radius = center.x;
vec2 position = v_tex_coord - center;
if (length(position) > radius) {
gl_FragColor = vec4(vec3(0.0), 1.0);
} else {
gl_FragColor = vec4(vec3(1.0), 1.0);
}
}
This is how I am loading the shader:
let node = SKSpriteNode(imageNamed: "napolean.png")
node.position = CGPoint(x: size.width / 2, y: size.height / 2)
node.shader = SKShader(fileNamed: "circle.fsh")
addChild(node)
When I run the image is always black, and gl_FragColor = vec4(vec3(1.0), 1.0);
is never run, and there are no errors in the console. Could someone explain what is going wrong? Thanks
Update
Okapi pointed out that u_tex_coord is normalized, so I normalized the center then divided it in half like this: vec2 center = (u_sprite_size) / length(u_sprite_size) / 2.0;
. After I do that I can the the circle, but it is too small and off center
v_tex_coord
is in unit coordinates[0-1]
so centre should bevec2(0.5,0.5)
and radius should be1.0
center = (u_sprite_size / 2.0) / length(u_sprite_size / 2.0);
then I can see the circle is working, but its too big and off center.vec2 center = (u_sprite_size) / length(u_sprite_size) / 2.0;
would normalize it, then get half, but its to small and off center when I do that.