11

I'm working on a card game, and currently have a good foundation but I'm running into an error when I run it in eclipse. I'm also using slick 2d.

Here is the error from the console.

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.RuntimeException: No OpenGL context found in the current thread. at org.lwjgl.opengl.GLContext.getCapabilities(GLContext.java:124) at org.lwjgl.opengl.GL11.glGetError(GL11.java:1277) at org.newdawn.slick.opengl.renderer.ImmediateModeOGLRenderer.glGetError(ImmediateModeOGLRenderer.java:387) at org.newdawn.slick.opengl.InternalTextureLoader.getTexture(InternalTextureLoader.java:337) at org.newdawn.slick.opengl.InternalTextureLoader.getTexture(InternalTextureLoader.java:275) at org.newdawn.slick.Image.(Image.java:270) at org.newdawn.slick.Image.(Image.java:244) at org.newdawn.slick.Image.(Image.java:232) at org.newdawn.slick.Image.(Image.java:198) at Cards.Card.(Card.java:18)

Code where I believe the source of the error to be occuring(Card class)

package Cards;
import org.newdawn.slick.Image;
import org.newdawn.slick.SlickException;
public class Card
{
    final int numCards = 52;
    Image[] card = new Image [numCards];
    Card (int c)
    {
        String fileLocation = new String ();
        for (int i = 1 ; i <= 52 ; i++)
        {
            fileLocation = "res/cards/" + i + ".png";
            try 
            {

                card [i] = new Image (fileLocation); //line
            }
            catch (SlickException e)
            {
                e.printStackTrace ();
            }
        }
    }
    public Image getImage (int cardlocation)
    {
        return card [cardlocation];
    }
}

Has anybody seen this kind of problem before? How can I solve it?

5 Answers 5

12

This kind of error is common for LWJGL starters. The OpenGL context gets bound to a thread when it's been created. So you can only access this context from the same thread.

As it does not look that you're working with different threads there might be another cause. Slick2D seems to need a valid OpenGL context for its Image class.

So my first try would be to initialize an OpenGL context before initializing your card images.

5

In lwjgl 3.x and higher, you can try: GLContext.createFromCurrent();

If you're using libgdx, there is also Gdx.app.postRunnable(...) to post a Runnable on the render thread.

1
  • The second solution works only with libgdx, not with lwjgl (which the question is about).
    – javac
    Apr 20, 2016 at 12:07
4

This happened to me once, and I couldn't figure out what to do until I realized I was calling the image loader before OpenGL had initialized. Make sure that you aren't defining any variables with an image loader in the constructor(or any other method called) before OpenGL inits(what I did).

Are you defining a Card class before OpenGL is initialized?

Hope this helps.

0
3

An old thread, but it might help someone. Depending on which LWJGL you're using, init your Display:

LWJGL 3 (uses GLFW):

if (!glfwInit()) {
   throw new IllegalStateException("Can't init GLFW");
}

LWJGL 2:

try {
   Display.setDisplayMode(new DisplayMode(800, 600));
   Display.create();
} catch (LWJGLException ex) {
   Logger.getLogger(Main.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}

I, mostly, forget Display.create() :)

2

Well, what I've found is that you need to init your Display before you set your OpenGL environment :)...

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