I've written an app that relies heavily on iSGL3d for 3D rendering, and I've come to a point now where I need to start fiddling with texture sizes for memory allocation reasons.
My app uses very large textures (1024x1024) and going from that to 512x512 is unacceptable
So, using GL ES 2.0 as a basis, I want to slightly reduce my textures to something closer to 700x700
I know this is possible, because I've painstakingly handwritten OpenGL code in a previous life that uses non-power-of-2 textures
But I've had a hell of a time trying to sift through iSGL3d's code to find where I can affect this change... and the project appears to be abandoned now.
Basically, by default, even if you use a GLES 2.0 instance, iSGL3d will just make a power-of-two bitmap and dump your texture into it, leaving a bunch of transparent pixels. This is worthless.
Forcing the texture size to a non-power-of-two image generates GL errors. I am assuming this is because I am not properly forcing it everywhere it needs to be forced, or iSGL3d isn't properly using GLES 2.0 as it should be
Any pointers at all would be useful...