I made a bookmarklet that opens the current window without the toolbars: javascript:(function(){window.open(window.location,%20document.title,%20"menubar=no,location=no,resizable=yes,scrollbars=yes,status=yes");})()
You create a VAO, a Vertex Arrays Object glGenVertexArrays, bind it, you read in the shaders and tie attributes to specific arrays and enable them (it is born with none enabled). And then you describe with VBOs the actual data which is basically just a flattened 1D array where you specify the strides and link them to the actual VAO in terms of relevant attributes.
And then when you're done playing around with the data, you'd do .UpdateData() and it'd take the data and cram it into the GPU Buffer's mouth with MAP_WRITE_DISCARD
(There's no point using this technique with static data).
(But if you like you can make a DynamicVertexBuffer and a StaticVertexBuffer, for shits 'n' giggles ).
my only issue is that I'll only be able to use interleaved arrays with DynamicVertexBuffer.
Unless I figured out how to do some std::vector TMP ~~~Magic~~~
Nine pints of Doom Bar, plus live music, and I'm quite happy to accept that owning pointers and unions are bad. Just don't care tonite 'cos good time :)
I remember the live document vividly. There was quite a bit of energy thrust upon it. The cohesion of a usually chaotic group of Regulars was surprising.
It wasn't really just me, but my work was supposed to set the rendering basis for it. And well, I really had to remove myself from everything for a good while. I'm not really good at dealing with death, I regret not sticking it out.
Gamers want graphics over gameplay. And while it is not that hard to deliver better iterations of engines, the strain put on artists is fucking retarded nowadays. I know CryTek freelance artists who worked on medium-sized areas for over a month.
So, we got all these crappy tools and frameworks that cripple our development time, and designers who either don't know what they want or are pressured by the suits who don't know what the fuck they're talking about.
@EtiennedeMartel The problem is, I've always wanted to develop 3D art tools, but it's really hard to sell them. Artists are stubborn and slow to change. They suffered with 3ds max, Mudbox, Maya, Zbrush etc. and it's hard to say "Hey, try this."