It says the drawing is done N times, with gl_InstanceID (which can be accessed from within the shader) is increased from 0 to N - 1. gl_InstanceID is the only thing that changes.
So I think I have to read the buffer manually from within the shader, but that would be so weird.
// glDrawElementsInstanced has the same effect as:
if (mode, count, or type is invalid )
generate appropriate error
else {
for (int i = 0; i < primcount ; i++) {
instanceID = i;
glDrawElements(mode, count, type, indices);
}
instanceID = 0;
}
Makes no sense to me at all.
DOCUMENTATION Y U NO TELL ME WHAT DATA IS PASSED TO THE VERTEX SHADER.
> It will send the same vertices instancecount number of times, as though you called glDrawArrays/Elements in a loop of instancecount length. However, the vertex shader is given a special input value: gl_InstanceID.
> It is possible to have one or more attribute arrays indexed, not by the index buffer or direct array access, but by the instance count. This is done via this function void glVertexAttribDivisor(GLuint index, GLuint divisor);.
> This is generally considered the most efficient way of getting per-instance data to the vertex shader. However, it is also the most resource-constrained method in some respects. Virtually every OpenGL implementation only offers 16 4-vector attributes, some of which will be the actual per-vertex data. So that leaves less for your per-instance data. While the number of instances can be arbitrarily large (unlike UBO arrays), the amount of per-instance data is much smaller.
it's interesting to look at the newest 10 questions and observe there's almost no correlation between age of question and number of views. (at least in that time span)