Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Bragg
6436cd073d Declare interface types as void and remove cast macros
This declares the interface types CoglFramebuffer, CoglBuffer,
CoglTexture, CoglMetaTexture and CoglPrimitiveTexture as void when
including the public cogl.h header so that users don't have to use lots
of C type casts between instance types and interface types.

This also removes all of the COGL_XYZ() type cast macros since they do
nothing more than compile time type casting but it's less readable if
you haven't seen that coding pattern before.

Unlike with gobject based apis that use per-type macros for casting and
performing runtime type checking we instead prefer to do our runtime
type checking internally within the front-end public apis when objects
are passed into Cogl. This greatly reduces the verbosity for users of
the api and may help reduce the chance of excessive runtime type
checking that can sometimes be a problem.

(cherry picked from commit 248a76f5eac7e5ae4fb45208577f9a55360812a7)

Since we can't break the 1.x api this version of the patch actually
defines compatible NOP macros within deprecated/cogl-type-casts.h
2013-11-27 19:33:44 +00:00
Robert Bragg
1317a25a91 offscreen: rename _new_to_texture to _new_with_texture
This renames cogl_offscreen_new_to_texture to
cogl_offscreen_new_with_texture. The intention is to then cherry-pick
this back to the cogl-1.16 branch so we can maintain a parallel
cogl_offscreen_new_to_texture() function which keeps the synchronous
allocation semantics that some clutter applications are currently
relying on.

Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit ecc6d2f64481626992b2fe6cdfa7b999270b28f5)

Note: Since we can't break the 1.x api on this branch this keeps a
thin shim around cogl_offscreen_new_with_texture to implement
cogl_offscreen_new_to_texture with its synchronous allocation
semantics.
2013-08-19 22:44:44 +01:00
Neil Roberts
41612bfc74 Add a test for getting the component sizes from different fbs
This adds a test which creates two offscreen framebuffers, one with
just an alpha component texture and the other will a full RGBA
texture. The bit sizes of both framebuffers are then checked to verify
that they either have or haven't got bits for the RGB components.

The test currently fails because the framebuffer functions don't bind
the framebuffer before querying so they just query whichever
framebuffer happened to be used last.

Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit 7ca01373efe908efc9f18f2cb7f4a51c274ef677)
2013-01-22 17:48:18 +00:00