Book Image

OpenGL Development Cookbook

By : Muhammad Mobeen Movania
Book Image

OpenGL Development Cookbook

By: Muhammad Mobeen Movania

Overview of this book

OpenGL is the leading cross-language, multi-platform API used by masses of modern games and applications in a vast array of different sectors. Developing graphics with OpenGL lets you harness the increasing power of GPUs and really take your visuals to the next level. OpenGL Development Cookbook is your guide to graphical programming techniques to implement 3D mesh formats and skeletal animation to learn and understand OpenGL. OpenGL Development Cookbook introduces you to the modern OpenGL. Beginning with vertex-based deformations, common mesh formats, and skeletal animation with GPU skinning, and going on to demonstrate different shader stages in the graphics pipeline. OpenGL Development Cookbook focuses on providing you with practical examples on complex topics, such as variance shadow mapping, GPU-based paths, and ray tracing. By the end you will be familiar with the latest advanced GPU-based volume rendering techniques.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
OpenGL Development Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Implementing OBJ model loading using interleaved buffers


In this recipe we will implement the Wavefront ® OBJ model. Instead of using separate buffer objects for storing positions, normals, and texture coordinates as in the previous recipe, we will use a single buffer object with interleaved data. This ensures that we have more chances of a cache hit since related attributes are stored next to each other in the buffer object memory.

Getting started

The code for this recipe is contained in the Chapter5/ObjViewer folder.

How to do it…

Let us start the recipe by following these simple steps:

  1. Create a global reference of the ObjLoader object. Call the ObjLoader::Load function, passing it the name of the OBJ file. Pass vectors to store the meshes, vertices, indices, and materials contained in the OBJ file.

      ObjLoader obj;
      if(!obj.Load(mesh_filename.c_str(), meshes, vertices, indices, materials)) {
        cout<<"Cannot load the 3ds mesh"<<endl;
        exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
      }
  2. Generate OpenGL...