glTexCoordPointerEXT - define an array of texture coordinates
void glTexCoordPointerEXT( GLint size, GLenum type, GLsizei stride, GLsizei count, const GLvoid *pointer )
size Specifies the number of coordinates per array element. It must be 1, 2, 3 or 4. type Specifies the data type of each texture coordinate. Symbolic constants GL_SHORT, GL_INT, GL_FLOAT, or GL_DOUBLE_EXT, are accepted. stride Specifies the byte offset between consecutive array elements. If stride is zero the array elements are understood to be tightly packed. count Specifies the number of array elements, counting from the first, that are static. pointer Specifies a pointer to the first coordinate of the first element in the array.
glTexCoordPointerEXT specifies the location and data format of an array of texture coordinates to use when rendering using the vertex array extension. size specifies the number of coordinates per element, and must be 1, 2, 3, or 4. type specifies the data type of each texture coordinate and stride gives the byte stride from one array element to the next allowing vertexes and attributes to be packed into a single array or stored in separate arrays. (Single-array storage may be more efficient on some implementations.) count indicates the number of array elements (counting from the first) that are static. Static elements may be modified by the application, but once they are modified, the application must explicitly respecify the array before using it for any rendering. When a texture coordinate array is specified, size, type, stride, count, and pointer are saved as client-side state, and static array elements may be cached by the implementation. The texture coordinate array is enabled and disabled using glEnable and glDisable with the argument GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY_EXT. If enabled, the texture coordinate array is used when glDrawArraysEXT or glArrayElementEXT is called. Use glDrawArraysEXT to define a sequence of primitives (all of the same type) from pre-specified vertex and vertex attribute arrays. Use glArrayElementEXT to specify primitives by indexing vertexes and vertex attributes.
Non-static array elements are not accessed until glArrayElementEXT or glDrawArraysEXT is executed. By default the texture coordinate array is disabled and it won't be accessed when glArrayElementEXT or glDrawArraysEXT is called. Although it is not an error to call glTexCoordPointerEXT between the execution of glBegin and the corresponding execution of glEnd, the results are undefined. glTexCoordPointerEXT will typically be implemented on the client side with no protocol. Since the texture coordinate array parameters are client side state, they are not saved or restored by glPushAttrib and glPopAttrib. glTexCoordPointerEXT commands are not entered into display lists. glTexCoordPointerEXT is part of the EXT_vertex_array extension, not part of the core GL command set. If "GL_EXT_vertex_array" is included in the string returned by glGetString, when called with argument GL_EXTENSIONS, extension EXT_vertex_array is supported.
GL_INVALID_VALUE is generated if size is not 1, 2, 3, or 4. GL_INVALID_ENUM is generated if type is not an accepted value. GL_INVALID_VALUE is generated if stride or count is negative
glIsEnabled with argument GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY_EXT glGet with argument GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY_SIZE_EXT glGet with argument GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY_TYPE_EXT glGet with argument GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY_STRIDE_EXT glGet with argument GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY_COUNT_EXT glGetPointervEXT with argument GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY_POINTER_EXT
glArrayElementEXT, glColorPointerEXT, glDrawArraysEXT, glEdgeFlagPointerEXT, glGetPointervEXT, glIndexPointerEXT, glNormalPointerEXT, glVertexPointerEXT, glEnable
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Last Edited:
Fri Dec 6 11:18:03 EST 1996
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