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IRIX 6.4 » Books » Developer »
OpenGL Performer Getting Started Guide
(document number: 007-3560-002 / published: 2000-11-14)
table of contents | additional info | download find in page
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arena
A portion of memory shared by OpenGL Performer processes.
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billboard
A slice of a geometry that rotates with the viewer so that the entire geometry appears rendered, even though only a slice of it has been rendered.
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channel
A view of objects in a scene, based on the location and orientation of the camera in the scene viewing frustum.
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cull
Eliminates all geometries out of view from rendering.
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clip texture
Virtualizes MIPmapped textures using hardware and software support, so that only the texels in the region close to the viewer (known as the clipped region) need to be loaded in texture memory. (Also known as ClipMap.)
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dynamic shared object (DSO)
An object that can be shared between applications at run time.
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frustum
Computer-generated objects can be projected into an artificial viewing area, called a frustum. A frustum is in the form of a truncated pyramid, shown in Figure 5-3, between the base of the viewing volume, called the far plane, and the near plane.
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heap
A portion of memory reserved for graphics.
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libpf
The pf Performer library; a higher level library that relies on libpr.
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libpr
The pr Performer library containing basic Performer tools.
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libpfdu
The du Performer library containing database utilities, helpful for loading scene graphs.
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load
(1) Transferring from disk to memory. (2) The processing burden of rendering a frame, and can be defined as the rendering time divided by the desired frame period.
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model view
Same as object space.
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node
A class derived from pfNode. A node can be part of a scene graph.
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object space
A coordinate system in a subsection of a scene graph. Also referred to as model view.
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perfly
The demonstration program distributed with OpenGL Performer.
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Renders the visual data, contained in the viewing frustum, to a window.
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scene graph
A hierarchy of nodes. The hierarchy specifies the order in which the nodes are processed.
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stress
Stress is directly related to the graphics load; the more complex the display, the higher the system stress.
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texture mapping
Applies textures, such as the appearance of an orange, to the surface of a geometry.
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traversal
An scene graph action, such as a draw action, going from one node to another.
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viewing frustum
A truncated pyramid defined by the near and far clipping planes, and by the horizontal and vertical field of view. See Figure 4-3. Only those shapes in the frustum are visible to the viewer.
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viewing volume
The viewing volume is the pyramid, shown in Figure 5-3, formed between the eyepoint and the vertical and horizontal field of view.
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viewport
A viewport refers to each channel in a window.
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world space
The coordinate system of the root node, in which all shapes in a scene graph can reside.
OpenGL Performer Getting Started Guide
(document number: 007-3560-002 / published: 2000-11-14)
table of contents | additional info | download
Front Matter
New Features in This Guide
About This Guide
Part I. Overview of OpenGL Performer
Part II. Programming With OpenGL Performer
Appendix A. Building a Visual Simulation Application
Appendix B. Image Gallery
Glossary
Index
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