Direct3D interprets the data in execute buffers according to the current state settings. Applications set up these states before instructing the system to render data. The D3DSTATE structure contains three enumerated types that expose this architecture: D3DTRANSFORMSTATETYPE, which sets the state of the transform module; D3DLIGHTSTATETYPE, for the lighting module; and D3DRENDERSTATETYPE, for the rasterization module.
Each state includes a Boolean value that is essentially a read-only flag. If this flag is set to TRUE, no further state changes are allowed.
Applications can override the read-only state of a module by using the D3DSTATE_OVERRIDE macro. This mechanism allows an application to reuse an execute buffer, changing its behavior by changing the system's state. Direct3D Retained Mode uses state overrides to accomplish some tasks that otherwise would require completely rebuilding an execute buffer. For example, the Retained-Mode API uses state overrides to replace the material of a mesh with the material of a frame.
An application might use the D3DSTATE_OVERRIDE macro to lock and unlock the Gouraud shade mode, as shown in the following example. (The shade-mode render state is defined by the D3DRENDERSTATE_SHADEMODE member of the D3DRENDERSTATETYPE enumerated type.)
OP_STATE_RENDER(2, lpBuffer);
STATE_DATA(D3DRENDERSTATE_SHADEMODE, D3DSHADE_GOURAUD, lpBuffer);
STATE_DATA(D3DSTATE_OVERRIDE(D3DRENDERSTATE_SHADEMODE), TRUE, lpBuffer);
The OP_STATE_RENDER macro implicitly uses the D3DOP_STATERENDER opcode, one of the members of the D3DOPCODE enumerated type. D3DSHADE_GOURAUD is one of the members of the D3DSHADEMODE enumerated type.
After executing the execute buffer, the application could use the D3DSTATE_OVERRIDE macro again, to allow the shade mode to be changed:
STATE_DATA(D3DSTATE_OVERRIDE(D3DRENDERSTATE_SHADEMODE), FALSE, lpBuffer);
The OP_STATE_RENDER and STATE_DATA macros are defined in the D3dmacs.h header file in the Misc directory of the DirectX 2 SDK sample code; these macros are also described in Setting the Immediate-Mode Render State.