Microsoft DirectX 8.1 (C++)

F

face
A single polygon in a mesh.
fade
The period between the central, or sustain, portion of a force-feedback effect and its end.
falloff
Light attenuation between a spotlight's inner and outer cones.
field
Data for one-half of a single video frame within a video stream. Each field contains data for every other scan line. Fields are sent and received in odd field, even field order.
field polarity
Quality determining whether a field is an even field or an odd field. In odd fields the trailing edge of the VREF does not occur during a scan line. In even fields the trailing edge of the VREF occurs during a scan line.
flimmering
A shimmering appearance on 3-D primitives that results from a poor separation of z values when doing decaling. Some pixels from the back texture are rendered onto the front texture and vice versa.
flip
The process of swapping the addresses associated with the back and front buffers. This effectively swaps the image in the back buffer to the front buffer, thus displaying the image.
flipping chain
A series of surfaces attached to each other that can be flipped. See also flip.
flipping surface
Any piece of memory that can be flipped. See also flip.
focus window
An application window, visible or not visible, that Microsoft® DirectDraw® uses to hook window messages. The focus window's message handler receives input messages forwarded by DirectDraw. Applications can have only one focus window. See also device window.
frame
An invisible box that provides a frame of reference for objects in a scene. Objects can be placed in a scene by specifying their spatial relationship to a relevant reference frame. Visual objects take their positions and orientations from frames.

In a movie or animation, a single image.

front buffer
A rectangle of memory that is translated by the graphics adapter and displayed on the monitor or other output device.
front clipping plane
The near boundary of a viewing frustum. Any object closer to the camera than the front clipping plane is not rendered. The height of the front clipping plane defines the field of view. See also back clipping plane.