Platform SDK: OpenGL |
OpenGL stores and manipulates pixel data in a frame buffer. The frame buffer consists of a set of logical buffers: color, depth, accumulation, and stencil buffers. The color buffer itself consists of a set of logical buffers; this set can include a front-left, a front-right, a back-left, a back-right, and some number of auxiliary buffers. A particular pixel format or OpenGL implementation may not supply all of these buffers. For example, the current version of Microsoft's implementation of OpenGL in Windows NT/2000 and Windows 95/98 does not support stereoscopic images, so a pixel format cannot have left and right color buffers. In addition, the current version does not support auxiliary buffers. For more information on OpenGL buffers and the OpenGL functions that operate on them, see the OpenGL Reference Manual and the OpenGL Programming Guide.
Microsoft's implementation of OpenGL inWindows NT/2000 and Windows 95/98 supports double buffering of images. This is a technique in which an application draws pixels to an off-screen buffer, and then, when that image is ready for display, copies the contents of the off-screen buffer to an on-screen buffer. Double buffering enables smooth image changes, which are especially important for animated images.
Two color buffers are available to applications that use double buffering: a front buffer and a back buffer. By default, drawing commands are directed to the back buffer (the off-screen buffer), while the front buffer is displayed on the screen. When the off-screen buffer is ready for display, you call SwapBuffers, and Windows NT/2000 and Windows 95/98 copies the contents of the off-screen buffer to the on-screen buffer.
The generic implementation uses a device-independent bitmap (DIB) as the back buffer and the screen display as the front buffer. Hardware devices and their drivers may use different approaches.
Double buffering is a pixel-format property. To request double buffering for a pixel format, set the PFD_DOUBLEBUFFER flag in the PIXELFORMATDESCRIPTOR data structure in a call to ChoosePixelFormat.
The OpenGL core function, glDrawBuffer, selects buffers for writing and clearing.