Mantieni tutto organizzato con le raccolte
Salva e classifica i contenuti in base alle tue preferenze.
Per disegnare oggetti e sprite nel gioco, dovrai configurare il
le variabili display, di superficie e di contesto, configurare il rendering nel ciclo di gioco e
disegna ogni scena e ogni oggetto.
Esistono due modi per disegnare immagini sullo schermo per un gioco C o C++, ovvero con
OpenGL ES oppure
Vulkan:
Avrai bisogno di un display,
superficie,
contesto e
config per eseguire il rendering del gioco. Aggiungi il parametro
seguenti variabili OpenGL ES al file di intestazione del tuo motore grafico:
boolNativeEngine::InitDisplay(){if(mEglDisplay!=EGL_NO_DISPLAY){returntrue;}mEglDisplay=eglGetDisplay(EGL_DEFAULT_DISPLAY);if(EGL_FALSE==eglInitialize(mEglDisplay,0,0)){LOGE("NativeEngine: failed to init display, error %d",eglGetError());returnfalse;}returntrue;}
La superficie può essere un buffer fuori schermo (pbuffer) allocato da EGL, oppure un
finestra allocata dal sistema operativo Android. Inizializza questa piattaforma:
boolNativeEngine::InitSurface(){ASSERT(mEglDisplay!=EGL_NO_DISPLAY);if(mEglSurface!=EGL_NO_SURFACE){returntrue;}EGLintnumConfigs;constEGLintattribs[]={EGL_RENDERABLE_TYPE,EGL_OPENGL_ES2_BIT,// request OpenGL ES 2.0EGL_SURFACE_TYPE,EGL_WINDOW_BIT,EGL_BLUE_SIZE,8,EGL_GREEN_SIZE,8,EGL_RED_SIZE,8,EGL_DEPTH_SIZE,16,EGL_NONE};// Pick the first EGLConfig that matches.eglChooseConfig(mEglDisplay,attribs,&mEglConfig,1,&numConfigs);mEglSurface=eglCreateWindowSurface(mEglDisplay,mEglConfig,mApp->window,NULL);if(mEglSurface==EGL_NO_SURFACE){LOGE("Failed to create EGL surface, EGL error %d",eglGetError());returnfalse;}returntrue;}
Inizializza il contesto di rendering. Questo esempio crea un
Contesto OpenGL ES 2.0:
boolNativeEngine::InitContext(){ASSERT(mEglDisplay!=EGL_NO_DISPLAY);if(mEglContext!=EGL_NO_CONTEXT){returntrue;}// OpenGL ES 2.0EGLintattribList[]={EGL_CONTEXT_CLIENT_VERSION,2,EGL_NONE};mEglContext=eglCreateContext(mEglDisplay,mEglConfig,NULL,attribList);if(mEglContext==EGL_NO_CONTEXT){LOGE("Failed to create EGL context, EGL error %d",eglGetError());returnfalse;}returntrue;}
Configura le impostazioni OpenGL ES prima di disegnare. Questo esempio viene eseguito
l'inizio di ogni frame. Consente test di profondità, imposta il colore trasparente su
nero e cancella i buffer di colore e profondità.
Aggiorna la logica e l'interfaccia utente del gioco.
Visualizza un frame sul display.
Per eseguire il rendering di un frame sul display, viene chiamato il metodo DoFrame
a tempo indeterminato nel ciclo di gioco:
voidNativeEngine::GameLoop(){// Loop indefinitely.while(1){intevents;structandroid_poll_source*source;// If not animating, block until we get an event.while((ALooper_pollAll(IsAnimating()?0:-1,NULL,&events,(void**)&source))>=0){// Process events....}// Render a frame.if(IsAnimating()){DoFrame();}}}
Nel metodo DoFrame, esegui una query sulle dimensioni della superficie attuali, richiedi
SceneManager per eseguire il rendering di un frame e scambiare i buffer del display.
voidNativeEngine::DoFrame(){...// Query the current surface dimension.intwidth,height;eglQuerySurface(mEglDisplay,mEglSurface,EGL_WIDTH,&width);eglQuerySurface(mEglDisplay,mEglSurface,EGL_HEIGHT,&height);// Handle dimension changes.SceneManager*mgr=SceneManager::GetInstance();if(width!=mSurfWidth||height!=mSurfHeight){mSurfWidth=width;mSurfHeight=height;mgr->SetScreenSize(mSurfWidth,mSurfHeight);glViewport(0,0,mSurfWidth,mSurfHeight);}...// Render scenes and objects.mgr->DoFrame();// Swap buffers.if(EGL_FALSE==eglSwapBuffers(mEglDisplay,mEglSurface)){HandleEglError(eglGetError());}}
Rendering di scene e oggetti
Il ciclo di gioco elabora una gerarchia di scene e oggetti visibili da visualizzare.
Nell'esempio di Endless Tunnel, SceneManager tiene traccia di più scene,
con una sola scena attiva alla volta. In questo esempio, la scena corrente è
con rendering:
A seconda del gioco, una scena può contenere sfondo, testo, sprite e
di oggetti di gioco. Visualizzali nell'ordine adatto al tuo gioco. Questo esempio
esegue il rendering di sfondo, testo e widget:
voidUiScene::DoFrame(){// clear screenglClearColor(0.0f,0.0f,0.0f,1.0f);glClear(GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT|GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT);glDisable(GL_DEPTH_TEST);RenderBackground();// Render the "Please Wait" sign and do nothing elseif(mWaitScreen){SceneManager*mgr=SceneManager::GetInstance();mTextRenderer->SetFontScale(WAIT_SIGN_SCALE);mTextRenderer->SetColor(1.0f,1.0f,1.0f);mTextRenderer->RenderText(S_PLEASE_WAIT,mgr->GetScreenAspect()*0.5f,0.5f);glEnable(GL_DEPTH_TEST);return;}// Render all the widgets.for(inti=0;i < mWidgetCount;++i){mWidgets[i]->Render(mTrivialShader,mTextRenderer,mShapeRenderer,(mFocusWidget < 0)?UiWidget::FOCUS_NOT_APPLICABLE:(mFocusWidget==i)?UiWidget::FOCUS_YES:UiWidget::FOCUS_NO,tf);}glEnable(GL_DEPTH_TEST);}
Risorse
Leggi quanto segue per avere ulteriori informazioni su OpenGL ES e Vulkan:
I campioni di contenuti e codice in questa pagina sono soggetti alle licenze descritte nella Licenza per i contenuti. Java e OpenJDK sono marchi o marchi registrati di Oracle e/o delle sue società consociate.
Ultimo aggiornamento 2025-07-27 UTC.
[null,null,["Ultimo aggiornamento 2025-07-27 UTC."],[],[],null,["# Configure graphics with OpenGL ES\n\nTo draw objects and sprites in your game, you will need to configure the\ndisplay, surface and context variables, set up rendering in your game loop, and\ndraw each scene and object.\n\nThere are two ways to draw images to the screen for a C or C++ game, namely with\n[OpenGL ES](/develop/ui/views/graphics/opengl/about-opengl), or\n[Vulkan](/ndk/guides/graphics/getting-started).\n\n- [OpenGL ES](/develop/ui/views/graphics/opengl/about-opengl) is part of the [Open Graphics\n Library (OpenGL®)](https://www.khronos.org/opengles/) specification\n intended for mobile devices such as Android. Learn how to configure OpenGL ES\n for your game in this topic.\n\n- If you use Vulkan for your game, read the\n [Getting started with Vulkan](/ndk/guides/graphics/getting-started)\n guide.\n\n| **Note:** The code in this topic is based on the [Endless Tunnel](https://github.com/android/ndk-samples/tree/master/endless-tunnel) sample, where details may differ for your game. Understand and adapt these concepts for your specific use case.\n\nBefore you get started\n----------------------\n\nIf you haven't already done so,\n[set up a GameActivity object](/games/agdk/game-activity) in your\nAndroid project.\n\nSet up OpenGL ES variables\n--------------------------\n\n1. You will need a [display](/reference/android/opengl/EGLDisplay),\n [surface](/reference/android/opengl/EGLSurface),\n [context](/reference/android/opengl/EGLContext), and\n [config](/reference/android/opengl/EGLConfig) to render your game. Add the\n following OpenGL ES variables to your game engine's header file:\n\n class NativeEngine {\n //...\n private:\n EGLDisplay mEglDisplay;\n EGLSurface mEglSurface;\n EGLContext mEglContext;\n EGLConfig mEglConfig;\n\n bool mHasFocus, mIsVisible, mHasWindow;\n bool mHasGLObjects;\n bool mIsFirstFrame;\n\n int mSurfWidth, mSurfHeight;\n }\n\n2. In the constructor for your game engine, initialize the default values for\n the variables.\n\n NativeEngine::NativeEngine(struct android_app *app) {\n //...\n mEglDisplay = EGL_NO_DISPLAY;\n mEglSurface = EGL_NO_SURFACE;\n mEglContext = EGL_NO_CONTEXT;\n mEglConfig = 0;\n\n mHasFocus = mIsVisible = mHasWindow = false;\n mHasGLObjects = false;\n mIsFirstFrame = true;\n\n mSurfWidth = mSurfHeight = 0;\n }\n\n3. Initialize the display to render.\n\n bool NativeEngine::InitDisplay() {\n if (mEglDisplay != EGL_NO_DISPLAY) {\n return true;\n }\n\n mEglDisplay = eglGetDisplay(EGL_DEFAULT_DISPLAY);\n if (EGL_FALSE == eglInitialize(mEglDisplay, 0, 0)) {\n LOGE(\"NativeEngine: failed to init display, error %d\", eglGetError());\n return false;\n }\n return true;\n }\n\n4. The surface can be an off-screen buffer (pbuffer) allocated by EGL, or a\n window allocated by the Android OS. Initialize this surface:\n\n bool NativeEngine::InitSurface() {\n ASSERT(mEglDisplay != EGL_NO_DISPLAY);\n if (mEglSurface != EGL_NO_SURFACE) {\n return true;\n }\n\n EGLint numConfigs;\n const EGLint attribs[] = {\n EGL_RENDERABLE_TYPE, EGL_OPENGL_ES2_BIT, // request OpenGL ES 2.0\n EGL_SURFACE_TYPE, EGL_WINDOW_BIT,\n EGL_BLUE_SIZE, 8,\n EGL_GREEN_SIZE, 8,\n EGL_RED_SIZE, 8,\n EGL_DEPTH_SIZE, 16,\n EGL_NONE\n };\n\n // Pick the first EGLConfig that matches.\n eglChooseConfig(mEglDisplay, attribs, &mEglConfig, 1, &numConfigs);\n mEglSurface = eglCreateWindowSurface(mEglDisplay, mEglConfig, mApp-\u003ewindow,\n NULL);\n if (mEglSurface == EGL_NO_SURFACE) {\n LOGE(\"Failed to create EGL surface, EGL error %d\", eglGetError());\n return false;\n }\n return true;\n }\n\n5. Initialize the rendering context. This example creates an\n [OpenGL ES 2.0](/reference/android/opengl/GLES20) context:\n\n bool NativeEngine::InitContext() {\n ASSERT(mEglDisplay != EGL_NO_DISPLAY);\n if (mEglContext != EGL_NO_CONTEXT) {\n return true;\n }\n\n // OpenGL ES 2.0\n EGLint attribList[] = { EGL_CONTEXT_CLIENT_VERSION, 2, EGL_NONE };\n mEglContext = eglCreateContext(mEglDisplay, mEglConfig, NULL, attribList);\n if (mEglContext == EGL_NO_CONTEXT) {\n LOGE(\"Failed to create EGL context, EGL error %d\", eglGetError());\n return false;\n }\n return true;\n }\n\n6. Configure your OpenGL ES settings before drawing. This example is executed at\n the beginning of every frame. It enables depth testing, sets the clear color to\n black, and clears the color and depth buffers.\n\n void NativeEngine::ConfigureOpenGL() {\n glClearColor(0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f);\n glEnable(GL_DEPTH_TEST);\n glClear(GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT | GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT);\n }\n\nRender with the game loop\n-------------------------\n\n1. The game loop renders a frame and repeats indefinitely until the user quits.\n Between frames, your game may:\n\n - [Process events](/games/agdk/game-activity/get-started#handle-events) such as\n input, [audio output](/games/sdk/oboe), and networking events.\n\n - Update the game logic and user interface.\n\n - Render a frame to the display.\n\n To render a frame to the display, the `DoFrame` method is called\n indefinitely in the game loop: \n\n void NativeEngine::GameLoop() {\n // Loop indefinitely.\n while (1) {\n int events;\n struct android_poll_source* source;\n\n // If not animating, block until we get an event.\n while ((ALooper_pollAll(IsAnimating() ? 0 : -1, NULL, &events,\n (void **) &source)) \u003e= 0) {\n // Process events.\n ...\n }\n\n // Render a frame.\n if (IsAnimating()) {\n DoFrame();\n }\n }\n }\n\n2. In the `DoFrame` method, query the current surface dimensions, request\n `SceneManager` to render a frame, and swap the display buffers.\n\n void NativeEngine::DoFrame() {\n ...\n // Query the current surface dimension.\n int width, height;\n eglQuerySurface(mEglDisplay, mEglSurface, EGL_WIDTH, &width);\n eglQuerySurface(mEglDisplay, mEglSurface, EGL_HEIGHT, &height);\n\n // Handle dimension changes.\n SceneManager *mgr = SceneManager::GetInstance();\n if (width != mSurfWidth || height != mSurfHeight) {\n mSurfWidth = width;\n mSurfHeight = height;\n mgr-\u003eSetScreenSize(mSurfWidth, mSurfHeight);\n glViewport(0, 0, mSurfWidth, mSurfHeight);\n }\n ...\n // Render scenes and objects.\n mgr-\u003eDoFrame();\n\n // Swap buffers.\n if (EGL_FALSE == eglSwapBuffers(mEglDisplay, mEglSurface)) {\n HandleEglError(eglGetError());\n }\n }\n\nRender scenes and objects\n-------------------------\n\n1. The game loop processes a hierarchy of visible scenes and objects to render.\n In the Endless Tunnel example, a `SceneManager` keeps track of multiple scenes,\n with only one scene active at a time. In this example, the current scene is\n rendered:\n\n void SceneManager::DoFrame() {\n if (mSceneToInstall) {\n InstallScene(mSceneToInstall);\n mSceneToInstall = NULL;\n }\n\n if (mHasGraphics && mCurScene) {\n mCurScene-\u003eDoFrame();\n }\n }\n\n2. Depending on your game, a scene may contain background, text, sprites and\n game objects. Render them in the order suitable for your game. This example\n renders the background, text, and widgets:\n\n void UiScene::DoFrame() {\n // clear screen\n glClearColor(0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f);\n glClear(GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT | GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT);\n glDisable(GL_DEPTH_TEST);\n\n RenderBackground();\n\n // Render the \"Please Wait\" sign and do nothing else\n if (mWaitScreen) {\n SceneManager *mgr = SceneManager::GetInstance();\n mTextRenderer-\u003eSetFontScale(WAIT_SIGN_SCALE);\n mTextRenderer-\u003eSetColor(1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f);\n mTextRenderer-\u003eRenderText(S_PLEASE_WAIT, mgr-\u003eGetScreenAspect() * 0.5f,\n 0.5f);\n glEnable(GL_DEPTH_TEST);\n return;\n }\n\n // Render all the widgets.\n for (int i = 0; i \u003c mWidgetCount; ++i) {\n mWidgets[i]-\u003eRender(mTrivialShader, mTextRenderer, mShapeRenderer,\n (mFocusWidget \u003c 0) ? UiWidget::FOCUS_NOT_APPLICABLE :\n (mFocusWidget == i) ? UiWidget::FOCUS_YES : UiWidget::FOCUS_NO,tf);\n }\n glEnable(GL_DEPTH_TEST);\n }\n\nResources\n---------\n\nRead the following for more information about OpenGL ES and Vulkan:\n\n- [OpenGL ES](/develop/ui/views/graphics/opengl/about-opengl) - Images and graphics in Android.\n\n- [OpenGL ES](https://source.android.com/devices/graphics/arch-egl-opengl) -\n Overview in Android Source.\n\n- [Vulkan](/ndk/guides/graphics/getting-started) - Getting started in NDK.\n\n- [Vulkan](https://source.android.com/devices/graphics/arch-vulkan) - Overview\n in Android Source.\n\n- [Understand Android game loops](/games/develop/gameloops) - learn to pace\n frames, queue buffers, handle VSYNC callbacks, and manage threads."]]