User:Tamas Bates/NetProto/WebGL/ShaderFun: Difference between revisions
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==Simple Mesh Deformation and | ==Simple Mesh Deformation and Shading== | ||
Deforming a sphere and coloring it based on its difference from a normal sphere. Requires LOTS of polygons to make this kind of transformation look smooth, but runs fine as long as there are no other objects in the scene... | Deforming a sphere and coloring it based on its difference from a normal sphere. Requires LOTS of polygons to make this kind of transformation look smooth, but runs fine as long as there are no other objects in the scene... | ||
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[[File:Spheroidsubtraction.png|framed|center|Obligatory Subtractive Shapes]] | [[File:Spheroidsubtraction.png|framed|center|Obligatory Subtractive Shapes]] | ||
==A More Complete Raymarching Example== | |||
Added support for texturing, better lighting, multiple materials, and a few small tweaks which should hopefully boost performance on some machines. May take a few seconds to load, and will render with flat colors in place of textures until the texture images have been downloaded. This is largely just a somewhat messy extension of the marching code above, and could use some more work to reduce a lot of the equations used for shading (too much trigonometry happening there, right now). | |||
<big>'''http://noirbear.com/toys/marching/melty.html'''</big> |
Latest revision as of 15:56, 3 February 2014
Simple Mesh Deformation and Shading
Deforming a sphere and coloring it based on its difference from a normal sphere. Requires LOTS of polygons to make this kind of transformation look smooth, but runs fine as long as there are no other objects in the scene...
Vertex Shader:
uniform float amplitude; // time-varying value used to increase/decrease overall deformation
uniform float time;
varying vec3 vNormal; // normal vector at this vertex; just passed on to fragment shader
varying float dist; // distance of this vertex from its original position (sent to fragment shader for coloring)
void main(void) {
vNormal = normal; // pass thru normal
vec3 newPos = position + normal * vec3(sin(0.5*position.y + 10.0*time) * amplitude );
dist = distance(position, newPos); // distance of new point from surface
gl_Position = projectionMatrix * modelViewMatrix * vec4(newPos, 1.0);
}
Fragment Shader:
varying vec3 vNormal;
varying float dist;
void main(void) {
vec3 light = vec3(0.5, 0.2, 1.0); // fake a light
light = normalize(light);
float dprod = max(0.0, dot(vNormal, light));
float j = 2.0 / dist;
gl_FragColor = vec4(dprod * j, j*0.4*dprod, 0.2*j, 1.0);
}
Super Simple Raymarching
All the smoothness! None of the polygons! A similar result to the one above was produced using only a fragment shader, requiring a grand total of 2 polygons (to render the shader's output on). Over 3x as many lines of code, though, so that's a little inconvenient. The actual raymarching only takes up about a third of the code, though, so extending this to more complex scenes shouldn't require much more code than extending the polygon-based example above (and depending on the scene may require less). HUGE and neverending thanks to IQ for his helpful articles on the topic.
precision mediump float;
uniform float time; // not required to be actual time, just needs to monotonically increase/decrease for the waves to flow correctly
uniform vec2 uResolution; // width/height of rendering surface
const float maxDepth = 64.0;
const int maxIterations = 64;
const float epsilon = 0.001;
const float radius = 0.55; // radius of sphere
float sphere(vec3 p, float s)
{
return (length(p)-s);
}
float wigglesphere(vec3 p, float s)
{
return 0.02*sin(-100.0*p.z + 10.*time) + sphere(p, s);
}
float dist(in vec3 p)
{
return wigglesphere(p, radius);
}
float castRay( in vec3 ro, in vec3 rd, in float maxd )
{
float h=epsilon*2.0; // step size
float t = 0.0; // distance travelled
for( int i=0; i<maxIterations; i++ )
{
if( abs(h)<epsilon||t>maxd ) continue;//break;
t += h;
h = dist(ro+rd*t);
}
return t;
}
vec3 calcNormal( in vec3 pos )
{
vec3 eps = vec3( 0.001, 0.0, 0.0 );
vec3 normal = vec3(
dist(pos+eps.xyy) - dist(pos-eps.xyy),
dist(pos+eps.yxy) - dist(pos-eps.yxy),
dist(pos+eps.yyx) - dist(pos-eps.yyx) );
return normalize(normal);
}
vec3 render( in vec3 ro, in vec3 rd )
{
vec3 col = vec3(0.0);
float t = castRay(ro,rd,maxDepth);
if( t < maxDepth ) // raymarch converged after t steps
{
vec3 pos = ro + t*rd; // end position = ray origin + distance traveled in ray direction
vec3 normal = calcNormal( pos );
float dif = sqrt(wigglesphere(pos, radius)-sphere(pos, radius)); // used to adjust color values based on distance this point is from a normal sphere
vec3 light = normalize( vec3(0.5, 1.2, 0.1) );
float diffuse = (10.0*sin(2.*time)+20.0)*clamp(dot(normal, light), 0.0, 1.0); // change brightness of the light over time
col = vec3(0.8*diffuse * dif, 0.4*dif*diffuse, 2.5*dif);
}
return vec3(clamp(col,0.0,1.0));
}
void main(void)
{
vec2 q = gl_FragCoord.xy/uResolution.xy;
vec2 p = -1.0+2.0*q;
p.x *= uResolution.x/uResolution.y;
// camera
vec3 rorigin = vec3(1.5, 1.0, 0.3);
vec3 cw = normalize(-rorigin);
vec3 cp = vec3(0.5, 1.0, -1.5);
vec3 cu = normalize(cross(cw,cp));
vec3 cv = normalize(cross(cu,cw));
vec3 rdir = normalize(p.x*cu + p.y*cv + 2.5*cw); // ray direction
vec3 color = render(rorigin, rdir); // <--- Action happens here
gl_FragColor=vec4(color, 1.0);
}
A More Complete Raymarching Example
Added support for texturing, better lighting, multiple materials, and a few small tweaks which should hopefully boost performance on some machines. May take a few seconds to load, and will render with flat colors in place of textures until the texture images have been downloaded. This is largely just a somewhat messy extension of the marching code above, and could use some more work to reduce a lot of the equations used for shading (too much trigonometry happening there, right now).