Hello,
as a answer to the 2D graphic question, is that possible to use clx
inside pwgl (actually easier for me) ?
It seems to work using sbcl on macosx using very standard X windows (so
that loads X11)...
Thank's for help,
fred
fredvoisin wrote:
> Hi Mika,
>
> I'd like to build a method for new object in a menu for drawing simple
> trees in 2D (for begining no opengl yet)...
> Please, where should I find or do pwgl methods/classes to use for
> representing boxes in a patch zich represent trees/graphs ; a double
> click may opens a larger window - such as bpf ones -with standard
> functionabilities such as zoom etc ?
> May I find some lisp to hack in pwgl source code ?
> (this to represent trees from matrices of distances for classification
> in fv-morphologie).
>
> Thank's in advance,
> Cheers,
>
> Fred
>
> Mika Kuuskankare wrote:
>> Hi Fred,
>>
>> I could quite easily add this as a display-box feature. Basically it
>> would then work as the editors, i.e., it would display the same image
>> in a separate window as well.
>>
>> -Mika
>>
>> On 10 Jun 2009, at 20:53, fredvoisin wrote:
>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I'd like to represent some graphs into pwgl...
>>> is there a way to represent opengl figures into a separate window
>>> (such as one used for 2D-Editor) ?
>>> (into tutorial about opengl-display-boxes in opengl, I haven't find a
>>> way to do it, graphics seem to be represented
>>> only onto the patch, inside the objet-boxe patch-representation,
>>> where a double-click just open the lisp code.
>>>
>>> Thank's for help,
>>>
>>> Frederic Voisin
>>>
>>
>> Dr. Mika Kuuskankare
>> Researcher
>> Centre for Music & Technology
>> Sibelius Academy
>>
>> Henkilökohtainen postiosoite/Personal post address
>> PL 342 - PO Box 342
>> FIN-00121 Helsinki, FINLAND
>> Mobile: +358 (0)40 5415 233 (Finland)
>> Skype: mkuuskan
>> personal home page: www.siba.fi/~mkuuskan
>> project home page: www.siba.fi/PWGL
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
--
"...the current paradigm is so thoroughly established that the only way
to change is to start over again."
(Donald Norman, in: The Invisible Computer)