(*Image).WritePixels doens't send a command to the queue immediately
but caches commands internally. However, the package atlas assumed
that pixel data was sent to the cache every end of a frame. Then, byte
slices for pixels were corrupted.
This change fixes the issue by resolving all the images when flushing
commands.
Closes#2390
Before this change, presenting happened when the rendering destination
was the final screen. Now this assumption is wrong as the final screen
might be used in the middle of the commands due to DrawFinalScreen.
Instead, this change adds a new argument `present` to FlushCommands to
present the screen explicitly at the end of the frame.
Closes#2386
Adjusting pixels is needed to avoid strainge rendering to avoid unexpected
rendering (#1171). However, this adjustment caused unexpected holes
especially in a thick stroke.
This change moves the logic of adjusting pixels from atlas to
graphics.QuadVertices so that adjusting works only for DrawImage and
DrawRectShader.
Updates #1171
Updates #1843
Now Kage shaders are always used.
The situtation is different from when we fixed for #1355, so we removed
the fast path for #1335. We have to re-check the current performance.
Updates #1355
DrawTriangles was introduced at #1508, and apparently there is no
reason we should use ReplacePixels here. So, simplify the logic by
using only DrawTriangles.
From the reported stack trace, there could be a potential issue in
atlas.BeginFrame: images were manipulated before the images are restored.
Restoring images assumes that all images are not stale, but manipulating
images like putOnAtlas might cause other images stale in ReplacePixels.
Though we failed to reproduce the case, this fix should make sense.
Updates #2075
Now pixels are adjusted even when the graphics driver doesn't have
high-precision floats, but this should not be problematic. This was
introduced at 9bff33472a, but the
adjusting way is much different from the current way.
Updates #879Closes#1820
With DirectX, the graphics driver cannot be determined until the
main loop starts, as a transparent window cannot be treated with
DirectX so far. On the other hand, compiling shaders requires a
graphics driver as it requires information about Y directions of
NDCs and framebuffers.
This change delays compiling shaders until the graphics commands
are actually executed in the main loop.
Updates #1007
Updates #2019