// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT package gl import ( "fmt" "reflect" "strings" "unsafe" ) // Ptr takes a slice or pointer (to a singular scalar value or the first // element of an array or slice) and returns its GL-compatible address. // // For example: // // var data []uint8 // ... // gl.TexImage2D(gl.TEXTURE_2D, ..., gl.UNSIGNED_BYTE, gl.Ptr(&data[0])) func Ptr(data interface{}) unsafe.Pointer { if data == nil { return unsafe.Pointer(nil) } var addr unsafe.Pointer switch v := data.(type) { case *uint8: addr = unsafe.Pointer(v) case *uint16: addr = unsafe.Pointer(v) case *float32: addr = unsafe.Pointer(v) case []uint8: addr = unsafe.Pointer(&v[0]) case []uint16: addr = unsafe.Pointer(&v[0]) case []float32: addr = unsafe.Pointer(&v[0]) default: panic(fmt.Errorf("unsupported type %T; must be a slice or pointer to a singular scalar value or the first element of an array or slice", v)) } return addr } // Str takes a null-terminated Go string and returns its GL-compatible address. // This function reaches into Go string storage in an unsafe way so the caller // must ensure the string is not garbage collected. func Str(str string) *uint8 { if !strings.HasSuffix(str, "\x00") { panic("str argument missing null terminator: " + str) } header := (*reflect.StringHeader)(unsafe.Pointer(&str)) return (*uint8)(unsafe.Pointer(header.Data)) }