Don't filter window messages passed to our window (see
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/oldnewthing/archive/2005/02/09/369804.aspx).
Additionally, return the correct values for all messages we are actually
handling and clean up unmanaged memory after we are done with the
window.
Instead of combining PeekMessage+GetMessage, we can simply call
PeekMessage(Remove) to achieve the same effect. This also allows us to
remove the IsIdle property, which is no longer used anywhere.
The temporary context is now retained until the actual context has been
constructed. If we don't do this, then WGL_ARB_create_context may fail
to work correctly on specific GPUs (e.g. Intel). This may affect issue
#19.
The correct way to query number of available pixel formats is to use
Wgl.Arb.GetPixelFormatAttrib(NumberPixelFormatsArb), not
Wgl.Arb.ChoosePixelFormats. This fixes an issue where Intel drivers
would fail to report any pixel formats in GetModesARB, even when
WGL_ARB_pixel_format is supported.
It is now possible to indicate that an application is not DPI-aware. In
that case, OpenTK will let the operating system handle DPI scaling. This
results in worse visuals (pixel doubling) but allows non DPI-aware
applications to continue working.
WGL was autogenerated a few years ago but never touched after that.
Since we use a tiny fraction of all available methods, it makes sense to
remove the unused ones. This reduces dll size and improves startup
times.
On Windows, entry points for OpenGL 1.0 and 1.1 are not exposed by
wglGetProcAddress. We fall back to LoadLibrary+GetProcAddress when
wglProcAddress fails.
When we enter the modal resize loop on Windows with ClipCursor set, we
cause a feedback loop where every resize causes the cursor to move and
every move causes a new resize. To fix this, we need to ungrab the
cursor when we are enter the modal loop.
WinGraphicsMode no longer creates a temporary context in order to create
the list of available modes. Instead, it requires to be passed an
existing context in its constructor.
WinGLContext now creates one temporary context in its static constructor
and hands that to WinGraphicsMode.
WinFactory no longer supports the CreateGraphicsMode API. This API will
be removed in the future, because the link because contexts and modes
cannot be separated in the general case.
The issue is that some display devices report a BitsPerPel value of 0.
It is not clear whether this is a bug in WinDisplayDevice.cs or some
strange windows issue. The implemented workaround adds an entry to the
debug log and hardcodes BitsPerPel to 32 whenever this condition is
encountered. More investigation required.
uint-to-intptr conversion must obey uint-to-int conversions on 32-bit
machines, otherwise an OverflowException may occur: conversions of
numbers over 2^31-1 must be declared as unchecked.
Fixes issue reported here: http://www.opentk.com/node/3418
This significantly improves the usability of keyboard input, by allowing
a common input scheme to be used on different keyboard layouts. Text
input will be facilitated through a new API.
The support burden for Windows versions prior to XP was too large, plus
the relevant code was completely untested. Removing that will allow us
to focus on the things that really matter.
Added IDisposable interface to all classes holding native data that must be freed. OpenTK.Toolkit.Init() now returns an IDisposable instance that can be used to cleanup all native data held by OpenTK. This is useful when re-initializing OpenTK (possibly in a new AppDomain), as is the case in the Example browser.
On some systems, the Windows Raw Input driver fails to find the name of
a mouse device, causing a NRE. Since the name is not vital information,
a dummy name is generated as a workaround.
The platform factory for windows now calls SetProcessDPIAware
in order to enable support for high-dpi modes. The relevant
DllImport has been added to API.cs