glFrontFace — define front- and back-facing polygons
void glFrontFace( | GLenum | mode) ; |
mode
Specifies the orientation of front-facing polygons. GL_CW
and GL_CCW
are accepted. The initial value is GL_CCW
.
In a scene composed entirely of opaque closed surfaces, back-facing polygons are never visible. Eliminating these invisible polygons has the obvious benefit of speeding up the rendering of the image. To enable and disable elimination of back-facing polygons, call glEnable and glDisable with argument GL_CULL_FACE
.
The projection of a polygon to window coordinates is said to have clockwise winding if an imaginary object following the path from its first vertex, its second vertex, and so on, to its last vertex, and finally back to its first vertex, moves in a clockwise direction about the interior of the polygon. The polygon's winding is said to be counterclockwise if the imaginary object following the same path moves in a counterclockwise direction about the interior of the polygon. glFrontFace
specifies whether polygons with clockwise winding in window coordinates, or counterclockwise winding in window coordinates, are taken to be front-facing. Passing GL_CCW
to mode
selects counterclockwise polygons as front-facing; GL_CW
selects clockwise polygons as front-facing. By default, counterclockwise polygons are taken to be front-facing.
GL_INVALID_ENUM
is generated if mode
is not an accepted value.
GL_INVALID_OPERATION
is generated if glFrontFace
is executed between the execution of glBegin and the corresponding execution of glEnd.
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