Microsoft DirectX 8.1 (pixel shader versions 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3) |
texcoord
Interprets texture coordinate data (UVW1) as color data (RGBA).
texcoord dest
Registers
Argument | Description | Registers | Version | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
vn | cn | tn | rn | |||
dest | Destination register | x | 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3 |
To learn more about registers, see Registers.
Remarks
This instruction interprets the texture coordinate set (UVW1) corresponding to the destination register number as color data (RGBA). If the texture coordinate set contains fewer than three components, the missing components are set to 0. The fourth component is always set to 1. All values are clamped between 0 and 1.
The advantage of texcoord is that it provides a way to pass vertex data interpolated at high precision directly into the pixel shader. However, once the data is written into the destination register, some precision will be lost, depending on the number of bits used by the hardware for registers.
No texture is sampled by this instruction. Only texture coordinates set on this texture stage are relevant.
Any texture data (such as position, normal, and light source direction) can be mapped by a vertex shader into a texture coordinate. This is done by associating a texture with a texture register using SetTexture and by specifying how the texture sampling is done using SetTextureStageState. If the fixed function pipeline is used, be sure to supply the TSS_TEXCOORDINDEX flag.
// This instruction is used as follows: texcoord tn // A texture register (tn) contains four color values (RGBA). The data can also be // thought of as vector data (xyzw). Texcoord will retrieve 3 of these values (xyz) from // texture coordinate set x, and the fourth component (w) is set to 1. // The texture address is copied from the texture coordinate set n. // The result is clamped between 0 and 1.
Example
This example is for illustration only. The C code accompanying the shader has not been optimized for performance. It can use helper functions from the Sample Framework. The sample framework is the foundation on which many of the samples are built.
// Here is an example shader using texcoord. ps.1.0 ; version instruction texcoord t0 ; declare t0 hold texture coordinates, ; which represent rgba values in this example mov r0, t0 ; move the color in t0 to output register r0
The rendered output from the pixel shader is shown below. The (u,v,w,1) coordinate values map to the (rgb) channels. The alpha channel is set to 1. At the corners of the image, coordinate (0,0,0,1) is interpreted as black, (1,0,0,1) is red, (0,1,0,1) is green, and (1,1,0,1) contains green and red, producing yellow.
// Additional code is required to use this shader and an example // scenario is shown below. // This code creates the shader from a file. The contents of the shader // file can also be supplied as a text string. TCHAR strPShaderPath[512]; LPD3DXBUFFER pCode; DXUtil_FindMediaFile( strPShaderPath, _T("shaderFile.txt") ); // Assemble the vertex shader from the file. D3DXAssembleShaderFromFile( strPShaderPath, 0, NULL, &pCode;, NULL ); m_pd3dDevice->CreatePixelShader((DWORD*)pCode->GetBufferPointer(), &m;_hPixelShader ); pCode->Release(); // This code defines the object vertex data. struct CUSTOMVERTEX { FLOAT x, y, z; FLOAT tu1, tv1; }; #define D3DFVF_CUSTOMVERTEX (D3DFVF_XYZ|D3DFVF_TEX1|TEXCOORD2(0)) static CUSTOMVERTEX g_Vertices[]= { // x y z u1 v1 { -1.0f, -1.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, }, { +1.0f, -1.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f, 0.0f, }, { +1.0f, +1.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, }, { -1.0f, +1.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f, }, };