iPhone cost vs. benefit - OpenGL ES 1.x vs 2.0
I'm not sure if this question has been asked 开发者_运维技巧already, my stackoverflow-fu has failed me.
So I'm building an OpenGL-ES-based iPhone game and pretty much all of the examples I've found out in the wild are on OpenGL ES 1.x. Which is fine because at least I'm (re)learning a lot about OpenGL in general.
Now that newer devices support OpenGL-ES 2.0, I'm wondering if anyone has ported their OpenGL-ES 1.x app to 2.0 and if so were there any performance or efficiency gains? For instance, I can setup my lighting (in 1.x) with glLightf(blahblah) and I'm done with lighting...but apparently that function doesn't exist in 2.0 so I'm forced to write it myself? So, how can somebody with no experience "programming the pipeline" accomplish this? Is there a default lighting implementation in 2.0?
I'm probably speaking out of ignorance as I haven't really found any solid iPhone-specific OpenGL-ES 2.0 information.
Any help in this space will be greatly appreciated.
From what I've read, and from my limited time working with it, going to OpenGL ES 2.0 from 1.1 isn't so much a matter of performance as it is about capabilities. If you watch the Mastering OpenGL ES for iPhone videos (part of the iPhone Getting Started Videos available through the iPhone Developer Program site), Apple even states that if you can do what you need to under OpenGL ES 1.1, you don't need to step up to 2.0.
OpenGL ES 2.0's fully programmable pipeline can make simple actions much harder than doing the same thing in 1.1, because you need to write code for parts of the pipeline that were handled for you before. However, 2.0 makes practical many stunning effects that you just couldn't do in 1.1. For example, I recommend watching the WWDC 2010 session video 417 - OpenGL ES Shading and Advanced Rendering and the Graphics and Media State of the Union to see what's possible using OpenGL ES 2.0.
To date, few applications have used OpenGL ES 2.0, given the limited subset of iPhone devices that had compatible GPUs and the lack of documentation and examples. I think we'll see this start to change as the pre-iPhone 3G S devices are phased out. In particular, the iPad has had OpenGL ES 2.0 from launch, so if you are designing an application for it you can rely on these capabilities to be there. More code examples and documentation are sure to appear in the near future.
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