ShaderEffect QML Type

Applies custom shaders to a rectangle More...

Import Statement: import QtQuick 2.7
Inherits:

Item

Properties

Detailed Description

The ShaderEffect type applies a custom OpenGL vertex and fragment shader to a rectangle. It allows you to write effects such as drop shadow, blur, colorize and page curl directly in QML.

There are two types of input to the vertexShader: uniform variables and attributes. Some are predefined:

  • uniform mat4 qt_Matrix - combined transformation matrix, the product of the matrices from the root item to this ShaderEffect, and an orthogonal projection.
  • uniform float qt_Opacity - combined opacity, the product of the opacities from the root item to this ShaderEffect.
  • attribute vec4 qt_Vertex - vertex position, the top-left vertex has position (0, 0), the bottom-right (width, height).
  • attribute vec2 qt_MultiTexCoord0 - texture coordinate, the top-left coordinate is (0, 0), the bottom-right (1, 1). If supportsAtlasTextures is true, coordinates will be based on position in the atlas instead.

In addition, any property that can be mapped to an OpenGL Shading Language (GLSL) type is available as a uniform variable. The following list shows how properties are mapped to GLSL uniform variables:

  • bool, int, qreal -> bool, int, float - If the type in the shader is not the same as in QML, the value is converted automatically.
  • QColor -> vec4 - When colors are passed to the shader, they are first premultiplied. Thus Qt.rgba(0.2, 0.6, 1.0, 0.5) becomes vec4(0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 0.5) in the shader, for example.
  • QRect, QRectF -> vec4 - Qt.rect(x, y, w, h) becomes vec4(x, y, w, h) in the shader.
  • QPoint, QPointF, QSize, QSizeF -> vec2
  • QVector3D -> vec3
  • QVector4D -> vec4
  • QTransform -> mat3
  • QMatrix4x4 -> mat4
  • QQuaternion -> vec4, scalar value is w.
  • Image -> sampler2D - Origin is in the top-left corner, and the color values are premultiplied. The texture is provided as is, excluding the Image item's fillMode. To include fillMode, use a ShaderEffectSource or Image::layer::enabled.
  • ShaderEffectSource -> sampler2D - Origin is in the top-left corner, and the color values are premultiplied.

The QML scene graph back-end may choose to allocate textures in texture atlases. If a texture allocated in an atlas is passed to a ShaderEffect, it is by default copied from the texture atlas into a stand-alone texture so that the texture coordinates span from 0 to 1, and you get the expected wrap modes. However, this will increase the memory usage. To avoid the texture copy, set supportsAtlasTextures for simple shaders using qt_MultiTexCoord0, or for each "uniform sampler2D <name>" declare a "uniform vec4 qt_SubRect_<name>" which will be assigned the texture's normalized source rectangle. For stand-alone textures, the source rectangle is [0, 1]x[0, 1]. For textures in an atlas, the source rectangle corresponds to the part of the texture atlas where the texture is stored. The correct way to calculate the texture coordinate for a texture called "source" within a texture atlas is "qt_SubRect_source.xy + qt_SubRect_source.zw * qt_MultiTexCoord0".

The output from the fragmentShader should be premultiplied. If blending is enabled, source-over blending is used. However, additive blending can be achieved by outputting zero in the alpha channel.


  import QtQuick 2.0

  Rectangle {
      width: 200; height: 100
      Row {
          Image { id: img;
                  sourceSize { width: 100; height: 100 } source: "qt-logo.png" }
          ShaderEffect {
              width: 100; height: 100
              property variant src: img
              vertexShader: "
                  uniform highp mat4 qt_Matrix;
                  attribute highp vec4 qt_Vertex;
                  attribute highp vec2 qt_MultiTexCoord0;
                  varying highp vec2 coord;
                  void main() {
                      coord = qt_MultiTexCoord0;
                      gl_Position = qt_Matrix * qt_Vertex;
                  }"
              fragmentShader: "
                  varying highp vec2 coord;
                  uniform sampler2D src;
                  uniform lowp float qt_Opacity;
                  void main() {
                      lowp vec4 tex = texture2D(src, coord);
                      gl_FragColor = vec4(vec3(dot(tex.rgb,
                                          vec3(0.344, 0.5, 0.156))),
                                               tex.a) * qt_Opacity;
                  }"
          }
      }
  }

By default, the ShaderEffect consists of four vertices, one for each corner. For non-linear vertex transformations, like page curl, you can specify a fine grid of vertices by specifying a mesh resolution.

ShaderEffect and Item Layers

The ShaderEffect type can be combined with layered items.

Layer with effect disabled Layer with effect enabled

  Item {
      id: layerRoot
      layer.enabled: true
      layer.effect: ShaderEffect {
          fragmentShader: "
              uniform lowp sampler2D source; // this item
              uniform lowp float qt_Opacity; // inherited opacity of this item
              varying highp vec2 qt_TexCoord0;
              void main() {
                  lowp vec4 p = texture2D(source, qt_TexCoord0);
                  lowp float g = dot(p.xyz, vec3(0.344, 0.5, 0.156));
                  gl_FragColor = vec4(g, g, g, p.a) * qt_Opacity;
              }"
      }

It is also possible to combine multiple layered items:


      Rectangle {
          id: gradientRect;
          width: 10
          height: 10
          gradient: Gradient {
              GradientStop { position: 0; color: "white" }
              GradientStop { position: 1; color: "steelblue" }
          }
          visible: false; // should not be visible on screen.
          layer.enabled: true;
          layer.smooth: true
      }

      Text {
          id: textItem
          font.pixelSize: 48
          text: "Gradient Text"
          anchors.centerIn: parent
          layer.enabled: true
          // This item should be used as the 'mask'
          layer.samplerName: "maskSource"
          layer.effect: ShaderEffect {
              property var colorSource: gradientRect;
              fragmentShader: "
                  uniform lowp sampler2D colorSource;
                  uniform lowp sampler2D maskSource;
                  uniform lowp float qt_Opacity;
                  varying highp vec2 qt_TexCoord0;
                  void main() {
                      gl_FragColor =
                          texture2D(colorSource, qt_TexCoord0)
                          * texture2D(maskSource, qt_TexCoord0).a
                          * qt_Opacity;
                  }
              "
          }
      }

The Qt Graphical Effects module contains several ready-made effects for using with Qt Quick applications.

Note: Scene Graph textures have origin in the top-left corner rather than bottom-left which is common in OpenGL.

For information about the GLSL version being used, see QtQuick::OpenGLInfo.

See also Item Layers.

Property Documentation

blending : bool

If this property is true, the output from the fragmentShader is blended with the background using source-over blend mode. If false, the background is disregarded. Blending decreases the performance, so you should set this property to false when blending is not needed. The default value is true.


cullMode : enumeration

This property defines which sides of the item should be visible.

The default is NoCulling.


fragmentShader : string

This property holds the fragment shader's GLSL source code. The default shader expects the texture coordinate to be passed from the vertex shader as "varying highp vec2 qt_TexCoord0", and it samples from a sampler2D named "source".


log : string

This property holds a log of warnings and errors from the latest attempt at compiling and linking the OpenGL shader program. It is updated at the same time status is set to Compiled or Error.

See also status.


mesh : variant

This property defines the mesh used to draw the ShaderEffect. It can hold any GridMesh object. If a size value is assigned to this property, the ShaderEffect implicitly uses a GridMesh with the value as mesh resolution. By default, this property is the size 1x1.

See also GridMesh.


status : enumeration

This property tells the current status of the OpenGL shader program.

  • ShaderEffect.Compiled - the shader program was successfully compiled and linked.
  • ShaderEffect.Uncompiled - the shader program has not yet been compiled.
  • ShaderEffect.Error - the shader program failed to compile or link.

When setting the fragment or vertex shader source code, the status will become Uncompiled. The first time the ShaderEffect is rendered with new shader source code, the shaders are compiled and linked, and the status is updated to Compiled or Error.

See also log.


supportsAtlasTextures : bool

Set this property true to confirm that your shader code doesn't rely on qt_MultiTexCoord0 ranging from (0,0) to (1,1) relative to the mesh. In this case the range of qt_MultiTexCoord0 will rather be based on the position of the texture within the atlas. This property currently has no effect if there is less, or more, than one sampler uniform used as input to your shader.

This differs from providing qt_SubRect_<name> uniforms in that the latter allows drawing one or more textures from the atlas in a single ShaderEffect item, while supportsAtlasTextures allows multiple instances of a ShaderEffect component using a different source image from the atlas to be batched in a single draw. Both prevent a texture from being copied out of the atlas when referenced by a ShaderEffect.

The default value is false.

This QML property was introduced in QtQuick 2.4.


vertexShader : string

This property holds the vertex shader's GLSL source code. The default shader passes the texture coordinate along to the fragment shader as "varying highp vec2 qt_TexCoord0".