##// END OF EJS Templates
Removed the timer callback in favor of the idle one and re-use wx waiting time after an event is processed. This make things more reactive. Also, the created window is now made insivisible and is not supposed to be ever show or detroyed. Finally, fixed the bug in window closing for linux platform using the glutSetOption available on Freeglut.
Nicolas Rougier -
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@@ -0,0 +1,176 b''
1 # coding: utf-8
2 """
3 GLUT Inputhook support functions
4 """
5
6 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
7 # Copyright (C) 2008-2009 The IPython Development Team
8 #
9 # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
10 # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
11 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
12
13 # GLUT is quite an old library and it is difficult to ensure proper
14 # integration within IPython since original GLUT does not allow to handle
15 # events one by one. Instead, it requires for the mainloop to be entered
16 # and never returned (there is not even a function to exit he
17 # mainloop). Fortunately, there are alternatives such as freeglut
18 # (available for linux and windows) and the OSX implementation gives
19 # access to a glutCheckLoop() function that blocks itself until a new
20 # event is received. This means we have to setup the idle callback to
21 # ensure we got at least one event that will unblock the function.
22 #
23 # Furthermore, it is not possible to install these handlers without a window
24 # being first created. We choose to make this window invisible. This means that
25 # display mode options are set at this level and user won't be able to change
26 # them later without modifying the code. This should probably be made available
27 # via IPython options system.
28
29 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 # Imports
31 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
32 import os
33 import sys
34 import time
35 import signal
36 import OpenGL
37 import OpenGL.GLUT as glut
38 import OpenGL.platform as platform
39 from timeit import default_timer as clock
40
41 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
42 # Constants
43 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
44
45 # Frame per second : 60
46 # Should probably be an IPython option
47 glut_fps = 60
48
49
50 # Display mode : double buffeed + rgba + depth
51 # Should probably be an IPython option
52 glut_display_mode = (glut.GLUT_DOUBLE |
53 glut.GLUT_RGBA |
54 glut.GLUT_DEPTH)
55
56 glutMainLoopEvent = None
57 if sys.platform == 'darwin':
58 try:
59 glutCheckLoop = platform.createBaseFunction(
60 'glutCheckLoop', dll=platform.GLUT, resultType=None,
61 argTypes=[],
62 doc='glutCheckLoop( ) -> None',
63 argNames=(),
64 )
65 except AttributeError:
66 raise RuntimeError(
67 '''Your glut implementation does not allow interactive sessions'''
68 '''Consider installing freeglut.''')
69 glutMainLoopEvent = glutCheckLoop
70 elif glut.HAVE_FREEGLUT:
71 glutMainLoopEvent = glut.glutMainLoopEvent
72 else:
73 raise RuntimeError(
74 '''Your glut implementation does not allow interactive sessions. '''
75 '''Consider installing freeglut.''')
76
77
78 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
79 # Platform-dependent imports and functions
80 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
81
82 if os.name == 'posix':
83 import select
84
85 def stdin_ready():
86 infds, outfds, erfds = select.select([sys.stdin],[],[],0)
87 if infds:
88 return True
89 else:
90 return False
91
92 elif sys.platform == 'win32':
93 import msvcrt
94
95 def stdin_ready():
96 return msvcrt.kbhit()
97
98 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
99 # Callback functions
100 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
101
102 def glut_display():
103 # Dummy display function
104 pass
105
106 def glut_idle():
107 # Dummy idle function
108 pass
109
110 def glut_close():
111 # Close function only hides the current window
112 glut.glutHideWindow()
113 glutMainLoopEvent()
114
115 def glut_int_handler(signum, frame):
116 # Catch sigint and print the defautl message
117 signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, signal.default_int_handler)
118 print '\nKeyboardInterrupt'
119 # Need to reprint the prompt at this stage
120
121
122
123 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
124 # Code
125 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
126 def inputhook_glut():
127 """Run the pyglet event loop by processing pending events only.
128
129 This keeps processing pending events until stdin is ready. After
130 processing all pending events, a call to time.sleep is inserted. This is
131 needed, otherwise, CPU usage is at 100%. This sleep time should be tuned
132 though for best performance.
133 """
134 # We need to protect against a user pressing Control-C when IPython is
135 # idle and this is running. We trap KeyboardInterrupt and pass.
136
137 signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, glut_int_handler)
138
139 try:
140 t = clock()
141
142 # Make sure the default window is set after a window has been closed
143 if glut.glutGetWindow() == 0:
144 glut.glutSetWindow( 1 )
145 glutMainLoopEvent()
146 return 0
147
148 while not stdin_ready():
149 glutMainLoopEvent()
150 # We need to sleep at this point to keep the idle CPU load
151 # low. However, if sleep to long, GUI response is poor. As
152 # a compromise, we watch how often GUI events are being processed
153 # and switch between a short and long sleep time. Here are some
154 # stats useful in helping to tune this.
155 # time CPU load
156 # 0.001 13%
157 # 0.005 3%
158 # 0.01 1.5%
159 # 0.05 0.5%
160 used_time = clock() - t
161 if used_time > 5*60.0:
162 # print 'Sleep for 5 s' # dbg
163 time.sleep(5.0)
164 elif used_time > 10.0:
165 # print 'Sleep for 1 s' # dbg
166 time.sleep(1.0)
167 elif used_time > 0.1:
168 # Few GUI events coming in, so we can sleep longer
169 # print 'Sleep for 0.05 s' # dbg
170 time.sleep(0.05)
171 else:
172 # Many GUI events coming in, so sleep only very little
173 time.sleep(0.001)
174 except KeyboardInterrupt:
175 pass
176 return 0
@@ -1,441 +1,447 b''
1 1 # coding: utf-8
2 2 """
3 3 Inputhook management for GUI event loop integration.
4 4 """
5 5
6 6 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
7 7 # Copyright (C) 2008-2009 The IPython Development Team
8 8 #
9 9 # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
10 10 # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
11 11 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
12 12
13 13 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
14 14 # Imports
15 15 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
16 16
17 17 import ctypes
18 18 import sys
19 19 import warnings
20 20
21 21 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
22 22 # Constants
23 23 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
24 24
25 25 # Constants for identifying the GUI toolkits.
26 26 GUI_WX = 'wx'
27 27 GUI_QT = 'qt'
28 28 GUI_QT4 = 'qt4'
29 29 GUI_GTK = 'gtk'
30 30 GUI_TK = 'tk'
31 31 GUI_OSX = 'osx'
32 32 GUI_GLUT = 'glut'
33 33 GUI_PYGLET = 'pyglet'
34 34
35 35 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
36 36 # Utility classes
37 37 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
38 38
39 39
40 40 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
41 41 # Main InputHookManager class
42 42 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
43 43
44 44
45 45 class InputHookManager(object):
46 46 """Manage PyOS_InputHook for different GUI toolkits.
47 47
48 48 This class installs various hooks under ``PyOSInputHook`` to handle
49 49 GUI event loop integration.
50 50 """
51 51
52 52 def __init__(self):
53 53 self.PYFUNC = ctypes.PYFUNCTYPE(ctypes.c_int)
54 54 self._apps = {}
55 55 self._reset()
56 56
57 57 def _reset(self):
58 58 self._callback_pyfunctype = None
59 59 self._callback = None
60 60 self._installed = False
61 61 self._current_gui = None
62 62
63 63 def get_pyos_inputhook(self):
64 64 """Return the current PyOS_InputHook as a ctypes.c_void_p."""
65 65 return ctypes.c_void_p.in_dll(ctypes.pythonapi,"PyOS_InputHook")
66 66
67 67 def get_pyos_inputhook_as_func(self):
68 68 """Return the current PyOS_InputHook as a ctypes.PYFUNCYPE."""
69 69 return self.PYFUNC.in_dll(ctypes.pythonapi,"PyOS_InputHook")
70 70
71 71 def set_inputhook(self, callback):
72 72 """Set PyOS_InputHook to callback and return the previous one."""
73 73 self._callback = callback
74 74 self._callback_pyfunctype = self.PYFUNC(callback)
75 75 pyos_inputhook_ptr = self.get_pyos_inputhook()
76 76 original = self.get_pyos_inputhook_as_func()
77 77 pyos_inputhook_ptr.value = \
78 78 ctypes.cast(self._callback_pyfunctype, ctypes.c_void_p).value
79 79 self._installed = True
80 80 return original
81 81
82 82 def clear_inputhook(self, app=None):
83 83 """Set PyOS_InputHook to NULL and return the previous one.
84 84
85 85 Parameters
86 86 ----------
87 87 app : optional, ignored
88 88 This parameter is allowed only so that clear_inputhook() can be
89 89 called with a similar interface as all the ``enable_*`` methods. But
90 90 the actual value of the parameter is ignored. This uniform interface
91 91 makes it easier to have user-level entry points in the main IPython
92 92 app like :meth:`enable_gui`."""
93 93 pyos_inputhook_ptr = self.get_pyos_inputhook()
94 94 original = self.get_pyos_inputhook_as_func()
95 95 pyos_inputhook_ptr.value = ctypes.c_void_p(None).value
96 96 self._reset()
97 97 return original
98 98
99 99 def clear_app_refs(self, gui=None):
100 100 """Clear IPython's internal reference to an application instance.
101 101
102 102 Whenever we create an app for a user on qt4 or wx, we hold a
103 103 reference to the app. This is needed because in some cases bad things
104 104 can happen if a user doesn't hold a reference themselves. This
105 105 method is provided to clear the references we are holding.
106 106
107 107 Parameters
108 108 ----------
109 109 gui : None or str
110 110 If None, clear all app references. If ('wx', 'qt4') clear
111 111 the app for that toolkit. References are not held for gtk or tk
112 112 as those toolkits don't have the notion of an app.
113 113 """
114 114 if gui is None:
115 115 self._apps = {}
116 116 elif self._apps.has_key(gui):
117 117 del self._apps[gui]
118 118
119 119 def enable_wx(self, app=None):
120 120 """Enable event loop integration with wxPython.
121 121
122 122 Parameters
123 123 ----------
124 124 app : WX Application, optional.
125 125 Running application to use. If not given, we probe WX for an
126 126 existing application object, and create a new one if none is found.
127 127
128 128 Notes
129 129 -----
130 130 This methods sets the ``PyOS_InputHook`` for wxPython, which allows
131 131 the wxPython to integrate with terminal based applications like
132 132 IPython.
133 133
134 134 If ``app`` is not given we probe for an existing one, and return it if
135 135 found. If no existing app is found, we create an :class:`wx.App` as
136 136 follows::
137 137
138 138 import wx
139 139 app = wx.App(redirect=False, clearSigInt=False)
140 140 """
141 141 from IPython.lib.inputhookwx import inputhook_wx
142 142 self.set_inputhook(inputhook_wx)
143 143 self._current_gui = GUI_WX
144 144 import wx
145 145 if app is None:
146 146 app = wx.GetApp()
147 147 if app is None:
148 148 app = wx.App(redirect=False, clearSigInt=False)
149 149 app._in_event_loop = True
150 150 self._apps[GUI_WX] = app
151 151 return app
152 152
153 153 def disable_wx(self):
154 154 """Disable event loop integration with wxPython.
155 155
156 156 This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
157 157 """
158 158 if self._apps.has_key(GUI_WX):
159 159 self._apps[GUI_WX]._in_event_loop = False
160 160 self.clear_inputhook()
161 161
162 162 def enable_qt4(self, app=None):
163 163 """Enable event loop integration with PyQt4.
164 164
165 165 Parameters
166 166 ----------
167 167 app : Qt Application, optional.
168 168 Running application to use. If not given, we probe Qt for an
169 169 existing application object, and create a new one if none is found.
170 170
171 171 Notes
172 172 -----
173 173 This methods sets the PyOS_InputHook for PyQt4, which allows
174 174 the PyQt4 to integrate with terminal based applications like
175 175 IPython.
176 176
177 177 If ``app`` is not given we probe for an existing one, and return it if
178 178 found. If no existing app is found, we create an :class:`QApplication`
179 179 as follows::
180 180
181 181 from PyQt4 import QtCore
182 182 app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
183 183 """
184 184 from IPython.external.qt_for_kernel import QtCore, QtGui
185 185
186 186 if 'pyreadline' in sys.modules:
187 187 # see IPython GitHub Issue #281 for more info on this issue
188 188 # Similar intermittent behavior has been reported on OSX,
189 189 # but not consistently reproducible
190 190 warnings.warn("""PyReadline's inputhook can conflict with Qt, causing delays
191 191 in interactive input. If you do see this issue, we recommend using another GUI
192 192 toolkit if you can, or disable readline with the configuration option
193 193 'TerminalInteractiveShell.readline_use=False', specified in a config file or
194 194 at the command-line""",
195 195 RuntimeWarning)
196 196
197 197 # PyQt4 has had this since 4.3.1. In version 4.2, PyOS_InputHook
198 198 # was set when QtCore was imported, but if it ever got removed,
199 199 # you couldn't reset it. For earlier versions we can
200 200 # probably implement a ctypes version.
201 201 try:
202 202 QtCore.pyqtRestoreInputHook()
203 203 except AttributeError:
204 204 pass
205 205
206 206 self._current_gui = GUI_QT4
207 207 if app is None:
208 208 app = QtCore.QCoreApplication.instance()
209 209 if app is None:
210 210 app = QtGui.QApplication([" "])
211 211 app._in_event_loop = True
212 212 self._apps[GUI_QT4] = app
213 213 return app
214 214
215 215 def disable_qt4(self):
216 216 """Disable event loop integration with PyQt4.
217 217
218 218 This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
219 219 """
220 220 if self._apps.has_key(GUI_QT4):
221 221 self._apps[GUI_QT4]._in_event_loop = False
222 222 self.clear_inputhook()
223 223
224 224 def enable_gtk(self, app=None):
225 225 """Enable event loop integration with PyGTK.
226 226
227 227 Parameters
228 228 ----------
229 229 app : ignored
230 230 Ignored, it's only a placeholder to keep the call signature of all
231 231 gui activation methods consistent, which simplifies the logic of
232 232 supporting magics.
233 233
234 234 Notes
235 235 -----
236 236 This methods sets the PyOS_InputHook for PyGTK, which allows
237 237 the PyGTK to integrate with terminal based applications like
238 238 IPython.
239 239 """
240 240 import gtk
241 241 try:
242 242 gtk.set_interactive(True)
243 243 self._current_gui = GUI_GTK
244 244 except AttributeError:
245 245 # For older versions of gtk, use our own ctypes version
246 246 from IPython.lib.inputhookgtk import inputhook_gtk
247 247 self.set_inputhook(inputhook_gtk)
248 248 self._current_gui = GUI_GTK
249 249
250 250 def disable_gtk(self):
251 251 """Disable event loop integration with PyGTK.
252 252
253 253 This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
254 254 """
255 255 self.clear_inputhook()
256 256
257 257 def enable_tk(self, app=None):
258 258 """Enable event loop integration with Tk.
259 259
260 260 Parameters
261 261 ----------
262 262 app : toplevel :class:`Tkinter.Tk` widget, optional.
263 263 Running toplevel widget to use. If not given, we probe Tk for an
264 264 existing one, and create a new one if none is found.
265 265
266 266 Notes
267 267 -----
268 268 If you have already created a :class:`Tkinter.Tk` object, the only
269 269 thing done by this method is to register with the
270 270 :class:`InputHookManager`, since creating that object automatically
271 271 sets ``PyOS_InputHook``.
272 272 """
273 273 self._current_gui = GUI_TK
274 274 if app is None:
275 275 import Tkinter
276 276 app = Tkinter.Tk()
277 277 app.withdraw()
278 278 self._apps[GUI_TK] = app
279 279 return app
280 280
281 281 def disable_tk(self):
282 282 """Disable event loop integration with Tkinter.
283 283
284 284 This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
285 285 """
286 286 self.clear_inputhook()
287 287
288 288
289 289 def enable_glut(self, app=None):
290 290 """ Enable event loop integration with GLUT.
291 291
292 292 Parameters
293 293 ----------
294 294
295 295 app : ignored
296 296 Ignored, it's only a placeholder to keep the call signature of all
297 297 gui activation methods consistent, which simplifies the logic of
298 298 supporting magics.
299 299
300 300 Notes
301 301 -----
302 302
303 303 This methods sets the PyOS_InputHook for GLUT, which allows the GLUT to
304 304 integrate with terminal based applications like IPython. Due to GLUT
305 305 limitations, it is currently not possible to start the event loop
306 306 without first creating a window. You should thus not create another
307 307 window but use instead the created one. See 'gui-glut.py' in the
308 308 docs/examples/lib directory.
309 309
310 310 The default screen mode is set to:
311 311 glut.GLUT_DOUBLE | glut.GLUT_RGBA | glut.GLUT_DEPTH
312 312 """
313 313
314 from glut_support import *
314 import OpenGL.GLUT as glut
315 from IPython.lib.inputhookglut import *
315 316
316 317 if not self._apps.has_key(GUI_GLUT):
317 318 glut.glutInit(sys.argv)
318 319 glut.glutInitDisplayMode(glut_display_mode)
320 # This is specific to freeglut
321 if bool(glut.glutSetOption):
322 glut.glutSetOption(glut.GLUT_ACTION_ON_WINDOW_CLOSE,
323 glut.GLUT_ACTION_GLUTMAINLOOP_RETURNS)
319 324 glut.glutCreateWindow(sys.argv[0])
325 glut.glutReshapeWindow( 1, 1 )
320 326 glut.glutHideWindow()
321 327 glut.glutWMCloseFunc(glut_close)
322 328 glut.glutDisplayFunc(glut_display)
323 glut.glutTimerFunc( int(1000.0/glut_fps), glut_timer, glut_fps)
329 glut.glutIdleFunc( glut_idle)
324 330 else:
325 331 glut.glutWMCloseFunc(glut_close)
326 332 glut.glutDisplayFunc(glut_display)
327 glut.glutTimerFunc( int(1000.0/glut_fps), glut_timer, glut_fps)
333 glut.glutIdleFunc( glut_idle)
328 334 self.set_inputhook(inputhook_glut)
329 335 self._current_gui = GUI_GLUT
330 336 self._apps[GUI_GLUT] = True
331 337
332 338
333 339 def disable_glut(self):
334 340 """Disable event loop integration with glut.
335 341
336 342 This sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL and set the display function to a
337 343 dummy one and set the timer to a dummy timer that will be triggered
338 344 very far in the future.
339 345 """
340 346 from glut_support import *
341 347
342 348 glut.glutHideWindow() # This is an event to be processed below
343 349 glutMainLoopEvent()
344 350 self.clear_inputhook()
345 351
346 352 def enable_pyglet(self, app=None):
347 353 """Enable event loop integration with pyglet.
348 354
349 355 Parameters
350 356 ----------
351 357 app : ignored
352 358 Ignored, it's only a placeholder to keep the call signature of all
353 359 gui activation methods consistent, which simplifies the logic of
354 360 supporting magics.
355 361
356 362 Notes
357 363 -----
358 364 This methods sets the ``PyOS_InputHook`` for pyglet, which allows
359 365 pyglet to integrate with terminal based applications like
360 366 IPython.
361 367
362 368 """
363 369 import pyglet
364 370 from IPython.lib.inputhookpyglet import inputhook_pyglet
365 371 self.set_inputhook(inputhook_pyglet)
366 372 self._current_gui = GUI_PYGLET
367 373 return app
368 374
369 375 def disable_pyglet(self):
370 376 """Disable event loop integration with pyglet.
371 377
372 378 This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
373 379 """
374 380 self.clear_inputhook()
375 381
376 382 def current_gui(self):
377 383 """Return a string indicating the currently active GUI or None."""
378 384 return self._current_gui
379 385
380 386 inputhook_manager = InputHookManager()
381 387
382 388 enable_wx = inputhook_manager.enable_wx
383 389 disable_wx = inputhook_manager.disable_wx
384 390 enable_qt4 = inputhook_manager.enable_qt4
385 391 disable_qt4 = inputhook_manager.disable_qt4
386 392 enable_gtk = inputhook_manager.enable_gtk
387 393 disable_gtk = inputhook_manager.disable_gtk
388 394 enable_tk = inputhook_manager.enable_tk
389 395 disable_tk = inputhook_manager.disable_tk
390 396 enable_glut = inputhook_manager.enable_glut
391 397 disable_glut = inputhook_manager.disable_glut
392 398 enable_pyglet = inputhook_manager.enable_pyglet
393 399 disable_pyglet = inputhook_manager.disable_pyglet
394 400 clear_inputhook = inputhook_manager.clear_inputhook
395 401 set_inputhook = inputhook_manager.set_inputhook
396 402 current_gui = inputhook_manager.current_gui
397 403 clear_app_refs = inputhook_manager.clear_app_refs
398 404
399 405
400 406 # Convenience function to switch amongst them
401 407 def enable_gui(gui=None, app=None):
402 408 """Switch amongst GUI input hooks by name.
403 409
404 410 This is just a utility wrapper around the methods of the InputHookManager
405 411 object.
406 412
407 413 Parameters
408 414 ----------
409 415 gui : optional, string or None
410 416 If None, clears input hook, otherwise it must be one of the recognized
411 417 GUI names (see ``GUI_*`` constants in module).
412 418
413 419 app : optional, existing application object.
414 420 For toolkits that have the concept of a global app, you can supply an
415 421 existing one. If not given, the toolkit will be probed for one, and if
416 422 none is found, a new one will be created. Note that GTK does not have
417 423 this concept, and passing an app if `gui`=="GTK" will raise an error.
418 424
419 425 Returns
420 426 -------
421 427 The output of the underlying gui switch routine, typically the actual
422 428 PyOS_InputHook wrapper object or the GUI toolkit app created, if there was
423 429 one.
424 430 """
425 431 guis = {None: clear_inputhook,
426 432 GUI_OSX: lambda app=False: None,
427 433 GUI_TK: enable_tk,
428 434 GUI_GTK: enable_gtk,
429 435 GUI_WX: enable_wx,
430 436 GUI_QT: enable_qt4, # qt3 not supported
431 437 GUI_QT4: enable_qt4,
432 438 GUI_GLUT: enable_glut,
433 439 GUI_PYGLET: enable_pyglet,
434 440 }
435 441 try:
436 442 gui_hook = guis[gui]
437 443 except KeyError:
438 444 e = "Invalid GUI request %r, valid ones are:%s" % (gui, guis.keys())
439 445 raise ValueError(e)
440 446 return gui_hook(app)
441 447
@@ -1,46 +1,51 b''
1 1 #!/usr/bin/env python
2 2 """Simple GLUT example to manually test event loop integration.
3 3
4 4 This is meant to run tests manually in ipython as:
5 5
6 6 In [5]: %gui glut
7 7
8 8 In [6]: %run gui-glut.py
9 9
10 10 In [7]: gl.glClearColor(1,1,1,1)
11 11 """
12 12
13 13 #!/usr/bin/env python
14 14 import sys
15 15 import OpenGL.GL as gl
16 16 import OpenGL.GLUT as glut
17 17
18 def close():
19 glut.glutDestroyWindow(glut.glutGetWindow())
20
18 21 def display():
19 22 gl.glClear (gl.GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT | gl.GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT)
20 23 glut.glutSwapBuffers()
21 24
22 25 def resize(width,height):
23 26 gl.glViewport(0, 0, width, height+4)
24 27 gl.glMatrixMode(gl.GL_PROJECTION)
25 28 gl.glLoadIdentity()
26 29 gl.glOrtho(0, width, 0, height+4, -1, 1)
27 30 gl.glMatrixMode(gl.GL_MODELVIEW)
28 31
29
30 32 if glut.glutGetWindow() > 0:
31 33 interactive = True
32 34 glut.glutInit(sys.argv)
33 35 glut.glutInitDisplayMode(glut.GLUT_DOUBLE |
34 36 glut.GLUT_RGBA |
35 37 glut.GLUT_DEPTH)
36 glut.glutShowWindow()
37 38 else:
38 glut.glutCreateWindow('gui-glut')
39 39 interactive = False
40 40
41 glut.glutCreateWindow('gui-glut')
41 42 glut.glutDisplayFunc(display)
42 43 glut.glutReshapeFunc(resize)
44 # This is necessary on osx to be able to close the window
45 # (else the close button is disabled)
46 if sys.platform == 'darwin' and not bool(glut.HAVE_FREEGLUT):
47 glut.glutWMCloseFunc(close)
43 48 gl.glClearColor(0,0,0,1)
44 49
45 50 if not interactive:
46 51 glut.glutMainLoop()
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