

PyOpenGL is the traditional OpenGL binding for the Python language (Python 2.x series). This release is the first major release of the package in more than 4 years. PyOpenGL 3.x is a complete rewrite of the PyOpenGL project which attempts to retain compatibility with the original PyOpenGL 2.x API while providing support for many more data-formats and extensions than were wrapped by the previous code-base. It attempts to retain the "easy" approachable API of the original PyOpenGL bindings, focusing more on ease of development (both for client code and the library itself) than speed.



Build and installation has been dramatically simplified. It is possible

to work directly from a PyOpenGL bzr branch or to merely unpack the

package into your PYTHONPATH. To install from source and/or participate

in development:

bzr branch lp:pyopengl

bzr branch lp:pyopengl-demo



easy_install PyOpenGL

easy_install PyOpenGL-Demo



then add the pyopengl/OpenGL directory to your PYTHONPATH. You can also download the source distributions from:and use standard distutils commands to install. PyOpenGL 3.x is already supported by the PyInstaller "exe" packaging utility, and can be made to work with Py2exe with inclusion statements.PyOpenGL may be installed using the easy_install script if desired. There are no setuptools/package-resources dependencies in PyOpenGL 3.0.0 final. You can install PyOpenGL on supported platforms (currently Linux, Win32 and OSX) with the following if you have setuptools, PIL and Numpy installed:You can then run the scripts in the PyOpenGL-Demo package.PyOpenGL 3.x introduces package-level configuration flags which allow you to modify the behavior of the entire PyOpenGL package, e.g. by introducing extremely verbose logging, or turning off all error-checking to improve performance. Of particular note is a flag which allows you to disable APIs which have been deprecated by the ARB in OpenGL 3.0. Other flags allow you to control the trade-off between ease-of-use andperformance during the development and release process.PyOpenGL 3.x provides access to the entire OpenGL 3.0 API, as well as most extensions which have been entered in the OpenGL extension registry. Commonly used extensions can have "Pythonic" wrappers written easily, and many of the commonly used extensions already have simplified APIs provided. It also provides wrappers for the GLUT, GLE and GLX libraries. The AGL and WGL modules are not provided with PyOpenGL 3.x, as most devs are using window-manager-based GL operations.PyOpenGL 3.x provides a simple plug-in API that allows you to write data-format or platform plugins. These can be used to easily add "native" support for your array-friendly data-formats (vector classes and the like). There is a sample data-format plug-in which wraps the "Vertex Buffer Objects" extensions (in the OpenGL/arrays/vbo.py module).PyOpenGL 3.x's documentation has been regenerated and the build process for the documentation has been updated so that it can be easily regenerated to include pointers to other Open Source PyOpenGL project's online code viewers. If you would like to add your project to the list of referenced projects, please contact the author with details of yourcode viewer's url, code license and project name.Notes in the reference documentation indicates the deprecated entry points for OpenGL 3.0. If you have a PyOpenGL code-base you should be looking at reworking the code in order to eliminate the use of "legacy" APIs before OpenGL 3.1 drivers become mainstream. At minimum you should be converting away from per-vertex operations and the use of display lists toward using array-based geometry.You should expect a performance decline with the use of PyOpenGL 3.x versus PyOpenGL 2.x! PyOpenGL 3.x will have an accelerator module released in time to provide better performance, but the development method (ctypes) is inherently slower than the C (SWIG) method previously used. If your code is performance critical you should likely use the accelerator module when it becomes available. Also consider using the package-level configuration flags to remove "support" functionality as you near release, use of these flags can provide more than 2x speedup in most cases.The 3.0.0 final release has a few bugs fixed from the previous 3.0.0c1 release. Users of the release candidate should upgrade. PyOpenGL 3.0.0 is intended for use with the Python 2.x series, porting to Python 3.x is not currently on the roadmap. There will likely be a PyOpenGL 3.0.1 release in the near future which will introduce a few more optimizations and likely will be synchronized with the first public release of the accelerator modules.Since the release of PyOpenGL 2.x another common OpenGL binding for Python has become popular and may be an appropriate choice for your projects. The Pyglet project ( http://www.pyglet.org ) has a full OpenGL binding in "raw" C style, along with many higher-level utilities to aid in the development of games, all of which can be easily installed on common platforms.