Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view docs/man3/SDL_SetColors.3 @ 1166:da33b7e6d181
Date: Tue, 1 Nov 2005 20:25:10 +0100
From: Dirk Mueller
Subject: [PATCH] build SDL with nonexecutable stack
libSDL is by default marked with an executable stack, which it doesn't
actually need. the reason for this is that there are assembler files in the
source tree not properly annotated with the "noexec stack" section. As such
the linker does a safe-fallback and marks the whole lib as "requires
executable stack".
the patch below removes this by adding annotations. As far as I can see it
shouldn't break anything.
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 01 Nov 2005 23:19:59 +0000 |
parents | e5bc29de3f0a |
children | 546f7c1eb755 |
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.TH "SDL_SetColors" "3" "Tue 11 Sep 2001, 23:01" "SDL" "SDL API Reference" .SH "NAME" SDL_SetColors\- Sets a portion of the colormap for the given 8-bit surface\&. .SH "SYNOPSIS" .PP \fB#include "SDL\&.h" .sp \fBint \fBSDL_SetColors\fP\fR(\fBSDL_Surface *surface, SDL_Color *colors, int firstcolor, int ncolors\fR); .SH "DESCRIPTION" .PP Sets a portion of the colormap for the given 8-bit surface\&. .PP When \fBsurface\fR is the surface associated with the current display, the display colormap will be updated with the requested colors\&. If \fBSDL_HWPALETTE\fP was set in \fISDL_SetVideoMode\fR flags, \fBSDL_SetColors\fP will always return \fB1\fR, and the palette is guaranteed to be set the way you desire, even if the window colormap has to be warped or run under emulation\&. .PP The color components of a \fI\fBSDL_Color\fR\fR structure are 8-bits in size, giving you a total of 256^3 =16777216 colors\&. .PP Palettized (8-bit) screen surfaces with the \fBSDL_HWPALETTE\fP flag have two palettes, a logical palette that is used for mapping blits to/from the surface and a physical palette (that determines how the hardware will map the colors to the display)\&. \fBSDL_SetColors\fP modifies both palettes (if present), and is equivalent to calling \fISDL_SetPalette\fR with the \fBflags\fR set to \fB(SDL_LOGPAL | SDL_PHYSPAL)\fP\&. .SH "RETURN VALUE" .PP If \fBsurface\fR is not a palettized surface, this function does nothing, returning \fB0\fR\&. If all of the colors were set as passed to \fBSDL_SetColors\fP, it will return \fB1\fR\&. If not all the color entries were set exactly as given, it will return \fB0\fR, and you should look at the surface palette to determine the actual color palette\&. .SH "EXAMPLE" .PP .nf \f(CW/* Create a display surface with a grayscale palette */ SDL_Surface *screen; SDL_Color colors[256]; int i; \&. \&. \&. /* Fill colors with color information */ for(i=0;i<256;i++){ colors[i]\&.r=i; colors[i]\&.g=i; colors[i]\&.b=i; } /* Create display */ screen=SDL_SetVideoMode(640, 480, 8, SDL_HWPALETTE); if(!screen){ printf("Couldn\&'t set video mode: %s ", SDL_GetError()); exit(-1); } /* Set palette */ SDL_SetColors(screen, colors, 0, 256); \&. \&. \&. \&.\fR .fi .PP .SH "SEE ALSO" .PP \fI\fBSDL_Color\fR\fR \fI\fBSDL_Surface\fR\fR, \fI\fBSDL_SetPalette\fP\fR, \fI\fBSDL_SetVideoMode\fP\fR ...\" created by instant / docbook-to-man, Tue 11 Sep 2001, 23:01