jam3-lesson » webgl » shader-intro
Shaders are a key concept in WebGL and graphics programming, so this lesson will be one of the first in our jam3-lesson-webgl
series. Even if you only end up working with higher level abstractions (like ThreeJS and materials), understanding shaders will give you a better appreciation of the entire graphics pipeline.
Once you master shaders, you have a world of new effects, transitions, and rendering possibilities at your fingertips.
A complex fragment shader rendering an abstract 3D mesh. (source)
This lesson will cover the very basics of GLSL, and introduce a couple of simple image effects.
Shaders are small programs written in the OpenGL Shading Language (GLSL), a language similar to C/C++. They are compiled specifically to run on the GPU, and take advantage of parallelization to quickly compute things like pixel color and vertex positions.
A simple program might look like this:
precision highp float;
varying vec2 vUv;
void main () {
gl_FragColor = vec4(vUv.xy, 1.0, 1.0);
}
Applied to a rectangle, we end up with:
There are two types of shader programs used in WebGL: vertex and fragment shaders. Together, they are used to draw content on the screen with WebGL.
- Vertex Shaders are typically used to place primitives (i.e. triangles, lines) in 2D or 3D space
- Fragment Shaders are typically used to output the pixel colors of these primitives
In a way, the vertex shaders figure out the shape, and the fragment shaders are painting in the color-by-number of each shape.
This lesson will focus on Fragment Shaders, since we can begin using them immediately to practice the language and concepts.
Fragment shaders, also known as pixel shaders, output a single color for each rendered fragment. In most cases, a fragment is just a single pixel on the screen.
The pixel color is stored with separate components for RGBA (Red, Green, Blue, Alpha). Each component is in the range 0.0 to 1.0, so:
(0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0)
represents opaque black(1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0)
represents opaque white(1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.5)
represents pure red with 50% alpha
The fragment shader is run once per pixel. In other words, if your canvas is 1920x1080 pixels and your triangle fills the whole canvas, the fragment shader will need to run 2,073,600 times per frame! GPUs can handle this because they draw many pixels in parallel (i.e. at the same time). Because of this, the program can only operate on a single pixel at a time, and can't access the values of neighbouring pixels.
We're going to write our shaders using an online tool called Shadertoy. This will get us running without any boilerplate or set-up. Let's begin!
Let's open up Shadertoy.com in Chrome or FireFox and click New Shader on the top right.
The left panel shows the WebGL canvas and the output of our shader. On the right, we have a code editor for our fragment shader, showing some GLSL code.
By modifying the value of fragColor
— the output pixel color — we can produce a wide variety of images and effects. This is a 4-component vector, a vec4
, holding the RGBA components we mentioned earlier.
Let's change this code to something simpler, to render a blue canvas. Remember that colors are RGBA
vectors, so we can use 1.0
for the blue channel and 1.0
for the alpha channel.
void mainImage( out vec4 fragColor, in vec2 fragCoord )
{
fragColor = vec4(0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 1.0);
}
After you change the code, press the Play button ▶ at the bottom of the code editor (or press Cmd/Ctrl + Enter).
Woah, a blue rectangle! ✨
Before we go further, let's take a second to look at the syntax of GLSL.
In GLSL, a vector is much like an array of numbers, holding a fixed number of elements (2, 3, or 4). Here is a brief list of some data types available in GLSL:
float
- a simple float value, e.g. 0.75vec2
- a vector with 2 floats, e.g. (x, y)vec3
- a vector with 3 floats, e.g. (x, y, z) or (r, g, b)vec4
- a vector with 4 floats, e.g. (r, g, b, a)int
- an integer, e.g. 4sampler2D
- a special type which we will get to when dealing with texture sampling
Notice that WebGL's GLSL compilers are a little picky. For example, the following might give us an error, because we are trying to give an int
type where the compiler expects a float
:
float x = 5; // ERROR
vec2 v = vec2(10, 5); // ERROR
Instead, you should add a decimal place for float values, like so:
float x = 5.0;
vec2 v = vec2(10.0, 5.0);
To create a new vector, you use the constructor like so:
vec2 pixelPosition = vec2(125.0, 5.0);
vec3 position3d = vec3(5.0, 1.0, 2.0);
vec4 blue = vec4(0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 1.0);
// sets all components to 1.0
vec4 white = vec4(1.0);
// create a new vec4 from a vec3
vec4 color = vec4(blue, 1.0);
And we can access them in a number of ways:
// copies only the first three components, notice we need to use vec3
vec3 other = myVec.xyz;
// copies all four components
vec4 aColor = myVec.rgba;
// copy only first three components
vec3 aColorRGB = myVec.rgb;
// "swizzles" the (x, y) components
myVec.xy = myVec.yx;
// the first component
float x = myVec.x;
// we could even treat vectors as an array
float e0 = myVec[0];
It doesn't matter whether you use .rgba
or .xyzw
to access a vector, so long as it's consistent (you cannot do .rgzw
, for example). You can also use .stpq
(typically used in texture coordinates), though it is less common.
Also useful to know is the const
keyword, similar to ES2015, which allows us to declare constants. For example, our earlier shader could be written as:
const vec3 blue = vec3(0.0, 0.0, 1.0);
void mainImage( out vec4 fragColor, in vec2 fragCoord )
{
fragColor = vec4(blue, 1.0);
}
All of the following lines are equivalent:
fragColor = vec4(blue, 1.0);
fragColor = vec4(blue.rgb, 1.0);
fragColor = vec4(blue.xyz, 1.0);
fragColor = vec4(vec3(blue), 1.0);
fragColor = vec4(blue.r, blue.g, blue.b, 1.0);
For a nice GLSL cheat sheet, see here.
Shadertoy gives us some nice features out of the box for working with inputs such as images, videos, cube maps and even audio. These inputs use the variable names iChannel0
, iChannel1
, etc.
Let's add some texture — first, click on the black iChannel0
and choose an image, ideally the European street. Once you click it, you can close the input panel and paste the following code:
void mainImage( out vec4 fragColor, in vec2 fragCoord )
{
vec2 uv = fragCoord.xy / iResolution.xy;
fragColor = texture2D(iChannel0, uv);
}
Now you should see an image:
The built-in texture2D
method will sample our texture in iChannel0
at the specified texture coordinate, uv
, and returns a vec4
color. We will talk a bit more about texture coordinates later, but for now let's see if we can change the image colors a bit!
No that we have an image let's manipulate it by only displaying the blue channel from our 3 RGB channels. We will create a temporary vec4
, and only pass the blue channel to the final fragColor
.
void mainImage( out vec4 fragColor, in vec2 fragCoord )
{
vec2 uv = fragCoord.xy / iResolution.xy;
vec4 color = texture2D(iChannel0, uv);
fragColor = vec4(0.0, 0.0, color.b, 1.0);
}
This gives a nice blue tint to our image:
With a similar approach, we can turn the image black & white. Here we use color.bbb
, which expands to vec3(color.b, color.b, color.b)
.
void mainImage( out vec4 fragColor, in vec2 fragCoord )
{
vec2 uv = fragCoord.xy / iResolution.xy;
vec4 color = texture2D(iChannel0, uv);
fragColor = vec4(color.bbb, 1.0);
}
💡 Note: This is a naïve approach to grayscale an image — there are some other approaches that compensate for the way the human eye perceives the three color channels.
So what is the uv
for, you might ask? This vec2
represents the texture coordinates for that pixel, which tells the shader where in the texture the pixels should be fetched.
In WebGL, texture coordinates typically start at (0.0, 0.0)
in the lower left, and go to (1.0, 1.0)
in the upper right.
We can confirm this by rendering the uv.x
and uv.y
coordinates independently to the screen. For example, uv.x
will show a gradient from black (i.e. 0.0
) to white (i.e. 1.0
).
void mainImage( out vec4 fragColor, in vec2 fragCoord )
{
vec2 uv = fragCoord.xy / iResolution.xy;
vec4 color = texture2D(iChannel0, uv);
fragColor = vec4(vec3(uv.x), 1.0);
}
Result:
By manipulating this vector, we can change the way the texture is sampled, leading to a variety of interesting effects.
By multiplying the uv.x
and/or uv.y
by -1, we can flip the image horizontally and/or vertically.
void mainImage( out vec4 fragColor, in vec2 fragCoord )
{
vec2 uv = fragCoord.xy / iResolution.xy;
uv.y *= -1.0;
vec4 color = texture2D(iChannel0, uv);
fragColor = vec4(color.rgb, 1.0);
}
Result:
You can multiply the UV coordinates by a number greater than 1.0
to "zoom out" or less than 1.0
to "zoom in." In reality, we are just modifying how the program will sample the texture.
vec2 uv = fragCoord.xy / iResolution.xy;
uv *= 0.5;
vec4 color = texture2D(iChannel0, uv);
💡 If you multiply a vector by a single number, it multiplies all components of the vector by that number.
Lastly, let's try something a bit more advanced. We know that (0.5, 0.5)
is the center of the screen, and if we take the current coordinate and subtract that point, we will end up with a direction vector that gets larger for pixels further away from the center.
vec2 direction = uv - 0.5;
💡 The above is equivalent to:
vec2 direction = vec2(uv.xy - vec2(0.5, 0.5));
Now, we can get the *length* or *magnitude* of this vector to determine how far away the current pixel is from the center. We can use this to scale the `uv` coordinates:
```glsl
vec2 direction = uv - 0.5;
uv *= length(direction);
Result:
Finally, let's make the squash effect a circle, rather than an ellipse, by correcting for our rectangular aspect ratio.
To do this, we will modify the direction
vector before computing its length, so that our distance from center is not affected by the rectangular aspect ratio. We can use iResolution
to get the width and height of the canvas in pixels.
void mainImage( out vec4 fragColor, in vec2 fragCoord )
{
vec2 uv = fragCoord.xy / iResolution.xy;
vec2 direction = uv - 0.5;
direction.x *= iResolution.x / iResolution.y;
uv *= length(direction);
vec4 color = texture2D(iChannel0, uv);
fragColor = vec4(color.rgb, 1.0);
}
Result:
That's all for this lesson! Our next lesson introduces vertex and fragment shaders in the context of ThreeJS, applying them to a custom geometry.
WebGL Lessons — ThreeJS Shaders
Stay tuned for more lessons! 😄
- The Book of Shaders by Patricio Gonzalez Vivo
- LWJGL Shader Lessons (Java)