lite-xl/resources/macos/macos-retina-display.md

3.9 KiB
Raw Permalink Blame History

Window creation for Retina displays

The file info.plist sets NSHighResolutionCapable to true. This is fine for High-DPI and retina displays.

The SDL_CreateWindow is called with the flag SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI. On Mac OS it means that, in source file video/cocoa/SDL_cocoawindow.m, from function Cocoa_CreateWindow, SDL calls:

/* highdpi will be TRUE below */
BOOL highdpi = (window->flags & SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI) != 0;
[contentView setWantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface:highdpi]

Documentation for setWantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface:

https://developer.apple.com/documentation/appkit/nsview/1414938-wantsbestresolutionopenglsurface

with more details in "OpenGL Programming Guide for Mac", chapter "Optimizing OpenGL for High Resolution":

https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/GraphicsImaging/Conceptual/OpenGL-MacProgGuide/EnablingOpenGLforHighResolution/EnablingOpenGLforHighResolution.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40001987-CH1001-SW4

Citation from the official documentation:

You can opt in to high resolution by calling the method setWantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface: when you initialize the view, and supplying YES as an argument:

[self  setWantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface:YES];

If you dont opt in, the system magnifies the rendered results.

The wantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface property is relevant only for views to which an NSOpenGLContext object is bound. Its value does not affect the behavior of other views. For compatibility, wantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface defaults to NO, providing a 1-pixel-per-point framebuffer regardless of the backing scale factor for the display the view occupies. Setting this property to YES for a given view causes AppKit to allocate a higher-resolution framebuffer when appropriate for the backing scale factor and target display.

To function correctly with wantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface set to YES, a view must perform correct conversions between view units (points) and pixel units as needed. For example, the common practice of passing the width and height of [self bounds] to glViewport() will yield incorrect results at high resolution, because the parameters passed to the glViewport() function must be in pixels. As a result, youll get only partial instead of complete coverage of the render surface. Instead, use the backing store bounds:

[self convertRectToBacking:[self bounds]];

Coordinates

The SDL function SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize will provide the size of the underlying drawable in pixels. From the SDL_video.h header.

/**
 *  \brief Get the size of a window's underlying drawable in pixels (for use
 *         with glViewport).
 *
 *  \param window   Window from which the drawable size should be queried
 *  \param w        Pointer to variable for storing the width in pixels, may be NULL
 *  \param h        Pointer to variable for storing the height in pixels, may be NULL
 *
 * This may differ from SDL_GetWindowSize() if we're rendering to a high-DPI
 * drawable, i.e. the window was created with SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI on a
 * platform with high-DPI support (Apple calls this "Retina"), and not disabled
 * by the SDL_HINT_VIDEO_HIGHDPI_DISABLED hint.
 *
 *  \sa SDL_GetWindowSize()
 *  \sa SDL_CreateWindow()
 */
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize(SDL_Window * window, int *w,
                                                    int *h);

In turns it calls Cocoa_GL_GetDrawableSize from source file video/cocoa/SDL_cocoaopengl.m. The function use the method [contentView convertRectToBacking:viewport]:

    if (window->flags & SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI) {
        /* This gives us the correct viewport for a Retina-enabled view, only
         * supported on 10.7+. */
        if ([contentView respondsToSelector:@selector(convertRectToBacking:)]) {
            viewport = [contentView convertRectToBacking:viewport];
        }
    }

to give back the sizes in pixels.