-- | Gloss hides the pain of drawing simple vector graphics behind a nice data type and -- a few display functions. -- -- Getting something on the screen is as easy as: -- -- @ -- import Graphics.Gloss -- main = `display` (InWindow \"Nice Window\" (200, 200) (10, 10)) `white` (`Circle` 80) -- @ -- -- Once the window is open you can use the following: -- -- * Quit - esc-key. -- -- * Move Viewport - left-click drag, arrow keys. -- -- * Rotate Viewport - right-click drag, control-left-click drag, or home\/end-keys. -- -- * Zoom Viewport - mouse wheel, or page up\/down-keys. -- -- Animations can be constructed similarly using the `animate`. -- -- If you want to run a simulation based around finite time steps then try -- `simulate`. -- -- If you want to manage your own key\/mouse events then use `play`. -- -- Gloss uses OpenGL under the hood, but you don't have to worry about any of that. -- -- Gloss programs should be compiled with @-threaded@, otherwise the GHC runtime -- will limit the frame-rate to around 20Hz. -- -- -- @Release Notes: -- -- For 1.7.0: -- * Tweaked circle level-of-detail reduction code. -- * Increased frame rate cap to 100hz. -- Thanks to Doug Burke -- * Primitives for drawing arcs and sectors. -- Thanks to Thomas DuBuisson -- * IO versions of animate, simplate and play. -- -- For 1.6.0: -- Thanks to Anthony Cowley -- * Full screen display mode. -- -- For 1.5.0: -- * O(1) Conversion of ForeignPtrs to bitmaps. -- * An extra flag on the Bitmap constructor allows bitmaps to be cached -- in texture memory between frames. -- -- For 1.4.0: -- Thanks to Christiaan Baaij: -- * Refactoring of Gloss internals to support multiple window manager backends. -- * Support for using GLFW as the window library instead of GLUT. -- GLUT is still the default, but to use GLFW install gloss with: -- cabal install gloss --flags=\"GLFW -GLUT\" -- @ -- -- For more information, check out . -- module Graphics.Gloss ( module Graphics.Gloss.Data.Picture , module Graphics.Gloss.Data.Color , Display(..) , display , animate , simulate , play) where import Graphics.Gloss.Data.Display import Graphics.Gloss.Data.Picture import Graphics.Gloss.Data.Color import Graphics.Gloss.Interface.Pure.Display import Graphics.Gloss.Interface.Pure.Animate import Graphics.Gloss.Interface.Pure.Simulate import Graphics.Gloss.Interface.Pure.Game