GLWpfControl - A fast OpenGL Control for WPF
A native control for WPF in OpenTK 3.x and 4.x.
Supported configurations:
- .Net Framework for OpenTK 3.x (the 3.x series NuGet packages)
- .Net Core for OpenTK 4.x (the 4.x series NuGet packages)
Since version 3.0.0, we're using full OpenGL/DirectX interop via OpenGL extensions - NV_DX_interop. This should run almost everywhere with AMAZING PERFORMANCE and is fully supported on Intel, AMD and Nvidia graphics.
This offers a way more clean solution than embedding GLControl and totally solves the airspace problem. As controls can be layered, nested and structured over your 3D view.
This package is intended to supercede the legacy GLControl completely, and we strongly encourage upgrading to this native WPF control instead.
Getting started:
-
In your window, include GLWpfControl.
<Window ... xmlns:glWpfControl="clr-namespace:OpenTK.Wpf;assembly=GLWpfControl" ... >
-
Add the control into a container (Grid, StackPanel, etc.) and add a handler method to the render event.
<Grid> ... <glWpfControl:GLWpfControl x:Name="OpenTkControl" Render="OpenTkControl_OnRender"/> ... </Grid>
-
In the code behind add to the constructor, after the InitializeComponents call, a call to the start method of the GLWpfControl.
public MainWindow() { InitializeComponent(); // [...] var settings = new GLWpfControlSettings { MajorVersion = 3, MinorVersion = 6 }; OpenTkControl.Start(settings); }
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You can now render in the OnRender handler.
private void OpenTkControl_OnRender(TimeSpan delta) { GL.ClearColor(Color4.Blue); GL.Clear(ClearBufferMask.ColorBufferBit | ClearBufferMask.DepthBufferBit); }
For additional examples, see MainWindow.xaml and MainWindow.xaml.cs in the example project.
Build instructions
- Clone repository
or for SSH
$ git clone https://github.com/varon/GLWpfControl.git $ cd GLWpfControl
$ git clone [email protected]:varon/GLWpfControl.git $ cd GLWpfControl
- Run
build.cmd
orbuild.sh
. - Develop as normal in whatever IDE you like.
Planned features
DX-Hijacking rendering
It's possible to bypass the RTT that takes place in WPF D3dImage by stealing the actual D3d handle from WPF and drawing manually. This is incredibly challenging, but would offer APEX performance as zero indirection is required. Currently more of an idea than a work in progress. Contributions welcome - Drop by the Discord server if you want to give this a shot!