Turbo-C graphics pages!!!
James Seidman
jseidman at jarthur.Claremont.EDU
Wed Feb 21 15:35:28 AEST 1990
In article <708 at hwee.UUCP> smc at hwee.UUCP (Stephen McGowan) writes:
> Anyone out there know about Turbo-C graphics pages?
These pages are actually provided by your graphics card, not by Turbo-C.
The compiler merely provides routines to access them.
> I'm using the 0 page (default), but I need to switch to page
> 1 to display further information from page 0.
Whether or not a page 1 even exists, by the way, depends on your graphics
card, how much memory it has, and what graphics mode you are in.
> However, it appears as though I'm not able to address the cursor
> co-ordinates (or more specifically, move the cursor using the
> 'gotoxy(x,y)' statement.
gotoxy() is a text function, yet you're talking about graphics stuff. What
you describe later is doing more text. What exactly are you trying to do?
> I can only use this facility if I use the 'textmode()' function
> which, obviously, will reset my graphics displays on page 0.
>
> Funny thing is, I'm able to perform these 'gotoxy' calls if I remain
> on page 0. However, this has the drawbaxck that it overwrites my
> graphics displays.
That is a funny thing. What does it do? Since it's supposed to position
the text cursor, unless you're using the BGI text outputs it shouldn't have
any effect on a graphics screen.
> So, are the 2 graphics pages (0 and 1) exactly the same? Do they
> inherit each other's attributes? Is page 0 capable of handling
> both text and graphics simultaneously, whereas page 1 can only
> support one mode? (as appears to be the case).
They have identical attributes. They inherit each other's attributes
inasmuch as most "attributes" (palette, graphics mode, etc.) are controlled
by other registers on the graphics card. It only affects what memory
locations are looked at for the graphics data.
> Page 0 contains a 256*256 pixel image of a three-dimensional vision
> scan. I would like to incorporate a facility where the user can move
> the mouse pointer over a particular horizontal image line, press
> a mouse button and have the 256 data values for that horizontal
> line displayed on the screen... [stuff deleted]
You never quite described why you need both graphics pages. By the way,
when you change graphics pages, are you remembering to use both
setactivepage() and setvisualpage()? Anyway, I would think that you could
do what you're describing by using the BGI text output routines to display
the stuff below the image.
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jim Seidman, Harvey Mudd College, Claremont, CA 91711. (714) 621-8000 x2026
DISCLAIMER: I don't even know if these are opinions, let alone those of
anyone other than me.
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