The Cg Programming Language reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Cg Programming Language

For people who check facts
Cg or C for Graphics is a High level shader language created by nVidia for programming vertex and pixel shaders.

Cg is based on the C programming language, they share the same syntax, however, some features of C were modified and new data types were added to make Cg more suitable for programming graphics processing units.

Table of contents
1 Background
2 Details
3 Applications and games that use Cg
4 See also
5 External links

Background

As a result of the technical advancements in graphics cards technology, some areas in 3D graphics programming have become quite complex, to solve the problem, new features where added to graphics cards to simplify the process, including the ability to modify the rendering pipeline of the graphics card using vertex and pixel shaders.

In the beginning, vertex and pixel shaders were programmed at a very low level, using the assembly language of the graphics processing unit, although that using the assembly language gave the programmer complete control over code and flexibility, it was pretty hard to use, and non-portable, a higher level language for programming the GPU was needed, and Cg was created to overcome these problems and make shader development easier.

Some of the benefits of using Cg over assembly are:

Details

Data types

Cg has six basic data types, some of them are the same as in C, others are especially added for GPU programming, these types are: Cg also features vector and matrix data types that are based on the basic data types, such as float3, float4x4, such data types are quite common when dealing with 3D graphics programming, Cg also has struct and array data types, which work in a similar way to C equivalents.

Operators

Cg supports a wide range of operators, including the common arithmetic operators from C, the equivalent arithmetic operators for vector and matrix data types, and the common logical operators.

Functions and control structures

Cg shares the basic control structures with C, like if/else, while, and for. It also has the a similar way of defining functions.

The standard Cg library

As in C, Cg features a set of functions for common tasks in GPU programming. Some of the functions have equivalents in C, like the mathematical functions abs and sin, while others are specialized in GPU programming tasks, like the texture mapping functions tex1D and tex2D.

The Cg runtime library

Cg programs are merely vertex and pixel shaders, and they need supporting programs that handle the rest of the rendering process, Cg can be used with two APIs, OpenGL or DirectX, each has its own set of Cg functions to communicate with the Cg program, like setting the current Cg shader, passing parameters, and such tasks.

A sample Cg vertex shader

// input vertex
struct VertIn {
    float4 pos   : POSITION;
    float4 color : COLOR0;
};

// output vertex
struct VertOut {
    float4 pos   : POSITION;
    float4 color : COLOR0;
};

// vertex shader main entry
VertOut main(VertIn IN, uniform float4x4 modelViewProj) {
    VertOut OUT;
    OUT.pos     = mul(modelViewProj, IN.pos); // calculate output coords
    OUT.color   = IN.color; // copy input color to output
    OUT.color.z = 1.0f; // blue component of color = 1.0f
    return OUT;
}

Applications and games that use Cg

See also

External links


Programming languages
Ada | AWK | BASIC| C | C++ | C# | COBOL | ColdFusion | Common Lisp | Delphi | Fortran | IDL | Java | JavaScript | Lisp | Perl | PHP | Prolog | Pascal | Python | SAS | SQL | Visual Basic | More programming languages
Edit this template