Sets the graphics drawing mode.
Sets the graphics drawing mode. This only affects the geometric routines
like putpixel, lines, rectangles, circles, polygons, floodfill, etc, not
the text output, blitting, or sprite drawing functions. The mode should
be one of the following constants:
DRAW_MODE_SOLID - the default, solid color
drawing
DRAW_MODE_XOR - exclusive-or drawing
DRAW_MODE_COPY_PATTERN - multicolored pattern fill
DRAW_MODE_SOLID_PATTERN - single color pattern fill
DRAW_MODE_MASKED_PATTERN - masked pattern fill
DRAW_MODE_TRANS - translucent color blending
In DRAW_MODE_SOLID, pixels of the bitmap being drawn onto are simply
replaced by those produced by the drawing function.
In DRAW_MODE_XOR, pixels are written to the bitmap with an exclusive-or
operation rather than a simple copy, so drawing the same shape twice will
erase it. Because it involves reading as well as writing the bitmap
memory, xor drawing is a lot slower than the normal replace mode.
With the patterned modes, you provide a pattern bitmap which is tiled
across the surface of the shape. Allegro stores a pointer to this bitmap
rather than copying it, so you must not destroy the bitmap while it is
still selected as the pattern. The width and height of the pattern must
be powers of two, but they can be different, eg. a 64x16 pattern is fine,
but a 17x3 one is not. The pattern is tiled in a grid starting at point
(x_anchor, y_anchor). Normally you should just pass zero for these
values, which lets you draw several adjacent shapes and have the patterns
meet up exactly along the shared edges. Zero alignment may look peculiar
if you are moving a patterned shape around the screen, however, because
the shape will move but the pattern alignment will not, so in some
situations you may wish to alter the anchor position.
When you select DRAW_MODE_COPY_PATTERN, pixels are simply copied from the
pattern bitmap onto the destination bitmap. This allows the use of
multicolored patterns, and means that the color you pass to the drawing
routine is ignored. This is the fastest of the patterned modes.
In DRAW_MODE_SOLID_PATTERN, each pixel in the pattern bitmap is compared
with the mask color, which is zero in 256-color modes or bright pink for
truecolor data (maximum red and blue, zero green). If the pattern pixel
is solid, a pixel of the color you passed to the drawing routine is
written to the destination bitmap, otherwise a zero is written. The
pattern is thus treated as a monochrome bitmask, which lets you use the
same pattern to draw different shapes in different colors, but prevents
the use of multicolored patterns.
DRAW_MODE_MASKED_PATTERN is almost the same as DRAW_MODE_SOLID_PATTERN,
but the masked pixels are skipped rather than being written as zeros, so
the background shows through the gaps.
In DRAW_MODE_TRANS, the global color_map table or truecolor blender
functions are used to overlay pixels on top of the existing image. This
must only be used after you have set up the color mapping table (for 256
color modes) or blender functions (for truecolor modes). Because it
involves reading as well as writing the bitmap memory, translucent
drawing is very slow if you draw directly to video RAM, so wherever
possible you should use a memory bitmap instead.