Note that building examples for web as they are (no code adaptation for web avoiding while loop) implies using the emterpreter... and that's very slow!
Found some issues when building for web using latest emscripten 1.38.30, traced the error and found that eglGetProcAdress does not return function pointers for VAO functionality, supported by extension.
It requires more investigation but now it works (avoiding VAO usage)
raylib resource data file for Windows platform (containing raylib icon and metadata for executable file) has been renamed to a more consistent name: raylib.rc.data
Also required to work with tcc compiler.
Examples can be compiled for web with no code change at all! Usually
examples need to be refactored for web... using emscripten code
interpreter (emterpreter), it can manage synchronous while() loops
internally... as a downside, execution is very slow...
Currently, if:
* GCC doesn't supports -no-pie: Build error
* GCC supports -no-pie
* GCC is not configured with --enable-default-pie: No-op
* GCC is configured with --enable-default-pie:
Slightly worse performance because we still generate -fpie code
(-pie affects linker, -fpie affects compiler)
So instead of probing for existence of -fno-pie -no-pie, remove it altogether.
Fixes#540: Build breakage on Debian 8 with gcc 4.9.
- Renamed VERSION to RAYLIB_VERSION
- Renamed API_VERSION to RAYLIB_API_VERSION
- Renamed RAYLIB_RELEASE to RAYLIB_RELEASE_PATH
- Support Web Assembly compilation on PLATFORM_WEB
Updated to latest GLFW library and working on Wayland support, still
looking how to implement it on raylib because it just exposes
PLATFORM_DESKTOP and defaults to X11 windowing system on Linux...
OpenAL Soft backend is still available in audio module, I'm thinking if
exposing it for building in some way or just left it there for advance
users to switch to it manually in case of necessity...
libEGL and libGLESv2 have been renamed on latest Raspbian Stretch
version (also included on latest Jessie upgrade).
It seems to be done to avoid conflicts between official Mesa libs and
Broadcomm provided ones.