\(
\newcommand{\P}[]{\unicode{xB6}}
\newcommand{\AA}[]{\unicode{x212B}}
\newcommand{\empty}[]{\emptyset}
\newcommand{\O}[]{\emptyset}
\newcommand{\Alpha}[]{Α}
\newcommand{\Beta}[]{Β}
\newcommand{\Epsilon}[]{Ε}
\newcommand{\Iota}[]{Ι}
\newcommand{\Kappa}[]{Κ}
\newcommand{\Rho}[]{Ρ}
\newcommand{\Tau}[]{Τ}
\newcommand{\Zeta}[]{Ζ}
\newcommand{\Mu}[]{\unicode{x039C}}
\newcommand{\Chi}[]{Χ}
\newcommand{\Eta}[]{\unicode{x0397}}
\newcommand{\Nu}[]{\unicode{x039D}}
\newcommand{\Omicron}[]{\unicode{x039F}}
\DeclareMathOperator{\sgn}{sgn}
\def\oiint{\mathop{\vcenter{\mathchoice{\huge\unicode{x222F}\,}{\unicode{x222F}}{\unicode{x222F}}{\unicode{x222F}}}\,}\nolimits}
\def\oiiint{\mathop{\vcenter{\mathchoice{\huge\unicode{x2230}\,}{\unicode{x2230}}{\unicode{x2230}}{\unicode{x2230}}}\,}\nolimits}
\)
Notes on using Filament, the rendering engine for many Google applications.
Note that Filament is not a replacement for Unity or Godot.
Types
Materials
In filament, shaders are written as materials.
The documentation for materials is available at https://google.github.io/filament/Materials.html
Vertex shader
Unlike standard OpenGL shaders, you cannot output arbitrary positions in the vertex shader.
You can:
1. Modify the world position of the vertices.
2. Send interpolants, aka varyings, to the pixel shader.
3. Use a custom 4x4 matrix to transform coordinates from local to clip space.
Fragment shader
The fragment shader expects the output to be in premultiplied alpha.