インテル® Fortran コンパイラー 19.0 デベロッパー・ガイドおよびリファレンス
Graphics Subroutine: Sets the color indexes of multiple pixels.
USE IFQWIN
CALL SETPIXELS (n, x, y, color)
n |
(Input) INTEGER(4). Number of pixels to set. Sets the number of elements in the other arguments. |
x, y |
(Input) INTEGER(2). Parallel arrays containing viewport coordinates of pixels to set. |
color |
(Input) INTEGER(2). Array containing color indexes to set the pixels to. |
SETPIXELS sets the pixels specified in the arrays x and y to the color indexes in color. These arrays are parallel: the first element in each of the three arrays refers to a single pixel, the second element refers to the next pixel, and so on.
If any of the pixels are outside the clipping region, those pixels are ignored. Calls to SETPIXELS with n less than 1 are also ignored. SETPIXELS is a much faster way to set multiple pixel color indexes than individual calls to SETPIXEL.
Unlike SETPIXELS, SETPIXELSRGB gives access to the full color capacity of the system by using direct color values rather than indexes to a palette. The non-RGB color functions (such as SETPIXELS and SETCOLOR) use color indexes rather than true color values.
If you use color indexes, you are restricted to the colors available in the palette, at most 256. Some display adapters (SVGA and true color) are capable of creating 262,144 (256K) colors or more. To access any available color, you need to specify an explicit RGB value with an RGB color function, rather than a palette index with a non-RGB color function.
! Build as a Graphics ap.
USE IFQWIN
INTEGER(2) color(9)
INTEGER(2) x(9), y(9), i
DO i = 1, 9
x(i) = 20 * i
y(i) = 10 * i
color(i) = INT2(i)
END DO
CALL SETPIXELS(9, x, y, color)
END