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Groups > comp.sys.acorn.programmer > #6224
| From | Richard Ashbery <basura@invalid.addr.uk> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.sys.acorn.programmer |
| Subject | Re: Instability in rectangular cursor |
| Date | 2020-11-15 13:20 +0000 |
| Organization | None |
| Message-ID | <58cfce3e97basura@invalid.addr.uk> (permalink) |
On 13 Nov in comp.sys.acorn.programmer, Steve Fryatt <news@stevefryatt.org.uk> wrote: > > You make a fair point and although WAIT does work in this example > > it dramatically slows down the program that this code has been > > ripped from. > It will do, because it seems to rely on replotting the screen many > times a frame, which is what causes the tearing effect. > WAIT simply pauses the program until the start of the next video > frame, when there's a small window of time in which to update the > screen while the video flyback is happening. If the code is > expecting to execute the REPEAT loop many more per second than the > monitor refresh rate, then the game will slow down as a result. > Unfortunately, you can't change the video refresh rate because > that's set by your monitor, so to fix the tearing you will need to > decouple the game timing from the screen update. Thanks Steve for the explanation. It looks as though a complete rewrite is necessary. Steve D indicated that triple buffering may be required - I briefly had a look at this but understanding the process is challenging - maybe it's time for a revisit. My simplified version does away with the mouse cursor and relies on the wash colour to erase the verticals - it seems to work just as well but doesn't look so pretty. Richard
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Re: Instability in rectangular cursor Richard Ashbery <basura@invalid.addr.uk> - 2020-11-15 13:20 +0000
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