Table of Contents

WebGL2Fundamentals.org

Fix, Fork, Contribute

How to prevent texture bleeding with a texture atlas

Question:

I've applied two necessary steps given in this answer https://gamedev.stackexchange.com/questions/46963/how-to-avoid-texture-bleeding-in-a-texture-atlas, but I still get texture bleeding.

I have an atlas that has filled with solid colors at bounds: x y w h: 0 0 32 32, 0 32 32 32, 0 64 32 32, 0 32 * 3 32 32

I want to display each of these frames using webgl without texture bleeding, only solid colors as is.

I've disabled mipmaping:

gl.texParameteri(gl.TEXTURE_2D, gl.TEXTURE_WRAP_S, gl.REPEAT);
gl.texParameteri(gl.TEXTURE_2D, gl.TEXTURE_WRAP_T, gl.REPEAT);

//gl.texParameteri(gl.TEXTURE_2D, gl.TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER, gl.LINEAR_MIPMAP_LINEAR);
gl.texParameteri(gl.TEXTURE_2D, gl.TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER, gl.LINEAR);
gl.texParameteri(gl.TEXTURE_2D, gl.TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER, gl.LINEAR);

I've applied half pixel correction:

  const uvs = (src, frame) => {
    const tw = src.width,
          th = src.height;

    const getTexelCoords = (x, y) => {
      return [(x + 0.5) / tw, (y + 0.5) / th];
    };

    let frameLeft = frame[0],
        frameRight = frame[0] + frame[2],
        frameTop = frame[1],
        frameBottom = frame[1] + frame[3];

    let p0 = getTexelCoords(frameLeft, frameTop),
        p1 = getTexelCoords(frameRight, frameTop),
        p2 = getTexelCoords(frameRight, frameBottom),
        p3 = getTexelCoords(frameLeft, frameBottom);

    return [
      p0[0], p0[1],
      p1[0], p1[1],
      p3[0], p3[1],
      p2[0], p2[1]
    ];
  };

But I still get texture bleeding. At first I tried using pixi.js and I got texture bleeding too, then I tried using vanilla js.

I've fixed this, by changing these lines:

    let frameLeft = frame[0],
        frameRight = frame[0] + frame[2] - 1,
        frameTop = frame[1],
        frameBottom = frame[1] + frame[3] - 1;

As you can see I subtract 1 from right and bottom edges. Previously these indexes are 32 which means beginning of the other frame, It has to be 31 instead. I don't know if this is the correct solution.

Answer:

Your solution is correct.

Imagine we have a 4x2 texture with two 2x2 pixel sprites

+-------+-------+-------+-------+
|       |       |       |       |
|   E   |   F   |   G   |   H   |
|       |       |       |       |
+-------+-------+-------+-------+
|       |       |       |       |
|   A   |   B   |   C   |   D   |
|       |       |       |       |
+-------+-------+-------+-------+

The letters represent the centers of the pixels in the textures.

(pixelCoord + 0.5) / textureDimensions

Take the 2x2 sprite at A, B, E, F. If your texture coordinates go anywhere between B and C then you'll get some of C mixed in if you have texture filtering on.

Originally you were computing coords A, A + width where width = 2. That lead you all the way from A to C. By adding the -1 you get just A to B.

Unfortunately you have a new issue which is that you're only displaying half of A and B. You can solve that by padding the sprites. For example make it 6x2 with the pixel bewteen being the edges of the sprite repeated

+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
|       |       |       |       |       |       |
|   E   |   F   |   Fr  |   Gr  |   G   |   H   |
|       |       |       |       |       |       |
+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
|       |       |       |       |       |       |
|   A   |   B   |   Br  |   Cr  |   C   |   D   |
|       |       |       |       |       |       |
+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+

Above Br is B repeated, Cr is C repeated. Setting repeat as gl.CLAMP_TO_EDGE will repeat A and D for you. Now you can use the edges.

Sprite CDGH's coords are

p0 = 4 / texWidth
p1 = 0 / texHeigth
p2 = (4 + spriteWidth) / texWidth
p3 = (0 + spriteHeigth) / texHeight

The best way to see the difference is to draw 2 sprites large using both techniques, the unpadded and the padded.

The question and quoted portions thereof are CC BY-SA 4.0 by eguneys from here
Issue/Bug? Create an issue on github.
Use <pre><code>code goes here</code></pre> for code blocks
comments powered by Disqus