Let’s say you don’t want to navigate or interact with the examples and you just want a good old fashion text book which you can read on the beach or on your commute to the city. In that case you can print this book.
For printing this book you need first to parse it. For that you will need glslViewer
a console shader tool that will compile and transform the shader examples into images.
In MacOSX get sure to have homebrew installed and then on your terminal do:
brew install glslviewer
On Raspberry Pi you need to get Raspbian, a Debian-based Linux distribution made for Raspberry Pi and then do:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
sudo apt-get install git-core glslviewer
For parsing the Markdown chapters into Latex and then into a PDF file we will use Xetex Latex Engine and Pandoc.
In MacOSX:
Download and Install MacTeX by:
brew cask install mactex-no-gui
and then install Pandoc and Python 3 by:
brew install pandoc python
On Raspberry Pi (Raspbian):
sudo apt-get install texlive-xetex pandoc python2.7
Now that you have all you need, it is time to clone the repository of this book and compile the book.
For that open your terminal once again and type:
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/patriciogonzalezvivo/thebookofshaders.git
cd thebookofshaders
make clean pdf
If everything goes well, you will see a book.pdf
file which you can read on your favorite device or print.
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/patriciogonzalezvivo/thebookofshaders.git
cd thebookofshaders
make clean epub
The generated book.epub
can be used directly, or converted to a .mobi
file for use with Kindle by using a converter, for example Calibre.