This section describes how new drawings are combined with the existing pixel values in the target of the drawing to generate the result, according to graphics state parameters compositing-mode or operation.
Note: The full set of graphics state parameters is described under graphics-state.
When the port's
drawing-mode
is :compatible
the graphics state parameter
operation
determines how the colors are combined, and
compositing-mode
is ignored.
The allowed values of
operation
are the values of the Common Lisp constants boole-1
, boole-and
and so on. These are the allowed values of the first argument to the Common Lisp function boole.
See the specification of boole
in the ANSI Common Lisp standard for the full list of operations.
The color combination corresponds to the logical operation defined there, as if by calling
(boole
operation
new-pixel
screen-pixel
)
For example, passing :operation
boole-andc2
provides a graphics-state where graphics ports drawing functions draw with the bitwise AND of the
foreground
color and the complement of the existing color of each pixel.
Note: Graphics State operation is not supported by Cocoa/Core Graphics so this parameter is ignored on Cocoa.
When the port's
drawing-mode
is :quality
the graphics state parameter
compositing-mode
determines how the colors are combined, and
operation
is ignored.
compositing-mode
:over
means draw over the existing values, blending alpha values if they exist.
compositing-mode
:copy
means that the source is written to the destination ignoring the existing values. If the source has alpha and the target does not, that has the effect of converting semi-transparent source to solid. :copy
is especially useful for creating transparent and semi-transparent pixmap ports, which can be displayed directly or converted to images by make-image-from-port.
Further compositing-mode values are supported on later versions of Cocoa and GTK+.
CAPI User Guide and Reference Manual (Unix version) - 3 Aug 2017