Michael Abrash's Graphics Programming Black Book

Michael Abrash's Graphics Programming Black Book

From the person who optimized Quake himself, features assembler optimization on graphics programming using Intel CPUs, from the 8088 on to the early Pentium lines.

Publication date: 01 Jul 1997

ISBN-10: 1576101746

ISBN-13: n/a

Paperback: 1342 pages

Views: 66,038

Type: Book

Publisher: The Coriolis Group

License: n/a

Post time: 24 Oct 2004 10:01:08

Michael Abrash's Graphics Programming Black Book

Michael Abrash's Graphics Programming Black Book From the person who optimized Quake himself, features assembler optimization on graphics programming using Intel CPUs, from the 8088 on to the early Pentium lines.
Tag(s): Game Development and Multimedia
Publication date: 01 Jul 1997
ISBN-10: 1576101746
ISBN-13: n/a
Paperback: 1342 pages
Views: 66,038
Document Type: Book
Publisher: The Coriolis Group
License: n/a
Post time: 24 Oct 2004 10:01:08
:santagrin: This book was suggested by: William Yuen

Book excerpts:

Michael Abrash's Graphics Programming Black Book is a collection of the author's previous books on assembly language and graphics programming, as well as past columns for Dr. Dobb's magazine. Though much of the book (such as 8088/286/386 assembly language optimization and VGA graphics programming) is out-of-date by now, the reader can see some of the larger tendencies in the author's work over the years -- a reliance on profiling in order to test code, and creative thinking to improve performance wherever possible.

This text features assembler optimization for a variety of problems including searching algorithms, and records the author's approaches to optimizing code for the evolving line of Intel CPUs, from the 8088 on to the early Pentium lines.

The last few chapters of this book are more relevant, and include a series of explorations of some of the technology behind the popular Doom and Quake 3-D games by id Corporation (where the author worked). Optimized solutions to 3-D graphics problems from texture mapping, hidden surface removal, and Binary Space Partitioning (BSP) trees are explained. Current gaming and 3-D technology, such as Direct3D and VRML is left out, but it's clear that game programmers like the author will continue to push the limits of current hardware technology in inventive ways.

This book is clearly targeted at game developers and serious assembly language programmers, not for the general reader.

Note: This book is hosted at an Australian mirror. You can visit the original page at Dr. Dobb's Journal. The entire online book is 153 MB in size, with each chapter can be downloaded separately as PDF files.

Reviews:

Amazon.com

:D "Hard-core advice from the guy who optimized Quake."
 




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Michael Abrash

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