- DirectDraw
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DirectDraw is part of Microsoft's DirectX API. DirectDraw is used to render graphics in applications where top performance is important. DirectDraw also allows applications to run fullscreen or embedded in a window such as most other MS Windows applications. DirectDraw uses hardware acceleration if it is available on the client's computer. DirectDraw allows direct access to video memory, hardware overlays, hardware blitters, and page flipping. Its video memory manager can manipulate video memory with ease, taking full advantage of the blitting and color decompression capabilities of different types of display adapters.
DirectDraw is a 2D API. That is, it contains commands for 2D rendering and does not support 3D hardware acceleration. A programmer could use DirectDraw to draw 3D graphics, but the rendering would be slow compared to an API such as Direct3D which does support 3D hardware acceleration.
As of DirectX version 8.0, DirectDraw was merged into a new package called DirectX Graphics, which is really just Direct3D with a few DirectDraw API additions. DirectDraw can still be used by programmers, but they must use older DirectX interfaces (DirectX 7 and below). As of the release of the June 2010 DirectX SDK package, the DirectDraw header file and library are no longed included.
DirectDraw has been deprecated since version 7 but is still included with DirectX, although updates are no longer made. Developers have been instructed to use textured quads in Direct3D for 2D graphics. Managed DirectX includes a managed wrapper for DirectDraw.
DirectDraw is now replaced by Direct2D.
See also
Microsoft APIs and frameworks Graphics Audio Multimedia Web Data access Networking Communication Administration and
managementComponent model Libraries Device drivers Windows Driver Model · Windows Driver Foundation (KMDF · UMDF) · WDDM · NDIS · UAA · Broadcast Driver Architecture · VxDSecurity .NET Software factories IPC Accessibility Text and multilingual
supportCategories:- Microsoft Windows stubs
- Graphics libraries
- Microsoft application programming interfaces
- DirectX
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