

Enjoy millions of the latest Android apps, games, music, movies, TV, books, magazines & more. Anytime, anywhere, across your devices.
This app is targeted at developers, or anyone curious about performance differences between OpenGL and Canvas. Specifically, it measures the performance of drawing 2D sprites explicitly using OpenGL ES 2.0 with a hybrid of Java and C, and drawing 2D sprites using Canvas with Java.
When you are done running a test, you can see a benchmark analysis of the performance by pressing the device's back button.
It is similar to Sprite Method Test by Chris Pruett, but it is updated for OpenGL ES 2.0. His Sprite Method Test runs the outdated ES 1.0, and is broken on Jelly Bean (because of tripple buffering).
This app works on all devices which support OpenGL ES 2.0.
This is ad-free and nag-free.
More details:
Specifically, this app measures the performance of drawing 2D sprites explicitly using OpenGL ES 2.0 with a hybrid of Java and C, and drawing 2D sprites using Canvas with Java.
On every frame:
The background color shifts slightly, pulsing between red and white.
Each sprite moves a random (Gaussian) amount. If the center of a sprite goes over an edge of the screen, the sprite moves to a random screen location.
The Canvas test uses a SurfaceView and Canvas.drawBitmap(). All the calculations are done in Java (using Random.nextGaussian() and Random.nextFloat()) on a float[].
The OpenGL ES 2.0 tests use a GLSurfaceView in Java. Calculation is done in C (using drand48() and an inline C equivalent of Java's Gaussian algorithm) on a native float[]. Drawing is also done in C, using glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, ...). C (NDK) methods are called every frame from Java through the JNI.
All tests have the identical overhead of profiling operations in Java.
Statistics:
The FPS information is about when frames are actually posted to the screen (technically, the SurfaceFlinger).
The Draw information is about the time it takes to issue (and glFlush() + glFinish(), in the OpenGL test) the drawing commands. It does not count the time to actually flip screen buffers.
The Push information (VBO only) is about the time it takes to push the vertex data to the GPU buffer. This will often be <.5ms (which rounds to 0.000s) per frame. When using the non-VBO OpenGL test, this time is essentially included in the draw time instead. In practical applications, it might take longer to push data to the GPU. This example contains only one VBO (or Vertex array) with 2 floats per sprite. Practical applications would have more data (such as size and texture information).
The Calc information is about the time it takes to calculate a frame's background color and the new position of each sprite. When JIT is enabled, calculation time is comparable between the Java (Canvas) test and the native (Open GL) tests, but with JIT disabled, Java suffers a significant penalty.
The Team GO Rocket Leaders are determined to stop players, so here's everything you need to know about how to beat them in Pokemon GO.
Here's how to solve all of the riddles in Nightshift Forest in Fortnite, including a list of all the questions and answers.
If you're looking to knock out the Godzilla Quests in Fortnite Chapter 6, here's how to find out Monarch's secrets.
Persistence is key!
Instead of pouting in the corner, you should use the Aura Battles codes to get enough points to get good abilities.
Use One Punch Simulator X codes to grab all the free resources that you need to max out your character's Psych and Power.
On our website, you can easily download the latest version of Compare Sprite Draw Method! No registration and SMS required!