# News ## 0.6 This took me way too long. The changes weren't difficult, but I had to do a lot of copy pasting. The main changes are using `queue.write_buffer()` and `queue.write_texture()` everywhere. I won't get into the nitty gritty, but you can checkout the [pull request](https://github.com/sotrh/learn-wgpu/pull/90) if you're interested. ## Added Pong Showcase [See it here](/showcase/pong/) ## Normal mapping My perfectionism got in my way a bit with this one. I wasn't sure that what I was getting was "physically accurate", but it seems to look good. ![](./normal_mapping_correct.png) ## 0.5! Too many things changed to make note of them here. Check out [the 0.5 pull request](https://github.com/sotrh/learn-wgpu/pull/29) if you're curious about specifics. That being said, 2 things are worth mentioning directly: the y-axis now points up like with DirectX and Metal, and requesting an adapter and creating a device now use `Future`s. The tutorials have been updated as well as the code. ## Reworked lighting tutorial The [lighting tutorial](/intermediate/tutorial10-lighting/) was not up to par, so I redid it. ## Added GIF showcase [Creating GIFs](/showcase/gifs/) ## Updated texture tutorials Up to this point, we created textures manually everytime. I've pulled out the texture creation code into a new `texture.rs` file and included it every tutorial from the [textures tutorial](/beginner/tutorial5-textures/#cleaning-things-up) onward. ## Fixed panics do to not specifying the correct `usage` Wgpu has become more strict about what `BufferUsage`s and `TextureUsage`s are required when performing certain operations. For example int the [Wgpu without a window example](/intermediate/windowless/), the `texture_desc` only specified the usage to by `COPY_SRC`. This caused a crash when the `texture` was used as a render target. Adding `OUTPUT_ATTACHMENT` fixed the issue. ## Updating Winit from 0.20.0-alpha5 to 0.20 There were a lot of small changes to how the dpi stuff works. You can see all the changes [in the changelog](https://github.com/rust-windowing/winit/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md). That means that some of the tutorials had to change. * I've removed `hidpi_factor` from `State` entirely. They removed the `hidpi_factor()` method from `winit::window::Window`, and changed `inner_size()` to return `PhysicalSize` instead of `LogicalSize`, so we don't need to store the `hidpi_factor` anymore. * `update_hidpi_and_resize` is no more. Since `ScaleFactorChanged` passes in the windows new `PhysicalSize`, we can simply use `resize()`. * `State::size` is now `PhysicalSize` instead of the pre 0.20 `LogicalSize`. * `EventsCleared` is now `MainEventsCleared`. I may have missed a change, but I made sure that all the examples compile an run, so if you have trouble with your code you can use them as a reference. ## Changed tutorial examples to use a src directory I wasn't using the traditional cargo binary folder setup. I've changed it to the standardized form now. ## Updating to 0.4 from 0.3 There are a few things that have changed: 1. The use of `Instance` has been removed. Creating a `Surface` and requesting an `Adapter` are done as follows. ```rust let surface = wgpu::Surface::create(window); let adapter = wgpu::Adapter::request(&wgpu::RequestAdapterOptions { ..Default::default() }).unwrap(); // needs to be unwrapped ``` 2. The `request_device` method now returns a `(Device, Queue)` tuple. This means that you can borrow the `Queue` mutably while using the `Device` immutably. Because of this change, submitting `CommandBuffer`s to the queue uses the `submit` method on the `Queue` directly. ```rust self.queue.submit(&[ encoder.finish() ]); ``` 3. The `create` method on `Surface` takes in any struct that implements the `HasRawWindow` trait, instead of a `RawWindowHandle`. This means that the `raw-window-handle = "0.3"` line in `Cargo.toml` is no longer needed. I don't know if this is a change from 0.4, but you use `wgpu = "0.4"` line in dependencies instead of the `[dependencies.wgpu]` as wgpu will determine the best back end for you. ## New/Recent Articles