
Security News
The Nightmare Before Deployment
Season’s greetings from Socket, and here’s to a calm end of year: clean dependencies, boring pipelines, no surprises.
OpenGL Mathematics (GLM) is a header only C++ mathematics library for graphics software based on the OpenGL Shading Language (GLSL) specifications. GLM provides classes and functions designed and implemented with the same naming conventions and functionalities than GLSL so that anyone who knows GLSL, can use GLM as well in C++. This project isn't limited to GLSL features. An extension system, based on the GLSL extension conventions, provides extended capabilities: matrix transformations, quaternions, data packing, random numbers, noise, etc... This library works perfectly with OpenGL but it also ensures interoperability with other third party libraries and SDK. It is a good candidate for software rendering (raytracing / rasterisation), image processing, physic simulations and any development context that requires a simple and convenient mathematics library. GLM is written in C++98 but can take advantage of C++11 when supported by the compiler. It is a platform independent library with no dependence and it officially supports the following compilers: - GCC 4.7 and higher - Intel C++ Compose XE 2013 and higher - Clang 3.4 and higher - Apple Clang 6.0 and higher - Visual C++ 2013 and higher - CUDA 9.0 and higher (experimental) - Any C++11 compiler

OpenGL Mathematics (GLM) is a header only C++ mathematics library for graphics software based on the OpenGL Shading Language (GLSL) specifications.
GLM provides classes and functions designed and implemented with the same naming conventions and functionalities than GLSL so that anyone who knows GLSL, can use GLM as well in C++.
This project isn't limited to GLSL features. An extension system, based on the GLSL extension conventions, provides extended capabilities: matrix transformations, quaternions, data packing, random numbers, noise, etc...
Project Website: https://glm.g-truc.net
GLM is written in C++98 but can take advantage of C++11 when supported by the compiler. It is a platform independent library with no dependence and it officially supports the following compilers:
#include <glm/vec3.hpp> // glm::vec3
#include <glm/vec4.hpp> // glm::vec4
#include <glm/mat4x4.hpp> // glm::mat4
#include <glm/ext/matrix_transform.hpp> // glm::translate, glm::rotate, glm::scale
#include <glm/ext/matrix_clip_space.hpp> // glm::perspective
#include <glm/ext/scalar_constants.hpp> // glm::pi
glm::mat4 camera(float Translate, glm::vec2 const& Rotate)
{
glm::mat4 Projection = glm::perspective(glm::pi<float>() * 0.25f, 4.0f / 3.0f, 0.1f, 100.f);
glm::mat4 View = glm::translate(glm::mat4(1.0f), glm::vec3(0.0f, 0.0f, -Translate));
View = glm::rotate(View, Rotate.y, glm::vec3(-1.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f));
View = glm::rotate(View, Rotate.x, glm::vec3(0.0f, 1.0f, 0.0f));
glm::mat4 Model = glm::scale(glm::mat4(1.0f), glm::vec3(0.5f));
return Projection * View * Model;
}
For more information about GLM, please have a look at the manual and the API reference documentation.
The source code and the documentation are licensed under either the Happy Bunny License (Modified MIT) or the MIT License.
FAQs
OpenGL Mathematics (GLM) is a header only C++ mathematics library for graphics software based on the OpenGL Shading Language (GLSL) specifications. GLM provides classes and functions designed and implemented with the same naming conventions and functionalities than GLSL so that anyone who knows GLSL, can use GLM as well in C++. This project isn't limited to GLSL features. An extension system, based on the GLSL extension conventions, provides extended capabilities: matrix transformations, quaternions, data packing, random numbers, noise, etc... This library works perfectly with OpenGL but it also ensures interoperability with other third party libraries and SDK. It is a good candidate for software rendering (raytracing / rasterisation), image processing, physic simulations and any development context that requires a simple and convenient mathematics library. GLM is written in C++98 but can take advantage of C++11 when supported by the compiler. It is a platform independent library with no dependence and it officially supports the following compilers: - GCC 4.7 and higher - Intel C++ Compose XE 2013 and higher - Clang 3.4 and higher - Apple Clang 6.0 and higher - Visual C++ 2013 and higher - CUDA 9.0 and higher (experimental) - Any C++11 compiler
We found that glm demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Security News
Season’s greetings from Socket, and here’s to a calm end of year: clean dependencies, boring pipelines, no surprises.

Research
/Security News
Impostor NuGet package Tracer.Fody.NLog typosquats Tracer.Fody and its author, using homoglyph tricks, and exfiltrates Stratis wallet JSON/passwords to a Russian IP address.

Security News
Deno 2.6 introduces deno audit with a new --socket flag that plugs directly into Socket to bring supply chain security checks into the Deno CLI.