![]() ![]() Even when you have no windows, event polling needs to be done in order to receive monitor and joystick connection events. Event processing is normally done each frame after buffer swapping. GLFW needs to poll the window system for events both to provide input to the application and to prove to the window system that the application hasn't locked up. ![]() It register every callback supported by GLFW and prints out all arguments provided for every event, along with time and sequence information. To get a better feel for how the various events callbacks behave, run the events test program. By using the window user pointer, you can access non-global structures or objects from your callbacks. Callbacks are more work to use than polling but is less CPU intensive and guarantees that you do not miss state changes.Īll input callbacks receive a window handle. While some can only be polled, like time, or only received via callbacks, like scrolling, many provide both callbacks and polling. There are also guides for the other areas of GLFW. For details on a specific function in this category, see the Input reference. This guide introduces the input related functions of GLFW. ![]()
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![]() "eWhoring is an online fraud scam which, like catfishing, is hard to police," Jess explains to Cosmopolitan. While filming her brilliant new BBC documentary, When Nudes Are Stolen, a private investigator unearthed that Jess is also a victim of eWhoring. ![]() ![]() ![]() Yet, having now spent years discovering and reporting countless Tinder/Instagram/you name it profiles baring her face and body (created by scammers to try and extract everything from money to attention from unsuspecting victims), Jess learnt that the way in which her images were being abused had shockingly evolved. It's largely those pictures from Jess's old website that are still being abused today, over a decade later, along with any newer photos that she posts on her social media accounts (including shots of her with friends and family). In those earlier days of the internet (in a time before Instagram and dating apps had really taken off), little thought was given to where those images could end up, or the way they may be used, later down the line. While working as a model during the Zoo and FHM glory days, Jess was encouraged by her manager to set up her own website and share more personal looking images on it – think: bedroom underwear shots and smiley selfies, rather than polished studio set-ups. ![]() Jess Davies had known for a while that photographs she'd taken during her former glamour modelling days were being used to catfish people. ![]() |
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