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I'm trying to use non-square matrices in my GLSL shader but when I compile I get a syntax error.

My shader code using:

uniform mat4 my_mat;

compiles just fine.

But if I change it to:

uniform mat4x3 my_mat;

I get

ERROR: 0:5: 'mat4x3' : syntax error syntax error

I get a similar error for

uniform mat4x4 my_mat;

If I print my GL_VERSION and GL_SHADING_LANGUAGE_VERSION I get: GL_VERSION: 2.1 NVIDIA-1.6.36 GL_SHADING_LANGUAGE_VERSION: 1.20

I'm compiling and running my OpenGL on a Mac OS X 10.6 MacBook Pro. According to this NVidia document and others, GLSL 1.20 and GL 2.1 should encompass support of non-square matrices and this syntax. Is there another catch? Or another way to troubleshoot why I get syntax errors?

1 Answer 1

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If I place

#version 120

At the top of my shader code, the problem goes away. According to the same document listed in the question shader source without the version compiler option will compile "as before" which I guess means that they won't.

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    That is exactly what you need to do. Without a version specification the shader is compiled as 1.10. I guess you see that just trying this out before asking the question would have been a good idea, as you obviously tryed it out some minutes after asking the question. But nevermind now you got a nice question with a self-accepted answer. Sep 26, 2011 at 20:45
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    With no #version it should compile it as if it was #version 110, as that was the last version where #version was optional.
    – Chris Dodd
    Sep 26, 2011 at 20:45

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