Ambient Lighting (Direct3D 9)

Ambient lighting provides constant lighting for a scene. It lights all object vertices the same because it is not dependent on any other lighting factors such as vertex normals, light direction, light position, range, or attenuation. It is the fastest type of lighting but it produces the least realistic results. Direct3D contains a single global ambient light property that you can use without creating any light. Alternatively, you can set any light object to provide ambient lighting. The ambient lighting for a scene is described by the following equation.

Ambient Lighting = Cₐ*[Gₐ + sum(Atteni*Spoti*Lai)]

Where:

Parameter Default value Type Description
Cₐ (0,0,0,0) D3DCOLORVALUE Material ambient color
Gₐ (0,0,0,0) D3DCOLORVALUE Global ambient color
Atteni (0,0,0,0) D3DCOLORVALUE Light attenuation of the ith light. See Attenuation and Spotlight Factor (Direct3D 9).
Spoti (0,0,0,0) D3DVECTOR Spotlight factor of the ith light. See Attenuation and Spotlight Factor (Direct3D 9).
sum N/A N/A Sum of the ambient light
Lai (0,0,0,0) D3DVECTOR Light ambient color of the ith light

 

The value for Cₐ is either:

  • vertex color1, if AMBIENTMATERIALSOURCE = D3DMCS_COLOR1, and the first vertex color is supplied in the vertex declaration.
  • vertex color2, if AMBIENTMATERIALSOURCE = D3DMCS_COLOR2, and the second vertex color is supplied in vertex declaration.
  • material ambient color.

Note

If either AMBIENTMATERIALSOURCE option is used, and the vertex color is not provided, then the material ambient color is used.

 

To use the material ambient color, use SetMaterial as shown in the example code below.

Gₐ is the global ambient color. It is set using SetRenderState(D3DRS_AMBIENT). There is one global ambient color in a Direct3D scene. This parameter is not associated with a Direct3D light object.

Lai is the ambient color of the ith light in the scene. Each Direct3D light has a set of properties, one of which is the ambient color. The term, sum(Lai) is a sum of all the ambient colors in the scene.

Example

In this example, the object is colored using the scene ambient light and a material ambient color.

#define GRAY_COLOR  0x00bfbfbf

// create material
D3DMATERIAL9 mtrl;
ZeroMemory(&mtrl, sizeof(mtrl));
mtrl.Ambient.r = 0.75f;
mtrl.Ambient.g = 0.0f;
mtrl.Ambient.b = 0.0f;
mtrl.Ambient.a = 0.0f;
m_pd3dDevice->SetMaterial(&mtrl);
m_pd3dDevice->SetRenderState(D3DRS_AMBIENT, GRAY_COLOR);

According to the equation, the resulting color for the object vertices is a combination of the material color and the light color.

The following two illustrations show the material color, which is gray, and the light color, which is bright red.

illustration of a gray sphereillustration of a red sphere

The resulting scene is shown in the following illustration. The only object in the scene is a sphere. Ambient light lights all object vertices with the same color. It is not dependent on the vertex normal or the light direction. As a result, the sphere looks like a 2D circle because there is no difference in shading around the surface of the object.

illustration of a sphere with ambient lighting

To give objects a more realistic look, apply diffuse or specular lighting in addition to ambient lighting.

Mathematics of Lighting