PO2 Syndrome

PO2 Syndrome (power-of-two syndrome) refers to the problem older graphic cards/drivers have: they can't display graphics whose width and height are not a power of two, that is: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, …

There are multiple things lovers can do to support their poor afflicted users.

  1. Only use PO2-sized image files. (One can add a transparent border for that end.)
  2. Use an ImageData object to pad non-PO2-sized image files (see example).

Both have a downside: getting the width, height and center of the image does not work right, which can be especially wrong for rotation. The solution is to keep the real width and height around, and use them rather than getWidth() and getHeight().

Drop-in solution

Both for users and lovers, there exists a drop-in solution (for Linux only, at the moment), based on method #2. See http://love2d.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=1433&p=16922#p16922.

It does not take the real-size problem, described above, into account.

RichText

Another solution, with limited scope, is the RichText library by Robin, only for 0.7.0. See GitHub for more information

A cure has been found

Starting version 0.8.0, all images are auto-padded on systems that need it, this means we can forget about all this madness and celebrate.

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