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Home/ Questions/Q 7180185
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 28, 20262026-05-28T17:17:41+00:00 2026-05-28T17:17:41+00:00

Is it possible in desktop GLSL to pass a fixed size array of floats

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Is it possible in desktop GLSL to pass a fixed size array of floats to the vertex shader as an attribute? If yes, how?

I want to have per vertex weights for character animation so I would like to have something like the following in my vertex shader:

attribute float weights[25];

How would I fill the attribute array from my C++ & OpenGL program? I have seen in another question that I could get the attribute location of the array attribute and then just add the index to that location. Could someone give an example on that for my pretty large array?

Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-28T17:17:43+00:00Added an answer on May 28, 2026 at 5:17 pm

    Let’s start with what you asked for.

    On pretty much no hardware that exists currently will attribute float weights[25]; compile. While shaders can have arrays of attributes, each array index represents a new attribute index. And on all hardware the currently exists, the maximum number of attribute indices is… 16. You’d need 25, and that’s just for the weights.

    Now, you can mitigate this easily enough by remembering that you can use vec4 attributes. Thus, you store every four array elements in a single attribute. Your array would be attribute vec4 weights[7]; which is doable. Your weight-fetching logic will have to change of course.

    Even so, you don’t seem to be taking in the ramifications of what this would actually mean for your vertex data. Each attribute represents a component of a vertex’s data. Each vertex for a rendering call will have the same amount of data; the contents of that data will differ, but not how much data.

    In order to do what you’re suggesting, every vertex in your mesh would need 25 floats describing the weight. Even if this was stored as normalized unsigned bytes, that’s still 25 extra bytes worth of data at a minimum. That’s a lot. Especially considering that for the vast majority of vertices, most of these values will be 0. Even in the worst case, you’d be looking at maybe 6-7 bones affecting an single vertex.

    The way skinning is generally done in vertex shaders is to limit the number of bones that affects a single vertex to four. This way, you don’t use an array of attributes; you just use a vec4 attribute for the weights. Of course, you also now need to say which bone is associated with which weight. So you have a second vec4 attribute that specifies the bone index for that weight.

    This strikes a good balance. You only take up 2 extra attributes (which can be unsigned bytes in terms of size). And for the vast majority of vertices, you’ll never even notice, because most vertices are only influenced by 1-3 bones. A few uses 4, and fewer still use 5+. In those cases, you just cut off the lowest weights and recompute the weights of the others proportionately.

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