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Am 28.06.2010 12:48, schrieb Gyscos:
> But isn't it possible to query the right value for Display_Gamma from the OS ? I
> mean, how do other viewer software do ?
That would be pretty cool. However, in a typical end user's system, the
OS doesn't know either, or even has wrong information about it.
For more professional systems, where the user (or admin) cares about
display nonlinearity, you'll typically have calibrated displays with a
corresponding ICC profile; but that don't help either, because it's much
more complex than a simple gamma curve, and POV-Ray isn't
color-profile-aware. Not yet.
> Also, about File_Gamma, it is used for the gamma-encoding that is applied when
> creating the file. When reading the file, it is decoded by the software, and
> then sent to the OS.
> I understand that, between the file being sent to the OS and the pixel being
> illuminated on the screen, there can be the gamma-transformation, caused by the
> graphic card, system, screen, ... because of some non-linearity.
> Now, before that, how does the software decode the file ?
> Does it do a reverse-encoding with the gamma value stored in the file ? Or does
> it just send it linearly to the system ?
For JPEG, BMP or the like, the software will essentially send the data
right to the display subsystem unchanged, expecting the display
subsystem's inherent non-linearity to take care of the gamma-decoding.
For PNG, the data will theoretically be gamma-decoded by the software,
then gamma pre-corrected by the same software to fit the display
subsystem's inherent gamma (having the same effect as gamma-encoding the
data again, though possibly with a different gamma value), and finally
the data passed to the display subsystem.
In practice, the initial gamma-decoding and subsequent gamma
pre-correction might be performed in one single step, taking advantage
of the fact that (x^A)^B = x^(A*B).
> I understood the Display_Gamma was mainly to compensate the system+GC+screen non
> linearity.
>
> The question is : What should the File_Gamma value compensate ? The software
> decoding ? The system+GC+screen non linearity ? Or the eye's perception ?
In a sense, File_Gamma is intended to compensate for the nonlinearity in
the eye's dynamic range, i.e. that the eye can tell apart two dark
colors easier than two bright colors.
In the PNG file format, that is its only role.
In JPEG, BMP or the like, the File_Gamma double-features as gamma
pre-correction for the intended output display's inherent nonlinearity,
because for those file formats this is customary.
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> Yeah, I just noticed that too...
> The thing is, I saw in the doc that default value for interval was 10 :
> http://www.povray.org/documentation/view/3.6.1/421/
That's the default for method 1.
> So when I first saw the results weren't good, I changed it to 20. But now if I
> set it to 10, it works fine too, so I doubt the default value really is 10...
> Maybe 1 indeed.
>
> Also, still unrelated, but when I use method 3 with a very low variance
> (0.000000001), a very high confidence (0.99999999), and "samples 10, 100",
> shouldn't it use more than 10 if the result isn't perfect ? I don't see why
> "samples 30, 100" works better there...
>
>
The default for method 3 are:
intervals 1
samples 10
There is no second samples value used and if one is provided, it's just
ignored.
Alain
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About media scattering, thanks... I just saw default method was 3 and not 1...
>_<
About gamma, File_Gamma is supposed to compensate for the eye's non-linear
perception. But why do we need to do this ?... Shouldn't the eye do it itself ?
I mean, if POV-Ray computes the value like they should be in real-world, then
the eye should perceive them the same way, right ? I mean, the eye perceives
non-linearly the screen as well as it perceives non-linearly the outside world,
doesn't it ?
The brightness POV-Ray computes is linearly proportionnal to the amount of
photonic energy the surface receives, right ? So it needs gamma-transformation
between this value and the brain to look like what we would see in real life.
But if the eye already makes this transformation, why do we also do it on the
computer side ?
I mean, for real photos, do we apply a gamma-correction ?
I don't see why we should bother with how the eye perceives things, since he
will apply whatever gamma-correction it wants to for both screen and real world,
with the same brightness values... Am I wrong ? (Since we do use gamma, I
probably am, I just don't know where... )
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Am 28.06.2010 23:17, schrieb Gyscos:
> About gamma, File_Gamma is supposed to compensate for the eye's non-linear
> perception. But why do we need to do this ?... Shouldn't the eye do it itself ?
It's not about the non-linear perception /per se/, but about the eye's
non-linearity in how good it can tell apart different brightness levels:
For the same given absolute brightness difference, the human eye can
tell apart two dark colors easier than two bright colors.
As a consequence, color banding due to limited bit depth is much more of
a problem in dark areas than in bright ones; with a straightforward
linear encoding, a bit depth of 8 would be more than enough for the
bright colors, while being still insufficient for dark colors.
This is circumvented by using a non-linear encoding ("gamma encoding")
in the image files, so that the discrete brightness levels that can be
encoded are /perceptually/ distributed evenly among both dark and bright
colors. For instance, the brightness levels encoded with values 16 and
17 can be told apart about as easily as the brightness levels encoded
with values 239 and 240, or those encoded with values 127 and 128.
This gamma encoding is what File_Gamma controls.
Of course, if a file is gamma-encoded this way, that very same encoding
must be reverted in one way or the other. The traditional way was to use
a gamma encoding that matched the intended target system's display
gamma, so that essentially the gamma decoding would be performed by the
hardware; or, seen from a different perspective, the gamma encoding
would serve as gamma pre-correction for the target display.
On the other hand, the modern way - as used e.g. in the PNG file format
- is to (theoretically) de-couple the two concepts of gamma encoding and
gamma pre-correction: In a first step, the viewing software will
gamma-decode the image to reconstruct the linear brightness values, and
in a second step gamma pre-correct these linear brightness values to
compensate for the display's non-linearity. (In practice both steps may
be combined, and this /may/ even result in a "nothing to do" operation,
but that's just a special case now, and software must no longer take
that for granted.)
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So the whole gamma thing is just a transitionnal state to store efficiently the
important values ? Like gramophones where some frequencies are amplified on the
track and then de-amplified during playback to compensate for a loss of
precision... :D Yay, I finally get why people invented it in the first place...
Thank you very much, and sorry again for being so slow ! :)
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But then, in theory, this gamma value just affects the transition, it shouldn't
change the final image (except for this precision improvements), right ?
So whatever File_Gamma I set, the correctly decoded image should have pretty
much the same brightness ?
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Am 29.06.2010 11:39, schrieb Gyscos:
> So the whole gamma thing is just a transitionnal state to store efficiently the
> important values ? Like gramophones where some frequencies are amplified on the
> track and then de-amplified during playback to compensate for a loss of
> precision... :D Yay, I finally get why people invented it in the first place...
Yes, as far as File_Gamma goes (i.e. gamma /encoding/), that's exactly
what's happening. Nice analogy.
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Am 29.06.2010 11:44, schrieb Gyscos:
> But then, in theory, this gamma value just affects the transition, it shouldn't
> change the final image (except for this precision improvements), right ?
> So whatever File_Gamma I set, the correctly decoded image should have pretty
> much the same brightness ?
Yes - at least for PNG files: Provided you use a file viewer that does
its homework properly, PNG files created by POV-Ray 3.7 look (almost)
identical regardless of how you set File_Gamma.
For the other files like JPEG or BMP it's not that easy because the file
viewer doesn't know the encoding gamma used (that information is not in
the file header), and will have to resort to wild guessing. Typically,
it will expect a value of around 1/2.2, corresponding to File_Gamma=2.2,
so any significantly different value will make the file viewer display
the image differently.
As a general rule, you should keep File_Gamma set to 2.2 (the default),
because that's what most file viewers will expect for JPEG, BPM and the
like - and it doesn't hurt for PNG either, giving a very efficient encoding.
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One last question : if I got it right, v3.6 used a wrong lighting algorithm,
that happened to work as if it didn't pre-encore with gamma, and 3.7 corrected
that.
But how could I, in v3.6, get the 'correct' results that I get from 3.7 ? Could
gamma be of any help there ?
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Am 30.06.2010 22:43, schrieb Gyscos:
> One last question : if I got it right, v3.6 used a wrong lighting algorithm,
> that happened to work as if it didn't pre-encore with gamma, and 3.7 corrected
> that.
>
> But how could I, in v3.6, get the 'correct' results that I get from 3.7 ? Could
> gamma be of any help there ?
All that I said about POV-Ray 3.6 applies to scenes without any
"assumed_gamma" statement, or with "assumed_gamma 2.2".
When specifying "assumed_gamma 1.0" in POV-Ray 3.6, you'll get proper
color math just as in POV-Ray 3.7 - for most things that is: Input image
files aren't handled properly by POV-Ray 3.6 no matter what (except for
PNG if I'm not mistaken), and I'm not sure right now whether PNG file
output might be bogus. Other file formats output - e.g. JPEG or BMP - is
right, provided that Display_Gamma is set to something sensible
(typically 2.2).
POV-Ray 3.6 also doesn't have the "gamma" keyword for colors (neither
does beta 37a, but the upcoming beta 38 will; should be released any
moment now).
I'm also not sure whether POV-Ray 3.6 does a proper job with
anti-aliasing. I think it does it wrong regarding gamma.
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