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Hi,
I have seen some very nice isosurface ridgedMF-Mountains, esp. in the "Icy
coast"-series. But I can't find params which give me at least comparable
results. The values of Cristoph Hormann result in a bunch of rocks (because
they are from a different tool) and my experiments don't even look like any
natural formations.
I would be very glad if anyone could point me in the right direction with an
initial set of values.
Thank you,
Marc-Hendrik
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"Marc-Hendrik Bremer" <Mar### [at] t-onlinede> wrote in message
news:39886ae3@news.povray.org...
|
| I have seen some very nice isosurface ridgedMF-Mountains, esp. in the "Icy
| coast"-series. But I can't find params which give me at least comparable
| results. The values of Cristoph Hormann result in a bunch of rocks
(because
| they are from a different tool) and my experiments don't even look like
any
| natural formations.
| I would be very glad if anyone could point me in the right direction with
an
| initial set of values.
I was using a fairly high octaves number of 7 to do the mountains I had made
for the animation I'm currently playing in.
I was generalizing greatly the affect each parameter had:
#declare H = 0.25; // roughening<>smoothing
#declare Lacunarity = 4; // roughening<>smoothing
#declare Octaves = 7; // smoothing<>roughening (computationally intensive
higher)
#declare Offset = 0.5; // height (suggested to start as 1 in the Doc.)
#declare Gain= 2; // smoothing<>roughening (I used too much maybe)
Bob
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Thanks, Bob, but I don't get it!
I'm obviously something wrong. When I use your values, all I get is a bunch
of smooth "rocks" - nice in a way and maybe useful someday, but not at all
what I am looking after :-) No plain, no "closed" formation, more like
asteroids in space.
This is my statement:
#declare H = 0.25; // roughening<>smoothing
#declare Lacunarity = 4; // roughening<>smoothing
#declare Octaves = 7; // smoothing<>roughening (computationally intensive
higher)
#declare Offset = 0.5; // height (suggested to start as 1 in the Doc.)
#declare Gain= 2; // smoothing<>roughening (I used too much maybe)
isosurface{
function{"ridgedmf", <H, Lacunarity, Octaves, Offset, Gain>}
method 1
// method 2
// eval
// max_gradient 4
accuracy 0.0001
contained_by{box -1,1}
pigment{White}
}
With method 2 I get a totally gray pic (background {rgb 0.3}) even with
max_gradient 5 (eval says max_gradient is ~3.7).
Any ideas what I'm doing wrong?
Thanks again,
Marc-Hendrik
Bob Hughes schrieb in Nachricht <3988ed7a@news.povray.org>...
>"Marc-Hendrik Bremer" <Mar### [at] t-onlinede> wrote in message
>news:39886ae3@news.povray.org...
>|
>| I have seen some very nice isosurface ridgedMF-Mountains, esp. in the
"Icy
>| coast"-series. But I can't find params which give me at least comparable
>| results. The values of Cristoph Hormann result in a bunch of rocks
>(because
>| they are from a different tool) and my experiments don't even look like
>any
>| natural formations.
>| I would be very glad if anyone could point me in the right direction with
>an
>| initial set of values.
>
>I was using a fairly high octaves number of 7 to do the mountains I had
made
>for the animation I'm currently playing in.
>I was generalizing greatly the affect each parameter had:
>
>#declare H = 0.25; // roughening<>smoothing
>#declare Lacunarity = 4; // roughening<>smoothing
>#declare Octaves = 7; // smoothing<>roughening (computationally intensive
>higher)
>#declare Offset = 0.5; // height (suggested to start as 1 in the Doc.)
>#declare Gain= 2; // smoothing<>roughening (I used too much maybe)
>
>Bob
>
>
>
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"Marc-Hendrik Bremer" <Mar### [at] t-onlinede> wrote in message
news:39896757@news.povray.org...
| Thanks, Bob, but I don't get it!
Sorry for the delay in replying. Been away from the newsgroups a short
while.
| I'm obviously something wrong. When I use your values, all I get is a
bunch
| of smooth "rocks" - nice in a way and maybe useful someday, but not at all
| what I am looking after :-) No plain, no "closed" formation, more like
| asteroids in space.
method 1 simply doesn't seem compatible from what I had seen. Use only
'eval' and 'accuracy' and nothing else along with method 2 to see
"mountains".
But where you really went wrong is by not using a starting parameter (if
that's the word for it).
#declare H = 0.25; // roughening<>smoothing
#declare Lacunarity = 4; // roughening<>smoothing
#declare Octaves = 7; // smoothing<>roughening (computationally intensive
higher)
#declare Offset = 0.5; // height (suggested to start as 1 in the Doc.)
#declare Gain= 2; // smoothing<>roughening (I used too much maybe)
#declare Fun=
function {"ridgedmf", <H, Lacunarity, Octaves, Offset, Gain>}
isosurface {
function { y - Fun(x,y,z) } // function is applied to x,y,x and
interacted according to y
method 2
eval
accuracy 0.0001
contained_by {box -1,1}
pigment {White}
}
That should get you something.
Bob
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YES!!!!
Thank you very much, Bob. I do not really know why it works now, but that's
okay for me and for now :-)
Marc-Hendrik
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