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Chris Huff wrote:
>
> What exactly does this new gradient pattern do? Is it just a pattern
> version of the displace warp?
That's right, i just copied the code. I also wrote a warp_pattern using a
warp directly, but i did not yet check for any difference in speed.
> Hmm, "grad" doesn't seem like a good keyword, but as you mentioned,
> "gradient" is already taken...and so is "slope". Maybe
> "amount_of_change_of_pigment_color_intensity". ;-)
> How about "derivative"? Not as intuitive unless you already know what
> "derivative" means...and it would probably be better as a new math
> function.
Since it calculates the length of the gradient vector, i think derivative
would not be very good. If it would only calculate the change in one
direction (the partial derivative), which could be an interesting
addition, this would probably be a better name.
I don't think 'grad' is that bad, because in mathematics
grad( f(x,y,z) )
stands for the gradient vector.
>
> I think your third type is what I intended my second type to
> be...unfortunately, I didn't heavily test the effect of the sample
> distance parameter. It shouldn't affect anything except the accuracy and
> detail of the warp.
I already supposed that, although by dividing through Warp->dist the
amount of displacement becomes quite high with a range of 1.
warp {
displace {
[Pigment]
type 1
}
}
would be equivalent to:
warp {
displace {
[Pigment]
type 2
range 0.05
}
}
so if default for 'range' is 0.05, the type 1 could be replaced without
any effect on existing scenes using displace warps as long as they don't
change the default distance.
> Are you going to release the source code to your patches?
>
I'm going to, but i'm planning to add some more things:
- the 'project' pattern (i renamed it to 'visibility' according to your
suggestion)
- Maybe a slope pattern that works for any specified object and not only
for the object it is applied to.
Christoph
--
Christoph Hormann <chr### [at] gmx de>
IsoWood include, radiosity tutorial, TransSkin and other
things on: http://www.schunter.etc.tu-bs.de/~chris/
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