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3 Nov 2024 03:01:11 EST (-0500)
  Antialiasing problem (Message 1 to 10 of 10)  
From: Queen soft
Subject: Antialiasing problem
Date: 9 Feb 2008 14:05:00
Message: <web.47adf9302db8cdbe24125c870@news.povray.org>
I have a problem obtaining nice sharp edges.
I have tried several antialiasing methods and huge resolution renderings
(something like 8000x6000). I still get jagged edges. Mostly when overlapping
shapes. If shape is directly over background, the edge is quite nice.
Please take a look at attached samples.
I have used INI settings:
Green spikes image: http://img229.imageshack.us/my.php?image=spiky2zo7.jpg
Antialias=On
Sampling_Method=2
Antialias_Threshold=2
Antialias_Depth=2
Test_Abort_Count=400

Green blob: http://img223.imageshack.us/my.php?image=002005gx6.jpg
Antialias=On
Sampling_Method=2
Antialias_Threshold=5
Antialias_Depth=1
Test_Abort_Count=500


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From: Alain
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 9 Feb 2008 14:46:42
Message: <47ae0322$1@news.povray.org>
Queen soft nous apporta ses lumieres en ce 2008/02/09 14:04:
> I have a problem obtaining nice sharp edges.
> I have tried several antialiasing methods and huge resolution renderings
> (something like 8000x6000). I still get jagged edges. Mostly when overlapping
> shapes. If shape is directly over background, the edge is quite nice.
> Please take a look at attached samples.
> I have used INI settings:
> Green spikes image: http://img229.imageshack.us/my.php?image=spiky2zo7.jpg
> Antialias=On
> Sampling_Method=2
> Antialias_Threshold=2
A very high treshold value. Almost every pixels will stay under that difference.
> Antialias_Depth=2
> Test_Abort_Count=400
Over the white background, the difference is large enough to trigger the 
antialias process, but elsewhere, the difference is just not large enough.
You probably want something more like 2/256 (0.0078)or 2/(256*3) (0.0026).
> 
> Green blob: http://img223.imageshack.us/my.php?image=002005gx6.jpg
> Antialias=On
> Sampling_Method=2
> Antialias_Threshold=5
An absurdly large treshold value, NO pixel will exeede that value.
> Antialias_Depth=1
> Test_Abort_Count=500
Here, the treshold is so large that antialias never have a chance to kick in.
You probably want something more like 5/256 (0.0195) or 5/(256*3) (0.0065).

> 
> 
> 
> 
In POV-Ray, the rgb values range from zero to 1. The difference between 2 pixels 
is calculated as the sum of the absolute values of each channels. That 
difference normaly stay in a 0 to 3 range.
In your examples, you probably want a difference of 2 on a scale that goes from 
zero to 256.
The "default" antialias treshold is of 0.3.
Set Antialias_Threshold to something like 0.1 and you will get much beter results.

-- 
Alain
-------------------------------------------------
You know you've been raytracing too long when you've tried to scan your face for 
a texture.
Quietly Watching


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From: Thorsten Froehlich
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 9 Feb 2008 16:37:43
Message: <47ae1d27$1@news.povray.org>
Queen soft wrote:
> Test_Abort_Count=500

Did you actually read the documentation about this value? - It has 
absolutely nothing to do with anti-aliasing at all!!!

Also, your other anti-aliasing settings are not very sensible as they are 
out of range to get good results (they practically disable anti-aliasing). 
Reading the documentation might be a *very* good idea...

	Thorsten


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From: nemesis
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 9 Feb 2008 18:20:00
Message: <web.47ae34aebc9399a144d8956c0@news.povray.org>
Alain <ele### [at] netscapenet> wrote:
> Queen soft nous apporta ses lumieres en ce 2008/02/09 14:04:
> > I have a problem obtaining nice sharp edges.
> > Sampling_Method=2
> > Antialias_Threshold=2
>
> A very high treshold value. Almost every pixels will stay under that difference.

indeed!  I usually go with the command line +AM2 (method) +A0.06 (threshold) or
lower...

but the AA method which I find gives the best result is camera blur.  Just a
slight aperture and enough blur_samples gives excellent results, at least if
you're going for photorealism...


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From: Nicolas Alvarez
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 9 Feb 2008 19:37:45
Message: <47ae4759$1@news.povray.org>
I usually use threshold 0.3 (the default). However, on green areas 
there's still a lot of noticeable jaggies (the human eye is more 
sensitive to green, afaik), and I have to lower the threshold (like to 
0.1) in those cases.

Like the rest said, anything above 1.0 is a lot like disabling 
antialiasing...

Now, for a final render, some people use thresholds even lower (0.01).


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From: Jan Dvorak
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 9 Feb 2008 23:56:22
Message: <47ae83f6$1@news.povray.org>
Nicolas Alvarez napsal(a):
> I usually use threshold 0.3 (the default). However, on green areas 
> there's still a lot of noticeable jaggies (the human eye is more 
> sensitive to green, afaik), and I have to lower the threshold (like to 
> 0.1) in those cases.
> 
> Like the rest said, anything above 1.0 is a lot like disabling 
> antialiasing...
> 
> Now, for a final render, some people use thresholds even lower (0.01).
JPEG compression does the AA for me ;-)


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From: Thorsten Froehlich
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 10 Feb 2008 02:17:59
Message: <47aea527$1@news.povray.org>
Jan Dvorak wrote:
> Nicolas Alvarez napsal(a):
>> I usually use threshold 0.3 (the default). However, on green areas 
>> there's still a lot of noticeable jaggies (the human eye is more 
>> sensitive to green, afaik), and I have to lower the threshold (like to 
>> 0.1) in those cases.
>>
>> Like the rest said, anything above 1.0 is a lot like disabling 
>> antialiasing...
>>
>> Now, for a final render, some people use thresholds even lower (0.01).
 >
> JPEG compression does the AA for me ;-)

:-)  Actually, did you know that anti-aliased images slightly improve 
compression and quality when using JPEG?

	Thorsten


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From: John VanSickle
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 10 Feb 2008 12:56:50
Message: <47af3ae2@news.povray.org>
Thorsten Froehlich wrote:

> Jan Dvorak wrote:

>> JPEG compression does the AA for me ;-)
> 
> :-)  Actually, did you know that anti-aliased images slightly improve 
> compression and quality when using JPEG?

More than slightly, depending on the specifics of the picture.  AA also 
greatly increases the quality and compressibility of MPEGs, too.

Regards,
John


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From: Thorsten Froehlich
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 10 Feb 2008 15:26:43
Message: <47af5e03$1@news.povray.org>
John VanSickle wrote:
> Thorsten Froehlich wrote:
> 
>> Jan Dvorak wrote:
> 
>>> JPEG compression does the AA for me ;-)
>>
>> :-)  Actually, did you know that anti-aliased images slightly improve 
>> compression and quality when using JPEG?
> 
> More than slightly, depending on the specifics of the picture.  AA also 
> greatly increases the quality and compressibility of MPEGs, too.

Indeed, because AA "decreases" the frequencies the DCT (discrete cosine 
transformation) needs to represent.

	Thorsten


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From: Queen soft
Subject: Re: Antialiasing problem
Date: 11 Feb 2008 13:40:01
Message: <web.47b09605bc9399a1d4b980070@news.povray.org>
Thank you very much for your quick responses.
I don't know why I was increasing the threshold !!! With values like .01 and
..001 it works just fine !!! Thank you again.


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