POV-Ray : Newsgroups : povray.programming : Better mosaic preview? Server Time
5 Jul 2024 16:20:45 EDT (-0400)
  Better mosaic preview? (Message 1 to 4 of 4)  
From: halley
Subject: Better mosaic preview?
Date: 22 Feb 2003 22:35:03
Message: <web.3e584037721c254a4b6c463e0@news.povray.org>
I've always wanted a smarter mosaic previewer.  Here are some ideas.

* Instead of walking pixels/tiles in left-to-right-top-to-bottom order,
  consider letting the renderer have a queue of higher priority pixels/tiles
  which are rendered immediately in the order they're added to the queue.
  Whenever the queue is empty, it should behave as it currently does.
  It should still avoid calculating any pixel more than once, of course.

* Wherever a pixel or tile is very different from its neighbors' colors,
  say, a red tile found amid several mostly white tiles, recurse an extra
  level in that region to give the viewer a little more definition along
  the natural edges of the image.

* Wherever the user clicks in the preview window, enqueue a few more pixels
  to be rendered on a priority basis in that area.  I suggest enqueueing a
  random spray in a circle of a few pixels around the mouse click.  This
  will let the user "paint" an area to be previewed first, extremely
  helpful to check if a part has just the right angle or material, before
  the render goes ahead and fills out the sky and other areas.

Again, if the queue is empty, the renderer should continue as it does today,
churning out the mosaic tiles or individual pixels that are unrendered in
row-wise fashion.


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From: Christopher James Huff
Subject: Re: Better mosaic preview?
Date: 23 Feb 2003 23:07:12
Message: <cjameshuff-70B694.23034323022003@netplex.aussie.org>
In article <web.3e584037721c254a4b6c463e0@news.povray.org>,
 "halley" <e d @ h a l l e y . c c> wrote:

> I've always wanted a smarter mosaic previewer.  Here are some ideas.

Some interesting ideas here.


> * Instead of walking pixels/tiles in left-to-right-top-to-bottom order,
>   consider letting the renderer have a queue of higher priority pixels/tiles
>   which are rendered immediately in the order they're added to the queue.
>   Whenever the queue is empty, it should behave as it currently does.
>   It should still avoid calculating any pixel more than once, of course.

Or do a scatter render, picking the tiles from a randomized list.


> * Wherever a pixel or tile is very different from its neighbors' colors,
>   say, a red tile found amid several mostly white tiles, recurse an extra
>   level in that region to give the viewer a little more definition along
>   the natural edges of the image.

I like this idea...kind of falls in with some ideas I've had about 
progressive antialiasing/focal blur.


> * Wherever the user clicks in the preview window, enqueue a few more pixels
>   to be rendered on a priority basis in that area.  I suggest enqueueing a
>   random spray in a circle of a few pixels around the mouse click.  This
>   will let the user "paint" an area to be previewed first, extremely
>   helpful to check if a part has just the right angle or material, before
>   the render goes ahead and fills out the sky and other areas.

This one is highly platform-dependant though. Possible to abstract out 
of the core code, though.
The code could also be modified to reuse the mosaiac samples for the 
final render. The only pitfall is that it will require the entire image 
and quite a bit of additional data to be kept in memory, which can 
consume a pretty big chunk of RAM. You could do some fancy file writing 
code to keep the main file on disk, reading and writing small tiles, or 
just disable mosaiac preview if it goes above a certain memory use 
threshold.

-- 
Christopher James Huff <cja### [at] earthlinknet>
http://home.earthlink.net/~cjameshuff/
POV-Ray TAG: chr### [at] tagpovrayorg
http://tag.povray.org/


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From: Wolfgang Wieser
Subject: Re: Better mosaic preview?
Date: 28 Feb 2003 13:40:51
Message: <3e5fad31@news.povray.org>
halley wrote:

> * Wherever a pixel or tile is very different from its neighbors' colors,
>   say, a red tile found amid several mostly white tiles, recurse an extra
>   level in that region to give the viewer a little more definition along
>   the natural edges of the image.
> 
Actually, when I am less busy I want to implement an algorithm which 
allows faster rendering with slighly less quality using interpolation 
and something called "directional coherence". 
(See my posting 2 weeks ago, I'll probably experiment with that in 
2 Weeks.)

Basically, that would include what you mention with 
"a red tile found amid several mostly white tiles, recurse an extra level"

> * Wherever the user clicks in the preview window, enqueue a few more
> pixels
>   to be rendered on a priority basis in that area.  I suggest enqueueing a
>   random spray in a circle of a few pixels around the mouse click.  This
>   will let the user "paint" an area to be previewed first, extremely
>   helpful to check if a part has just the right angle or material, before
>   the render goes ahead and fills out the sky and other areas.
> 
Hmm... 

In the current patch (dont use it!), I render a 8x8 bilinearly interpolated
preview which gets re-used for the final rendering. This requires that 
I only allocate width*height/64 color cells which is probably acceptable. 
However, what you propose would require the complete image to be 
kept in RAM which requires 20*width*height bytes (sizeof(COLOUR)=20). 

But well, for a preview (which is, as I suspect, small) this could be 
acceptable. 

The os-dependent handling of the spray function could be a problem. 
I could implement a patch for that for X11 (UNIX/Linux) version if I 
have time, but not for MacOS/Windows. 

Wolfgang


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From: Wolfgang Wieser
Subject: Re: Better mosaic preview?
Date: 31 Mar 2004 04:18:53
Message: <406a8cfc@news.povray.org>
halley wrote:

> 
[I know the article is 1 year old but I just stepped over it.]

> I've always wanted a smarter mosaic previewer.  Here are some ideas.
> 
> * Instead of walking pixels/tiles in left-to-right-top-to-bottom order,
>   consider letting the renderer have a queue of higher priority
>   pixels/tiles which are rendered immediately in the order they're added
>   to the queue. Whenever the queue is empty, it should behave as it
>   currently does. It should still avoid calculating any pixel more than
>   once, of course.
> 
> * Wherever a pixel or tile is very different from its neighbors' colors,
>   say, a red tile found amid several mostly white tiles, recurse an extra
>   level in that region to give the viewer a little more definition along
>   the natural edges of the image.
> 
> * Wherever the user clicks in the preview window, enqueue a few more
> pixels
>   to be rendered on a priority basis in that area.  I suggest enqueueing a
>   random spray in a circle of a few pixels around the mouse click.  This
>   will let the user "paint" an area to be previewed first, extremely
>   helpful to check if a part has just the right angle or material, before
>   the render goes ahead and fills out the sky and other areas.
> 
My "progressive refinement patch" does about what you describe here. 
It draws the regions with great color variation first and allows one 
to "spray" the image content using the mouse. 

It is currently available for the UNIX version, only. 
But in case somebody wants to port it to windows/mac, let me know. 

http://www.cip.physik.uni-muenchen.de/~wwieser/render/povray/prt-patch/

Wolfgang


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