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    Any SU render engines that renders distorted textures?

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    • FrederikF Offline
      Frederik
      last edited by

      @unknownuser said:

      The method uses TW which crates 'a second texture'==additional 'Thea material'.

      Yeah - that's what I thought...
      This is - again - how everyone else is able to handle it...
      However, I believe thomthom is trying to find out if this can be handled differently...

      @thomthom said:

      Yea, Make Unique generates a new texture and gives the face new UV co-ordinates.

      What I'm trying to find out though, if there is any renderers that actually handles this. More importantly, I'm interesting in how they handle it.

      IMHO, I hardly never see distorted textures used and thereby it has never been a great issue, certainly not a dealbreaker...

      Cheers
      Kim Frederik

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      • T Offline
        tomasz
        last edited by

        @thomthom said:

        • What UV values do you send to you renderer?

        When all textures has been loaded to TW I use:

        					uvHelper=face.get_UVHelper(true, false, tw)
        					point_pos=mesh.point_at(p).transform!(trans.inverse) #trans='nested transformation' of the parent
        #thanks to Stefan Jaensch for figuring out that this trans has to be inverted and applied here
        					uv=uvHelper.get_front_UVQ(point_pos)
        

        @thomthom said:

        • If the render material has a bumpmap applied to it - how is that handled? Won't you end up with mismatching bump?

        I use same UVs. I assume that the bumpmap is the same size as the main texture.

        Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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        • thomthomT Offline
          thomthom
          last edited by

          @unknownuser said:

          @thomthom said:

          • What UV values do you send to you renderer?

          When all textures has been loaded to TW I use:

          					uvHelper=face.get_UVHelper(true, false, tw)
          > 					point_pos=mesh.point_at(p).transform!(trans.inverse) #trans='nested transformation' of the parent
          > #thanks to Stefan Jaensch for figuring out that this trans has to be inverted and applied here
          > 					uv=uvHelper.get_front_UVQ(point_pos)
          

          @thomthom said:

          • If the render material has a bumpmap applied to it - how is that handled? Won't you end up with mismatching bump?

          I use same UVs. I assume that the bumpmap is the same size as the main texture.

          where do the p variable come from?

          Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
          List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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          • T Offline
            tomasz
            last edited by

            @thomthom said:

            where do the p variable come from?

            It is an index(starting from 1) of a point in a PolygonMesh. You get the Polygon mesh from a face.mesh #.
            You probably can get point position in other way.

            Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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            • thomthomT Offline
              thomthom
              last edited by

              Also, why don't you use uv = mesh.uv_at(p, true)? Appears it would give the same result.

              Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
              List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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              • thomthomT Offline
                thomthom
                last edited by

                If you use my Probes plugin: http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=323&t=21472#p180592

                Press Tab to see raw UVQ data
                By default it will use UVHelper to get the UV data
                Press F2 to make it sample the data from the PolygonMesh

                From my testing, the data never differs.

                UVHelper seem to be made to sample UV data from a Face.
                But if you have a PolygonMesh of the Face, it includes the UV data (provided you asked for that when you used face.mesh).

                Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                • T Offline
                  tomasz
                  last edited by

                  @thomthom said:

                  Also, why don't you use uv = mesh.uv_at(p, true)? Appears it would give the same result.

                  I simply use UVHelper because it seems to be designed to this task. What would be the purpose of it otherwise? 👊
                  I am not so sure if it would give same result for two distorted faces sharing same distorted texture (the last pair in the modified skp test scene).

                  BTW. I have found that there is some memory leak when using UVHelper, at least those objects are not being dumped well (rubbish collector). In my exporter I stay away from UVHelper as long as I can. I read uv coordinates in all other scenarios using uv_at.

                  Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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                  • T Offline
                    tomasz
                    last edited by

                    @thomthom said:

                    If you use my Probes plugin: http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=323&t=21472#p180592

                    Press Tab to see raw UVQ data
                    By default it will use UVHelper to get the UV data
                    Press F2 to make it sample the data from the PolygonMesh

                    From my testing, the data never differs.

                    UVHelper seem to be made to sample UV data from a Face.
                    But if you have a PolygonMesh of the Face, it includes the UV data (provided you asked for that when you used face.mesh).

                    Ok. Try this. Just load a face with distorted texture to the TW, then you will see the difference if you will use same TW to get uv from UVHelper.
                    What you have written is true as long as you use blank TW. It gives coordinates in relation to the original 'picture', but when you load a face to TW then it 'makes it unique inside TW' therefore uvs change.

                    It looks like this thread would better fit in the new developers section 😄

                    Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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                    • C Offline
                      Chris_at_Twilight
                      last edited by

                      @unknownuser said:

                      I have never received false negatives by checking the 1.0 with enough precision.

                      Really? That's good to know. That's a much faster test.

                      As far as why some projected textures aren't distorted, I think Al and thomthom are both right, given the respective circumstance. It could be that the texture is not truly 'distorted' as Al suggest; it could be that the level of subdivision is high enough that you just don't see the distortion, like thomthom said.

                      And Tomasz hit it right on the head as far as using tw and uvhelper; you have to make sure you are using a tw 'loaded' with the face in question, before using it in the uvhelper.

                      http://www.TwilightRender.com

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                      • thomthomT Offline
                        thomthom
                        last edited by

                        @unknownuser said:

                        if you will use same TW to get uv from UVHelper.

                        Use a TextureWriter to get UV data? ❓

                        Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                        • T Offline
                          tomasz
                          last edited by

                          @thomthom said:

                          @unknownuser said:

                          if you will use same TW to get uv from UVHelper.

                          Use a TextureWriter to get UV data? ❓

                          It is the required parameter: uvHelper=face.get_UVHelper(true, false, **tw**)

                          Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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                          • thomthomT Offline
                            thomthom
                            last edited by

                            Aaah!!! That's why it asks for a TW. Duh!
                            That fills in a great hole in the API doc.

                            Thanks Tomaz!

                            Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                            List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                            • thomthomT Offline
                              thomthom
                              last edited by

                              Here's a simple test I did. (doesn't take into account nested groups etc)
                              but it's a rough ruby version of Make Unique.


                              uv_make_unique.rb


                              distort test.skp

                              Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                              List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                              • AdamBA Offline
                                AdamB
                                last edited by

                                Just a quick word as to what you're seeing.

                                The texture coordinates in SU are mostly 2d but there is support for projected textures in which the 3rd element of the texture coordinate is a projection. ie by dividing through by the 3 element you get a 2d texture coordinate.

                                You can get a ok approximation by doing the projection at the vertices and then interpolating across the polygon in 2d (this is what LightUp does), or you can interpolate the 3-element texture coordinate and do the divide at each pixel which is slower but you'll get the right answer. Not sure there are many renderers that do that.

                                Adam

                                Developer of LightUp Click for website

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                                • AdamBA Offline
                                  AdamB
                                  last edited by

                                  Oh, and the corollary of this is that if you subdivide the faces into smaller pieces, you'll get a progressively more accurate rendering. So try cutting the distorted quad into 16 quads.

                                  Adam

                                  Developer of LightUp Click for website

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                                  • T Offline
                                    tomasz
                                    last edited by

                                    @adamb said:

                                    You can get a ok approximation by doing the projection at the vertices and then interpolating across the polygon in 2d (this is what LightUp does), or you can interpolate the 3-element texture coordinate and do the divide at each pixel which is slower but you'll get the right answer. Not sure there are many renderers that do that.

                                    SU is using OpenGL. Does it mean that SU, for its own 'rendering', does same interpolation and sends the 'unique' texture to OpenGL?

                                    Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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                                    • Al HartA Offline
                                      Al Hart
                                      last edited by

                                      @unknownuser said:

                                      SU is using OpenGL. Does it mean that SU, for its own 'rendering', does same interpolation and sends the 'unique' texture to OpenGL?

                                      I suspect so - it is a lot faster to create the distorted image as a bitmap, and then send it to OpenGL - rather than starting to sub-divide faces.

                                      Also, that would explain why SketchUp makes to pre-distorted image available to 3DS output and to us.

                                      Al Hart

                                      http:wiki.renderplus.comimageseefRender_plus_colored30x30%29.PNG
                                      IRender nXt from Render Plus

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                                      • AdamBA Offline
                                        AdamB
                                        last edited by

                                        @unknownuser said:

                                        @adamb said:

                                        You can get a ok approximation by doing the projection at the vertices and then interpolating across the polygon in 2d (this is what LightUp does), or you can interpolate the 3-element texture coordinate and do the divide at each pixel which is slower but you'll get the right answer. Not sure there are many renderers that do that.

                                        SU is using OpenGL. Does it mean that SU, for its own 'rendering', does same interpolation and sends the 'unique' texture to OpenGL?

                                        No, it means SU sends 3-component texture coordinates to OpenGL and allows OpenGL to interpolate and divide at each pixel.

                                        But as Al says, given you can 'bake in' your projection to a unique texture once your happy, its not a big deal.

                                        Adam

                                        Developer of LightUp Click for website

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                                        • C Offline
                                          Chris_at_Twilight
                                          last edited by

                                          @adamb said:

                                          No, it means SU sends 3-component texture coordinates to OpenGL and allows OpenGL to interpolate and divide at each pixel.

                                          Just as Adam says, OpenGL provides methods not just for 2 coordinates (UV), but 3 and even 4. glTexCoord3f, glTexCoord4f

                                          http://www.TwilightRender.com

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                                          • thomthomT Offline
                                            thomthom
                                            last edited by

                                            I'm curious: for those render engines that renders distorted textures. What's the result if you add a bump map, like the one attached. Exaggerated bump so it's clearly visible.


                                            grid_bump.png

                                            Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                                            List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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