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    Color interpolation across a face

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    • Dan RathbunD Offline
      Dan Rathbun
      last edited by

      You might use THAT image as a material's texture applied to the face. Then adjust the corners of the material image to the face's vertices. ??

      I'm not here much anymore.

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      • Dan RathbunD Offline
        Dan Rathbun
        last edited by

        If you are thinking of creating the images "on-the-fly" then you'll need to use a 3rd party Library, such as ImageMajik etc. SketchUp does use PaintLib internally, but I do not know of anyone accessing it.

        I'm not here much anymore.

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        • A Offline
          ArunYoganandan
          last edited by

          @dan rathbun said:

          You might use THAT image as a material applied to the face. Then adjust the corners of the material image to the face's vertices. ??

          Hi Dan,

          Thanks for your reply. What I'm trying to do is build a sliceable color cube like
          http://www.sonycsl.co.jp/person/nielsen/visualcomputing/programs/colorcube-1.png
          This is an immersive system and the user would be able to grab a corner and move it within the original cube's dimensions in 3D to
          indicate the color desired. i.e, position 0.4,0.1,0.3 within the cube will denote the corresponding RGB values.
          When the corner is moved, the faces will also correspondingly change in shape/fragment (Exactly like how it would behave when the vertex of a cube is moved in sketchup)
          revealing new colors at the depth (like slicing a volume with interpolated colors).

          Simply put, the faces of the cube get modified to different configurations and hence I will not be able to use a static texture. Something like a GLSL shader would be perfect except I don't think we could do that in SU?

          Thanks,
          Arun

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          • Dan RathbunD Offline
            Dan Rathbun
            last edited by

            If you know the binary fileformat for some image filetype, you could write out a file in binary mode:

            ` img = File.open('myimage.bmp',"wb")

            img.write(value)

            ...

            img.close`

            Then bring that image into your materials collection.

            I'm not here much anymore.

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            • Dan RathbunD Offline
              Dan Rathbun
              last edited by

              Hmmm.. I'll need to think on that...

              Have you been following what Aerilius' OnScreen GUI Toolkit

              or: Chris Fullmer's On Screen GUI RGB Colorpicker

              ❓

              I'm not here much anymore.

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              • Dan RathbunD Offline
                Dan Rathbun
                last edited by

                To draw in OpenGL style (either 3D or 2D,) in SketchUp, must be done within a Tool class, using the View instance's family of draw methods.

                see:
                https://developers.google.com/sketchup/docs/ourdoc/view#draw

                I'm not here much anymore.

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                • Dan RathbunD Offline
                  Dan Rathbun
                  last edited by

                  So.. for color interpolation within a Tool class, when you set the color (just prior to painting a point,) with view.drawing_color=() you would evaluate the argument using color.blend

                  The receiver color would be color of one vertice, arg1 the other vertice's color, and the weight arg would be percentage ( Float) of the distance between the two vertices.

                  I'm not here much anymore.

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                  • thomthomT Offline
                    thomthom
                    last edited by

                    The API doesn't let you set vertex colour. 😞 Wish it did.

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

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                    • Dan RathbunD Offline
                      Dan Rathbun
                      last edited by

                      That's not what he wants.

                      He wants to draw multi-gradient color fill, on-the-fly.

                      I'm not here much anymore.

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                      • thomthomT Offline
                        thomthom
                        last edited by

                        @dan rathbun said:

                        That's not what he wants.

                        He wants to draw multi-gradient color fill, on-the-fly.

                        Yes - and in OpenGL you do that by defining a colour for each vertex in a polygon where the shader then creates a gradient between each vertex colour across the polygon surface.

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

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                        • Dan RathbunD Offline
                          Dan Rathbun
                          last edited by

                          Yep.. it would be nice to have more OpenGL draw functions.
                          Implementing a shader in Ruby is bound to be slow.

                          I'm not here much anymore.

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                          • A Offline
                            Aerilius
                            last edited by

                            @dan rathbun said:

                            ... you would evaluate the argument using color.blend

                            color.blend makes brown out of red and green.
                            In case you need a different interpolation (where you want red and green to result yellow), you need to write your own interpolation method, or take Color.interpolate(color1, color2,...) of https://bitbucket.org/Aerilius/color/wiki/Home

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                            • A Offline
                              ArunYoganandan
                              last edited by

                              Thanks everyone for the replies.

                              @Dan using the draw in a tool's view method looks like a plausible option. Let me dig into it and get back.

                              Thanks again.

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