* Adding hue instead of removing it.
fmod doesn't work as % when it comes to negative numbers:
fmod( 1.3, 1) == 1.3 % 1 == 0.3
fmod(-0.3, 1) != -0.3 % 1
* Added some new integrator parameters to the xml reading.
* Added ability to specify window width/height, if not set it uses film/camera width/height.
* Added back the xml exporter script from cycles branch, with modifications to hock up into the UI. To use it, copy the script into 2.61/scripts/startup.
Note: This is intended for developers for now, but the standalone Cycles app has potential to be used as benchmark for example.
- rename 'bcycles' --> '_cycles', since this is the python convention when a py module uses a C module internally.
- use macros for returning None
- make with_osl an attribute rather then a function.
- changes methods METH_VARARGS --> METH_O when single args are used.
This allows group nodes inside other group nodes in cycles and makes the
code more generic for all possible cases, like direct group
input-to-output links and unused group sockets.
Previous code tried to connect external nodes and internal group sockets
by following links until a "real" node input/output. This quickly
becomes complicated in corner cases as described above and can lead to
unexpected behavior when the group socket is of a different type than
the internal/external sockets, but that conversion is skipped.
The new code uses the concept of "proxy nodes" similar to what the new
compositor does. Each group socket is replaced with a proxy node with a
single input and output, to which other nodes in the same tree and
internal nodes can link to. After all groups have been expanded in the
graph, these proxy nodes are removed again, adding converter nodes if
necessary.
Node specially useful for Texture correction.
This is also a nice example of a simple node made from scratch in case someone wants to create their custom nodes.
Review by Brecht.
reviewed by Brecht, with help from Lukas.
Note: dot is reversed compared to Blender.
In Blender Normals point outside, while in Cycles they point inside.
If you use your own custom vector with the Normal Node you will see a difference.
If you feed it with object normals it should work just as good.
lower than 1.3, since we're not officially supporting these. We're already not
providing CUDA binaries for these, so better make it clear when compiling from
source too.
* Added option "WITH_BF_CYCLES_CUDA_THREADED_COMPILE" for the people who have much RAM (8 or more) and can compile several kernels at the same time. If enabled, it uses the general BF_NUMJOBS flag.
* The option is off per default.