Problem was py code of main texture panel was not doing any check on the pinned id, assuming it managed the textures itself - but this is not the case of the Object datablock...
All work actually done by Sergey, was just missing the Lamp specific case. Checked both in code and with tests, quite sure all cases are now correctly handled!
Near sensors only pick up "actors," but objects with character physics did not have the actor option displayed. By setting the character physics object to actor, it can be picked up by the near sensor. However, it collides with the near sensor, which sounds like bug [#31701]
Issue was caused by some stuff happenign in wm_operator_finish() which uses
to somehow restore changes made by transformation invoke function.
Solved by not calling translation operator directly from duplication operator
(which is in fact really tricky) and use macros instead. This macros calls
duplication operator which simply duplicates strip, and then calls translation
operator.
Patch by Philipp Oeser (lichtwerk), just did style change (better to not define a value twice, so only affecting the three color components, not the alpha, also using the slice syntax makes things much more compact ;) ), thanks!
In contrast to start_frame (which affects on where footage actually
starts to play and also affects on all data associated with a clip
such as motion tracking, reconstruction and so on) this slider only
affects on a way how frame number is mapping to a filename, without
touching any kind of tracking data.
The formula is:
file_name = clip_file_name + frame_offset - (start_frame - 1)
- Display track's reprojection error in dopesheet
- Make sure track is selected when clicking on dopesheet channel
- Attempt to make headers a bit cleaner without long labels which
doesn't actually make sense.
It was a bit confusing to synchronize settings used in pre-calculated
dopesheet channels which was storing in tracking data with settings
used for display which is in space data.
This was initially done by converting one flags to other and checking
if space's settings matches pre-calculated one, but that had several
issues if two different dopesheet are using different settings:
- Channels would be re-calculated on every redraw for each of spaces
- Dopesheet operators could fail due to the could be using channels
calculated for other space.
That was also quite nasty code checking if requested settings matches
pre-calculated one.
Added option to use Grease Pencil datablock as a mask for pattern
when doing motion tracking. Option could be found in Tracking Settings
panel.
All strokes would be rasterized separately from each other and every
stroke is treating as a closed spline.
Also added option to apply a mask on track preview which is situated
just after B/B/W channel button under track preview.
- new compositor could use uninitialized var
- profile conversion could use uninitialized var
- set better warnings for clang+cmake.
- remove picky warnings from sphinx doc gen shell script.
===========================================
Major list of changes done in tomato branch:
- Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv
This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The
tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that
myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since
the motion model is more involved, the interface is
different than the RegionTracker interface used previously
in Blender.
The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included.
- Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation
Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using
pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner
representation.
There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular
sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated
markers.
All other areas should be ported to new representation:
* Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl
would scale the whole pattern
* S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only
* Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates
only patterns around their centers or all markers around median,
Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search
area doesn't make sense.
* Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which
libmv actually operates with.
- "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker
This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization"
scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker.
This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but
decreases the number of iterations required to converge and
also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the
optimization.
- Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender,
and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also
adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv:
* Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid"
mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower
but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the
performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is
necessary to support high bit depth imagery.
* Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step
towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks
will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball.
Not exposed into interface yet/
* Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka
"Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the
tracked patch is not linearly related to the template.
* Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied
points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately
does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead,
warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences.
- Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the
new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means:
* The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1
algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much
prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work
has been done so the speed is not there yet.
* There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices:
* Translation
* Translation, rotation
* Translation, scale
* Translation, rotation, scale
* Affine
* Perspective
* The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to
enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This
is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work
with the new planar tracking modes.
* The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar
tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The
pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force
initialization it is unnecessary.
- Add light-normalized tracking
Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while
tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes.
Additional details could be found at wiki page [2]
[1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver
[2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
- optionally display the histogram as lines (not filled areas).
- expand the enum for faster access.
- keep the sample line displayed after doing the line sample (running again clears).
One side of change is related on making code easier to follow, due it started
being quite messy because of all in-lined mode/view checks. Now there's a bit
of code duplication, but it's much easier to see what's going on there.
Another side of patch is related on re-arranging elements in header in a way
that follows rule "depending elements are placed after elements they depends on".
This might be a bit against mostly-used-based elements placement, but now it's
much easier to figure out where to add new option. Also it fits better other
blender's areas such as image editor header, i.e.
Now it's indicates at which scene frame number movie clip starts playing back.
This this setting is still belongs to clip datavlock and used by all users of
clip such as movie compositor nodes, constraints and so.
After long discussion and thoughts about this it was decided that this would
match image's current behavior (which initially seen a bit crappy), but that's
actually allows:
- Keep semantics of start frame in image and clip datablocks in sync
- Allows to support features like support of loading image sequences
with crappy numbers in suffix which doesn't fit long int.
- Allows to eliminate extra boolean checkbox to control such kind of offset.
Hopefully from pipeline POV it wouldn't hurt because idea of having this things
implemented in original way was working only if sequence before processing
started naming form 001.
Self collision vertex groups enable artists to exclude selected vertices from getting involved in self collisions. This speeds simulations and it also resolves some self collision issues.
Number of start frame in opened image sequence used to be distinguished automatically
in a way that file name used on open would be displayed at scene frame #1.
But sometimes it's useful to have it manually configurable (like in cases when you're
processing image sequence and replacing clip's filepath to postprocessed image sequence
and want new clip to show at the same frame range as it was rendered from).
Added Custom Start Frame flag to movie clip (could be accessed from Footage panel in
clip editor) and Start Frame which means number of frame from sequence which would
be displayed at scene frame #1.
For example if you've got clip pointing to file render_00100.png and Start Frame of 100
this file would be displayed at scene frame #1, if Start Frame is 1 then this image
would be displayed at scene frame #100,