Monday 21 November 2022

another way to cut or slice objects




Use 2 clip SOPs in a For Each loop. The "detail" function access the iteration number. These little expressions are pasted in the X, Y or Z origin boxes. The first cuts to the top of the division, The second cuts to the bottom of it (technically to the top of the previous iteration - which is what the "-1" is for.

 -8.26+detail("../foreach_count1", "iteration",0)*4

-8.26+(detail("../foreach_count1", "iteration",0)-1)*4

This does not create interior detail - but is good for troublesome geo.

Tuesday 15 November 2022

Cutting/slicing up an object in equal divisions

 Houdini Quick tip - slice equally - YouTube

Sometimes the Boolean Fracture lets you down, so use the Voronoi Fracture, and feed a line into the second input. That is pretty much the gist of the video.

Thursday 27 October 2022

GLSL style textures with COPS

 Create a COP network.

Create a VOP Generator

Inside this, make a snippet.

below is an example of what you could do inside the texture. This fills the image with pink and has blue borders on the left and right side of the image. The Step function doesn't exist in vex, so I define it in the beginning. So at least functions are code-able. Annoyingly chf("blabla" aren't possible, but you can add parameter inputs to the node.
The bottom line is the important part. It assigns the red, green, blue and alpha to the output (you don't need to plug anything into the output nodes of the VOP network).

Instead of U and V, you have X and Y.
You can still do things like multiply X and the modulo it to achieve tiling. I need to test out things like matrix rotations next. Much excite

float step(float a, b){

float jog=0;

if(a<b){jog=1;

}

else{jog=0;}


return jog;

}


float are=step(0.1,X)*(1-step(0.9,X));


vector4 rgba=set(are,0,1,1);

assign(R,G,B,A,rgba);



ROTATION UPDATE

so I couldn't figure out the matrix stuff...but handily a maths site mentioned that the resultant x' and y'

were: x'= x*cos(angle)-y*sin(angle) AND y'=x*sin(angle)+y*cos(angle)

doing some crap maths in vex gives you this:

vector2 uv=set(X,Y);

vector2 uvN=uv;

uvN.x=uv.x*cos(angle)-uv.y*sin(angle);

uvN.y=uv.x*sin(angle)+uv.y*cos(angle);


so now when you use uvN for any coordinate references the image will be rotated! I think the pivot is broken though...so that's next on the list of things

number padding and clamping file sequences

padding file names and clamping at the same time -


  `padzero(7,clamp($F4,1091,1256))`

 Think I've shown this snippet before, but maybe not combo'd with the clamp. Remember to use the back ticks to evaluate the expression when using it in a file name...And use all relevant brackets

accessing COP outputs in textures

use this expression to get to COP stuff - 


 op:/obj/cop2net1/out


the "op:/" is key!

"shrinkwrap" push faces from one object towards another

More Julian scripting
Use case - an object lying on the floor is not quite touching the surface - so lets pull points of the floor toward the surface. The floor object would go into the first input and the object to "wrap" to goes into the 2nd input. Put this code into a point wrangle -

 i@prim;

v@uvw;

@dist = xyzdist(1, @P, @prim, @uvw);

@bias = fit(@dist, 0, .01, .79, 0);

@P = lerp(@P, primuv(1, "P", @prim, @uvw), @bias);


It might be necessary to play with the "fit" values & ensure the objects are kinda close to each other to begin with! This is good for bodge fixing stuff!


Wednesday 26 October 2022

using a transform that relies on $CEX $CEY $CEZ with a differently shaped/sized object

Use the julian matrix - (point wrangle)

matrix M=detail(1,"xform");

@P=@P*M;

plug the transform you want to "copy" into input 2 ("1") and the object you want to transform with said transform into input 1 ("0"). 

MAKE SURE the transform node has the xform ticked at the bottom, so the wrangle can actually access the "xform"

This is especially relevant for when you overuse $CEX etc bounding box for pivots & you suddenly change the geo size. Eg you rotate your thing into place, and do so using the centre of a short object, but suddenly you need to substitute it with a much taller thing.