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Added a new "Sharpen Less" kernel to the filter compositor node. The intent here is to provide a much less aggressive sharpening filter that can't simply be solved by toning down the factor on the existing sharpen filter.
The existing "Sharpen" filter uses a "box" kernel:
```
-1 -1 -1
-1 9 -1
-1 -1 -1
```
The new "Sharpen Less" filter uses a "diamond" kernel:
```
0 -1 0
-1 5 -1
0 -1 0
```
The difference between the two is clear to see in the following side-by-side:
{F12847431}
Below shows the difference between the filtering kernels as applied to a B&W render of Suzanne with the UV grid as a texture. The left side of the render using the existing "Sharpen" filter, and the right side showing the new "Sharpen Less" filter. Notice that the left side is more aggressive in accentuating localized contrasts across the image. This can lead to what appears to be aliasing or striations in the resulting image:
{F12847429}
https://developer.blender.org/T95275
https://blender.community/c/rightclickselect/57Kq/?sorting=hot
{F12847428}
Reviewed By: #compositing, jbakker
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14019
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This patch makes it possible to set the UI color of a node's
header bar and override the default from the node's typeinfo.
Currently the color is taken from the `.nclass`
member of the node's bNodeType->TypeInfo struct.
This is created once when registering the node.
The TypeInfo is used for both UI and non-UI functionality.
Since the TypeInfo is shared, the header bar for the node
can't be changed without changing all nodes of that type.
The Map Range node is shown as a `Converter` or blue color by default.
This patch allows this to be changed dynamically to `Vector` or purple.
This is done by adding a `ui_class` callback to node typeinfo struct.
Reviewed By: HooglyBoogly
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13936
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We have this node for shader and geometry nodes. Compositor can also
work with vectors, and this can help with that.
Reviewed By: manzanilla
Maniphest Tasks: T95385
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12919
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This implements a merge by distance operation for point clouds.
Besides the geometry input, there are two others-- a selection
input to limit the operation to certain points, and the merge
distance. While it would be a reasonable feature, the distance
does not support a field currently, since that would make
the algorithm significantly more complex.
All attributes are merged to the merged points, with the values
mixed together. This same generic method is used for all attributes,
including `position`. The `id` attribute uses the value from the
first merged index for each point.
For the implementation, most of the effort goes into creating a
merge map to speed up attribute mixing. Some parts are inherently
single-threaded, like finding the final indices accounting for the
merged points. By far most of the time is spend balancing the
KD tree.
Mesh support will be added in the next commit.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13649
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With (center) position, radius and random value outputs.
Eevee does not yet support rendering point clouds, but an untested
implementation of this node was added for when it does.
Ref T92573
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Currently there are many function declarations in `BKE_node.h` that
don't actually have implementations in blenkernel. This commit moves
the declarations to `NOD_composite.h`, `NOD_texture.h`, and
`NOD_shader.h` instead. This helps to clarify the purpose of the
different modules.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13869
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This patch introduces an extrude node with three modes. The vertex mode
is quite simple, and just attaches new edges to the selected vertices.
The edge mode attaches new faces to the selected edges. The faces mode
extrudes patches of selected faces, or each selected face individually,
depending on the "Individual" boolean input.
The default value of the "Offset" input is the mesh's normals, which
can be scaled with the "Offset Scale" input.
**Attribute Propagation**
Attributes are transferred to the new elements with specific rules.
Attributes will never change domains for interpolations. Generally
boolean attributes are propagated with "or", meaning any connected
"true" value that is mixed in for other types will cause the new value
to be "true" as well. The `"id"` attribute does not have any special
handling currently.
Vertex Mode
- Vertex: Copied values of selected vertices.
- Edge: Averaged values of selected edges. For booleans, edges are
selected if any connected edges are selected.
Edge Mode
- Vertex: Copied values of extruded vertices.
- Connecting edges (vertical): Average values of connected extruded
edges. For booleans, the edges are selected if any connected
extruded edges are selected.
- Duplicate edges: Copied values of selected edges.
- Face: Averaged values of all faces connected to the selected edge.
For booleans, faces are selected if any connected original faces
are selected.
- Corner: Averaged values of corresponding corners in all faces
connected to selected edges. For booleans, corners are selected
if one of those corners are selected.
Face Mode
- Vertex: Copied values of extruded vertices.
- Connecting edges (vertical): Average values of connected selected
edges, not including the edges "on top" of extruded regions.
For booleans, edges are selected when any connected extruded edges
were selected.
- Duplicate edges: Copied values of extruded edges.
- Face: Copied values of the corresponding selected faces.
- Corner: Copied values of corresponding corners in selected faces.
Individual Face Mode
- Vertex: Copied values of extruded vertices.
- Connecting edges (vertical): Average values of the two neighboring
edges on each extruded face. For booleans, edges are selected
when at least one neighbor on the extruded face was selected.
- Duplicate edges: Copied values of extruded edges.
- Face: Copied values of the corresponding selected faces.
- Corner: Copied values of corresponding corners in selected faces.
**Differences from edit mode**
In face mode (non-individual), the behavior can be different than the
extrude tools in edit mode-- this node doesn't handle keeping the back-
faces around in the cases that the edit mode tools do. The planned
"Solidify" node will handle that use case instead. Keeping this node
simpler and faster is preferable at this point, especially because that
sort of "smart" behavior is not that predictable and makes less sense
in a procedural context.
In the future, an "Even Offset" option could be added to this node
hopefully fairly simply. For now it is left out in order to keep
the patch simpler.
**Implementation**
For the implementation, the `Mesh` data structure is used directly
rather than converting to `BMesh` and back like D12224. This optimizes
for large extrusion operations rather than many sequential extrusions.
While this is potentially more verbose, it has some important benefits:
First, there is no conversion to and from `BMesh`. The code only has
to fill arrays and it can do that all at once, making each component of
the algorithm much easier to optimize. It also makes the attribute
interpolation more explicit, and likely faster. Only limited topology
maps must be created in most cases.
While there are some necessary loops and allocations with the size of
the entire mesh, I tried to keep everything I could on the order of the
size of the selection rather than the size of the mesh. In that respect,
the individual faces mode is the best, since there is no topology
information necessary, and the amount of work just depends on the size
of the selection.
Modifying an existing mesh instead of generating a new one was a bit
of a toss-up, but has a few potential benefits:
- Avoids manually copying over attribute data for original elements.
- Avoids some overhead of creating a new mesh.
- Can potentially take advantage of future ammortized mesh growth.
This could be changed easily if it turns out to be the wrong choice.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13709
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This node can scale individual edges and faces. When multiple selected
faces/edges share the same vertices, they are scaled together.
The center and scaling factor is averaged in this case.
For some examples see D13757.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13757
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Currently there is no way to flip normals in geometry nodes. This node
makes that possible by flipping the winding order of selected faces.
The node is purposely not called "Flip Normals", because normals are
derived data, changing them is only a side effect. The real change is
that the vertex and edge indices in the face corners of every selected
polygon are reversed, and face corner attribute data is reversed.
While there are existing utilities to flip a polygon and its custom
data, this node aims to process an attribute's data together instead
of processing all attributes separately for each index.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13809
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This adds a new curve primitive to generate arcs.
Radius mode (default): Generates a fixed radius arc on XY plane
with controls for Angle, Sweep and Invert.
Points mode: Generates a three point curve arc from Start to End
via Middle with an Angle Offset and option to invert the arc.
There are also outputs for arc center, radius and normal direction
relative to the Z-axis.
This patch is based on previous patches
D11713 and D13100 from @guitargeek. Thank you.
Reviewed By: HooglyBoogly
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13640
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This node allows accessing data of other elements in the context geometry.
It is similar to the Transfer Attribute node in Index mode. The main difference
is that this node does not require a geometry input, because the context
is used.
The node can e.g. be used to generalize what the Edge Vertices node is doing.
Instead of only being able to get the position of the vertices of an edge,
any field/attribute can be accessed on the vertices.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13825
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Includes unwanted changes
This reverts commit 46e049d0ce2bce2f53ddc41a0dbbea2969d00a5d.
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This patch implements the vector types (i.e:`float2`) by making heavy
usage of templating. All vector functions are now outside of the vector
classes (inside the `blender::math` namespace) and are not vector size
dependent for the most part.
In the ongoing effort to make shaders less GL centric, we are aiming
to share more code between GLSL and C++ to avoid code duplication.
####Motivations:
- We are aiming to share UBO and SSBO structures between GLSL and C++.
This means we will use many of the existing vector types and others
we currently don't have (uintX, intX). All these variations were
asking for many more code duplication.
- Deduplicate existing code which is duplicated for each vector size.
- We also want to share small functions. Which means that vector
functions should be static and not in the class namespace.
- Reduce friction to use these types in new projects due to their
incompleteness.
- The current state of the `BLI_(float|double|mpq)(2|3|4).hh` is a
bit of a let down. Most clases are incomplete, out of sync with each
others with different codestyles, and some functions that should be
static are not (i.e: `float3::reflect()`).
####Upsides:
- Still support `.x, .y, .z, .w` for readability.
- Compact, readable and easilly extendable.
- All of the vector functions are available for all the vectors types
and can be restricted to certain types. Also template specialization
let us define exception for special class (like mpq).
- With optimization ON, the compiler unroll the loops and performance
is the same.
####Downsides:
- Might impact debugability. Though I would arge that the bugs are
rarelly caused by the vector class itself (since the operations are
quite trivial) but by the type conversions.
- Might impact compile time. I did not saw a significant impact since
the usage is not really widespread.
- Functions needs to be rewritten to support arbitrary vector length.
For instance, one can't call `len_squared_v3v3` in
`math::length_squared()` and call it a day.
- Type cast does not work with the template version of the `math::`
vector functions. Meaning you need to manually cast `float *` and
`(float *)[3]` to `float3` for the function calls.
i.e: `math::distance_squared(float3(nearest.co), positions[i]);`
- Some parts might loose in readability:
`float3::dot(v1.normalized(), v2.normalized())`
becoming
`math::dot(math::normalize(v1), math::normalize(v2))`
But I propose, when appropriate, to use
`using namespace blender::math;` on function local or file scope to
increase readability.
`dot(normalize(v1), normalize(v2))`
####Consideration:
- Include back `.length()` method. It is quite handy and is more C++
oriented.
- I considered the GLM library as a candidate for replacement. It felt
like too much for what we need and would be difficult to extend / modify
to our needs.
- I used Macros to reduce code in operators declaration and potential
copy paste bugs. This could reduce debugability and could be reverted.
- This touches `delaunay_2d.cc` and the intersection code. I would like
to know @howardt opinion on the matter.
- The `noexcept` on the copy constructor of `mpq(2|3)` is being removed.
But according to @JacquesLucke it is not a real problem for now.
I would like to give a huge thanks to @JacquesLucke who helped during this
and pushed me to reduce the duplication further.
Reviewed By: brecht, sergey, JacquesLucke
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13791
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Reverted because the commit removes a lot of commits.
This reverts commit a2c1c368af48644fa8995ecbe7138cc0d7900c30.
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Fixes issue T94603
It adds a new compositor node called Scene Time which is already present as a geo node, having the same basic nodes available in all node trees is a nice thing to have.
Renames "Time" node to "Time Curve", this is done to avoid confusion between the Time node and the Scene Time node.
Reviewed By: jbakker
Maniphest Tasks: T94603
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13762
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This patch implements the vector types (i.e:float2) by making heavy
usage of templating. All vector functions are now outside of the vector
classes (inside the blender::math namespace) and are not vector size
dependent for the most part.
In the ongoing effort to make shaders less GL centric, we are aiming
to share more code between GLSL and C++ to avoid code duplication.
Motivations:
- We are aiming to share UBO and SSBO structures between GLSL and C++.
This means we will use many of the existing vector types and others we
currently don't have (uintX, intX). All these variations were asking
for many more code duplication.
- Deduplicate existing code which is duplicated for each vector size.
- We also want to share small functions. Which means that vector functions
should be static and not in the class namespace.
- Reduce friction to use these types in new projects due to their
incompleteness.
- The current state of the BLI_(float|double|mpq)(2|3|4).hh is a bit of a
let down. Most clases are incomplete, out of sync with each others with
different codestyles, and some functions that should be static are not
(i.e: float3::reflect()).
Upsides:
- Still support .x, .y, .z, .w for readability.
- Compact, readable and easilly extendable.
- All of the vector functions are available for all the vectors types and
can be restricted to certain types. Also template specialization let us
define exception for special class (like mpq).
- With optimization ON, the compiler unroll the loops and performance is
the same.
Downsides:
- Might impact debugability. Though I would arge that the bugs are rarelly
caused by the vector class itself (since the operations are quite trivial)
but by the type conversions.
- Might impact compile time. I did not saw a significant impact since the
usage is not really widespread.
- Functions needs to be rewritten to support arbitrary vector length. For
instance, one can't call len_squared_v3v3 in math::length_squared() and
call it a day.
- Type cast does not work with the template version of the math:: vector
functions. Meaning you need to manually cast float * and (float *)[3] to
float3 for the function calls.
i.e: math::distance_squared(float3(nearest.co), positions[i]);
- Some parts might loose in readability:
float3::dot(v1.normalized(), v2.normalized())
becoming
math::dot(math::normalize(v1), math::normalize(v2))
But I propose, when appropriate, to use
using namespace blender::math; on function local or file scope to
increase readability. dot(normalize(v1), normalize(v2))
Consideration:
- Include back .length() method. It is quite handy and is more C++
oriented.
- I considered the GLM library as a candidate for replacement.
It felt like too much for what we need and would be difficult to
extend / modify to our needs.
- I used Macros to reduce code in operators declaration and potential
copy paste bugs. This could reduce debugability and could be reverted.
- This touches delaunay_2d.cc and the intersection code. I would like to
know @Howard Trickey (howardt) opinion on the matter.
- The noexcept on the copy constructor of mpq(2|3) is being removed.
But according to @Jacques Lucke (JacquesLucke) it is not a real problem
for now.
I would like to give a huge thanks to @Jacques Lucke (JacquesLucke) who
helped during this and pushed me to reduce the duplication further.
Reviewed By: brecht, sergey, JacquesLucke
Differential Revision: http://developer.blender.org/D13791
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The main issue was the use of `G_MAIN` during file load.
This patch refactors the code so that iterating over `G_MAIN`
is not necessary anymore. See D13800 for more details.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13800
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The value of this flag was only retrieved in `nodeGetActiveID`, which
wasn't used anywhere. Other than that, the `NODE_ACTIVE_ID` and
related functions seem to come from the Blender internal renderer.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13770
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Compositor node to convert between color spaces.
Conversion is skipped when converting between the same color spaces or to or from data spaces.
Implementation done for tiled and full frame compositor.
Reviewed By: Blendify, jbakker
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12481
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Remove a variety of unused functions, declarations without definitions,
incorrect comments, and defines that have been commented for years
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MSVC used to warn about const mismatch for arguments passed by value.
Remove these as newer versions of MSVC no longer show this warning.
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This flag is only used a few small cases, so instead
of setting the flag for every node only set the
required flag for the nodes that require it.
Mostly the flag is used to set `ntype.flag = NODE_PREVIEW`
For nodes that should have previews by default which
is only some compositor nodes and some texture nodes.
The frame node also sets the `NODE_BACKGROUND` flag.
All other nodes were setting a flag of 0 which has no purpose.
Reviewed By: JacquesLucke
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13699
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Calculates the angle in radians between two faces that meet at an edge.
0 to PI in either direction with flat being 0 and folded over on itself PI.
If there are not 2 faces on the edge, the angle will be 0.
For valid edges, the angle is the same as the 'edge angle' overlay.
For the Face and Point domain, the node uses simple interpolation to calculate a value.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13366
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This function node creates a running total of a given Vector, Float, or
Int field.
Inputs:
- Value: The field to be accumulated
- Group Index: The values of this input are used to aggregate the input
into separate 'bins', creating multiple accumulations.
Outputs:
- Leading and Trailing: Returns the running totals starting
at either the first value of each accumulations or 0 respectively.
- Total: Returns the total accumulation at all positions of the field.
There's currently plenty of duplicate work happening when multiple outputs
are used that could be optimized by a future refactor to field inputs.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12743
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`SOCK_IN_USE` is now set in `update_socket_used_tags` in
`node_tree_update.cc` when a node tree is changed.
It doesn't need to run every single redraw. Removing this
results in a small speedup of 0.4 ms when drawing a tree
with about 4000 nodes (from about 70 ms total).
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13645
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When copying a full node tree, we can avoid an O(n^2) loop finding a
unique name for every node if we assume they already have unique names.
That is a reasonable assumption, since unique names are verified
elsewhere when adding a new node.
Copying a node tree with about 4000 nodes took 42 ms before,
now it takes 6 ms.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13644
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These pointers point to the new nodes when duplicating,
and their even used to point to "original" nodes for
"localized" trees. They're just a bad design decision
that make code confusing and buggy.
Instead, node copy functions now optionally add to a map
of old to new socket pointers. The case where the compositor
abused these pointers as "original" pointers are handled
by looking up the string node names.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13518
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Goals of this refactor:
* More unified approach to updating everything that needs to be updated
after a change in a node tree.
* The updates should happen in the correct order and quadratic or worse
algorithms should be avoided.
* Improve detection of changes to the output to avoid tagging the depsgraph
when it's not necessary.
* Move towards a more declarative style of defining nodes by having a
more centralized update procedure.
The refactor consists of two main parts:
* Node tree tagging and update refactor.
* Generally, when changes are done to a node tree, it is tagged dirty
until a global update function is called that updates everything in
the correct order.
* The tagging is more fine-grained compared to before, to allow for more
precise depsgraph update tagging.
* Depsgraph changes.
* The shading specific depsgraph node for node trees as been removed.
* Instead, there is a new `NTREE_OUTPUT` depsgrap node, which is only
tagged when the output of the node tree changed (e.g. the Group Output
or Material Output node).
* The copy-on-write relation from node trees to the data block they are
embedded in is now non-flushing. This avoids e.g. triggering a material
update after the shader node tree changed in unrelated ways. Instead
the material has a flushing relation to the new `NTREE_OUTPUT` node now.
* The depsgraph no longer reports data block changes through to cycles
through `Depsgraph.updates` when only the node tree changed in ways
that do not affect the output.
Avoiding unnecessary updates seems to work well for geometry nodes and cycles.
The situation is a bit worse when there are drivers on the node tree, but that
could potentially be improved separately in the future.
Avoiding updates in eevee and the compositor is more tricky, but also less urgent.
* Eevee updates are triggered by calling `DRW_notify_view_update` in
`ED_render_view3d_update` indirectly from `DEG_editors_update`.
* Compositor updates are triggered by `ED_node_composite_job` in `node_area_refresh`.
This is triggered by calling `ED_area_tag_refresh` in `node_area_listener`.
Removing updates always has the risk of breaking some dependency that no
one was aware of. It's not unlikely that this will happen here as well. Adding
back missing updates should be quite a bit easier than getting rid of
unnecessary updates though.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13246
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This flag was checked, but not set anywhere.
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Similar to the previous commit, this allowed removing a function to set
a single pixel of a node preview.
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This commit adds a search menu when links are dragged above empty
space. When releasing the drag, a menu displays all compatible
sockets with the source link. The "main" sockets (usually the first)
are weighted above other sockets in the search, so they appear first
when you type the name of the node.
A few special operators for creating a reroute or a group input node
are also added to the search.
Translation is started after choosing a node so it can be placed
quickly, since users would likely adjust the position after anyway.
A small "+" is displayed next to the cursor to give a hint about this.
Further improvements are possible after this first iteration:
- Support custom node trees.
- Better drawing of items in the search menu.
- Potential tweaks to filtering of items, depending on user feedback.
Thanks to Juanfran Matheu for developing an initial patch.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8286
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Also add groups in some files.
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Also remove unnecessary function to set a node type's
label function that duplicated its definition, and make
another function static.
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The const argument makes sense because these are the "source"
sockets, even though a const cast is necessary at one point.
The name "interface_socket" is an improvement over "stemp"
because the latter sounds like "temporary", or it confuses
the old socket template system with a node group's interface.
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This node outputs the current scene time in seconds or in frames.
Use of this node eliminates the need to use drivers to control values
in the node tree that are driven by the scene time.
Frame is a float value to provide for subframe rendering for motion
blur.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13455
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This node is a field input that outputs a separate index for each mesh island.
The indices are based on the order of the lowest-numbered vertex in each island.
Authoring help from @hooglyboogly
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13504
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Creates a new Edge Neighbors node which outputs a field
containing the number of faces connected to each edge.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13493
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This adds a new Geometry to Instance node that turns every
connected input geometry into an instance. Those instances
can for example be used in the Instance on Points node.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13500
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The `node_storage` functions to retrieve const and mutable structs
from a node are generated by a short macro that can be placed at the
top of each relevant file. I use this in D8286 to make code snippets
in the socket declarations much shorter, but I thought it would be
good to use it consistently everywhere else too.
The functions are also useful to avoid copy and paste errors,
like the one corrected in the cylinder node in this commit.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13491
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- Added space below non doc-string comments to make it clear
these aren't comments for the symbols directly below them.
- Use doxy sections for some headers.
- Minor improvements to doc-strings.
Ref T92709
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Creates 4 new nodes which provide topology information
for the mesh. Values are interpolated from the primary
domain in each case using basic attribute interpolation.
Vertex Neighbors
- Vertex Count
- Face Count
Face Neighbors
- Vertex Count
- Neighboring Face Count
Edge Vertices
- Vertex Index 1
- Vertex Index 2
- Position 1
- Position 2
Face Area
- Face Area
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13343
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As a followup to 338c1060d5d7, apply the same change to the node
drawing callback. This helps to simplify code when the complexity
of a callback isn't necessary right now.
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Currently there are a few callbacks on `bNodeType` that do the same
thing for every node type except reroutes and frame nodes. Having a
callback for basic things complicates code and makes it harder to
understand, and reroutes and frames are special cases in larger way.
Arguably frame nodes shouldn't even be drawn like regular nodes,
given that it adds a case of O(N^2) looping through all nodes.
"Unrolling" the callbacks makes it easier to see what's happening,
and therefore easier to optimize.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13463
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This helps to tell when a pointer is expected to be null, and avoid
overly verbose code when dereferencing. This commit also includes
a few other cleanups in this area:
- Use const in a few places
- Use `float2` instead of `float[2]`
- Remove some unnecessary includes and old code
The change can be continued further in the future.
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