Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Grease pencil modifiers already had defined outliner icons, but had
never been included in the tree. This adds the modifiers and the shader
effects to the tree.
Part of T68498
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This implements Snake Hook as a deform type for the cloth brush. This
brush changes the strength of the deformation constraints per brush step
to avoid affecting the results of the simulation as much as possible. It
allows to grab the cloth without producing any artifacts in the surface
and create more natural looking folds than any of the other deformation
modes.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8621
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`TH_UV_OTHERS` is a theme option that isn't hooked to anything since
blender 2.80. This patch will remove the option and related code.
Reviewed By: Campbell Barton
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8669
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This was part of the game engine and is not used anymore.
Reviewers: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8666
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This reverts {rB1693a5efe91999b60b3dc0bdff727473b3bd00bb}
and implements an alternative solution.
The old patch had the problem that the depsgraph would always
evaluate at the current frame of the original scene (even when
`DEG_evaluate_on_framechange` was used). Now it is possible
to evaluate the depsgraph at a specific frame without having to
change the original scene.
Reviewers: sergey, sybren
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8616
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Horizontal panel alignment hasn't been used for years, and we have no
plans to use it in the future. It adds a fair amount of complexity to
the panel code which makes adding features take longer.
This code removes the X closing flag, and all of the logic / variables
unused without it.
This commit includes a file subversion bump.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8601
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This RNA/BPY function was removed in c08d84748804. For understandable
reasons really-- getting scene statistics from a string displayed in the
status bar is not exactly the best design. But we have committed to not
changing the RNA API too much for the 2.90 release, so we would like to
keep this functionality.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8604
Reviewd by: Julian Eisel
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This adds a new brush property called "Deformation Target" which
controls how the brush deformations is going to affect the mesh data. By
default is set to Geometry, which makes the brushes displace the
vertices. When set to Cloth Simulation, the deformation of the brush is
applied to the cloth solver constraints, so the simulation is
responsible to apply the final deformation. This allows to add cloth
simulation effects to other sculpt tools with minor modifications to their
code.
This patch enables Cloth Simulation deformation target for Pose and
Boundary brushes, which are tools that are already designed to work in
low poly counts and produce large deformations. This allows creating the
most common cloth effects, like bending and compressing folds, without
relying on collisions.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8578
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This adds an option to the Multires modifier to sculpt directly on the
base mesh while previewing the displacement of a higher subdivisions
level. What this does it considering Multires as a regular modifier
without exposing the grid displacement to sculpt mode.
This allows to see the propagation happening in real time, which enables
to use complex tools like Cloth or Pose in much higher resolutions and
without surface noise and artifacts.
Reviewed By: sergey, Severin
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8555
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Functions `mesh_create_eval_final_view()` and
`mesh_create_eval_final_render()` were doing the exact same thing,
except for a hack introduced in d3eb9dddd6b4 (2012-10-08, Better fix for
T32846: dupligroup messes up particle instancing on rendering) that
appears to be no longer necessary. Besides that, these functions had
confusing names. Their functionality changed over time, and whether to
do for-render or for-viewport evaluation is now actually determined by
the depsgraph evaluation mode. This means that the `..._render` function
could evaluate a mesh with viewport settings, and vice versa.
The functions are now merged into `mesh_create_eval_final()`, and the
hack has been removed. The `OB_NO_PSYS_UPDATE` flag has been removed
entirely (instead of keeping it around as deprecated flag), because it
was always only temporarily set on objects during mesh evaluation and
thus not saved to the blend file.
No expected functional changes as far as users are concerned.
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Avoid misunderstandings with UI scaling.
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Checks for header alignment didn't account for tool-header & header
having different alignment.
There is no reason to use a lookup function on the area
(ED_area_header_alignment) as we already have region.
Check the regions alignment directly, remove access functions.
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The existing header flip detection didn't account for mixed
tool-header and header flipping & visibility between space-types.
Now alignment syncing handles any combination of header,
tool-header & footer flipped state, in a way that can be extended
to other region types in the future.
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In this mode the preview image is always using the most of the preview
area space: it is scaled to fit, preserving aspect ratio. This makes it
possible to always have maximum of the preview region even after resize
of other areas.
This mode is enabled by default, is available in the View -> Zoom to Fit
menu. It is enabled when View All (Home key) is used, and is disabled
when manual navigation ([panning, zooming) is performed.
There is no versioning code, which means existing files will open as-is,
but new projects will have this option enabled.
Ref T78987
Maniphest Tasks: T78987
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8549
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This adds the boundary_falloff_type and boundary_offset to control how the
falloff of the Boundary Brush is applied.
Boundary Origin Offset is the same concept as the Pose Origin offset in
the Pose Brush. It is a multiplier that adds extra length to the brush
radius to locate the deformation pivot further from the boundary without
affecting the falloff.
The Falloff type includes Constant (previous default), brush radius, loop
and loop and invert. Loop and Loop and Invert can be used to create
deformation patterns in a mesh.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8526
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This brush deletes displacement information of the Multires Modifier,
resetting the mesh to the subdivision limit surface.
This can be use to easily delete parts of the sculpt or to fix
reprojection artifacts after applying a shrinkwrap.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8543
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Allows to keep track of modifiers, which is required, for example,
for runtime data preservation in depsgraph.
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This brush includes a set of deformation modes designed to deform and
control the shape of the mesh boundaries, which are really hard to do
with regular sculpt brushes (and even in edit mode). This is useful
for creating cloth assets and hard surface base meshes.
The brush detects the mesh boundary closest to the active vertex and
propagates the deformation using the brush falloff into the mesh.
It includes bend, expand, inflate, grab and twist deform modes.
The main use cases of this brush are the Bend and Expand deformation
modes, which depend on a grid topology to create the best results.
In order to do further adjustments and tweaks to the result of these
deformation modes, the brush also includes the Inflate, Grab and
Twist deformation modes, which do not depend that much on the topology.
Grab and Inflate are the same operation that is implemented in the
Grab and Inflate tools, they are also available in the boundary brush
as producing deformations with regular brushes in these areas is very
hard to control.
Even if this brush can produce deformations in triangle meshes and
meshes with a non-regular quad grid, the more regular and clean the
topology is, the better. Most of the assets this brush is intended to
deform are always created from a cylindrical or plane quad grid, so it
should be fine. Also, its algorithms can be improved in future versions
to handle more corner cases and topology patterns.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8356
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This feature was suggested in https://blender.community/c/rightclickselect/rggbbc/
When press `Ctrl+LMB`, the filled area is inverted.
{F8749306}
{F8749307}
Filling several areas:
{F8759399}
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8477
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This is used for equality and didn't have the same behavior as strcmp.
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This broke during the OpenVDB update for 2.90. Just making sure that guiding velocity files are being read correctly.
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This addresses warnings from Clang-Tidy's `readability-else-after-return`
rule. This should be the final commit of the series of commits that
addresses this particular rule.
No functional changes.
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This replaces header include guards with `#pragma once`.
A couple of include guards are not removed yet (e.g. `__RNA_TYPES_H__`),
because they are used in other places.
This patch has been generated by P1561 followed by `make format`.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8466
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This makes possible to choose between a local and a global simulation
when the cloth brush is used. Local simulation is the current default.
When global simulation is enabled, the cloth brush simulates the entire
mesh without taking any simulation limits into account.
This was possible before by setting the simulation limits to 10 (the
current maximum value allowed) so the entire mesh was inside the limits,
but this was a hack as the limits scale with the radius and there should
not be any limitation on how big the simulated area can be to be able to
simulate an entire object. This also allows to make a more clear
distinction between cloth brush presets that are intended to be used in
local areas to add details or globally to generate the base shape of the
mesh.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8481
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Having includes in debug builds makes it possible to accidentally
break release builds.
Avoid this by moving calls to other modules out of BLI_assert.h
into BLI_assert.c
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This implements collisions in the solver of the cloth brush/filter. It
uses the scene colliders as a regular physics simulation.
There are still some parameters (friction, distance to the surface...)
that can be exposed as properties in later patches.
Thanks to Sebastian Parborg for helping me with the implementation.
Reviewed By: sergey, zeddb
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8019
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The scale deform mode includes rotation by default, so when when scaling
down a part of the models it becomes harder to control as the effect of
the rotation less predictable (similar to using trackball rotation in a
very small radius). This locks the rotation of the segment, so parts of
the model can be scaled down in a more predictable way.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8465
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This is a patch suggested in https://blender.community/c/rightclickselect/qggbbc/
The valid values are:
* Visible Layers.
* Active Layer.
* Layer Above active.
* Layer Below active.
* All layers Above active.
* All layers Below active.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8474
Some minor UI changes done in the original patch.
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Some implementation have different maximum texture size.
This patch avoid crash when texture allocation fails when:
- trying to bake a lightcache too big for the OpenGL imeplementaion.
- loading a cache from file that is too big for the OpenGL imeplementation.
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The cloth brush has a defined simulated area with a falloff. In the falloff
area (the area between the dashed white circle and the exterior white
circle), simulation properties change in order to fade out the
simulation deformation effects towards the boundary.
With some brushes and stroke types (like anchored strokes with pinching
or grabbing with full strength), it is possible to apply more force than
what the boundary falloff can compensate, so the simulation breaks when
this happens.
This option pins the falloff area with softbody constraints, This
produces a much better deformation falloff and it is no longer possible
to move the vertices near the simulation boundary, so the simulation
won't break no matter the strength of the forces applied inside the
simulated areas.
This is an option as it is particularly useful for some brushes to add
localized details, but for brushes that are supposed to deform the
entire mesh (like the grab brush in D8424), this can add unwanted
softbody constraints that affect the simulation result.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8435
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Conflicts:
source/blender/editors/gpencil/gpencil_primitive.c
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Allows to identify pose channels more reliably than by the pointer.
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Following work done in 2.83, the resolution control is now a real
level-of-detail parameter. It is now useful to be able to set the
resolution for display independently from render. This is true for
both mesh generation and mesh deformation modes.
For compatibility with old scenes, resolution is retained and is the
render resolution. Old modifiers loaded have the value of resolution
also applied to viewport resolution. This allows newer modifiers to
be used in older versions without trouble
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8336
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This patch adds the ability to render motion blur from Alembic caches.
The motion blur data is derived from a velocity attribute whose name has
to be defined by the user through the MeshSequenceCache modifier, with a
default value of ".velocities", which is the standard name in Alembic
for the velocity property, although other software may ignore it and
write velocity with their own naming convention (e.g. "v" in Houdini).
Furthermore, a property was added to define how the velocity vectors
are interpreted with regard to time : frame or second. "Frame"
means that the velocity is already scaled by the time step and we do not
need to modify it for it to look proper. "Second" means that the unit
the velocity was measured in is in seconds and so has to be scaled by
some time step computed here as being the time between two frames (1 /
FPS, which would be typical for a simulation). This appears to be
common, and is the default behavior.
Another property was added to control the scale of the velocity to
further modify the look of the motion blur.
Reviewed By: brecht, sybren
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2388
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The abbreviation 'init' is brief, unambiguous and already used
in thousands of places, also initialize is often accidentally
written with British spelling.
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