Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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With this commit, node warnings added to nodes during evaluation
(not "Info" warnings) will also draw in the modifier. In the future
there could be a "search for this node" button as well.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11983
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Because these handles are calculated lazily, we need to make sure they
are calculated before switching to a manually positioned mode.
I doubt it would ever be necessary, but theoretically this could happen
on a per-point level, to avoid calculating handles not in the selection.
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This node takes a curve and a point selection and allows you to set the
specified (or all) points left/right or both handles to a given type.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11992
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Just add a check for whether the mesh has faces when retrieving an
attribute on the corner domain. In the future there could be an info
message in the node in this case, since maybe it's not intuitive.
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The new faces should have a winding direction that points them outward,
the fix was swapping the order of each face's edge and vertex indices.
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Using const indexes and offsets helps to make the logic less sequential,
which is hopefully easier to understand and possibly easier to parallelize
in the future. Also order return arguments last.
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This caused the "cyclic" attribute to appear dysfunctional.
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Use C comments for plain text.
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The code used `Spline::LookupResult` in a way that referred to evaluated
points and control points interchangeably. That didn't affect the logic,
but the code became harder to read. Instead, introduce a local struct
to contain the data in a more obvious way.
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This node implements shortening each spline in the curve based on
either a length from the start of each spline, or a factor of the
total length of each spline, similar to the "Start & End Mapping"
panel of curve properties.
For Bezier curves, the first and last control points are adjusted
to maintain the shape of the curve, but NURB splines are currently
implicitly converted to poly splines.
The node is implemented to avoid copying where possible, so it outputs
a changed version of the input curve rather than a new one.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11901
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Replaces current ID Mask node Anti-Aliasing operation by SMAA
operations with default settings as proposed by Jeroen Bakker.
SMAA produces smoother edges.
Reviewed By: manzanilla
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11881
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This shows the text as part of the assertion message.
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This logic is from the curve sundivide node, used to add points with
proper handles in between two existing points. However, the same logic
is used for trimming of Bezier splines, and possibly interactive point
insertion in the future, so it's helpful as a general utility.
The logic is converted to depend on a bezier spline instead of being
static. A temporary segment spline can be used for the latter use case.
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nodes or sockets" error
rBfe22635bf664 introduced a utility to check for this (but it was always
returning true).
This wasnt a problem in master (since it is unused there), but in the
2.93 branch, this utility is actually used and the error results in all
geometry nodetrees to appear with the "Node group has unidentified nodes
or sockets" message (and being unusable).
Now return false in has_undefined_nodes_or_sockets if all nodes and
sockets have been successfully checked.
This commit then needs to end up in the 2.93 branch.
Maniphest Tasks: T89851
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11911
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Socket inspection helps with debugging a geometry node group.
Now, when hovering over a socket, a tooltip will appear that provides
information about the data in the socket. Note, socket inspection only
works for sockets that have been computed already. Nodes that are not
connected to an output are not computed.
Future improvements can include ui changes to make the tooltip look
more like in the original design (T85251). Furthermore, additional
information could be shown if necessary.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11842
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This commit moves the storage of `bDeformGroup` and the active index
to `Mesh`, `Lattice`, and `bGPdata` instead of `Object`. Utility
functions are added to allow easy access to the vertex groups given
an object or an ID.
As explained in T88951, the list of vertex group names is currently
stored separately per object, even though vertex group data is stored
on the geometry. This tends to complicate code and cause bugs,
especially as geometry is created procedurally and tied less closely
to an object.
The "Copy Vertex Groups to Linked" operator is removed, since they
are stored on the geometry anyway.
This patch leaves the object-level python API for vertex groups in
place. Creating a geometry-level RNA API can be a separate step;
the changes in this commit are invasive enough as it is.
Note that opening a file saved in 3.0 in an earlier version means
the vertex groups will not be available.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11689
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This commit adds a curve primitive node for creating squares,
rectangles, trapezoids, kites, and parallelograms. It also includes
a mode where the four points are just vector inputs.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11665
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Under some circumstances (e.g. when rendering) the geometry
nodes logger is not used. This was missing a simple null check.
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Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11872
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panel
Renaming compositor node in search panel "View Switch" to "Switch View"
for better consistency.
Reviewed By: dfelinto
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11717
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TBB includes in windows.h which will by
default define min/max macro's by default,
which collide with stl's min/mac functions.
this change instructs windows.h not to
add the offending macros
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Many ui features for geometry nodes need access to information generated
during evaluation:
* Node warnings.
* Attribute search.
* Viewer node.
* Socket inspection (not in master yet).
The way we logged the required information before had some disadvantages:
* Viewer node used a completely separate system from node warnings and
attribute search.
* Most of the context of logged information is lost when e.g. the same node
group is used multiple times.
* A global lock was needed every time something is logged.
This new implementation solves these problems:
* All four mentioned ui features use the same underlying logging system.
* All context information for logged values is kept intact.
* Every thread has its own local logger. The logged informatiton is combined
in the end.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11785
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Rename the mesh circle to "Mesh Circle", mesh line to "Mesh Line",
and mesh subdivide to "Mesh Subdivide". Previously they looked exactly
the same in the search menu, and the nodes themselves had the same
label. This is a "deep" rename that also renames internal defines and
function names to match the UI.
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This node is quite similar to the curve to points node, but creates
points for only the start and end of each spline. This is a separate
node because the sampling from the curve to points node don't apply,
and just for ease of use.
All attributes from the curves are copied, including the data for
instancing: tangents, normals, and the derived rotations. One simple
use case is to make round caps on curves by instancinghalves of a
sphere on each end of the splines.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11719
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The curve resample node neglected to copy attributes to single point
result splines. That could have caused errors if some of the splines
in the result had only one point but others had more.
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The menu lists all socket types that are valid for the node tree.
Changing a socket type updates all instances of the group and keeps
existing links to the socket.
If changing the socket type leads to incorrect node connections the
links are flagged as invalid (red) and ignored but not removed. This is
so users don't lose information and can then fix resulting issues.
For example: Changing a Color socket to a Shader socket can cause an
invalid Shader-to-Color connection.
Implementation details:
The new `NODE_OT_tree_socket_change_type` operator uses the generic
`rna_node_socket_type_itemf` function to list all eligible socket types.
It uses the tree type's `valid_socket_type` callback to test for valid
types. In addition it also checks the subtype, because multiple RNA
types are registered for the same base type. The `valid_socket_type`
callback has been modified slightly to accept full socket types instead
of just the base type enum, so that custom (python) socket types can be
used by this operator.
The `nodeModifySocketType` function is now called when group nodes
encounter a socket type mismatch, instead of replacing the socket
entirely. This ensures that links are kept to/from group nodes as well
as group input/output nodes. The `nodeModifySocketType` function now
also takes a full `bNodeSocketType` instead of just the base and subtype
enum (a shortcut `nodeModifySocketTypeStatic` exists for when only
static types are used).
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10912
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The line starts at the origin and ends at (0,0,1m), just like the mesh node.
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This node creates a poly spline line in one of 2 modes:
- Line between two points
- Start Point, Direction, and Length
Both modes create splines with only start and endpoints.
A resample node can be used afterward to increase the point count.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11769
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Also a stupidly-included change I made when committing the patch.
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This patch adds a very simple node that explicitly converts a float to
an int. While this may seem redundant, it would offer 2 benefits to the
current requirement to use implicit float conversions:
1. It makes the node tree's intent more clear and self-documenting
(especially if changes in the future require integer inputs).
2. It eliminates undefined behavior in current/future nodes from float
inputs by guaranteeing that the input is an integer.
The node offers a variety of rounding techniques to make it more flexible.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11700
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This adds a viewer node similar to the one in the compositor.
The icon in the headers of nodes is removed because it served
the same purpose and is not necessary anymore.
Node outputs can be connected to the active viewer using
ctrl+shift+LMB, just like in the compositor. Right now this collides
with the shortcut used in the node wrangler addon, which will
be changed separately.
As of now, the viewed geometry is only visible in the spreadsheet.
Viewport visualization will be added separately.
There are a couple of benefits of using a viewer node compared
to the old approach with the icon in the node header:
* Better support for nodes that have more than one geometry output.
* It's more consistent with the compositor.
* If attributes become decoupled from geometry in the future,
the viewer can have a separate input for the attribute to visualize.
* The viewer node could potentially have visualization settings.
* Allows to keep "visualization points" around by having multiple
viewer nodes.
* Less visual clutter in node headers.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11470
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Also use doxy style function reference `#` prefix chars when
referencing identifiers.
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A point of confusion about this node is that it doesn't work on the
output of the mesh circle primitive node. This patch adds a warning to
help with that. This avoids adding a warning when the geometry set
input has no mesh.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11771
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As noted in a comment now, these functions only update a cache, so they
don't change the logical state of the mesh, which is "it will have the
data when necessary." Using a const argument will help const correctness
when accessing an object's evaluated mesh.
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This node has two modes: the first mode computes a circle from three
locations and a resolution. The second takes radius and resolution.
The first mode also outputs the center of the computed circle as
a vector.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11650
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