Difference between revisions of "Glossary"

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#REDIRECT [[:Category:Glossary]]
== 2.5D ==
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"Two and a half-D" is an optimization trick for [[RT3D]] that fakes the [[Viewer|viewer]] into thinking they are seeing true 3D graphics. A whole scene (or an object in a scene) is made of 2-dimensional graphics that are scaled and drawn in perspective to look like [[Polygon|polygonal]] graphics, but there are no polygons involved. This is done by projecting displacement information onto a single [[Face|plane]]. Accordingly, this technique is limited to 2 point perspective, not allowing any [[Pitch|Y-axis rotation]]. The groundbreaking game Doom is built entirely on this concept. [[Billboard|Billboards]] are 2.5D, but [[Voxel|voxels]] can be either 2.5D or 3D.
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Other effects classified as 2.5D can include [[Parallax_Map|parallax]] scrolling effects or orthographic 3/4 perspective (popularized by many real-time strategy and role-playing games).
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= '''A''' =
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== Additive Blending ==
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A [[TextureBlending|texture blending]] method that uses the [[AdditiveColorModel|Additive Color Model]]. The [[Pixel|pixels]] of a [[BaseMap|base map]] and a [[Light map|light map]] are blended together to make a brighter texture.
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See also [[AdditiveColorModel|additive color model]], [[AdditiveTransparency|additive transparency]], [[AverageBlending|average blending]], [[BlendInvert|invert blending]], [[BlendSubtract|subtractive blending]].
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== Additive Color Model ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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In the additive color model, red, green, and blue ([[RGB]]) are the primary colors, and mixing them together creates white. This is the way light blends together-- shine a red, a green, and a blue spotlight in the same place, and it will make white light. You add to get white. To get a lighter color use more of each color, or to get a darker color use less of each color. Additive is the color model used to display graphics on your computer screen, where all the colors are just combinations of the colors red, green and blue. Also called RGB space. See also [[SubtractiveColorModel|subtractive color model]], [[TextureBlending|texture blending]].
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== Additive Transparency ==
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A way to calculate the color behind a transparent object, using the [[AdditiveColorModel|Additive Color Model]]. In general, wherever the object is more [[Opacity|opaque]], the brighter the background. If you use an alpha channel to change the transparency, the white areas get brighter, and the black areas have no effect on the background. This works well for flames, explosions, lens flares, etc., because it makes them look cleaner and hotter. If you use [[Material|material]] opacity, it makes the whole background behind the object the same brightness level: the more opaque the object, the brighter the background, and the lower the opacity, the less bright the background. This works well for things like water or prisms or holograms. See also [[AverageTransparency|average transparency]], [[SubtractiveTransparency|subtractive transparency]].
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== AI ==
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Artificial Intelligence is a set of computer instructions or algorithms designed to simulate the actions of an intelligent being to the extent necessary to meet design requirements of the game. Unlike the AI computer science field, AI in games is much less dependent on accuracy and uses a variety of tricks and hacks to reduce [[Memory|memory]] and better serve the design of the game.
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== AL ==
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Artificial Life. In a nutshell, AL is the antithesis of AI. While AI seeks to simulate real-world behaviour by following a complex series of rules, AL starts with very simple rules for a system and enables complex behaviour to emerge from them. Galapagos from [http://www.anark.com/ Anark] is the first commercial game to use AL.
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== Aliasing ==
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When edges look jagged instead of smooth, and moiré patterns develop in fine parallel lines. The problem is most prevalent in diagonal lines. Aliasing happens when the engine tries to display an image on a portion of the screen where the resolution is too low to display its details correctly. This is solved with [[Anti-Aliasing|anti-aliasing]], [[Mip Mapping|mip mapping]], or [[Texture Filtering|texture filtering]].
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== Alpha Channel ==
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An optional channel in the texture file that usually defines the [[Transparency map|transparency]] of the texture’s [[Pixel|pixels]].
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It can also be used for other things like a [[Height map|height map]] or grey-scale [[Category:Specular map|specular map]].
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The alpha is usually anywhere from 1bit up to 8bits, depending on the amount of detail you need. Generally, the lower the [[BitDepth|bit depth]] you use, the more [[Memory|memory]] you save, but the less image quality you get. See [[Transparency map]] for more information, and some visual examples can be found on the Glossary page [[Transparency#Alpha_Bit_Depths]].
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Different image channels can be extracted by a [[Category:Shaders|shader]] to use them for particular effects, like alpha for physics info, red channel for glow and green channel for specular and blue channel for sound types, etc. In this way, a bitmap can store more information than just RGB color.
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== Ancestor ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Any [[Node|node]] in a [[Hierarchy|hierarchy]] that is above the current node.
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See also [[Child|child]], [[Parent|parent]], [[Node|node]]
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== Animatic ==
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An animated [[Storyboard|storyboard]]. This is used to refine timing, cameras, composition, etc., when a static storyboard just isn't enough. The animatic is kind of like a slide-show, with zooms and pans added to the storyboard panels to flesh out timing and composition. Where needed, low-resolution animated 3d scenes are used, intermixed with the remaining 2D storyboard panels. Sometimes called a "story reel." Also called a "Leica reel," (pronounced LIKE-uh) a term sometimes still used by gray-haired animators.
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== Anisotropic Filtering ==
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A [[Texture_filtering|texture filtering method]], specifically for non-square filtering, usually of textures shown in radical perspective (such as a pavement texture as seen from a camera lying on the road). More generally, anisotropic improves clarity of images with severely unequal [[AspectRatio|aspect ratios]]. Anisotropic filtering is an improvement of isotropic mip-mapping, but because it must take many samples, it can be very [[Memory|memory]] intensive.
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== Anti-Aliasing ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Anti-aliasing removes the stair-stepping or jaggies which occur at the edges of [[Polygon|polygons]] or between the [[Texel|texels]] on the polygons. It works by [[Interpolation|interpolating]] the [[Pixel|pixels]] at the edges to make the difference between two color areas less dramatic. See also [[Aliasing|aliasing]], [[Mip_Mapping|MIP mapping]], [[Texture_filtering|texture filtering]].
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== ASCII ==
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The American Standard Code for Information Interchange (pronounced "ASS-key") is a encoding type for text, based on the English alphabet. A more universal encoding type is Unicode which allows for display of many different characters.
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== Aspect Ratio ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A number that describes the shape of a rectangular texture, whether it's tall or wide. To get the aspect ratio, either divide the width by the height, or write it out as width:height. Aspect ratio helps you decide what kinds of changes need to be done to an image to get it to display correctly, like when you have to scale the image. Aspect ratio gets kind of complex when you have to deal with non-square pixels and other oddities-- not very important to the artist. See also [[AnisotropicFiltering|anisotropic filtering]].
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== Average Blending ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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When using [[TextureBlending|texture blending]], average is when the colors of the [[BaseMap|base map]] and the [[Light map|light map]] are blended together evenly. This helps when you don't want the light map to brighten or darken the base map, like when you are placing a decal of a crack on a wall to make it looked cracked. See also [[AdditiveBlending|additive blending]], [[AverageTransparency|average transparency]], [[BlendInvert|invert blending]], [[BlendSubtract|subtractive blending]].
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== Average Transparency ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Colors are mixed together evenly to create a new color. Sometimes called filter transparency. See also [[AdditiveTransparency|additive transparency]], [[AverageBlending|average blending]], [[SubractiveTransparency|subtractive transparency]].
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== Azimuth ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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One of the two rotational axes used by the astronomers, and also by [[RT3D]] programmers. Azimuth is similar to [[Yaw|yaw]]-- if you shake your head "no," you are rotating in azimuth. Most [[Engines|engines]] count from 0 to 360 degrees, starting out pointed straight forward, turning clockwise all the way around, and ending pointed straight forward again. Straight forward is both 0 and 360 degrees, and straight backwards is 180 degrees. Sometimes mathematicians measure it in radians, a unit of measure that comes from the magical number Pi. A radian equals Pi/180, but most people use degrees instead of radians.
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Astronomers use only two axes (the other axis is [[Declination|declination]]), because they do not use [[Roll|roll]]. This is similar to the way most [[FPS<sup>2</sup>|FPS]] games work. It is preferred in some RT3D engines because it keeps the viewer level no matter where he points. But this system has a drawback because it suffers from gimbal lock whenever the [[Viewer<sup>1</sup>|viewer]] points either straight up or straight down. The Quake games, for instance, avoid [[GimbalLock|gimble lock]] by not allowing the viewer to point all the way up or down.
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= '''B''' =
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== B-Spline ==
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A way to make a curved line with very few points. It has control points with equal weights to adjust the shape of the curve. The control points rarely reside on the curve itself, because the curve is an average of the points. For instance, if you make four control points in the shape of a square, the resulting curve will be a circle inside of that square, because the curve is pulled inward as it tries to average out the weights of all the four points. Different from [[BezierSpline|bezier splines]], which use control points that always touch the curve, and handles that help you adjust the curve.
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== Backface Culling ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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The process of removing the unseen polygons that face away from the [[Viewer<sup>1</sup>|viewer]]. This can dramatically speed up the [[Rendering|rendering]] of a [[Polygon|polygonal]] scene, since they take up valuable processing power. Also called Backface Removal or Back Culling. It is one of the methods of [[HiddenSurfaceRemoval|Hidden Surface Removal]].
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== Base Map ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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When using [[TextureBlending|texture blending]], this is the main [[Texture|texture]] used on the [[Polygon|polygon]]. One or more additional textures are blended with the base map to create a new texture. See also [[DarkMap|dark map]], [[LightMap|light map]].
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== Bézier Spline ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Another way to make a curved line with very few points. named after the French mathematician Pierre Bézier (pronounced BEZ-ee-ay), these curves employ at least three points to define a curve. The two endpoints of the curve are called anchor points. The other points, which define the shape of the curve, are called handles, tangent points, or nodes. Attached to each handle are two control points. By moving the handles and the control points, you end up having a lot of control over the shape of the curve. Different from [[B-Spline|b-splines]], which use control points that don't necessarily touch the curve.
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== Bilinear Filtering ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A method of [[Mip_Mapping|MIP mapping]]. Since the [[Texel|texels]] are almost always larger or smaller than the screen [[Pixel|pixels]], it tries to find a MIP-map with texels that are closest in size to the screen pixels. Then it [[Interpolation|interpolates]] the four texels that are the nearest to each screen pixel in order to render each new screen pixel. See also [[TrilinearFiltering|trilinear filtering]].
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== Billboard ==
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Billboard is a term commonly used in games to describe a camera-facing plane. This is a polygon with a texture using [[Transparency map|transparency]], that rotates on various axes to always face the viewer.
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Billboards are commonly used for particles, far away [[Category:EnvironmentFoliage|trees]], [[GrassTechnique|grass]], clouds, [[Category:UserInterface|UI elements]], etc. This is a common device to get more detail in objects without using a lot of polygons. However, they are flat and may look strange when you move around them.
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Billboards can be set up to rotate on only one [[RotationalAxis|axis]] or on combinations of axes. For example, a tree might be set to rotate only on its vertical axis, so it always appears grounded. However a puff of smoke usually looks better if it always stays upright and flat to the view.
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One cool trick is to use a curved billboard, which helps give more depth to a single-axis billboard, because like a tree billboard, you can look down on it, so the extra depth helps get rid of that flat look.
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Also called [[Sprite]], Imposter, Flag, Kite, Stamp.
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== Bit Depth ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Bitdepth is used to denote how many colors a game or application needs to function properly, which is the number of colors plus other channels like [[AlphaChannel|alpha]]. The more colors, the smoother the image. 1-bit is two colors-- black and white. 2-bit is four colors, 4-bit is sixteen, 8-bit is 256 colors, etc.
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The number of colors at any bit depth = 2bitdepth. For instance, 8-bit = 28 = 2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2 = 256 colors.
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If game uses alpha or [[HeightMap|heightmaps]], then they are additional channels that can be added to the bitdepth number. 16-bit is 65536 colors without any additional channels, but if you want to add an alpha channel, then 16 would be divided into [[RGB]] and alpha, which can be done a number of ways. For example, if you use 4 bits each for Red, Green, and Blue, then that leaves 4 bits for the alpha, so you have 16 colors for alpha. Or else 5 bits for each RGB means you have 1-bit for alpha, which is only 2 colors, but gives you more RGB colors to work with. It's a trade-off.
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== Bitmap ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Another name for a [[Texture|texture]].
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== Blending (Inverted) ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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When using [[TextureBlending|texture blending]], invert is when the light map inverts the [[RGB]] color of the base map. See also [[AdditiveBlending|additive blending]], [[AverageBlending|average blending]], [[BlendSubtract|subtractive blending]].
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== Blending (Subtractive) ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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When using [[TextureBlending|texture blending]], subtractive is when the colors of the [[DarkMap|dark map]] are subtracted from the colors of the [[BaseMap|base map]] to make a new darker texture. See also [[AdditiveBlending|additive blending]], [[AverageBlending|average blending]], [[BlendInvert|invert blending]].
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== Bounding Box ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A simplified approximation of the volume of a model, used most commonly for [[CollisionDetection|collision detection]]. Although it is commonly a box, it can be any shape. If not a box, it is more properly called a bounding volume.
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== BPC ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Bits Per Channel is another term for [[BitDepth|bitdepth]].
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== BPP ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Bits Per Pixel is almost the same as a [[BitDepth|bitdepth]]. But BPP is only the [[RGB]] component. It tells us how many colors are used in the RGB part of the image. For example, 16BPP = 216 = 2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2x2 = 65536 colors. The term bitdepth is more commonly used to denote what a game or application needs to function properly, which is the number of colors plus other channels like alpha. For example, if you say there is a 32bit bitdepth, this doesn't mean 232 colors. Instead, this means a 24bit RGB space + an 8bit alpha. To make things clearer, instead of the term bitdepth people are starting to use the term BPC, or Bits Per Channel.
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== BSP ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Binary Space Partition. A BSP tree subdivides 3D space with 2D planes to help speed up [[Sorting|sorting]]. It is sometimes used for additional purposes like [[CollisionDetection|collision detection]].
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= '''C''' =
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== Camera ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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In [[RT3D]], this is another word for the [[Viewer|viewer's]] view into the scene.
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== Channel Packing ==
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See [[ChannelPacking]]
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== Child ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Any [[Node|node]] in a [[Hierarchy|hierarchy]] that is attached to another node.
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== Chroma Key ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A [[BitDepth|1-bit]] transparency. In the film & video worlds, chromakey means to "key" to a particular color and make it transparent, like with bluescreening. In [[RT3D]], it means to make a particular [[RGB]] color in a texture 100% transparent, and all other colors 100% opaque. It's a cheap way to get transparency, since you don't need an [[AlphaChannel|alpha channel]]. However it means the transparency has a rough pixelized edge. A good color to designate for chromakey is one that you won't be using elsewhere in your textures, like magenta (1,0,1). Whatever the color you decide, all textures in the engine will use that same color for chromakey. See also [[Sprite|sprites]].
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== Clipping Plane ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A clipping plane throws away [[Polygon|polygons]] on the other side of it. This can dramatically speed up the [[Rendering|rendering]] of a polygonal scene, since unneeded polygons can take up valuable processing power. See also [[BackfaceCulling|backface culling]], [[Frustrum|frustum]], [[HiddenSurfaceRemoval|hidden surface removal]].
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== Collision Detection ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A constant drain on a 3D game engine, the systematic check to see if any intersections are occuring between significant polygons, such as my player's sword and your player's neck. See also [[BoundingBox|bounding box]].
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== Color Depth ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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The number of colors in an image, same as [[BitDepth|bit depth]].
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== Color Models ==
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See [[ColorModels]]
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== Compile ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Programmers have to convert source code, written in a high-level language such as C, into object code (typically Assembly language), so that a microprocessor can run the program. This is similar to the process artists go thru in order to create game art-- I create textures in Photoshop, saving them in PSD format, then I convert them down to the appropriate bitmap format for use in the game. However, it can take a long time for programmers to compile their code, like overnight or a couple days, depending on the complexity.
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== Concave ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A certain kind of shape, opposite of convex. If any two points can be connectd by a line that goes outside the shape, the shape is concave. The letter C is a concave shape. An easy way to remember concave is thinking of it being like a hill with a cave in it. If you put a straight line between a gold nugget in the floor and a diamond in the ceiling, the line is not inside the hill anymore (it is in the air not in the earth). The word concave means "with a cavity."
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== Convex ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A certain kind of shape, without indentations, opposite of concave. If any two points can be connected by a line that goes outside the shape, the shape is not convex. The letter O is a convex shape. An uncut watermelon is a convex shape-- anytime you draw a straight line between two seeds, you're still inside the watermelon.
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== Coordinate ==
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See [[Coordinate]]
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== Coplanar ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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When two or more things are on the same 2D plane. If two pieces of paper are sitting side by side flat on your desk, they're coplanar.
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= '''D''' =
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== Dark Map ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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The texture used to [[Blend|blend]] with the [[BaseMap|base map]] to create a new, darker texture. See also [[Light map|light map]], [[SubtractiveBlending|subtractive blending]].
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== Declination ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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One of the two rotational axes used by the astronomers, and also by [[RT3D]] programmers. Declination is similar to [[Pitch|pitch]]-- if you nod your head "yes," you are rotating in declination. Most [[Engines|engines]] count from +90 to -90 degrees, starting out pointed straight up, turning downwards and ending pointed straight down. Straight forward is 0 degrees. Sometimes mathematicians measure it in radians, a unit of measure that comes from the magical number Pi. A radian equals Pi/180, but most people use degrees instead of radians.
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Astronomers use only two axes (the other axis is [[Azimuth|azimuth]]), because they do not use [[Roll|roll]]. This is similar to the way most [[FPS|FPS]] games work. It is preferred in some RT3D engines because it keeps the [[Viewer|viewer]] level no matter where it points. But this system has a drawback because it suffers from [[GimbalLock|gimbal lock]] whenever the viewer points either straight up or straight down.
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== Draw Order ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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The back-to-front order of [[Polygon|polygons]] drawing on top of one another, with the last to draw being the one that appears to be in front of the others. Usually, [[AlphaChannel|alpha channeled]] polygons should draw later, and closer polygons should draw later. Some programs allow you to place polygons under a [[Node|node]] so the [[Engine|engine]] will draw them in a certain order, left to right, and assure that alpha polys draw last.
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== Draw Rate ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Same as [[FillRate|fill rate]].
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== Dynamic Lighting ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Lighting, but updated every frame, as you'd want for moving lights and for characters that move amongst various light sources. Perhaps the lighting itself animates color and intensity.
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= '''E''' =
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== Engine ==
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The heart of the [[RT3D]] program, the engine is what converts all the game assets into a display on your computer screen. It is a software program written by one or more programmers, and has several components that need to work in harmony to display the game at a nice [[FrameRate|frame rate]]. [what are the components?]
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== Environment Map ==
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A method of [[Texturing|texture]] mapping that simulates the look of reflections in a shiny surface, like chrome or glass. The texture is usually painted to look like an all-encompassing world. In this example, the sky texture on the far right has been used on the donut. This can also be used to fake the look of specular highlights on an object, by painting only the light sources into the environment texture.
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Also called reflection mapping.
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A common method is a [[Cube map]] which maps six textures of a panorama to the faces of a cube.
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== Expression ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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A formula used to create procedural animation, often using mathematical elements like sine and cosine. Expressions can automate and greatly speed up repetitive animation tasks. Also sometimes called scripting.
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= '''F''' =
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== Face ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Another name for a [[Polygon|polygon]]. This term can be used specifically for a single [[Triangle|triangle]] or more generally for a multi-triangle polygon.
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== Fan ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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One of the ways that [[Triangle|triangles]] can be created to reuse [[Vertex|vertex]] [[Transfors|transforms]], and thus save [[Memory|memory]] and also [[Render|render]] time. Once you have drawn one triangle, the next triangle only needs to load the [[Coordinate|coordinate]] of one additional vertex in order to draw itself, because it re-uses the vertex transforms that were already performed on its neighbor triangle. But your [[Engine|engine]] must specifically support fans for it to work. See also [[Strip|strips]].
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== Fill Rate ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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The number of [[Texture|textured]] and [[Shading|shaded]] [[Pixel|pixels]] that an [[Engine|engine]] can [[Render|render]] over a given time period, usually measured in millions of pixels per second (MPPS). [How does this affect RT3D artists? Need to elaborate]
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See also [[FrameRate|frame rate]]
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== Fog ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Objects in the [[RT3D]] scene become more and more the same color as they recede into the distance. This is similar to real fog, except that RT3D fog is a perfect gradient, whereas real fog usually has some wispy uneveness to it. Heavy fogging in RT3D is used to disguise the far [[ClippingPlane|clipping plane]], as shown at right in the game Turok. In fact, you can see the polygons being clipped, just behind the monster's head. This fog isn't done well-- it should completely hide the clipping plane. Besides, heavy-fogging is generally looked down upon, because it shortens the distance you can see enemies.
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In some of the newer [[Engine|engines]], volume fog and ground fog are supported, where the fog is localized to a specific area, which is closer to the behavior of real fog.
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== Forward Kinematics ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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FK for short. A method of manipulating objects in a [[Hierarchy|hierarchy]] where the animator positions objects in the hierarchy and the program calculates the positions and orientations of the objects below it in the hierarchy. See also [[InverseKinematics|inverse kinematics]].
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== FOV ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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Field Of View is a traditional photography term, meaning the area that the [[Viewer|viewer]] can see in the RT3D scene. The FOV is usually defined by its width in degrees. A typical FOV in [[RT3D]] games is around 45 degrees. A really wide FOV like 90 degrees allows the viewer a panoramic view, but can seriously lower the frame rate because so many polygons are visible. It also produces distortions in the scene, where objects in the center of the view appear to be farther away than they are, and objects at the periphery appear to be really close. The trick in RT3D is to lower the FOV as much as possible without impairing too much of the view. See also [[Frustrum|frustrum]].
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== FPS ==
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See [[FPS]]
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== Frame Buffer ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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The frame buffer is what a video board uses to store the images it [[Render|renders]], while it is rendering them. When it is done rendering, it sends the completed frame to your monitor and starts building the next frame. The amount of frame buffer [[Memory|memory]] a video board has directly impacts which resolutions it can support-- the more memory you've got the higher resolutions your board will support and at higher [[BitDepth|bit depths]].
+
 
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The frame buffer usually stores 2 frames: one is being calculated by the 3D accelerator while the other one is being sent to the monitor. This is called double buffering and delivers smooth animation. For 640x480 resolution with 16 bits color we require 640x480x16x2 = 9830400 bits of memory or about 1.2 Mb of Frame Buffer memory.
+
 
+
== Frame Rate ==
+
 
+
The framerate measures how fast the game is being rendered.
+
 
+
Generally if the framerate is lower than 30 frames per second, then the game will seem "choppy" and unresponsive.
+
 
+
See [[PolygonCount#Articles_About_Performance]].
+
 
+
== Frustrum ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A term from traditional photography, it is the shape that the [[Viewer|viewer's]] [[FOV]] creates when projected into the scene. This pyramidal shape defines the limits of what the viewer can see, so it is used to calculate [[ClippingPlane|clipping]], [[CollisionDectection|collisions]], fog, etc.
+
 
+
Imagine your eyeball stuck to the top of a clear pyramid, looking straight down into it. The top-most point that is scratching against your eyeball is the near end of the frustum. You cannot see the side faces of the pyramid, because they are perpendicular to your eyeball, but you can see everything within the pyramid. In photography, this pyramid is infinitely tall, because in theory you can see to infinity.
+
 
+
In RT3D, the frustum is not infinitely long. It has near and far clipping planes to help reduce polygon counts. The near clipping plane cuts off the very top of the pyramid, while the far clipping plane defines the base of the pyramid.
+
 
+
== FUBAR ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Fucked Up Beyond All Repair, or more politely Fowled Up Beyond All Recognition.
+
 
+
== Full Bright ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
When a color or a [[Texture|texture]] is drawn at its full intensity, unaffected by real-time lighting. Some [[RT3D]] [[Engines|engines]] do not have lighting or [[DynamicLighting|dynamic lighting]], so all textures are drawn full-bright. Sometimes also called fully-emissive, or self-illuminated.
+
 
+
= '''G''' =
+
 
+
== Geometry ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
This term is commonly used to define all [[Polygon|polygonal]] objects in a game. Also called mesh.
+
 
+
== Gimbal Lock ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
The rotation of an object seems to "stick," when it is rotated all the way down or all the way up. This can also happen with the [[Camera|camera]] itself. It happens because the mathematics in rotational systems like Euler angles cannot make a consistent rotation solution when they point straight up or straight down. The Quake games avoid gimbal lock by not allowing the viewer to look straight up or straight down.
+
 
+
To solve gimbal lock, either avoid looking directly down or directly up, or else use a different rotational system.
+
 
+
== Gouraud Shading ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A [[Shading|shading]] method, named after the French mathematician Henri Gouraud (pronounced on-REE grrr-ROW). Each [[Triangle|triangle's]] color is created by [[Interpolating|interpolating]] the [[Vertex|vertex]] colors that are located at each corner of the triangle. In other words, the interior of each triangle is a smooth gradient between the colors of the three vertices. The vertex colors are usually created dynamically from the lighting in the scene, although the artist can instead assign specific colors to each vertex.
+
 
+
Gouraud shading has a smooth look, but can look strange when using polygons with solid colors on them.
+
 
+
= '''H''' =
+
 
+
== Height Map ==
+
 
+
A grayscale texture used as a displacement map to define the topography of the polygons. Usually the brighter pixels make higher elevations, and the darker pixels make lower elevations, and 50% gray pixels make no change. Often the [[AlphaChannel|alpha channel]] of an object's texture is used for the height map. [[Voxel|Voxel]] landscapes often use height maps.
+
 
+
== Hidden Surface Removal ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
See also [[BackfaceCulling|backface culling]], [[ClippingPlane|clipping plane]].
+
 
+
== Hierarchy ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A list of things that are linked together in a certain order. A family tree is used as an analogy to help describe the parts of the hierarchy. However, the hierarchy tree traditionally hangs upside down, to make it easier to read and to use. At the top of the tree is the root, and all things are attached to it. Every object in the hierarchy is called a node. The connections between the nodes are called links. A node linked to another is called a child, and the node the child is linked to is called a parent. A parent can have multiple children, but in this tree each child can have only one parent. The nodes that have no children are called leaves, because they're at the ends of the tree.
+
 
+
Each node can trace its lineage up through the tree, back though parents to the root. If you choose any parent, then you can call its collection of children a branch of the tree.
+
 
+
= '''I'''=
+
 
+
== Interpolation ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
It is the process of determining from two or more values what the "in-between" values should be. Interpolation is used with animation and with [[Texture|textures]], particularly [[TextureFiltering|texture filtering]].
+
 
+
== Inverse Kinematics ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
IK for short. A method of manipulating [[Hierarchies|hierarchies]] where the animator positions objects at the end of the hierarchy and the program calculates the positions and orientations of all other objects in the hierarchy. With properly setup IK, you can quickly animate complex motions. For instance, the bones in the arm of a character are linked in a hierarchy, then limits are set for the rotations of the bones, then the animator can move the hand, and the IK will figure out what the rest of the arm needs to do.
+
 
+
IK is used in RT3D to allow characters to interact with the environment in a more realistic manner, like when a player directs a character to pick an object off the floor. See also [[ForwardKinematics|forward kinematics]].
+
 
+
= '''L'''=
+
 
+
== Light Map ==
+
 
+
See [[Light Map]]
+
 
+
== LOD ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Stands for [[LevelOfDetail|Level Of Detail]]. This is used primarily to reduce polygon count in a scene, especially when you have multiple characters like in a sports game. A lower polygon count model of the character is used for when the character is far away, and when the character gets closer, it switches to a different model with a higher polygon count. This example is only two LODs, but you can have multiple LODs to help you reduce the "popping" effect that makes it obvious the character is switching from a low-count to a high-count model. You want to have the least polygons on screen at a time, so there are other factors besides distance... speed it is moving, viewer's anticipated focus, importance of character.
+
 
+
= '''M''' =
+
 
+
== Map ==
+
 
+
== Mapping ==
+
 
+
== Material ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A set of parameters that determine the color, shininess, smoothness, etc. of a surface. Usually a material is used to assign a [[Texture|texture]] to a [[Face|face]].
+
 
+
== Memory ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
One of the most fundamental [[RT3D]] concepts, memory is the amount of quickly-retrievable space available for assets currently being used by the game. This includes textures, geometry, geometry animation, interface artwork, AI, etc. RT3D applications use a number of different types of memory, but RT3D artists are mostly concerned with [[RAM]]. The biggest question for the artist is how much RAM is available for textures. (Need to cross-reference RAM, Video mem, Texture Mem, etc.).
+
 
+
== Mesh ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Another word for [[Geometry|geometry]]. See also [[Polygon|polygon]].
+
 
+
== Mip Mapping ==
+
 
+
See [[Mip Mapping]]
+
 
+
== Morph ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
An animated 2D or 3D effect that makes one [[Texture|texture]] or [[Geometry|geometry]] smoothly transform into another. Often used to do 3D facial animation. Comes from the word metamorphosis.
+
 
+
== Multi-Texture ==
+
 
+
See [[MultiTexture]]
+
 
+
= '''N''' =
+
 
+
== N-gon ==
+
 
+
Another word for a [[Polygon|polygon]]. The letter N stands for any whole number. In other words, any polygon with "n" number of sides.
+
 
+
== Nadir ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
The point directly below you in space. The opposite of [[Zenith|zenith]].
+
 
+
== NDO ==
+
 
+
See [[NDO]]
+
 
+
== Node ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Each single object in a [[Hierarchy|hierarchy]] is called a node. Without nodes there can be no hierarchy-- there's nothing to link together. Also called a bead.
+
 
+
== NURBS ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Short for Non-Uniform Rational B-Spline, a mathematical representation of a 3-dimensional object. Most CAD/CAM applications support NURBS, which can be used to represent analytic shapes, such as cones, as well as free-form shapes, such as car bodies. NURBS are not used much for [[RT3D]] because they create a large number of [[Polygon|polygons]], but it is an available modeling method in some artist 3D packages.
+
 
+
= '''O''' =
+
 
+
== Opacity ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Opacity (opaque) is the opposite of transparency (transparent). Opacity can mean that something is partially transparent-- because you can change an object's opacity using a setting in its [[Material|material]]. But the word opaque usually means totally non-transparent.
+
 
+
== Overdraw ==
+
 
+
Overdraw means a screen pixel is being drawn more than once. Overdraw can increase the [[FillRate|fill rate]], how fast the game can render each frame, slowing down the [[FrameRate|frame rate]]. Re-rendering each pixel more than once is usually a waste of processing time.
+
 
+
Overdraw should be avoided whenever possible, however it is required if triangles are partially [[Transparency map|transparent]], because the surfaces must be mixed together to create the final screen pixel.
+
 
+
Overdraw is usually caused by multiple triangles being drawn over each other, for example with particle effects or tree foliage.
+
 
+
= '''P''' =
+
 
+
== Parent ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Any [[Node|node]] in a [[Hierarchy|hierarchy]] that has another node attached to it.
+
 
+
== PBR ==
+
 
+
See [[PBR]]
+
 
+
== Phong ==
+
 
+
See [[Phong]]
+
 
+
== Pitch ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
If you nod your head "yes," this is pitch in action. One of the three rotational axes commonly used to describe the rotation of an object. The term comes from aviation. Most [[RT3D]] [[Engine|engines]] count from +90 to -90 degrees, starting out pointed straight up, turning downwards and ending pointed straight down. Straight forward is 0 degrees. See also [[Roll|roll]], [[Yaw|yaw]], [[RotationalAxis|rotational axis]].
+
 
+
== Pixel ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Short for picture element. There are two common meanings: the pixels that [[Texture|textures]], or [[Bitmap|bitmaps]] are made of, and the pixels that are [[Render|rendered]] onto your computer screen by the [[Engine|engine]].
+
 
+
You tell each pixel where to go and what color to be by giving it two sets of values. For position, it needs [[Category:TextureCoordinates|coordinates]] (coords), called X and Y, usually written as (X,Y). The X coord is horizontal, the Y coord is vertical, and the numbers usually start at (0,0) in the upper-left corner. For the pixel's color it needs the three [[RGB]] color values, written as (R,G,B). These go from 0 (no color) to 1 (full-on color). For instance, green is (0,1,0). Most paint programs use 0 to 255, but 0 to 1 is easier for [[RT3D]] programmers to use. See also [[Texel|texel]].
+
 
+
== Polygon ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A series of [[Vertex|vertices]] that define a plane in 3D space. Most [[RT3D]] [[Engine|engines]] use polygons to make the surfaces of their objects. A polygon can be made up of 1 or more [[Triangle|triangles]], like a [[Quad|quad]] is made of two triangles, a pentagon is made of three triangles, etc. Some engines support multiple polygon types, but triangles are the most common. Some people use the term polygon to specify a quad, others use it when talking about triangles. Polygons are also called polys, or sometimes [[N-gon|n-gons]]. See also [[Face|faces]], [[Fan|fans]], [[Quad|quads]], [[Strip|strips]].
+
 
+
== Polygons ==
+
 
+
See [[Polygons]]
+
 
+
== Power of 2 ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
The numbers 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, etc. Usually this is used to describe the [[Texture|texture]] sizes that an [[Engine|engine]] requires in order to make good use of video [[Memory|memory]]. An example texture size would be 32x64. Textures that are not in powers of 2, like 33x24, would probably cause the engine to run slower or maybe crash.
+
 
+
= '''Q''' =
+
 
+
== Quad ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A four-sided polygon. Some [[RT3D]] engines use quads instead of triangular polygons because it saves NEED DEFINITION, because a square polygon stored as a quad stores only four vertices, whereas a square created with two triangles means transforming six vertices instead of only four. The artist should keep the vertices of the quad [[Coplanar|coplanar]], or rendering weirdness can happen, because the quad is divided into two triangles at render time. The internal edge between the two tris is determined arbitrarily, so it could look like a ridge or a valley.
+
 
+
= '''R''' =
+
 
+
== RAM ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Random Access Memory is the place to store game assets that are used most often, because RAM can be read really quick. See also [[Memory|memory]].
+
 
+
== Ray Cast ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Projecting an imaginary line from each screen pixel into the RT3D scene, bouncing from the surface it meets up to the light source...(needs to be flesh out)
+
 
+
== Raytrace ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A way of rendering a 3D image which follows the path of every ray of light. Non-interactive, it works best for rendering images which have many reflective surfaces, like steel balls.
+
 
+
== Real-time ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
When events happen at a rate consistent with events in the outside world. Specifically for [[RT3D]] artists, if the [[Engine|engine]] [[Render|renders]] a scene at a slow rate, the illusion of movement can be lost. To retain an interactive, immersive experience, the engine must react to your input and present you with new updated images immediately. If you are getting smooth feedback, it is real-time. [[FPS|Frames per second]] is the measurement of how fast the frames are being rendered.
+
 
+
The engine must perform many complex operations, and the effect of that effort is the amount of time needed to draw each frame. By necessity, we must take shortcuts in the image quality to speed up the rendering. However, no single image remains visible for very long. If you carefully choose speedup techniques so that the errors are small, then they will not be noticed during the moment when the picture is visible.
+
 
+
== Rendering ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
The transformation of 3D data by the [[Engine|engine]] into 2D frames for display on your computer screen (or TV). For [[RT3D]] artists, this specifically refers to [[RealTime|real-time]] rendering, where the individual frames must be drawn as fast as possible.
+
 
+
== RGB Colorspace ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Red, Green, and Blue are the primary colors used to display [[RT3D]] on your computer screen. All the colors you see are combinations of those three. RGB space is the place where any transformations are made to colors, whether reducing the [[BitDepth|bit depth]], [[TextureBlending|texture blending]], [[Render|rendering]], etc.
+
 
+
In RT3D, we use numerical RGB values to describe the colors in each [[Texture|texture]]. These numbers can be a drag to use, but they give you more control of the medium, especially when you want to tweak something like texture blending.
+
 
+
In texture programs like Photoshop, the RGB values for texture colors are in an [[BitDepth|8bit]] scale which is usually 0 to 255. But RT3D programmers prefer a simpler scale, representing all colors with the values 0 to 1. For instance, red is (1,0,0), white is (1,1,1), black is (0,0,0), brown is (.4,.21,0) etc. The decimal places can go out as far as the programmer decides it needs to, but usually just two decimal places (.00) is precise enough. The less decimals, the smaller the file sizes will be, which conserves precious [[Memory|memory]]. This was the root of the Y2K problem, but we don't need to get into that... heh heh.
+
 
+
See also [[AdditiveColorModel|additive color model]].
+
 
+
== Roll ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
If you tilt your head to read the spine of a book, this is roll in action. One of the three rotational axes commonly used to describe the rotation of an object. The term comes from aviation. Most [[RT3D]] [[Engine|engines]] count from -180 to 180 degrees, starting out rolled upside-down all the way to the left, turning clockwise and ending up rolled upside-down all the way to the right. Straight forward with no roll is 0 degrees. See also [[Pitch|pitch]], [[Yaw|yaw]], [[RotationalAxis|rotational axis]].
+
 
+
== Rotational Axis ==
+
 
+
See [[RotationalAxis]]
+
 
+
== RT3D ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Real-Time 3-Dimensional graphics. Artwork that is rendered in real-time on a computer, usually with interactive input from the [[Viewer|viewer]].
+
 
+
= '''S''' =
+
 
+
== Shading ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
The process of assigning values to the surfaces of objects, which control the way the surface interacts with light in the scene to create the object's color, specularity (highlights), reflective qualities, transparency, and refraction. Shading mimics the material that an object is supposed to be made of-- wood, plastic, metal, etc. The art of shading is understanding how the range of parameters will interact to create realistic or else imaginative effects. Also sometimes called surfacing.
+
 
+
See also [[GouraudShading|Gouraud shading]], [[Phong|Phong shading]].
+
 
+
== Smoothing Groups ==
+
 
+
See [[Smoothing Groups]]
+
 
+
== Sorting ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Keeps track of which onscreen elements can be viewed and which are hidden behind other objects.
+
 
+
See also [[Z-Buffer|z-buffering]].
+
 
+
== Spline ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A curved line, defined by mathematical functions.
+
 
+
See also [[B-Spline|b-spline]], [[BezierSpline|bezier spline]].
+
 
+
== Storyboard ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A visualization of the animation that breaks it down into a sequence of sketches that illustrate the key movements.
+
 
+
== Strip ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
One of the ways that [[Triangle|triangles]] can be created to reuse [[Vertex|vertex]] [[Transforms|transforms]], and thus save [[Memory|memory]] and also [[Render|render]] time. Once you have drawn one triangle, the next triangle only needs to load the [[Coordinate|coordinate]] of one additional vertex in order to draw itself, because it re-uses the vertex transforms that were already performed on its neighbor triangle. But your [[Engine|engine]] must specifically support strips for it to work. Sometimes also called tri-strips. See also [[Fan|fans]].
+
 
+
== Substance Designer ==
+
 
+
See [[Substance Designer]]
+
 
+
= '''T''' =
+
 
+
== Texel ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Each [[Pixel|pixel]] of a [[Texture|texture]] during the time the texture is being processed by the [[RT3D]] [[Engine|engine]]. After the engine performs calculations to project the texture onto [[Polygon|polygons]], the texture pixels are transformed into texels. Then the engine [[Render|renders]] the scene, and at that point it transforms those texels into screen pixels.
+
 
+
The distiction between texels and pixels is important in defining how the engine transforms textures. First they're texture pixels, then they're texels, then they're finally screen pixels.
+
 
+
== Texture Atlas ==
+
 
+
See [[Texture Atlas]]
+
 
+
== Texture Compression ==
+
 
+
The technique used by new and upcoming 3d accelerator cards to use larger [[Texture|textures]] in the same amount of texture [[Memory|memory]] and graphics bus bandwidth. With texture compression, you can often use textures as big as 2048x2048 in your real-time scenes. Two examples of texture compression methods are S3TC and VQTC.
+
 
+
== Texture Coordinates ==
+
 
+
See [[Texture Coordinates]]
+
 
+
== Texture Filtering ==
+
 
+
This term is used whenever a texture is altered by the [[Engine|engine]]: to eliminate jagged edges and shimmering [[Pixel|pixels]] whenever [[Texel|texels]] are larger or smaller than screen pixels (see [[Aliasing|aliasing]]), or to perform [[textureBlending|texture blending]] to blend two textures together.
+
 
+
See also [[AnisotropicFiltering|anisotropic filtering]], [[MipMap|MIP mapping]].
+
 
+
== Texture Types ==
+
 
+
See [[Texture Types]]
+
 
+
== Texture Blending ==
+
 
+
See [[TextureBlending]]
+
 
+
== Tiling ==
+
 
+
See [[Tiling]]
+
 
+
== Transforms ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
What the [[Engine|engine]] does to objects and [[Vertex|vertices]] in order to place them in the [[RT3D]] scene. transforms are position, rotation, and scale.
+
 
+
== Transparency ==
+
 
+
See [[Transparency]]
+
 
+
== Triangle ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A triangular [[Polygon|polygon]]. Often shortened to tri or tris.
+
 
+
== Trilinear Filtering ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A method of [[MipMap|MIP mapping]]. Since the [[Texel|texels]] are almost always larger or smaller than the screen [[Pixel|pixels]], it finds two MIP-maps whose texels are closest in size to the screen pixels: one with larger texels, and the other with smaller texels. For each of the two MIP-maps, it then [[Interpolation|interpolates]] the four texels that are the nearest to each screen pixel. In the final step it averages between the two MIP results to render the final screen pixel.
+
 
+
Trilinear mip-mapping requires more than twice the computational cost of [[BilinearFiltering|bilinear filtering]], but the textures are filtered very nicely, with a clean result.
+
 
+
= '''U''' =
+
 
+
== UV Coordinates ==
+
 
+
Texture coordinates, also called UVs, are pairs of numbers stored in the vertices of a mesh. These are often used to stretch a 2D texture onto a 3D mesh.
+
 
+
See [[TextureCoordinates]] for more information.
+
 
+
= '''V''' =
+
 
+
== Vertex ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A point in 3D space that doesn't really do anything unless it is connected to a [[Polygon|polygon]] or a line. For more than one vertex, you call 'em vertices.
+
 
+
== Viewer ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
You, the user of the [[RT3D]] application, looking at the 3D scene through your computer screen. The viewer looks into the RT3D world from a vantage point, which acts something like a camera, to frame your view. Most of the engine's calculations are tailored to make the world look great from that particular view. See also [[Frustrum|frustum]].
+
 
+
Viewer may also refer to a version of the RT3D engine that is used to preview artwork while it is being created.
+
 
+
== Voxel ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
Shorthand for volume [[Pixel|pixel]]. Voxels have traditionally been used to create 3D renderings of complex volumes, like meterological cloud formations or scanned human tissues.
+
 
+
In these visualizations, the voxels are used similar to the way grains of sand are used to make a sand castle-- the volume is dense with thousands of tiny voxels, and each is in the shape of a little cube or tetrahedron. Each voxel is assigned an [[Opacity|opacity]] percentage, and often a color, which makes it easier to examine the underlying structure of the volume. This kind of voxel is usually called a "true" 3D voxel. These voxels require a lot of [[Memory|memory]] and computational time, so they are usually pre-rendered, or else display at a relatively slow [[FrameRate|frame rate]].
+
 
+
In games, voxels have been optimized to run in real-time, most often by using [[Billboard|billboards]] instead of cubes, and by only displaying the voxels on the surfaces of objects. This optimization is called a [[2.5D]] voxel. Typically these voxels have no transparency, and are made large enough to always overlap one another, which usually gives a slightly rough look to the surface. [http://www.novalogic.com/ NovaLogic's] game Comanche Maximum Overkill was the first to use this technique, creating landscapes that were remarkably detailed at the time. In their latest incarnation of the franchise, they've been able to greatly increase the number of voxels, thereby reducing the jaggedness of the landscape surface.
+
 
+
Using voxels, whether 2.5D or 3D, an object can be displayed with great amount of detail, independent of the complexity of the object, dependent instead on the number of voxels used to represent it.
+
 
+
= '''W''' =
+
 
+
== Wavelet ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
A mathematical formula often used for image and video compression. [http://www.radgametools.com/ Bink] uses wavelets, along with other compression techniques, as an update to its popular Smacker video codec.
+
 
+
= '''Y''' =
+
 
+
== Yaw ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
+
 
+
If you shake your head "no," this is yaw in action. One of the three rotational axes commonly used to describe the rotation of an object. The term comes from aviation. Most [[RT3D]] [[Engine|engines]] count from 0 to 360 degrees, starting out pointed straight forward, turning clockwise and ending pointed straight forwards again. Straight forward is both 0 and 360 degrees. See also [[Pitch|pitch]], [[Roll|roll]], [[RotationalAxis|rotational axis]].
+
 
+
= '''Z''' =
+
 
+
== Z-Buffer ==
+
 
+
{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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An algorithm used in 3-D graphics to determine which objects, or parts of objects, are visible and which are hidden behind other objects. With Z-buffering, the graphics processor stores the Z-axis value of each pixel in a special area of memory called the Z-buffer. Different objects can have the same x- and y-coordinate values, but with different z-coordinate values. The object with the lowest z-coordinate value is in front of the other objects, and therefore that's the one that's displayed.
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An alternate algorithm for hiding objects behind other objects is called Z-sorting. The Z-sorting algorithm simply displays all objects serially, starting with those objects furthest back (with the largest Z-axis values). The Z-sorting algorithm does not require a Z-buffer, but it is slow and does not render intersecting objects correctly.
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== Z-Fighting ==
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See [[Z-Fighting]]
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== Zenith ==
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{{:[[OutOfDate]]}}
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The point directly above you in space. The opposite of [[Nadir|nadir]].
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Latest revision as of 19:55, 14 February 2015

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