Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
it's both a problem of polygon sorting and a native problem of 3D rendering.
plane and cube are not really plane and cube they are 6 plane*2 triangle for
cube and
1 plane*2 triangle.
When you create a cube or plane by default you create to triangle per faces.
a 3D motor has to choose which triangle is behind or in front of each others.
depending on the angle you put the plane a triangle can sit at the same time in
front
or behind a cube's triangle. Papervision can't never chose the correct sorting,
neither any 3D motor even if it's coded in C++.
to fix that you have too way:
1 increase the number of triangle of your plane or cube, which can consumme a
lot of
memory
2 create a DAE with 3DsMax or blender that integrate the plane, and do it in the
manner that any triangle can hit each other...
The fact is that papervision is not really good a sorting triangle but first,
your
trouble comes NOT from papervision (I have had the same) and secondly there is
method
provided to fix sorting problem (wich will NOT solve your trouble) but it's
processor
and memory consuming. And you have to be realist papervision is written in
flash not
in C++ and we face limitations that NOT depend on papervision, it's a flash
limitation : Flash is interpreted.
Original comment by damien.miras
on 18 May 2010 at 10:57
Yes I know :0)
But ideally at render time you would sort the scene using something like a BSP
tree and split the triangles
where the intersection occurred. Then there would be no overlapping polygons.
In my particular case the whole scene is generated in code not from imported
models. (In case you haven't
noticed I'm the same guy with the hit detection memory leak issue - a very work
in progress version can be
found here: http://www.xind.co.uk/wip/ShedVis/)
For instance if two triangles went through each other then the scene would
arbitrarily split the two triangles
into say 9 or more depending on where the intersection occurred. Then the
centroids would never be out of
sequence.
I wrote a 3D engine in AS2 that used the same sorting engine that you use now.
Lazyness prevented me from
doing a better job :0)
The main reason for me bringing the issue up was that I've just used
papervision for a commerical project and
this issue has put me a month over budget. That's not your fault of course - I
should have done better
research on papervision before I started - I'm just saying that you're probably
killing your own adoption rate
because of this fundamental issue. Other than that you guys have doe a great
job!
Original comment by d...@dev01.co.uk
on 18 May 2010 at 3:39
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
d...@dev01.co.uk
on 6 Apr 2010 at 11:13