Forum: Bryce


Subject: Where are the Boolean Operations in Bryce 6.3?

Plutom opened this issue on Nov 18, 2010 · 8 posts


Plutom posted Thu, 18 November 2010 at 8:30 PM

Hi folks, with earlier versions of Bryce, Boolean operations were easy to find. However, I can't find the Boolean substraction, intersection, unions.

Also how do you change from mesh view to opaque view without rendering the scene? 

Thanks in advance folks.  Jan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

k


IO4 posted Fri, 19 November 2010 at 12:22 AM

The Bryce 6 artists guides contains all the info you need regarding Booleans (for some reason I can't find the equivalent in the Bryce 7 guide). Here's the link:

http://documentation.daz3d.com/bryce/Bryce6ArtistGuide.htm

The Boolean operation is found by clicking on the attributes icon which is the 'A' in the list which appears with any primitive you create (see attached jpg). They are

Neutral

Positive

Negative

Intersect

Beginners tutorials for Bryce

Bryce Arena


IO4 posted Fri, 19 November 2010 at 12:30 AM

> Quote - Also how do you change from mesh view to opaque view without rendering the scene? 

Click on , and hold down your mouse, on the display modes icon which is a little wireframe cube on the right hand side panel. With your mouse still held down you can scroll through the different modes and then release your mouse to select it.

I hope that helps and was what you were looking for.

Beginners tutorials for Bryce

Bryce Arena


Plutom posted Fri, 19 November 2010 at 8:26 AM

Good Morning IO4, thanks for the info.  I still have problems subtracting say a cylinder from the Sphere.  I positioned the cylinder so that it merges with the sphere, select the cylinder and click on Negative with transfer of Negative (I assume that any material on the cylinder will be transfered to the sphere).  However I don't get the cylinder cutout.  Jan 

IO4 posted Fri, 19 November 2010 at 10:39 AM

Hi Plutom. I'll try and explain it as clearly as I can - it's easier to do these things than explain them sometimes:)

  1. Create your sphere - set it's attribute to Positive

  2. Create the cyclinder - set it's attribute to Negative

  3. Now ensure you have both objects selected (If you still have the cylinder selected press shift+left click on the sphere so that both are now selected).  

  4. You will now see there is a 'G' in the little list next to the objects. This is the grouping icon. Click that and it will disapper as both objects are now grouped together. If you have placed your cylinder inside the sphere you should see a hole and the cylinder not visible when you render the scene. But you must make sure that the height of the cylinder is greater than the height of the sphere to see the hole (as you have done in your image above).

You can select cylinder on it's own from the pallete at the bottom of the screen, and when you move it around in range of the sphere you will see the boolean effect change depending on how much of the cylinder intersects with the sphere.

Don't forget the boolean effect will only be visible when you render the scene. You will not see it in any of the display modes.

I hope that helps:)

Beginners tutorials for Bryce

Bryce Arena


Plutom posted Fri, 19 November 2010 at 11:29 AM

Thanks IL04, that did it!  Perfect tutorial, straight forward and simple!  The 3DWorld's magazine's Bryce 6.3 didn't come with a .PDF.  However, the interface is not bad at all except for those tiny icons that don't relate well to old eyes that need glasses.  Jan


IO4 posted Fri, 19 November 2010 at 11:34 AM

Great, I'm glad it worked for you. Do check the manual via the link I gave as it has more information about Booleans. Did you know for example that you can convert whatever you have made from booleans into a mesh? But you have to be careful how you group your booleans if the object requires alot of them or has alot of groups. But what you see if you get it right is a 'C' in that little list. Click that it becomes a mesh, so there are no longer any individual parts to select.

There is also a free version of Bryce 7 (PLE version) over at the Daz site if you are interested.

Beginners tutorials for Bryce

Bryce Arena


Plutom posted Fri, 19 November 2010 at 11:49 AM

Hi IO4,  Bryce, Vue, Poser, and Carrara have basically the same format ie the Romance languages so getting refamiliar with Bryce won't be that difficult.  What's painfully difficult is ZBrush.  Sort of like studying the Romance language and up pops Chinese that the only thing that ZBrush has in common with my other software programs is Cntrl Z that works most of the time-except when it doesn't.  Jan