Anthony Appleyard opened this issue on Jan 14, 2000 ยท 9 posts
Anthony Appleyard posted Fri, 14 January 2000 at 2:38 PM
Anthony Appleyard posted Fri, 14 January 2000 at 2:58 PM
And all the segments involved are set to non-curve & non-bend.
Anthony Appleyard posted Fri, 14 January 2000 at 3:50 PM
In DXF format every face is separate and has its own copies of the coordinates of its corners; has no vertex list like OBJ and 3DS formats have. (That is why translating an object to DXF and back to OBJ shuffles the vertexes and messes up morph target vertex matching.) So likely when Poser translates DXF into OBJ, each face's line's vertex numbers point to its own set of entries in the vertex list, and every face is a separate small "object". DXF format is not very clever for 3D graphics. It was intended to describe engineering drawings, and its instruction 3DFACE that defines a 3D mesh polygon is merely an aside.
nerd posted Sat, 15 January 2000 at 2:01 AM Forum Moderator
What I've been doing is adding some extra vertices the the edges I want sharp. Very narrow faces next to the faces I want to be flat. The Little faces will absorb all the smoothing leaving my edges sharp. The blades on the Ice Skates I just made are done that way. So poser will leave the flat stuff flat.
Anthony Appleyard posted Sat, 15 January 2000 at 10:43 AM
In the case of my suction-dredger-sub:- (1) Finally I unwelded the end faces of the suction tube segments from the inside and outside surfaces. (2) Those things clean up ALL the rubbish that gets into the sea round, if you try poaching shellfish round here. (3) But still, why is the rounding angle limit set so fierce? As I said, in Bryce in my experience everything that should be smoothed, is smoothed, even if I set maximum smoothing angle to 80deg to avoid smoothing right-angles, or even if I set it to 50deg to avoid smoothing 60deg edges on hexagonal nuts and bolt heads in the model.
Rorschach posted Sun, 16 January 2000 at 7:05 PM
Look into the discussion of the "room problem" Maz and I are having. My solution is like yours: detach perpendicular faces AND assign them different materials so Poser will make hard edges. Maz is working with chamfer objects and discovering why poser's own cube prop shows clean edges. I think he'll discover an easier way.
Anthony Appleyard posted Mon, 17 January 2000 at 4:26 AM
In the Poser 3 "box" prop, each face is unwelded from the others, and also each face is 10*10 = 100 square polygons, not one only. The Poser 3 "square" prop is 2 coincident square faces, not welded, anticlockwise in opposite directions, and those faces are thus:- fo 1/1 2/3 3/4 4/2 fo 8/2 7/4 6/3 5/1 where "fo" is an obsolete code = "face outline" which now means the same as "f".
Rorschach posted Mon, 17 January 2000 at 10:09 AM
Exporting Poser's box props and then transforming them is not always an option since any boolean operation "destroys" the box. I think the detaching faces and assigning materials method is the only one working so far.
Anthony Appleyard posted Mon, 17 January 2000 at 10:34 AM
The telescopic tubes of my sub have these 4 Poser materisls: suctiontube (outsides), suctiontubeinside (insides), suctiontubeedge (front edges), suct_backedge (back edges), and yet Poser's renderer rounded those edges, until I unwelded them. Compare my Bryce render of the sub returning to dock, with all right-angle edges left sharp as I intended. - It seems that 3D mesh booleaning doesn't like objects which are not (complete bags of polygons with no loose edges).