While Boolean is not guaranteed to work if the operands are not
volume-enclosing (technically: PWN - piecewise constant winding number),
it needs to do something in those cases. This change makes
more cases meet user expectations in T84493, T64544, T83403,
T82642 (though very slow on that one).
The original new boolean code used "generalized winding number"
for this fallback; replaced this with code that uses raycasting.
Raycasting would have been faster, but for unfortunately also
switchd to per-triangle tests rather than per-patch tests since
it is possible (e.g., with Suzanne) to have patches that are
both inside and outside the other shape. That can make it much
slower in some cases, sadly.
Resolves modernize-raw-string-literal Clang-Tidy warning
The way warning works is it suggests to use raw literal when
overhead of having escape characters is higher than the overhead
of having raw literal syntax (talking about code size overhead).
This means that the warning will not trigger for "foo\"bar".
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10322
This patch fixes a bug introduced in
rB74188e65028d268af887ab2140e4253087410c1e.
The commit incorrectly moved the declaration and intialization of the
variable `pwr` inside the loop. Since the value was originally modified
in each iteration based on it's previous value and `pwHL` through
`pwr *= pwHL`, this change in scope was wrong. It resetted the value in
each iteration. This patch moves the declaration of `pwr` outside the
loop again.
Reviewed By: JacquesLucke
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10258
The unused result was reported by Clang-Tidy 11.
It does make sense to check for the failed mmap() calls rather than
quietly suppress errors.
In this change failures are reported, but application execution is
not aborted. This is a bit disputable, but it feels to be a safer
thing to do now.
It is unclear how to test the code though, as we don't have any
tools in-place to simulate read errors.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10223
BLI_strncpy_wchar_from_utf8 made the assumption that
wchar_t is UTF-32 bit regardless of environment, while
this holds true on both mac and linux, on windows
wchar_t is actually actually UTF-16.
This resulted in the upper 16 bits being dropped from
from some string conversions and prevented blender
from starting when installed in a path with unicode
code-points over 0xffff.
There was also a fair bit of code duplication between
BLI_strncpy_wchar_from_utf8 and BLI_str_utf8_as_unicode_and_size
this change essentially removes all logic from
BLI_strncpy_wchar_from_utf8 and calls the right function
for the right environment.
Reviewed By: brecht , Robert Guetzkow
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D9822
Use transform matrices instead of loc, rot, scale variables to store instance transforms.
Reviewed By: JacquesLucke
Differential Revision: http://developer.blender.org/D10211
Important lesson to be learned here, leaving comments
is great and in the moment, they usually make sense.
Many months later they may not quite make as much sense
any more and time will have to be spend to figure out
what was meant, all of this would have been averted with a
better comment.
The zero terminator in this case, I can find no evidence
of it being used or relied on at any point. It does however
break GTests's `EXPECT_EXIT` macro that stops looking in
the output as soon as it sees the zts and doesn't end up
looking at the actual assert text being thrown. Which in
turn makes the`fcurve_active_keyframe`test fail when run
in debug mode on windows.
* tbb::blocked_range moved to a different namespace and since the fix is
non-trivial, remove some unused code that used this.
* Task group priorities are no longer supported. It's unclear if they are
useful at all right now and even set correctly, for now all tasks are equal
priority with TBB 2021.
Previously float2 was converted to float3 by implicitly converting to a
float pointer first, which was then passed to the float3 constructor.
This leads to uninitialized memory in the z component of the new float3.
Instead of submitting tons of tiny IO syscalls, we can speed things up
significantly by `mmap`ing the .blend file into virtual memory and directly
accessing it.
In my local testing, this speeds up loading the Dweebs file with all its
linked files from 19sec to 10sec (on Linux).
As far as I can see, this should be supported on Linux, OSX and BSD.
For Windows, a second code path uses `CreateFileMapping` and
`MapViewOfFile` to achieve the same result.
Reviewed By: mont29, brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8246
Some of these conversions are arbitrary to some degree.
However, the user experience is better when at least something
happens when converting between types, instead of just getting
zeros. I left out a few conversions that I wasn't sure about yet.
I also added conversions for float2.
Use approximate geodesic distance computatiom that crosses through triangles
rather than only along edges. Using only edges would give artifacts already
on a simple grid.
Fixes T78752, T35590, T43393, T53602
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10068
Currently, the random attribute node doesn't work well for most
workflows because for any change in the input data it outputs
completely different results.
This patch adds an implicit seed attribute input to the node, referred
to by "id". The attribute is hashed for each element using the CPPType
system's hash method, meaning the attribute can have any data type.
Supporting any data type is also important so any attribute can be
copied into the "id" attribute and used as a seed.
The "id" attribute is an example of a "reserved name" attribute,
meaning attributes with this name can be used implicitly by nodes like
the random attribute node. Although it makes it a bit more difficult
to dig deeper, using the name implicitly rather than exposing it as an
input should make the system more accessible and predictable.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D9832
This patch does two things:
* Introduce a Seed to the random distribution method
* Bring in a new distribution method for the point scattering node
Patch Review: https://developer.blender.org/D9787
Note: This commit doesn't not handle doversion. Which means that users
need to manually update their files that were using the Point Distribute
node and reconnect inputs to the "Maximum Density" socket.
Original patch by Sebastian Parborg, with changes to not rely on the cy
libraries and overall cleanup.
Patch review by Jacques Lucke, besides help with the new "heap" system
that was required for this algorithm.
Based on Cem Yuksel. 2015. Sample Elimination for Generating Poisson Disk
Sample. Sets. Computer Graphics Forum 34, 2 (May 2015), 25-32
http://www.cemyuksel.com/research/sampleelimination/
Casting pointers from one type to another does change the
value of the pointer in some cases. Therefore, casting a span
that contains pointers of one type to a span that contains
pointers of another type, is not generally safe. In practice, this
issue mainly comes up when dealing with classes that have a
vtable.
There are some special cases that are still allowed. For example,
adding const to the pointer does not change the address.
Also, casting to a void pointer is fine.
In cases where implicit conversion is disabled, but one is sure
that the cast is valid, an explicit call of `span.cast<NewType>()`
can be used.
This data structure adds priority queue functionality to an existing array.
The underlying array is not changed. Instead, the priority queue maintains
indices into the original array.
Changing priorities of elements dynamically is supported, but the priority
queue has to be informed of such changes.
This data structure is needed for D9787.