NLA strips support using the keyframe values in a variety of ways:
adding, subtracting, multiplying, linearly mixing with the result
of strips located below in the stack. This is intended for layering
tweaks on top of a base animation.
However, when inserting keyframes into such strips, it simply inserts
the final value of the property, irrespective of these settings. This
in fact makes the feature nearly useless.
To fix this it is necessary to evaluate the NLA stack below the
edited strip and correctly compute the raw key that would produce
the intended final value, according to the mode and influence.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D3927
There is a new `bpy.app.timers` api.
For more details, look in the Python API documentation.
Reviewers: campbellbarton
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D3994
That kind of implicit includes should really only be done when totally,
absolutely necessary, and ideally only with rather simple 'second-level'
headers.
Otherwise not being explicit with includes always end up biting in
unexpected ways...
Note that this is turned off by default and must be enabled at build time with the CMake WITH_CYCLES_EMBREE flag.
Embree must be built as a static library with ray masking turned on, the `make deps` scripts have been updated accordingly.
There, Embree is off by default too and must be enabled with the WITH_EMBREE flag.
Using Embree allows for much faster rendering of deformation motion blur while reducing the memory footprint.
TODO: GPU implementation, deduplication of data, leveraging more of Embrees features (e.g. tessellation cache).
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D3682
This is needed because some RNA functions differentiate a NULL 'char *'
argument from an empty string.
Previously a NULL argument could be passed when the C definition
defined the default as NULL and the argument wasn't passed
which is a fairly hidden way of handling things.
Now strings use `PROP_NEVER_NULL` by default
which can be cleared for function arguments that allow None -> NULL.
Only tag relations update when new f-curve was allocated. This solves
possible too slow keyframe insertion when doing character animation,
but still does proper relation update when new ID component became
animated.
That feature will not be ready (or at least, not tested enough) to be
officially part of 2.80 beta. So we disable it by default, hidding it
behind a startup option (`--enable-static-override`), and a python
app var (`bpy.app.use_static_override`).
That way, people who really want to play with it can do it easily, while
not exposing/enabling non-production-ready feature by default.
Note that underlying override code remains active, i.e. files we do have
overridden data-blocks will be loaded correctly according to static override.
This allows gizmo groups to store properties in the tool.
This makes sense for gizmo options which only control gizmo display and
don't control operator execution.
Unlike similar kinds of properties,
this isn't accessible via the gizmo-group-type instance.
For now the it's only stored in the workspace tool as can be done for
operator properties, so each instance doesn't have different settings
which would be confusing from a user perspective and complicate access
from the top-bar.
Later we could add gizmo-group properties if needed.
Terms get/set don't make much sense when casting values.
Name macros so the conversion is obvious,
use common prefix for easier completion.
- GET_INT_FROM_POINTER -> POINTER_AS_INT
- SET_INT_IN_POINTER -> POINTER_FROM_INT
- GET_UINT_FROM_POINTER -> POINTER_AS_UINT
- SET_UINT_IN_POINTER -> POINTER_FROM_UINT