2006-07-18 23:21:48 +08:00
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/* -*-c++-*- OpenSceneGraph - Copyright (C) 1998-2006 Robert Osfield
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2003-01-22 00:45:36 +08:00
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*
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* This library is open source and may be redistributed and/or modified under
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* the terms of the OpenSceneGraph Public License (OSGPL) version 0.0 or
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* (at your option) any later version. The full license is in LICENSE file
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* included with this distribution, and on the openscenegraph.org website.
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*
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* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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* OpenSceneGraph Public License for more details.
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*/
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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//osgParticle - Copyright (C) 2002 Marco Jez
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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#ifndef OSGPARTICLE_SECTOR_PLACER
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#define OSGPARTICLE_SECTOR_PLACER 1
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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#include <osgParticle/CenteredPlacer>
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#include <osgParticle/Particle>
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#include <osgParticle/range>
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#include <osg/CopyOp>
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#include <osg/Object>
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#include <osg/Vec3>
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#include <osg/Math>
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namespace osgParticle
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{
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/** A sector-shaped particle placer.
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This placer sets the initial position of incoming particle by choosing a random position
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within a circular sector; this sector is defined by three parameters: a <I>center point</I>,
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which is inherited directly from <CODE>osgParticle::CenteredPlacer</CODE>, a range of values
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for <I>radius</I>, and a range of values for the <I>central angle</I> (sometimes called <B>phi</B>).
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*/
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class SectorPlacer: public CenteredPlacer {
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public:
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inline SectorPlacer();
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline SectorPlacer(const SectorPlacer& copy, const osg::CopyOp& copyop = osg::CopyOp::SHALLOW_COPY);
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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/// Get the range of possible values for radius.
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline const rangef& getRadiusRange() const;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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/// Set the range of possible values for radius.
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline void setRadiusRange(const rangef& r);
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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/// Set the range of possible values for radius.
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inline void setRadiusRange(float r1, float r2);
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/// Get the range of possible values for the central angle.
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline const rangef& getPhiRange() const;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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/// Set the range of possible values for the central angle.
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline void setPhiRange(const rangef& r);
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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/// Set the range of possible values for the central angle.
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inline void setPhiRange(float r1, float r2);
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2002-06-06 21:25:36 +08:00
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META_Object(osgParticle, SectorPlacer);
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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/// Place a particle. Do not call it manually.
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline void place(Particle* P) const;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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Form Wang Rui, "An initial GLSL shader support of rendering particles. Only the POINT
type is supported at present. The attached osgparticleshader.cpp will
show how it works. It can also be placed in the examples folder. But I
just wonder how this example co-exists with another two (osgparticle
and osgparticleeffect)?
Member variables in Particle, including _alive, _current_size and
_current_alpha, are now merged into one Vec3 variable. Then we can
make use of the set...Pointer() methods to treat them as vertex
attribtues in GLSL. User interfaces are not changed.
Additional methods of ParticleSystem are introduced, including
setDefaultAttributesUsingShaders(), setSortMode() and
setVisibilityDistance(). You can see how they work in
osgparticleshader.cpp.
Additional user-defined particle type is introduced. Set the particle
type to USER and attach a drawable to the template. Be careful because
of possible huge memory consumption. It is highly suggested to use
display lists here.
The ParticleSystemUpdater can accepts ParticleSystem objects as child
drawables now. I myself think it is a little simpler in structure,
than creating a new geode for each particle system. Of course, the
latter is still compatible, and can be used to transform entire
particles in the world.
New particle operators: bounce, sink, damping, orbit and explosion.
The bounce and sink opeartors both use a concept of domains, and can
simulate a very basic collision of particles and objects.
New composite placer. It contains a set of placers and emit particles
from them randomly. The added virtual method size() of each placer
will help determine the probability of generating.
New virtual method operateParticles() for the Operator class. It
actually calls operate() for each particle, but can be overrode to use
speedup techniques like SSE, or even shaders in the future.
Partly fix a floating error of 'delta time' in emitter, program and
updaters. Previously they keep the _t0 variable seperately and compute
different copies of dt by themseleves, which makes some operators,
especially the BounceOperator, work incorrectly (because the dt in
operators and updaters are slightly different). Now a getDeltaTime()
method is maintained in ParticleSystem, and will return the unique dt
value (passing by reference) for use. This makes thing better, but
still very few unexpected behavours at present...
All dotosg and serialzier wrappers for functionalities above are provided.
...
According to some simple tests, the new shader support is slightly
efficient than ordinary glBegin()/end(). That means, I haven't got a
big improvement at present. I think the bottlenack here seems to be
the cull traversal time. Because operators go through the particle
list again and again (for example, the fountain in the shader example
requires 4 operators working all the time).
A really ideal solution here is to implement the particle operators in
shaders, too, and copy the results back to particle attributes. The
concept of GPGPU is good for implementing this. But in my opinion, the
Camera class seems to be too heavy for realizing such functionality in
a particle system. Myabe a light-weight ComputeDrawable class is
enough for receiving data as textures and outputting the results to
the FBO render buffer. What do you think then?
The floating error of emitters
(http://lists.openscenegraph.org/pipermail/osg-users-openscenegraph.org/2009-May/028435.html)
is not solved this time. But what I think is worth testing is that we
could directly compute the node path from the emitter to the particle
system rather than multiplying the worldToLocal and LocalToWorld
matrices. I'll try this idea later.
"
2010-09-14 23:47:29 +08:00
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/// return the area of the sector
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2010-09-15 17:24:45 +08:00
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inline float volume() const;
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Form Wang Rui, "An initial GLSL shader support of rendering particles. Only the POINT
type is supported at present. The attached osgparticleshader.cpp will
show how it works. It can also be placed in the examples folder. But I
just wonder how this example co-exists with another two (osgparticle
and osgparticleeffect)?
Member variables in Particle, including _alive, _current_size and
_current_alpha, are now merged into one Vec3 variable. Then we can
make use of the set...Pointer() methods to treat them as vertex
attribtues in GLSL. User interfaces are not changed.
Additional methods of ParticleSystem are introduced, including
setDefaultAttributesUsingShaders(), setSortMode() and
setVisibilityDistance(). You can see how they work in
osgparticleshader.cpp.
Additional user-defined particle type is introduced. Set the particle
type to USER and attach a drawable to the template. Be careful because
of possible huge memory consumption. It is highly suggested to use
display lists here.
The ParticleSystemUpdater can accepts ParticleSystem objects as child
drawables now. I myself think it is a little simpler in structure,
than creating a new geode for each particle system. Of course, the
latter is still compatible, and can be used to transform entire
particles in the world.
New particle operators: bounce, sink, damping, orbit and explosion.
The bounce and sink opeartors both use a concept of domains, and can
simulate a very basic collision of particles and objects.
New composite placer. It contains a set of placers and emit particles
from them randomly. The added virtual method size() of each placer
will help determine the probability of generating.
New virtual method operateParticles() for the Operator class. It
actually calls operate() for each particle, but can be overrode to use
speedup techniques like SSE, or even shaders in the future.
Partly fix a floating error of 'delta time' in emitter, program and
updaters. Previously they keep the _t0 variable seperately and compute
different copies of dt by themseleves, which makes some operators,
especially the BounceOperator, work incorrectly (because the dt in
operators and updaters are slightly different). Now a getDeltaTime()
method is maintained in ParticleSystem, and will return the unique dt
value (passing by reference) for use. This makes thing better, but
still very few unexpected behavours at present...
All dotosg and serialzier wrappers for functionalities above are provided.
...
According to some simple tests, the new shader support is slightly
efficient than ordinary glBegin()/end(). That means, I haven't got a
big improvement at present. I think the bottlenack here seems to be
the cull traversal time. Because operators go through the particle
list again and again (for example, the fountain in the shader example
requires 4 operators working all the time).
A really ideal solution here is to implement the particle operators in
shaders, too, and copy the results back to particle attributes. The
concept of GPGPU is good for implementing this. But in my opinion, the
Camera class seems to be too heavy for realizing such functionality in
a particle system. Myabe a light-weight ComputeDrawable class is
enough for receiving data as textures and outputting the results to
the FBO render buffer. What do you think then?
The floating error of emitters
(http://lists.openscenegraph.org/pipermail/osg-users-openscenegraph.org/2009-May/028435.html)
is not solved this time. But what I think is worth testing is that we
could directly compute the node path from the emitter to the particle
system rather than multiplying the worldToLocal and LocalToWorld
matrices. I'll try this idea later.
"
2010-09-14 23:47:29 +08:00
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2005-08-25 22:12:08 +08:00
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/// return the control position
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inline osg::Vec3 getControlPosition() const;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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protected:
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virtual ~SectorPlacer() {}
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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SectorPlacer& operator=(const SectorPlacer&) { return *this; }
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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private:
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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rangef _rad_range;
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rangef _phi_range;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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};
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// INLINE FUNCTIONS
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inline SectorPlacer::SectorPlacer()
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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: CenteredPlacer(), _rad_range(0, 1), _phi_range(0, osg::PI*2)
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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{
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}
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline SectorPlacer::SectorPlacer(const SectorPlacer& copy, const osg::CopyOp& copyop)
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: CenteredPlacer(copy, copyop), _rad_range(copy._rad_range), _phi_range(copy._phi_range)
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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{
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}
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline const rangef& SectorPlacer::getRadiusRange() const
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{
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return _rad_range;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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}
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline const rangef& SectorPlacer::getPhiRange() const
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{
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return _phi_range;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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}
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline void SectorPlacer::setRadiusRange(const rangef& r)
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{
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_rad_range = r;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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}
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inline void SectorPlacer::setRadiusRange(float r1, float r2)
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{
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_rad_range.minimum = r1;
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_rad_range.maximum = r2;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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}
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline void SectorPlacer::setPhiRange(const rangef& r)
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{
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_phi_range = r;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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}
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inline void SectorPlacer::setPhiRange(float r1, float r2)
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{
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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_phi_range.minimum = r1;
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_phi_range.maximum = r2;
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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}
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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inline void SectorPlacer::place(Particle* P) const
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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{
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2005-04-29 17:47:57 +08:00
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float rad = _rad_range.get_random_sqrtf();
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float phi = _phi_range.get_random();
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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osg::Vec3 pos(
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getCenter().x() + rad * cosf(phi),
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getCenter().y() + rad * sinf(phi),
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getCenter().z());
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P->setPosition(pos);
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}
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Form Wang Rui, "An initial GLSL shader support of rendering particles. Only the POINT
type is supported at present. The attached osgparticleshader.cpp will
show how it works. It can also be placed in the examples folder. But I
just wonder how this example co-exists with another two (osgparticle
and osgparticleeffect)?
Member variables in Particle, including _alive, _current_size and
_current_alpha, are now merged into one Vec3 variable. Then we can
make use of the set...Pointer() methods to treat them as vertex
attribtues in GLSL. User interfaces are not changed.
Additional methods of ParticleSystem are introduced, including
setDefaultAttributesUsingShaders(), setSortMode() and
setVisibilityDistance(). You can see how they work in
osgparticleshader.cpp.
Additional user-defined particle type is introduced. Set the particle
type to USER and attach a drawable to the template. Be careful because
of possible huge memory consumption. It is highly suggested to use
display lists here.
The ParticleSystemUpdater can accepts ParticleSystem objects as child
drawables now. I myself think it is a little simpler in structure,
than creating a new geode for each particle system. Of course, the
latter is still compatible, and can be used to transform entire
particles in the world.
New particle operators: bounce, sink, damping, orbit and explosion.
The bounce and sink opeartors both use a concept of domains, and can
simulate a very basic collision of particles and objects.
New composite placer. It contains a set of placers and emit particles
from them randomly. The added virtual method size() of each placer
will help determine the probability of generating.
New virtual method operateParticles() for the Operator class. It
actually calls operate() for each particle, but can be overrode to use
speedup techniques like SSE, or even shaders in the future.
Partly fix a floating error of 'delta time' in emitter, program and
updaters. Previously they keep the _t0 variable seperately and compute
different copies of dt by themseleves, which makes some operators,
especially the BounceOperator, work incorrectly (because the dt in
operators and updaters are slightly different). Now a getDeltaTime()
method is maintained in ParticleSystem, and will return the unique dt
value (passing by reference) for use. This makes thing better, but
still very few unexpected behavours at present...
All dotosg and serialzier wrappers for functionalities above are provided.
...
According to some simple tests, the new shader support is slightly
efficient than ordinary glBegin()/end(). That means, I haven't got a
big improvement at present. I think the bottlenack here seems to be
the cull traversal time. Because operators go through the particle
list again and again (for example, the fountain in the shader example
requires 4 operators working all the time).
A really ideal solution here is to implement the particle operators in
shaders, too, and copy the results back to particle attributes. The
concept of GPGPU is good for implementing this. But in my opinion, the
Camera class seems to be too heavy for realizing such functionality in
a particle system. Myabe a light-weight ComputeDrawable class is
enough for receiving data as textures and outputting the results to
the FBO render buffer. What do you think then?
The floating error of emitters
(http://lists.openscenegraph.org/pipermail/osg-users-openscenegraph.org/2009-May/028435.html)
is not solved this time. But what I think is worth testing is that we
could directly compute the node path from the emitter to the particle
system rather than multiplying the worldToLocal and LocalToWorld
matrices. I'll try this idea later.
"
2010-09-14 23:47:29 +08:00
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2010-09-15 17:24:45 +08:00
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inline float SectorPlacer::volume() const
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Form Wang Rui, "An initial GLSL shader support of rendering particles. Only the POINT
type is supported at present. The attached osgparticleshader.cpp will
show how it works. It can also be placed in the examples folder. But I
just wonder how this example co-exists with another two (osgparticle
and osgparticleeffect)?
Member variables in Particle, including _alive, _current_size and
_current_alpha, are now merged into one Vec3 variable. Then we can
make use of the set...Pointer() methods to treat them as vertex
attribtues in GLSL. User interfaces are not changed.
Additional methods of ParticleSystem are introduced, including
setDefaultAttributesUsingShaders(), setSortMode() and
setVisibilityDistance(). You can see how they work in
osgparticleshader.cpp.
Additional user-defined particle type is introduced. Set the particle
type to USER and attach a drawable to the template. Be careful because
of possible huge memory consumption. It is highly suggested to use
display lists here.
The ParticleSystemUpdater can accepts ParticleSystem objects as child
drawables now. I myself think it is a little simpler in structure,
than creating a new geode for each particle system. Of course, the
latter is still compatible, and can be used to transform entire
particles in the world.
New particle operators: bounce, sink, damping, orbit and explosion.
The bounce and sink opeartors both use a concept of domains, and can
simulate a very basic collision of particles and objects.
New composite placer. It contains a set of placers and emit particles
from them randomly. The added virtual method size() of each placer
will help determine the probability of generating.
New virtual method operateParticles() for the Operator class. It
actually calls operate() for each particle, but can be overrode to use
speedup techniques like SSE, or even shaders in the future.
Partly fix a floating error of 'delta time' in emitter, program and
updaters. Previously they keep the _t0 variable seperately and compute
different copies of dt by themseleves, which makes some operators,
especially the BounceOperator, work incorrectly (because the dt in
operators and updaters are slightly different). Now a getDeltaTime()
method is maintained in ParticleSystem, and will return the unique dt
value (passing by reference) for use. This makes thing better, but
still very few unexpected behavours at present...
All dotosg and serialzier wrappers for functionalities above are provided.
...
According to some simple tests, the new shader support is slightly
efficient than ordinary glBegin()/end(). That means, I haven't got a
big improvement at present. I think the bottlenack here seems to be
the cull traversal time. Because operators go through the particle
list again and again (for example, the fountain in the shader example
requires 4 operators working all the time).
A really ideal solution here is to implement the particle operators in
shaders, too, and copy the results back to particle attributes. The
concept of GPGPU is good for implementing this. But in my opinion, the
Camera class seems to be too heavy for realizing such functionality in
a particle system. Myabe a light-weight ComputeDrawable class is
enough for receiving data as textures and outputting the results to
the FBO render buffer. What do you think then?
The floating error of emitters
(http://lists.openscenegraph.org/pipermail/osg-users-openscenegraph.org/2009-May/028435.html)
is not solved this time. But what I think is worth testing is that we
could directly compute the node path from the emitter to the particle
system rather than multiplying the worldToLocal and LocalToWorld
matrices. I'll try this idea later.
"
2010-09-14 23:47:29 +08:00
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{
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return 0.5f * (_phi_range.maximum - _phi_range.minimum) *
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(_rad_range.maximum*_rad_range.maximum - _rad_range.minimum*_rad_range.minimum);
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}
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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2005-08-25 22:12:08 +08:00
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inline osg::Vec3 SectorPlacer::getControlPosition() const
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{
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return getCenter();
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}
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2002-06-05 20:44:55 +08:00
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}
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#endif
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