After some testing of the behaviour of this stuff, it became clear that the current
pressure handling here isn't very useful. The initial point would invariably get a
low pressure value (due to the way that the initial tap needs time to "take"), while
the end of the stroke suffers from similar issues (i.e. when the pen is released).
Meanwhile, the line thickness would flicker while drawing the stroke, as the endpoint
pressure varied.
So, until we find a better way, all straight line segments are now drawn without
pressure sensitivity.
This is currently a requirement of OpenSudiv and original orientation code
was depending on this quite a lot.
This makes mesh conversion and comparison slower but solves some crashes.
With some trickery it could be optimized and become closer to original
performance.
Probably Campbell has some nice ideas here as well :)
Use first material slot for until multiple materials are fully supported.
Also respect setMaterial()'s return value to avoid drawing unnecessary
geometry.
Make it so CCGDM reports 0 number of geometry when it uses GPU backend for
drawing. This screws up a bit statistics in info header and requires to have
some special handle of CCGDM in the drawing code, but makes it so non of the
areas will try to access non-existing geometry.
Mirror modifier was reporting that it depends on geometry of the object
used for mirror center which is incorrect -- only object matrix is needed
for modifier evaluation.
This commit makes sure Linux and Windows buildbots are using OpenSubdiv
and also enables OpenSubdiv by default on Windows.
OSX is kept disabled still, this is due to OpenGL restrictions which are
not solved in any way yet.
Linux is defaults to OpenSubdiv disabled because it needs precompiled
library.
The documentation could be found there:
http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/OpenSubdiv
Recent changes to kernel broke compilation of the kernels again, need some
other kind of solution for this issue.
Don't have much time for this currently, but will be addressed before the
release.
Meanwhile it's better to have some buildbot builds instead of totally failing
one.
The issue was caused by the following construction:
def = env['SOMETHING']
defs.append('SOMETHING_MORE')
Since first assignment was actually referencing environment option it was totally
polluted hawing weird and wonderful side effects on all other areas of Blender.
The old method:
The "old" method used the node dimensions to get a number of lines and checked if they intersect with the node link. Issue with this is that only a small part of the actual node surface is checked, making the method a bit unpredictable or unresponsive.
The new method:
The new method checks for intersections within the entire node surface. If multiple links are intersected, the node with the smallest distance from the *upper left corner* to the link is chosen.
Reviewed by @campbellbarton (tm)