Correct misspellings in code comments of "vertex" and "vertices".
See D13932 for more details.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13932
Reviewed by Harley Acheson
This fix contains two parts. There was one critical mistake where
order of two indices was wrong when removing constraint planes from
the array. The other changes are improvements to the used thresholds
to keep everything numerically stable.
Differential Revision: http://developer.blender.org/D14183
In some cases, the normal edit modifier calculated the normals on one
mesh with the "ensure" functions, then copied the mesh and retrieved
the layers "for write" on the copy. Since 59343ee162, normal
layers are never copied, and normals are allocated with malloc instead
of calloc, so the mutable memory was uninitialized.
Fix by calculating normals on the correct mesh, and also add a warning
to the "for write" functions in the header.
These features are complicated to support on GPU and hardly compatible
with subdivision in the first place. In the future, with T68891 and
T68893, subdivision and custom smooth shading will be separate workflows.
For now, and to better prepare for this future (although long term
plan), we should discourage workflows mixing subdivision and custom
smooth normals, and as such, this disables GPU subdivision when
autosmoothing or custom split normals are used.
This also adds a message in the modifier's UI to indicate that GPU
subdivision will be disabled if autosmooth or custom split normals are
used on the mesh.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14194
These were only set in two places. One was related to "tessellated loop
normal", and the other derived corner normals. The values were never
checked though, after 59343ee162. The handling of dirty face
corner normals is clearly problematic, but in the future it should be
handled like the normal layers on the other domains instead.
Ref D14154, T95839
Limit the min and max of the IDProperty for the node group input
from 0 to infinity, and the soft min and max between 0 and 1.
Thanks to @PratikPB2123 for investigation.
The constraints solver is now able to handle more cases correctly.
Also the behavior of the boundary fixes is slightly changed if
the constraints thickness mode is used.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14143
The modifier supports arithmetic operations, like Add or Multiply,
but for some reason omits Minimum and Maximum. They are similarly
simple and useful math functions and should be supported.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14164
It's better not to expose the details of where the dirty flags are
stored to every place that wants to know if the normals are dirty.
Some of these places are relics from before vertex normals were
computed lazily anyway, so this is more of an incrememtal cleanup.
This will make part of the fix for T95839 simpler.
This commit renames enums related the "Curve" object type and ID type
to add `_LEGACY` to the end. The idea is to make our aspirations clearer
in the code and to avoid ambiguities between `CURVE` and `CURVES`.
Ref T95355
To summarize for the record, the plans are:
- In the short/medium term, replace the `Curve` object data type with
`Curves`
- In the longer term (no immediate plans), use a proper data block for
3D text and surfaces.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14114
For the attribute search button, the tooltip was missing
if the input socket type has attribute toggle activated.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14142
StringGrid has been deprecated in openvdb 9.0.0 and will be removed soon
Reviewed By: Brecht
Differential Revision: http://developer.blender.org/D14133
The crash is caused as we did not check that the RNA pointer is null
before trying to use it. This moves the existing checks from the
modifier panels into the template functions so the logic is a bit
centralized.
Use a shorter/simpler license convention, stops the header taking so
much space.
Follow the SPDX license specification: https://spdx.org/licenses
- C/C++/objc/objc++
- Python
- Shell Scripts
- CMake, GNUmakefile
While most of the source tree has been included
- `./extern/` was left out.
- `./intern/cycles` & `./intern/atomic` are also excluded because they
use different header conventions.
doc/license/SPDX-license-identifiers.txt has been added to list SPDX all
used identifiers.
See P2788 for the script that automated these edits.
Reviewed By: brecht, mont29, sergey
Ref D14069
Complex Solidify creates edge bevel weights on the rim if the
according vertex has some vertex bevel weight. If there are no
edge bevel weights, they were left disabled even if vertex bevel
weights are used.
Based on discussions from T95355 and T94193, the plan is to use
the name "Curves" to describe the data-block container for multiple
curves. Eventually this will replace the existing "Curve" data-block.
However, it will be a while before the curve data-block can be replaced
so in order to distinguish the two curve types in the UI, "Hair Curves"
will be used, but eventually changed back to "Curves".
This patch renames "hair-related" files, functions, types, and variable
names to this convention. A deep rename is preferred to keep code
consistent and to avoid any "hair" terminology from leaking, since the
new data-block is meant for all curve types, not just hair use cases.
The downside of this naming is that the difference between "Curve"
and "Curves" has become important. That was considered during
design discussons and deemed acceptable, especially given the
non-permanent nature of the somewhat common conflict.
Some points of interest:
- All DNA compatibility is lost, just like rBf59767ff9729.
- I renamed `ID_HA` to `ID_CV` so there is no complete mismatch.
- `hair_curves` is used where necessary to distinguish from the
existing "curves" plural.
- I didn't rename any of the cycles/rendering code function names,
since that is also used by the old hair particle system.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14007
Technically, this can't be relied upon in the long term. It worked more or
less accidentally before. It was broken by a previous fix accidentally. I mainly
bring it back because rBa985f558a6eb16cd6f0 was not expected to have
this side effect.
Note, this change can result in slower performance. Writing to a vertex
groups is less efficient than using a generic attribute.
The issue was happening with a specific file where the ID management
code was not fully copying all modifiers because of the extra check
in the `BKE_object_support_modifier_type_check()`.
While it is arguable that copy-on-write should be a 1:1 copy there is
no real need to maintain the per-modifier pointer to its original.
Use its SessionUUID to perform lookup in the original datablock.
Downside of this approach is that it is a linear lookup instead of
direct pointer access, but the upside is that there is less pointers
to manage and that the file with unsupported modifiers does behave
correct without any asserts.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13993
This refactors how output attributes are computed in the geometry
nodes modifier. Previously, all output attributes were computed one
after the other. Every attribute was stored on the geometry directly
after computing it. The issue was that other output attributes might
depend on the already overwritten attributes, leading to unexpected
behavior.
The solution is to compute all output attributes first before changing the
geometry. Under specific circumstances, this refactor can result in a speedup,
because output attributes on the same domain are evaluated together now.
Overwriting existing might have become a bit slower, because we write the
attribute into new buffer instead of using the existing one.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13983
The geometry nodes modifier currently always adds a dependency
relation from the evaluated geometry to the object transform. However,
that can be avoided unless there is a collection or object info node in
"Relative" mode.
In order to avoid requiring dependency graph relations updates often
when editing a node tree, this patch doesn't check if the node is muted
or if the data-block sockets are empty before adding the dependency.
Fixes T95265
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13973
This is similar to e032ca2e25 which removed the
callback for volumes. Now that we have geometry sets, there is
no need to define a callback for every data type, and this wasn't
used. Procedural curves/hair editing will use nodes rather than new
modifier types anyway.
Previously, macros were ifdefed using the cmake option `WITH_INTERNATIONAL`
However, the is unnecessary as withen the functions themselves have checks for building without internationalization.
This also means that many `add_definitions(-DWITH_INTERNATIONAL)` are also unnecessary.
Reviewed By: mont29, LazyDodo
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13929
As part of the project of converting `MVert` into `float3`
(more details in T93602), this is an easy step, since it
is only locally used runtime data. In the six places it was
used, the flag was replaced by a local bitmap.
By itself this change has no benefits other than making some
code slightly simpler. It only really matters when the other
flags are removed and it can be removed from `MVert`
along with the bevel weight.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13878
The vertex and face normals from the input mesh
were used to calculate the normals on the result,
which could cause a crash because the result should
be about twice as large.
Also remove an unnecessary dirty tag, since it is handled
automatically when creating a new mesh or in the case
of the mirror modifier, when calculating the new custom
face corner normals.
This commit moves the weld modifier code to the geometry module
so that it can be used in the "Merge by Distance" geometry node
from ec1b0c2014. The "All" mode is exposed in the node
for now, though we could expose the "Connected" mode in the future.
The modifier itself is responsible for creating the selections from
the vertex group. The "All" mode takes an `IndexMask` for the
selection, and the "Connected" mode takes a boolean array,
since it actually iterates over all edges.
Some disabled code for a BVH mode has not been copied over,
it's still accessible through the patches and git history anyway,
and it made the port slightly simpler.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13907
Previously it was only part of experimental features in beta, however now
renderers can render point clouds generated by geometry nodes. Adding or
converting a point cloud object directly is still hidden by default, since
there is no good way to edit it.