SpeedTree - The Valley Real-Time Demo
http://www.idvinc.com/html/the_valley.htm It's a holy grail of the real-time world: An outdoor environment of realistic foliage that runs efficiently but features off-line quality. The Valley delivers. Windblown trees and grass that look real from ANY distance (even within the tree itself!), along with bump mapped bark textures, specular effects, and a variety of shadow effects. The perfect complement to our Huge Forest of a million trees, The Valley is an unprecedented celebration of SpeedTree's aesthetic versatility, range and power. The full source code for The Valley will be available to all SpeedTreeRT evaluators with the release of SpeedTreeRT 1.6.
The full source code for The Valley will be available to all SpeedTreeRT evaluators with the release of SpeedTreeRT 1.6.
Did you actually get the demo to run. I tried and got installer errors. To make this about Python: I've been learning ReportLab, which allows direct creation of PDFs from scratch. My goal was to write a primitive banded report generator, that lets you group records, define headers/footers and like that. In Java world, an open source project called Jasper Reports seems fairly mature, and is in turn based on iText, which I'm also playing with (it's the Java world analog to Python's ReportLab). As per Arthur's post, I agree that Java is fairly easy, syntax-wise. What's complex is getting a handle on the huge forest of class hierarchies, both native and downloadable. But of course that's a challenge in any full-featured language, Python included. One just learns to use the reference materials, such as they are. Perl has CPAN and there's some buzz about how to improve Python's infrastructure for sharing code/modules, perhaps with a built-in rating system. This thread gets revisited rather often in our Portland group, thanks to Kevin Altis and others. Kirby
participants (2)
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Jason Cunliffe
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Kirby Urner