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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: a little wizardry needed
> From hanson at cs.indiana.edu Wed Feb 2 17:44:49 1994
> From: hanson at cs.indiana.edu (Andrew J. Hanson)
> Date: Wed, 2 Feb 1994 18:44:46 EST
> To: slevy at geom
> Subject: a little wizardry needed
>
>
> Stuart-
> I gather you have already heard from one of my enthusiastic students
> (Juan Villaci) trying to link together geomview to a networked
> Mathematica (we have few machines that run both!); he says that worked
> perfectly - thanks for your help!
>
> I have one other problem: I assigned the students the task of
> creating an object file to be read by geomview, and then asked them
> to put a high-resolution picture of the object in a LaTeX document.
> The module PS Snapshot seems to do that, but it stores polygons
> instead of pixels.
> -suppose we want eps Postscript pixels: when we run the print...
> menu and select "save" instead of print, you get a popup that says
> Renderer - localhost? And then if you click OK, it cranks for about
> 10 minutes and produces a file that, after running it through psfix
> to make it encapsulated, prints as a black square. It seems not to
> have rendered at all.
> We do not have renderman, but I have made this work at least a couple
> of times somehow without it; but now something seems to make the pictures
> always black, regardless of what fiddling I do with the Inspector colors
> of foreground and background, as though it really wasn't rendering
> after all, despite the 10 minutes of cranking.
>
> Bottom line is:
> 1. how to make a decent ps/eps image file using the print... menu;
> are we missing an installation of a default renderer?
> 2. is there any difference in the result if we use print... rather
> than the "PS Snapshot" module? Is there any better way to generate
> high-quality images to print on, e.g., our color Tektronix Phaser
> using dvips'd LaTeX?
>
> Thanks!
> Andy
I'm not sure what's the story with the "Print" menu item. It seems to do
different things for different people, and I don't know why. Anyone else know?
There are several ways to get an image:
PS Snapshot has the advantage of producing full-resolution polygons;
you'll never see jaggies. However it ignores the Geomview
material & lighting setup, etc. Also it uses a simple depth-sort on the
polygons, which is easy and often correct but can fail.
Another option: in Geomview, save the scene in RenderMan format
(RMan -> tiff) in some file, e.g. "fred.rib". Then run Renderman
(which you really do have): from a shell window type
/usr/prman/prman fred.rib
It will produce a file "fred.tiff" in the same directory where "fred.rib"
was saved (i.e. same file name with .rib -> .tiff). Should take much
less than 10 minutes unless you've a very complicated scene.
Image size will be the same as the geomview window size (though you could
edit the .rib file to change it; see the Format line. Take care to
preserve aspect ratio if you do.)
A speedier but lower-quality option is to use /NextApps/Grab.app
to grab the contents of a Next window as a .tiff image. Start Grab,
pick Grab -> Selection from its menu, then click and drag across the
geomview window. When you release, a snapshot window appears.
Save it (as a .tiff file) from the Grab menu.
The latter two methods produce .tiff files. To convert to EPSF,
it's easiest to use the PBM toolkit programs. From a shell:
tifftopnm fred.tiff | pnmtops > fred.ps
The resulting file should be directly include-able as a Postscript figure.
If you don't have the PBM package installed, you could grab the binaries
from our /usr/local/bin directories, or better install the package yourself.
Geomview hackers: it would be nice to have a window-image snapshot feature for
NeXT geomview like that on SGI. If it could produce either .tiff or .ps files,
so much the better.
- Stuart
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