33 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext
33 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext
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> Hi John,
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>
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> I know I'll forget to tell you this if I don't write it right now....
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>
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> >(2) How is the receiving geometry for the shadow decided?
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>
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> I wrote about an LSS-test but actually performing a new VFC test (from the
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> light's view) is the same. In both cases, here's a trick to take advantage
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> of temporal coherence : test the world against a slightly larger than
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> necessary LSS or frustum. Keep the list of touched surfaces. Then next
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> frame, if the new volume is still contained within the previous one used
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for
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> the query, you can reuse the same list immediately. Actually it's a bit
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> similar to what you did in your sphere-tree, I think. Anyway, now the
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O(log
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> N) VFC is O(1) for some frames. It's not worth it for the "real" VFC, but
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> when you have N virtual frustum to test to drop N shadows, that's another
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> story.
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>
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> Two downsides:
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> - You need more ram to keep track of one list of meshes / shadow, but
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> usually it's not a lot.
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> - By using a larger volume for the query you possibly touch more
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> faces/surfaces, which will be rendered in the shadow pass. Usually it's
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not
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> a problem either since rendering is simply faster than geometric queries
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> those days. But of course, "your mileage may vary".
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>
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> Happy new year !
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>
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> Pierre
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