dickie |
So I'm creating, yet again, another set of paper patterns. This time I'm using three different noise patterns and allowing the user to select the type of noise being used. Everything went dandy, submitted the filter, and then thought, "Why did I duplicate all those controls? I could have used one set, and then just pointed them to every block!"
Problem is, I went back and modified the filter, using one set of controls rather than three seperate sets (one for each mode), and all the previews changed - and changed in a major way. So I went back in, copied and pasted the control block, attached one set to each type, saved, and just like that, the previews were back to how I had originally intended (with only minor modifications). So why the discrepancy? If the variables are the same, why would it matter if I used one set of controls for each kaleidescope variation vs one per selected type? Electric Paper lsingle controlp.ffxml |
|
Posted: December 19, 2006 2:35 am | ||
dickie | ||
Posted: December 19, 2006 2:35 am | ||
dickie | ||
Posted: December 19, 2006 2:37 am | ||
dickie | ||
Posted: December 19, 2006 2:38 am | ||
Vladimir Golovin
Administrator |
Both filters work just fine and produce identical results. Some of their presets do look different, however, but that is because they use different values for controls.
|
|
Posted: December 19, 2006 3:43 am | ||
dickie |
That's what I'm talking about - the presets change when I'm using three controls vs one. Shouldn't it produce the same presets regardless?
|
|
Posted: December 19, 2006 9:47 pm |
Filter Forge has a thriving, vibrant, knowledgeable user community. Feel free to join us and have fun!
33,711 Registered Users
+18 new in 30 days!
153,531 Posts
+39 new in 30 days!
15,347 Topics
+72 new in year!
23 unregistered users.