hurdofchris Posted August 24, 2007 Share Posted August 24, 2007 Hey, all you developers out there... I know it sounds unrealistic right now but it would be an awesome addition to Paint.NET if you guys could put together a terrain generator such as the one found in the program Terragen. Quote You can't touch this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Crazy Man Dan Posted August 24, 2007 Share Posted August 24, 2007 I don't really know if that would make sense. Terragen has a terrain generator because it's a 3D modeling program and can render an image based upon that generated terrain map. You can move the camera, change zoom and exposure settings, edit materials for the terrain and limit them based on altitude and slope settings, change the color of the sky, sun, shadows, atmosphere, change the atmospheric particle density, et cetera... In Paint.NET, it'd just be a rainbow splotchy image. Your best bet is to render the image in Terragen and open the resultant BMP in PDN for editing. Quote I am not a mechanism, I am part of the resistance; I am an organism, an animal, a creature, I am a beast. ~ Becoming the Archetype Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
verndewd Posted August 24, 2007 Share Posted August 24, 2007 That answers my inquiry about a 3d environment plug in. Thanks CMD. Quote retired from PDN forums. Later dewds Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Crazy Man Dan Posted August 24, 2007 Share Posted August 24, 2007 Well, I'm certain, just like Shape3D, a plugin could replicate some of the function of Terragen, handling the 3D manipulation and camera placement, then passing the rendered image to Paint.NET's canvas. My point is: What's the point? There is already a program that does what Terragen does. No points for guessing which one. :wink: Quote I am not a mechanism, I am part of the resistance; I am an organism, an animal, a creature, I am a beast. ~ Becoming the Archetype Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tag Posted August 24, 2007 Share Posted August 24, 2007 It would also slow PDN down if you had a lot of 3d rendering options, personally I love how small and fast it is. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
drakaan Posted August 24, 2007 Share Posted August 24, 2007 It would also slow PDN down if you had a lot of 3d rendering options... Actually, no, it wouldn't. Plugins in and of themselves don't slow PdN down at all, aside from while you're running them. You'd still have small, fast PdN, but you'd have a plugin that replicates something that is already done by other programs...it's a matter of whether there's enough benefit to adding it as a plugin vs. just using another app and importing the rendered image from there. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tag Posted August 24, 2007 Share Posted August 24, 2007 It would also slow PDN down if you had a lot of 3d rendering options... Actually, no, it wouldn't. Plugins in and of themselves don't slow PdN down at all, aside from while you're running them. You'd still have small, fast PdN, but you'd have a plugin that replicates something that is already done by other programs...it's a matter of whether there's enough benefit to adding it as a plugin vs. just using another app and importing the rendered image from there. I made too broad a statement :oops: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
drakaan Posted August 24, 2007 Share Posted August 24, 2007 I made too broad a statement :oops: aww, don't worry, I think we all have, at one time or another. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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