Also if you hold down your tool hotkeys (ie w for move) and the left mouse button you get the tool's options as a hotbox. Super useful for switching your move modes from global to local to custom axis without navigating menus.
Sometimes i try to imagine the unsubdivided geometry when i look at a real object... 13 years ago, when i played morrowind for the first time, i looked at a local river and said "ahh the water in morrowind looks more realistic" :D
Shoot, I didn't realize it was so slow, but I've only tested on my other computer downstairs, I'll test at EA and rockstar and then check out some local paid webspace, perhaps I can get a way better web address as well.
You can use this script also: http://bryancavett.com/maxscripts/actionCenters.ms It works just like the actionCenter in Modo, placing the working pivot at the currently selected sub-object + aligning it properly to its normal (it does the job better than local coordinate space)
The local Walmart started selling the game early so I've had it for almost a week. It's pretty good so far, there are some things I'm disappointed about that they took out that was in the original. I'm enjoying the improvements though. The promise of 50 bosses was a.... bit of an exaggeration...
Cool been wondering if it was possible. I've always just gone into Axis Mode (insert) and clicked on the reset ball. Puts it back at Local Transform&Rotate 0,0,0. So I can tinker from there. That looks like it needs a shortcut key setup. ^_^ heh
High Moon Studios will be at The Game Developers Conference 2007 in San Francisco! High Moon employs more than 140 developers at a state-of-the-art facility based in San Diego County, California. The award-winning studio is currently developing titles for next-generation video game consoles. At High Moon, artists,…
I popped into my local store, and they were still selling some stuff at ludicrous prices. Gemini Rue and Machinarium were both priced at £19.99 when they have an RRP of £6.99 for the boxed versions. Rayman Origins on the 360 was £45.99 - I pre-ordered it for 1/3rd of that D:
If you're in a city it's always nice to see if there are some local printers who can help you out. Being able to see different types/qualities of print in person ends up being much less frustrating and you usually end up getting what you want.
you need to understand the scope of a variable. in a proc the variable is local, thus you always initialized it with the same value. you need a global variable to remember the state. also good to understand variable declaration, which answers your problem with previous thread, you were declaring it twice.