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Spotlight: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
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Azurfan
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
I have a minor question: Is it possible to save a model's pose? Or is it possible to view and enter the location and rotation coordinates by hand? That would be really useful.
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finale00
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
It looks like a lot of tools have support for kinect.
Does yours support non-human models? lol
Does yours support non-human models? lol
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MrAdults
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
The Noesis Kinect implementation supports mocap on the NI/NITE skeleton, and it supports mapping that mocap skeleton to any skeleton. I've used it with non-humanoid characters before.
SC5 files will load in the next version of Noesis, whenever I get around to publishing a build. The only reason the files aren't accepted by Noesis is because they changed the NMD marker to 4E 4D 44 2E instead of 4E 4D 44 03. You can hex edit the 03 to 2E and Noesis will load it fine as-is. It won't load materials correctly though, which isn't surprising, I never completely figured out the material data in SC4 or T6.
SC5 files will load in the next version of Noesis, whenever I get around to publishing a build. The only reason the files aren't accepted by Noesis is because they changed the NMD marker to 4E 4D 44 2E instead of 4E 4D 44 03. You can hex edit the 03 to 2E and Noesis will load it fine as-is. It won't load materials correctly though, which isn't surprising, I never completely figured out the material data in SC4 or T6.
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Darko
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
Oh thanks mr adults, I'm gonna try ^_^MrAdults wrote:The Noesis Kinect implementation supports mocap on the NI/NITE skeleton, and it supports mapping that mocap skeleton to any skeleton. I've used it with non-humanoid characters before.
SC5 files will load in the next version of Noesis, whenever I get around to publishing a build. The only reason the files aren't accepted by Noesis is because they changed the NMD marker to 4E 4D 44 2E instead of 4E 4D 44 03. You can hex edit the 03 to 2E and Noesis will load it fine as-is. It won't load materials correctly though, which isn't surprising, I never completely figured out the material data in SC4 or T6.
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finale00
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
Is there a way to determine whether weights look right in preview mode? (vertex weights I guess, or however other ways bone weights may be implemented)
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chrrox
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
the main thing to do is manually move a bone in noesis and see if the deformations look right. I did not see a way to see vertex weights tho you could assign them as colors to test it visually.
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MrAdults
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
What I like to do is assign a procedural animation to the model (check the commented out code that does this for Bullet Witch), that way all I have to do is hit play after the model loads to check that the weights are all working. Or, like chrrox said, you could visualize them by assigning vertex colors based on the weight values, but that could be a little bit of work to do nicely.
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finale00
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
Formats that like to store their ascii characters in 2 bytes.
Cleanest way to deal with these?
Cleanest way to deal with these?
- Dinoguy1000
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
Are the first two bytes FE FF (or FF FE)? If so, it probably uses UTF-16 encoding (not that this really helps with your question).
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Sniperello
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
Actual models Call of duty games series not support in future?
Sorry my bad english =)
Sorry my bad english =)
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finale00
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
Nope. I think that's only used as a standard that's only really useful when sharing your files with others.Dinoguy1000 wrote:Are the first two bytes FE FF (or FF FE)? If so, it probably uses UTF-16 encoding (not that this really helps with your question).
I think with formats like these, their engine would parse all strings the same way, so if they had japanese or chinese characters (or anything that was stored in 2 bytes) they don't need to parse them any differently.
- Dinoguy1000
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
Keep in mind that those bytes aren't required, and many programs won't add them to begin with when saving UTF-16 files. Another way to tell is if, in lots of the byte pairs (specifically ones corresponding to text in a language that uses the Latin alphabet), one byte (the same byte across all the pairs; I can't remember for sure whether it'd be the high or low byte) is null.finale00 wrote:Nope. I think that's only used as a standard that's only really useful when sharing your files with others.Dinoguy1000 wrote:Are the first two bytes FE FF (or FF FE)? If so, it probably uses UTF-16 encoding (not that this really helps with your question).
I think with formats like these, their engine would parse all strings the same way, so if they had japanese or chinese characters (or anything that was stored in 2 bytes) they don't need to parse them any differently.
Yes, that's what Unicode is designed to do: if an application supports Unicode, it automatically supports all characters included in Unicode (well, this is a gross oversimplification, but no one should be using Unicode tools that require them to separately add support for e.g. character combining).
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MrAdults
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Re: Señor Casaroja's Noesis
Yeah, you're describing unicode strings that don't happen to use anything in the extended character range. You should be able to load them in as unicode strings, and if you wanted you could then decode as something like UTF8 and it should work fine. (as long as they really aren't using any extended range characters)

