hello,
i've got a little issue here, been trying and trying but can't figure out a solution, i guess it's not complicated, i just don't get it
here's the thing. I created a sphere and added normals to each point with a point SOP. Then i connected a POPNET to it and emitted a particle for each point and let it fly in the normal direction of the points. (attributes>velocity>$NX, $NY, $NZ)
Next i created a cylinder. Through the copy node i wanted to align a cylinder to each emitted particle's velocity direction. How can i achieve this?
some help would be appreciated,
thx & with the best regards,
Manu
align object to velocity direction
14926 14 2- asnowcappedromance
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- ragupasta
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- tamte
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the “v” attribute is automatically recognised by copy SOP and the copies are z-axis aligned with it as ragupasta said
but you need to keep in mind that “v” is not the only attribute according to which copies can be aligned, actually it has the lowest priority
so if your particles have “N” attribute as well, then the copies are aligned to “N” attribute
the “orient” attribute overrides both “v” and “N”
and “rot” attribute kind of sums up with “N” or “v' or ”orient“ alignment
the last one is ”up“ attribute which complements ”N“ or ”v“ and gives you more control of how the copies are aligned
so if you want to align copies with ”v“ make sure that there is no ”N“,”rot“ or ”orient" attribute on the points/particles
all the above apply to instances as well
but you need to keep in mind that “v” is not the only attribute according to which copies can be aligned, actually it has the lowest priority
so if your particles have “N” attribute as well, then the copies are aligned to “N” attribute
the “orient” attribute overrides both “v” and “N”
and “rot” attribute kind of sums up with “N” or “v' or ”orient“ alignment
the last one is ”up“ attribute which complements ”N“ or ”v“ and gives you more control of how the copies are aligned
so if you want to align copies with ”v“ make sure that there is no ”N“,”rot“ or ”orient" attribute on the points/particles
all the above apply to instances as well
Tomas Slancik
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thx a lot guys, that's exactly what i was looking for!
I didn't create an “add velocity” (ch(“nx”)) in the particle rollout of the point SOP in the first place, i guess that was fault nr.1?? then i didn't orientate my object to the z-axis in world space, i guess that was my second.
but hmm Tamte, the stuff you're telling me, it's a little confusing I'm new to houdini. I basically know that one can create attributes for the particles and access them on the geometry level, but that's about all i know. It's definitely a field that i want to learn more about. Has the stuff you told me something to do with the attribute node or else with the attribute rollout of the copy node?
I didn't create an “add velocity” (ch(“nx”)) in the particle rollout of the point SOP in the first place, i guess that was fault nr.1?? then i didn't orientate my object to the z-axis in world space, i guess that was my second.
but hmm Tamte, the stuff you're telling me, it's a little confusing I'm new to houdini. I basically know that one can create attributes for the particles and access them on the geometry level, but that's about all i know. It's definitely a field that i want to learn more about. Has the stuff you told me something to do with the attribute node or else with the attribute rollout of the copy node?
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i didn't mean to confuse you
just ignore it for now if your problem is solved
i only posted that info because when you look at ragupasta's example
it seems to work ok, but add gravity to particles and you'll clearly see that the copies are aligned to normals and not velocity
it may work for your needs though
it may not tell you much at this time maybe, just feel free to return to this page when you advance a bit and it'll start making sense to you.
just ignore it for now if your problem is solved
i only posted that info because when you look at ragupasta's example
it seems to work ok, but add gravity to particles and you'll clearly see that the copies are aligned to normals and not velocity
it may work for your needs though
it may not tell you much at this time maybe, just feel free to return to this page when you advance a bit and it'll start making sense to you.
Tomas Slancik
FX Supervisor
Method Studios, NY
FX Supervisor
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- asnowcappedromance
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- asnowcappedromance
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if you are using Inherit Velocity for particles you need either normals “N” attribute or velocity “v” attribute on your source geometry
since that Point SOP creates both, you can left one of them off
i recommend you to set normals to Keep Normals
and velocity to Add Velocity with values $NX, $NY, $NZ
this way the source geometry will have only “v” attribute for particles to inherit velocity from
particles will have no “N” attribute, so the copied objects will be aligned with velocity
since that Point SOP creates both, you can left one of them off
i recommend you to set normals to Keep Normals
and velocity to Add Velocity with values $NX, $NY, $NZ
this way the source geometry will have only “v” attribute for particles to inherit velocity from
particles will have no “N” attribute, so the copied objects will be aligned with velocity
Tomas Slancik
FX Supervisor
Method Studios, NY
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asnowcappedromance
btw Tamte, where can i learn more about those attributes you talked about? like “N”, “ROT” “ORIENT” etc. ???
http://www.sidefx.com/docs/houdini10.0/copy/ [sidefx.com]
http://www.sidefx.com/docs/houdini10.0/copy/varying [sidefx.com]
http://www.sidefx.com/docs/houdini10.0/copy/instanceattrs [sidefx.com]
Tomas Slancik
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- asnowcappedromance
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thx a lot mate!! really nice of you!
and well … i'm not scared, en contraire i'm looking forward to learn this software although there will be a lot i wont understand straightaway, i'm new to expressions and maths ))
lets see first i have to go through all those example files and try to get an overview to all those nodes and expressions and then … i'm psyched of the possibilites houdini provides, before i used 3DS Max and compared with that, Houdini is a whole new experience …
cheers!
and well … i'm not scared, en contraire i'm looking forward to learn this software although there will be a lot i wont understand straightaway, i'm new to expressions and maths ))
lets see first i have to go through all those example files and try to get an overview to all those nodes and expressions and then … i'm psyched of the possibilites houdini provides, before i used 3DS Max and compared with that, Houdini is a whole new experience …
cheers!
- asnowcappedromance
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tamte
if you are using Inherit Velocity for particles you need either normals “N” attribute or velocity “v” attribute on your source geometry
since that Point SOP creates both, you can left one of them off
i recommend you to set normals to Keep Normals
and velocity to Add Velocity with values $NX, $NY, $NZ
this way the source geometry will have only “v” attribute for particles to inherit velocity from
particles will have no “N” attribute, so the copied objects will be aligned with velocity
one last thing, after that let's call it a day )
didn't you mean “Add Velocity with values $VX, $VY, $VZ” ??? :?
- tamte
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asnowcappedromance
…
didn't you mean “Add Velocity with values $VX, $VY, $VZ” ??? :?
…
no, the values $NX, $NY, $NZ are correct
it will create “v” attribute with the the values as normals
it actually knows $NX, $NY, $NZ even it there is no “N” attribute on the geometry
but the values for $VX, $VY, $VZ will be 0,0,0 if there is no “v” attribute before
Tomas Slancik
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- Marco_M
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Hey guys! I dig up this topic cause I've a related doubt.
What if, for example, my particles are a fish cluster swimming aligned to its velocity, who stops at some point and we'd like them to point at a specific direction?
I'm not sure if I'm doing rigth, but bellow is how I'm trying to blend the velocity orientation (p@vel_orient) with the target orientation (p@target_orient).
The target is working fine, but I'm stucked in how to replicate the same align to velocity behaviour to save under the p@vel_orient attribute in order to work with the interpolation?
Or, if there is a better way, please let me know. Thanks!
UPDATED BELLOW
I found this other discussion answered by Matt (tokeru)
https://forums.odforce.net/topic/27316-rotateorientalignmentquaternionsetc/ [forums.odforce.net]
The code bellow does the trick, but the orientation gets crazy when the speed gets closer to zero.
A blur in the velocity make it better but don't fix all the problem.
Now I'm trying to fix that.
Any suggestions are welcome.
Thanks!
What if, for example, my particles are a fish cluster swimming aligned to its velocity, who stops at some point and we'd like them to point at a specific direction?
I'm not sure if I'm doing rigth, but bellow is how I'm trying to blend the velocity orientation (p@vel_orient) with the target orientation (p@target_orient).
//Blend from velocity orientarion to target orientation
@orient = lerp(p@vel_orient, p@target_orient, chf(“blend”));
The target is working fine, but I'm stucked in how to replicate the same align to velocity behaviour to save under the p@vel_orient attribute in order to work with the interpolation?
Or, if there is a better way, please let me know. Thanks!
UPDATED BELLOW
I found this other discussion answered by Matt (tokeru)
https://forums.odforce.net/topic/27316-rotateorientalignmentquaternionsetc/ [forums.odforce.net]
The code bellow does the trick, but the orientation gets crazy when the speed gets closer to zero.
p@vel_orient = dihedral({0,0,1} ,@v);
A blur in the velocity make it better but don't fix all the problem.
Now I'm trying to fix that.
Any suggestions are welcome.
Thanks!
Edited by Marco_M - 2020年10月13日 21:58:32
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