D3DXMatrixIdentity(&MatRot);
// Now, apply the orientation variables to the world matrix
if(m_fPitch || m_fYaw || m_fRoll) {
// Produce and combine the rotation matrices.
D3DXMatrixRotationX(&MatTemp, m_fPitch); // Pitch
It seems you cannot generate rotation matrices "from scratch", but you can rotate preexisting matrices. Hence you start with the identity to get the same effect. Makes sense?
@TonyTheTiger Try replacing the multiply with an assignment and test it. Maybe other transformations happen to MatRot… and for some reason MatTemp is also needed.
it just stacks the rotations in MatRot and then adds them to the earlier translation matrix
oh no
no no no no no
After you prepare the world matrix, call the IDirect3DDevice9::SetTransform method to set it, specifying the D3DTS_WORLD macro for the first parameter.
Someoen around who maybe knows how, in Mosaic images, like this creativecopywrite.nl/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/… to calculate the gradient of the patches? I you look at the edge of the bird you see how nicely the patches create the edge
Tony the Tiger is the advertising cartoon mascot for Kellogg's Frosted Flakes (also known as Frosties) breakfast cereal, appearing on its packaging and advertising. More recently, Tony has also become the mascot for Tony's Cinnamon Krunchers and Tiger Power. Since his debut in the 1950s, the character has spanned several generations and become a breakfast cereal icon.
History
In 1952, Eugene Kolkey, an accomplished graphic artist and Art Director for Leo Burnett, sketched a character for a contest to become the official mascot of a then brand-new breakfast cereal. Kolkey designed a tiger n...
I have a wikipedia entry, I'm so proud of myself :)
@cpx It is room policy here to turn regulars into room owners. (See the newbie hints for why that is so.) If you do that, you either get an ever-increasing list, or you not only put new users on it, but also take others off it. I sometimes put new users onto the list that I have seen chatting here regularly for weeks, and when I do this I usually also quickly browse through the list for whom I haven't seen in a while, and might take someone off the list.
I might actually have taken @Johannes off, or someone else did it. I really don't know. (I'd like to feel I'm not the only one doing this janitor job.) However, as @Tony has already explained, it fits with the room policy.
@DeadMG You should know that in German (and @Xeo keeps insisting he is a German, though nobody ever saw him to confirm), we pronounce the A much like you pronounce the U in words like, uh, luck. :)
@DeadMG It's not that I never employ any setters or getters. I do, sometimes. But I always feel somewhat dirty afterwards. (Like when you needed to take a shit in the woods, and they forgot to install a wash basin out there to allow you to clean your hands afterwards.)
do you think that pair programming is, well, firstly, very common? but also, would it be drastically improved if you have a 42" multi-touch screen and pair-programmed the same piece of code at the same time, instead of sharing a kb/mouse
@DeadMG 1) IME pair-programming is not very common. 2) Pair-programming isn't about technology (though some of it helps), but all about psychology. You do want one to just watch in pair-programming.
@DeadMG When I was pair-programming, I especially liked to pair with that guy who, when you typed away, would just sedately say "it's return", and I knew I had mistyped a return statement. For a non-touch-typer like me, that's better than looking at the screen myself.
@Xeo Yeah, I liked it, too, when I was in a company where we did it. However, I found that cow-workers who'd never done it didn't like the idea, and shy back, even though pair-programming is what they all do once in a while. ("Um, Pete, could you please have a look at this here?")
I've never done pair programming, but I have done a sort of group programming. We used a projector and there was definitely one designated data-entry guy.
@Xeo You know, my typing got considerably worse when Word introduced the feature that would fix such errors automagically while you type. Years later, Visual Assist was the final nail in the coffin.
@Xeo It was called "the current principal guy has no prior professional experience and we need to help him, but we can't solve the problems ourselves due to massive convolution by Those Who Were Fired."
Actually, for me it's not about size, but about number of pixels. And I prefer having two monitors over having a single big one, because that way I can easily maximize my editor window on one of them.
@TonyTheTiger You know, I usually don't do that, because I'm not patient enough to plough through many dozens of open tabs, trying to find out whether I could safely close them...
Anyway, I gonna go to bed. I bet I'll be woken in six hours. :(