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6:10 PM
@CrisLuengo havent read all, but when I did it, I was doing tetraehdra/triangle meshes in 3D. you can do it with other shapes, but triangles are best. What I had is an mesh that was made of vertices and faces, and you just draw them one after the other, ignoring the order.
but depends on the applicataion, I guess
@flawr its exactly this yeah.
the real answer is that it hihgly depends on your data type and application in all this
all the ideas here make tons of sense, but also, all of them are wildly different for different cases. I did explore tons of them, so if you have more information about what exaclt you are trying to do I should be able to help
 
@AnderBiguri yeah, that's how I understood the question at first, but that's not what he needs
He wants to impart a polyhedron in the voxels of a 3d image
I.e. turn on pixels in a 3d array in the shape of a polyhedron
 
6:30 PM
ah I see
well your solution seems to work.
basically voxelization
7
Q: Converting a 3D model to a voxel field

HanneshI need to write some code to convert an array of quads into a voxel field. Making it work should be easy, but making it fast won't be so trivial. Does anyone know of any libs or source code that I can use? I'm sure someone must've done this before. edit: The algorithm needs to fill the inside o...

 
@AnderBiguri neat, so the keyword there is the binary space partitioning tree
 
6:47 PM
@AnderBiguri Thanks! Good to know the terminology, makes it a lot easier to Google. I was using “rendering” at first, which works for a 2D polygon, but gets you all sorts of CGI stuff for 3D. :)
 
@AnderBiguri good point, pyvista can do that too. It defines a uniform grid on top of the poly mesh and checks each point for containment, I think.
 
7:08 PM
@LuisMendo I wondered, it feels like most people have their effect pedals in a linear chain, it seems to be quite uncommon to have other topologies, like two parallel lines that get mixed again or so. Or maybe even feedback?
 
 
5 hours later…
11:56 PM
@flawr Yes, anything other than linear isd quite uncommon
For two parallel lines you would need an adder (mixer) block. That probably exists, but it's not common. (I do use two parallel paths in the GT-100, but that's an emulator. You can even assign each path to left/right and add a small delay in one of them to increase the perceived stereo separation)
For feedback you would need another adder at the input of the feedback loop, and a splitter at its output.
I don't remember having seen that ever
 

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