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- ยท Subject: (08Mar93) comp.graphics Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
-
- Archive-name: graphics/faq
-
- This message is automatically posted once a week or so in an effort to
- cut down on the repetitive junk in comp.graphics. It was last changed
- on 08Mar93. If you have answers to other frequently asked questions that
- you would like included in this posting, please send me mail. If you
- don't want to see this posting every week, please add the subject line
- to your kill file. Thank you.
-
- If your copy of the FAQ is more than a couple of weeks old, you may want to
- seek out the most recent version. The latest version of this FAQ is always
- available on the archive site pit-manager.mit.edu (alias rtfm.mit.edu) as
- pub/usenet/news.answers/graphics/faq.
-
- ---
- _john
-
- @UPFILES@BYTES@@SECURITY@@DATAPHONE@@CITY@@FIRST@@USER@ John Grieggs grieggs@jpl
- ---
- Last update: 08Mar93
-
- What's new?
-
- Addition of Imagine PC mention to Imagine Mailing List blurb (sls@tct.com).
-
- grieggs@jpl-devvax.jpl.nasa.gov
-
-
-
- Contents:
-
- 1) General references for graphics questions.
- 2) Drawing three-dimensional objects on a two-dimensional screen.
- 3) Quantizing 24 bit images down to 8 bits.
- 4) Converting color into grayscale.
- 5) Quantizing grayscale to black&white.
- 6) Rotating a raster image by an arbitrary angle.
- 7) Free image manipulation software.
- 8) Format documents for TIFF, IFF, BIFF, NFF, OFF, FITS, etc.
- 9) Converting between vector formats.
- 10) How to get Pixar films.
- 11) How do I draw a circle as a Bezier (or B-spline) curve?
- 12) How to order standards documents.
- 13) How to FTP by email.
- 14) How to tell whether a point is within a planar polygon.
- 15) How to tessellate a sphere.
- 16) Specific references on ray-tracing and global illumination.
- 17) SIGGRAPH information online
- 18) SIGGRAPH Panels Proceedings available
- 19) Graphics mailing lists
- 20) Specific references on file formats
- 21) What about GIF?
- 22) What is morphing?
- 23) How to ray-trace height fields
- 24) How to find the area of a 3D polygon
- 25) How to join ACM/SIGGRAPH
- 26) Where can I find MRI and CT scan volume data?
- 27) Specific references on spatial data structures including quadtrees
- and octrees
- 28) Where can I get a program to plot XY(Z) data or f(x) data?
- 29) Specific references on PEX and PHIGS
-
-
- 1) General references for graphics questions:
-
- Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice (2nd Ed.), J.D. Foley,
- A. van Dam, S.K. Feiner, J.F. Hughes, Addison-Wesley 1990, ISBN
- 0-201-12110-7
- Procedural Elements for Computer Graphics, David F. Rogers, McGraw
- Hill 1985, ISBN 0-07-053534-5
- Mathematical Elements for Computer Graphics 2nd Ed., David F. Rogers
- and J. Alan Adams, McGraw Hill 1990, ISBN 0-07-053530-2
- Three Dimensional Computer Graphics, Alan Watt, Addison-Wesley 1990, ISBN
- 0-201-15442-0
- An Introduction to Ray Tracing, Andrew Glassner (ed.), Academic Press
- 1989, ISBN 0-12-286160-4
- Graphics Gems, Andrew Glassner (ed.), Academic Press 1990, ISBN
- 0-12-286165-5
- Graphics Gems II, James Arvo (ed.), Academic Press 1991, ISBN
- 0-12-64480-0
- Graphics Gems III, David Kirk (ed.), Academic Press 1992, ISBN
- 0-12-409670-0 (with IBM disk) or 0-12-409671-9 (with Mac disk)
- Digital Image Warping, George Wolberg, IEEE Computer Society Press
- Monograph 1990, ISBN 0-8186-8944-7
- Digital Image Processing (2nd Ed.), Rafael C. Gonzalez, Paul Wintz,
- Addison-Wesley 1987, ISBN 0-201-11026-1
- A Programmer's Geometry, Adrian Bowyer, John Woodwark, Butterworths 1983,
- ISBN 0-408-01242-0 Pbk
-
- An automatic mail handler at Brown University allows users of "Computer
- Graphics: Principles and Practice," by Foley, van Dam, Feiner, and
- Hughes, to obtain text errata and information on distribution of the
- software packages described in the book. Also, users can send the
- authors feedback, to report text errors and software bugs, make
- suggestions, and submit exercises. To receive information describing
- how you can use the mail handler, simply mail graphtext@cs.brown.edu
- and put the word "Help" in the Subject line. Use the Subject line
- "Software-Distribution" to receive information specifically concerning
- the software packages SRGP and SPHIGS.
-
- Errata for "An Introduction to Ray Tracing" is available on
- wuarchive.wustl.edu in graphics/graphics/books/IntroToRT.errata.
-
- Errata for "Digital Image Warping" is in the same directory as
- "Digital-Image-Warping.errata".
-
- All C code from the "Graphics Gems" series is available via anonymous ftp
- from princeton.edu. Look in the directory pub/Graphics/GraphicsGems for
- the various volumes (Gems, GemsII, GemsIII), and get the README file first.
-
- Errata to _Graphics Gems_ and _Graphics Gems II is available on
- wuarchive.wustl.edu in graphics/graphics/books.
-
- A list of computer graphics, computational geometry and image processing
- journals is available from Juhana Kouhia, jk87377@cs.tut.fi.
-
-
- 2) Drawing three-dimensional objects on a two-dimensional screen.
-
- The simple answer is, you divide by the depth. For a more verbose
- explanation, see any of the above references, starting with:
-
- The Foley & Van Dam & Feiner & Hughes "Computer Graphics" book is certainly
- a good start. Chapter 6 is "Viewing in 3D", then read chapter 15,
- "Visible-Surface Determination". For more information go to chapter 16 for
- shading, chapter 19 for clipping, and branch out from there.
-
-
- 3) Quantizing 24 bit images down to 8 bits.
-
- Find a copy of "Color Image Quantization for Frame Buffer Display" by
- Paul Heckbert, SIGGRAPH '82 Proceedings, page 297. There are other
- algorithms, but this one works well and is fairly simple. Implementations
- are included in most raster toolkits (see item 7 below).
-
- A variant method is described in "Graphics Gems", p. 287-293. Note that
- the code from the "Graphics Gems" series is all available from an FTP site,
- as described above.
-
- Check out John Bradley's "Diversity Algorithm", which is incorporated into
- the xv package and described in the back of the manual.
-
- The ImageMagick package (see section 7 for where it is) contains another
- quantizing algorithm which is presented as "doing a better job than the
- other algorithms, but slower".
-
- There's also an implementation of:
-
- Wan, Wong, and Prusinkiewicz, _An Algorithm for Multidimensional Data
- Clustering_, Transactions on Mathematical Software, Vol. 14 #2 (June, 1988),
- pp. 153-162.
-
- avialable as princeton.edu:pub/Graphics/colorquant.shar. This code,
- in modified form, appears in the Utah Raster Toolkit as well.
-
-
- 4) Converting color into grayscale.
-
- The NTSC formula is:
-
- luminosity = .299 red + .587 green + .114 blue
-
-
- 5) Quantizing grayscale to black&white.
-
- The only reference you need for this stuff is:
-
- Digital Halftoning, Robert Ulichney, MIT Press 1987, ISBN 0-262-21009-6
-
- But before you go off and start coding, check out the image manipulation
- software mentioned in item 7 below. All of the packages mentioned can do
- some form of gray to b&w conversion.
-
-
- 6) Rotating a raster image by an arbitrary angle.
-
- The obvious but wrong method is to loop over the pixels in the source
- image, transform each coordinate, and copy the pixel to the destination.
- This is wrong because it leaves holes in the destination. Instead,
- loop over the pixels in the destination image, apply the *reverse*
- transformation to the coordinates, and copy that pixel from the source.
- This method is quite general, and can be used for any one-to-one
- 2-D mapping, not just rotation. You can add anti-aliasing by doing
- sub-pixel sampling.
-
- However, there is a much faster method, with antialising included,
- which involves doing three shear operations. The method was originally
- created for the IM Raster Toolkit (see below); an implementation is
- also present in PBMPLUS. Reference: "A Fast Algorithm for Raster
- Rotation", by Alan Paeth (awpaeth@watcgl.waterloo.edu) Graphics
-
- Interface '86 (Vancouver). An article on the IM toolkit appears in
- the same journal. An updated version of the rotation paper appears
- in "Graphics Gems" (see section [1]) under the original title.
-
-
- 7) Free image manipulation software.
-
- There are a number of toolkits for converting from one image format to
- another, doing simple image manipulations such as size scaling, plus
- the above-mentioned 24 -> 8, color -> gray, gray -> b&w conversions.
- Here are pointers to some of them:
-
- xv by John Bradley. X-based image display, manipulation, and format
- conversion package. XV displays many image formats and permits editing
- of GIF files, among others. The program was updated 5/92; see the file
- contrib/xv-2.21.tar.Z on export.lcs.mit.edu.
-
- PBMPLUS, by Jef Poskanzer. Comprehensive format conversion and image
- manipulation package. The latest version is always available via
- anonymous FTP as ftp.ee.lbl.gov:pbmplus*.tar.Z,
- wuarchive.wustl.edu:graphics/graphics/packages/pbmplus/pbmplus*.tar.Z,
- and export.lcs.mit.edu:contrib/pbmplus*.tar.Z.
-
- IM Raster Toolkit, by Alan Paeth (awpaeth@watcgl.uwaterloo.ca).
- Provides a portable and efficient format and related toolkit. The
- format is versatile in supporting pixels of arbitrary channels,
- components, and bit precisions while allowing compression and machine
- byte-order independence. The kit contains more than 50 tools with
- extensive support of image manipulation, digital halftoning and format
- conversion. Previously distributed on tape c/o the University of
- Waterloo, an FTP version will appear someday.
-
- Utah RLE Toolkit. Conversion and manipulation package, similar to
- PBMPLUS. Available via FTP as cs.utah.edu:pub/urt-*,
- princeton.edu:pub/Graphics/urt-*, and freebie.engin.umich.edu:pub/urt-*.
-
- Fuzzy Pixmap Manipulation, by Michael Mauldin <mlm@nl.cs.cmu.edu>.
- Conversion and manipulation package, similar to PBMPLUS. Version 1.0
- available via FTP as nl.cs.cmu.edu:/usr/mlm/ftp/fbm.tar.Z,
- ftp.uu.net:pub/fbm.tar.Z, and ucsd.edu:graphics/fbm.tar.Z.
-
- Img Software Set, by Paul Raveling <raveling@venera.isi.edu>. Reads and
- writes its own image format, displays on an X11 screen, and does some
- image manipulations. Version 1.3 is available via FTP as
- export.lcs.mit.edu:contrib/img_1.3.tar.Z, and
- venera.isi.edu:pub/img_1.3.tar.Z along with a large collection of color
- images.
-
- Xim, X Image Manipulator, by Philip R. Thompson. It does essential
- interactive image manipulations and uses x11r4 and the OSF/Motif toolkit
- for the interface. It supports images in 1, 8, 24 and 32 bit formats.
- Reads/writes and converts to/from GIF, xwd, xbm, tiff, rle, xim, and
- other formats. Writes level 2 postscript. Other utilities and image
- application library are included. Not a paint package. Available via
- ftp from gis.mit.edu.
-
- xloadimage, by Jim Frost <madd@std.com>. Reads in images in various
- formats and displays them on an X11 screen. Available via FTP as
- export.lcs.mit.edu:contrib/xloadimage*, and in your nearest comp.sources.x
- archive.
-
- xli, by Grame Gill, is an updated xloadimage with numerous improvements
- in both speed and in the number of formats supported. Available in the
- same places as xloadimage (contrib tape, comp.sources.x archives).
-
- TIFF Software, by Sam Leffler <sam@okeeffe.berkeley.edu>. Nice
- portable library for reading and writing TIFF files, plus a few tools
- for manipulating them and reading other formats. Available via FTP as
- ucbvax.berkeley.edu:pub/tiff/*.tar.Z or ftp.uu.net:graphics/tiff.tar.Z
-
- xtiff, an X11 tool for viewing a TIFF file. It was written to handle
- as many different kinds of TIFF files as possible while remaining
- simple, portable and efficient. xtiff illustrates some common problems
- with building pixmaps and using different visual classes. It is
- distributed as part of Sam Leffler's libtiff package and it is also
- available on export.lcs.mit.edu, ftp.uu.net and comp.sources.x.
- xtiff 2.0 was announced in 4/91; it includes Xlib and Xt versions.
-
- ALV, a Sun-specific image toolkit. Version 2.0.6 posted to
- comp.sources.sun on 11dec89. Also available via email to
- alv-users-request@cs.bris.ac.uk.
-
- popi, an image manipulation language. Version 2.1 posted to
- comp.sources.misc on 12dec89.
-
- ImageMagick, an X11 package for display and interactive manipulation
- of images. Includes tools for image conversion, annotation, compositing,
- animation, and creating montages. ImageMagick can read and write many of
- the more popular image formats. Available via FTP as
- export.lcs.mit.edu:contrib/ImageMagick.tar.Z.
-
- Khoros, a huge (~100 meg) graphical development environment based on
- X11R4. Khoros components include a visual programming language, code
- generators for extending the visual language and adding new application
- packages to the system, an interactive user interface editor, an
- interactive image display package, an extensive library of image and
- signal processing routines, and 2D/3D plotting packages. Available via
- FTP as pprg.eece.unm.edu:pub/khoros/*.
-
- LaboImage, a SunView-based image processing and analysis package. It
- includes more than 200 image manipulation, processing and measurement
- routines, on-line help, plus tools such as an image editor, a color
- table editor and several biomedical utilities. Available via anonymous
- FTP as ads.com:pub/VISION-LIST-ARCHIVE/SHAREWARE/LaboImage_3.1.tar.Z
-
- The San Diego Supercomputer Center Image Tools, software tools for
- reading, writing, and manipulating raster images. Binaries for some
- machines available via anonymous FTP in sdsc.edu:sdscpub.
-
- The Independent JPEG Group has written a package for reading and
- writing JPEG files. FTP to ftp.uu.net:graphics/jpeg/jpegsrc.v?.tar.Z
-
- Don't forget to set binary mode when you FTP tar files. For you MILNET
- folks who still don't have name servers, the IP addresses are:
-
- ads.com 128.229.30.16
- cs.utah.edu 128.110.4.21
- coral.cs.jcu.edu.au 137.219.17.4
- export.lcs.mit.edu 18.24.0.12
- freebie.engin.umich.edu 141.212.103.21
- ftp.ee.lbl.gov 128.3.112.20
- ftp.uu.net 137.39.1.9 or 192.48.96.9
- gis.mit.edu 18.80.1.118
- gondwana.ecr.mu.oz.au 128.250.70.62
- karazm.math.uh.edu 129.7.7.6
- marsh.cs.curtin.edu.au 134.7.1.1
- nic.funet.fir 128.214.6.100
- ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu 141.142.20.50
- nl.cs.cmu.edu 128.2.222.56
- pit-manager.mit.edu 18.172.1.27
- pprg.eece.unm.edu 129.24.24.10
- princeton.edu 128.112.128.1
- sdsc.edu 132.249.20.22
- ucbvax.berkeley.edu 128.32.133.1
- venera.isi.edu 128.9.0.32
- weedeater.math.yale.edu 128.36.23.17
- wuarchive.wustl.edu 128.252.135.4
- zamenhof.cs.rice.edu 128.42.1.75
-
- Please do *not* post or mail messages saying "I can't FTP, could someone
- mail this to me?" There are a number of automated mail servers that will
- send you things like this in response to a message. See item 13 below for
- details on some.
-
- Also, the newsgroup alt.graphics.pixutils is specifically for discussion
- of software like this. You may find useful information there.
-
-
- 8) Format documents for TIFF, IFF, BIFF, NFF, OFF, FITS, etc.
-
- You almost certainly don't need these. Read the above item 7 on free
- image manipulation software. Get one or more of these packages and
- look through them. Chances are excellent that the image converter you
- were going to write is already there. But if you still want one of the
- format documents, many such files are available by anonymous ftp from
- zamenhof.cs.rice.edu in directory pub/graphics.formats.
-
- These files were collected off the net and are believed to be correct.
- This archive includes pixel formats, and two- and three-dimensional object
- formats. The future of this archive is uncertain at the moment, as Mark
- Hall <foo@cs.rice.edu> will apparently no longer be maintaining it.
-
- A second graphics file format archive is now being actively maintained
- by Quincey Koziol (koziol@ncsa.uiuc.edu). The latest version exists at
- ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in /misc/file.formats/graphics.formats. Apparently,
- neither of these is complete, you might want to check both.
-
- FITS stands for Flexible Image Transport System. It's a file format most
- often used in astronomy. Despite the name, it can contain not only images
- but other things as well. There is a regular monthly FITS basics and
- information posting on sci.astro.fits - read it if you want to know more.
-
-
-
- 9) Converting between vector formats.
-
- A lot of people ask about converting from HPGL to PostScript, or MacDraw
- to CGM, or whatever. It is important to understand that this is a very
- different problem from the image format conversions in item 7. Converting
- one image format to another is a fairly easy problem, since once you
- get past all the file header junk, a pixel is a pixel -- the basic objects
- are the same for all image formats. This is not so for vector formats.
- The basic objects -- circles, ellipses, drop-shadowed pattern-filled
- round-cornered rectangles, etc. -- vary from one format to another.
- Except in extremely restricted cases, it is simply not possible to do
- a one-to-one conversion between vector formats.
-
- There is software for converting to and from CGM files on ftp.psc.edu. The
- contributor states that it runs on Unix, MS-Windows, and possibly the Mac.
- A better, more specific blurb would be most welcome.
-
-
- On the other hand, it is quite possible to do a close approximation,
- rendering an image from one format using the primitives from another.
- As far as I know, no one has put together a general toolkit of such
- converters, but two different HPGL to PostScript converters have been
- posted to comp.sources.misc. Check the index on your nearest archive
- site.
-
- A related frequent question is how to convert from some vector format
- to a bitmapped image - from PostScript to Sun raster format, or HPGL to
- X11 bitmap. For example, some of the commercial PostScript clones for
- PC's allow you to render to a disk file as well as a printer. Also,
- the PostScript interpreters in the NeXT box and in Sun's X11/NeWs can
- be used to render to a file if you're clever. But in general, the
- answer is no. However, if someone were to put together a vector to
- vector conversion toolkit, adding a vector to raster converter would be
- trivial.
-
- GNU ghostscript (from the FSF - current version 2.5.2) includes
- drivers for both ppm and gif format files, thus it can be used as
- a PostScript to ppm or a PostScript to GIF filter. (It implements
- essentially all of PostScript level 1 and alot of Display PostScript
- and level 2).
-
-
- 10) How to get Pixar films.
-
- The various John Lasseter / Pixar computer animated shorts are available
- on video tape. You can order them from Direct Cinema Limited:
-
- Film Individual Price Institutional Price
- Luxo, Jr. $14.95 $50.00
- Red's Dream $19.95 $75.00
- Tin Toy $24.95 $75.00
- Knickknack $24.95 $75.00
- Luxo, Jr./Red's Dream/Tin Toy $39.95 $100.00
-
- All tapes are on 1/2" VHS NTSC. Add $10/tape for PAL format. Also
- available:
-
- Tin Toy T-shirt $15.00
- Knickknack 3D T-shirt $15.00 (includes glasses)
-
- For individual orders, add $5 S&H for the first tape or shirt, $2 for
- each additional tape or shirt. For institutional orders, add $5 S&H
- for the first tape, $3 for each additional tape. Foreign shipping, add
- $3/tape or shirt. Call 800-525-0000 (213-396-4774 international,
- 213-396-3233 FAX) to charge to your credit card. Call first to verify
- prices and availability. Or, just write to:
-
- Direct Cinema Limited
- 1749 14th Street
- Santa Monica, CA 90404-4342
-
- Allan Braunsdorf has this to say:
-
- At SIGGRAPH they were selling a tape with all four shorts
- for $25. That was a sale price. You can get it for slightly
- more than that normally. ($35 maybe.) I believe it's
- available from RenderMan Retail (at Pixar's address).
-
- Pixar
- 1001 West Cutting Blvd.
- Richmond, CA. 94804
- (510) 236-4000
- (510) 236-0388 (FAX)
-
- You can obtain a video directly from Pixar which contains "Luxo, Jr.", "Red's
- Dream", "Tin Toy" and "Knicknack" for $25.00, plus $2.50 for shipping. They
- will take your order over the phone or via FAX with a major credit card. I
- ordered mine just last week and received it several days later. Don't expect
- to be able to rent a copy from your local video store. According to the license
- agreement printed on the back cover of the case, it cannot be rented.
-
-
- 11) How do I draw a circle as a Bezier (or B-spline) curve?
-
- The short answer is, "You can't." Unless you use a rational spline you
- can only approximate a circle. The approximation may look acceptable,
- but it is sensitive to scale. Magnify the scale and the error of
- approximation magnifies. Deviations from circularity that were not
- visible in the small can become glaring in the large. If you want to
- do the job right, consult the article:
-
- "A Menagerie of Rational B-Spline Circles"
- by Leslie Piegl and Wayne Tiller
- in IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, volume 9, number 9,
- September, 1989, pages 48-56.
-
- For rough, non-rational approximations, consult the book:
-
- Computational Geometry for Design and Manufacture
- by I. D. Faux and M. J. Pratt,
- Ellis Horwood Publishers, Halsted Press, John Wiley 1980.
-
- For the best known non-rational approximations, consult the article:
-
- "Good Approximation of Circles by Curvature-continuous Bezier Curves"
- by Tor Dokken, Morten Daehlen, Tom Lyche, and Knut Morken
- in Computer Aided Geometric Design, volume 7, numbers 1-4 (combined),
- June, 1990, pages 33-41 [Elsevier Science Publishers (North-Holland)]
-
-
- 12) How to order standards documents.
-
- The American National Standards Institute sells ANSI standards, and also
- ISO (international) standards. Their sales office is at 1-212-642-4900,
- mailing address is 1430 Broadway, NY NY 10018. It helps if you have the
- complete name and number.
-
- Some useful numbers to know:
-
- CGM (Computer Graphics Metafile) is ISO 8632-4 (1987). GKS (Graphical
- Kernel System) is ANSI X3.124-1985. PHIGS (Programmer's Hierarchical
- Interactive Graphics System) is ANSI X3.144-1988. IGES is ASME/ANSI
- Y14.26M-1987. Language bindings are often separate but related numbers;
- for example, the GKS FORTRAN binding is X3.124.1-1985.
-
- Standards-in-progress are made available at key milestones to solicit
- comments from the graphical public (this includes you!). ANSI can let
- you know where to order them; most are available from Global Engineering
- at 1-800-854-7179.
-
-
- 13) How to FTP by email.
-
- There are a number of sites that archive the Usenet sources newsgroups
- and make them available via an email query system. You send a message
- to an automated server saying something like "send comp.sources.unix/fbm",
- and a few hours or days later you get the file in the mail.
-
- In addition, there is at least one FTP-by-mail server. Send mail to
- ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com saying "help" and it will tell you how to use
- it. Note that this service has at times been turned off due to abuse.
-
-
- 14) How to tell whether a point is within a planar polygon.
-
- Consider a ray originating at the point of interest and continuing to
- infinity. If it crosses an odd number of polygon edges along the way,
- the point is within the polygon. If the ray crosses an even number of
- edges, the point is either outside the polygon, or within an interior
- hole formed from intersecting polygon edges. This idea is known in
- the trade as the Jordan curve theorem; see Eric Haines' article in
- Glassner's ray tracing book (above) for more information, including
- treatment of special cases.
-
- Another method is to sum the absolute angles from the point to all
- the vertices on the polygon. If the sum is 2 pi, the point is inside,
- if the sum is 0 the point is outside. However, this method is about an
- order of magnitude slower than the previous method because evaluating the
- trigonometric functions is usually quite costly.
-
- Code for both methods (plus barycentric triangle testing) can be found in
- the Ray Tracing News, Vol. 5, No. 3, available from princeton.edu:
- pub/Graphics/RTNews/RTNv5n3.Z.
-
-
- 15) How to tessellate a sphere.
-
- One simple way is to do recursive subdivision into triangles. The
- base of the recursion is an octahedron, and then each level divides
- each triangle into four smaller ones. Jon Leech <leech@cs.unc.edu>
- has posted a nice routine called sphere.c that generates the coordinates.
- It's available for FTP on ftp.ee.lbl.gov and princeton.edu.
-
- 16) Specific references on ray-tracing and global illumination.
-
- Rick Speer maintains a cross-indexed ray-tracing bibliography:
-
- Highlights of this edition-
-
- i) more than 500 citations spanning the period from 1968 through
- November '91;
- ii) papers from all Siggraph, Graphics Interface, Eurographics, CG
- International and Ausgraph proceedings through December, '91;
- iii) all citations keyworded for easy lookup;
- iv) cross-indices by keyword and author;
- v) glossary of the 119 keywords used.
-
- The bib is in the form of a PostScript file. The printout is 41 pages long.
- Below is a list of ftp sites and the dirs that contain the file. It's named
- "speer.raytrace.bib.ps.Z" and is compressed at most sites-
-
- Site Dir
- wuarchive.wustl.edu graphics/graphics/bib/RT.BIB.Speer/
- karazm.math.uh.edu pub/Graphics/
- gondwana.ecr.mu.oz.au pub/papers/
- nic.funet.fi pub/sci/papers/graphics
- coral.cs.jcu.edu.au graphics/papers/
-
-
- Eric Haines (erich@eye.com) maintains ray tracing and radiosity/global
- illumination bibliographies. These are in "refer" format, and so can be
- searched electronically (a simple awk script to search for keywords is
- included with each). The bibliographies are available at most of the
- sites listed above, and the most current versions are maintained at
- princeton.edu: pub/Graphics/Papers as "RayBib.*" and "RadBib.*".
-
- Tom Wilson (wilson@cs.ucf.edu) has collected over 300 abstracts from ray
- tracing related research papers and books. The information is essentially
- in plaintext, and Latex and troff formatting programs are included. This
- collection is available at most of the sites above as "rtabs.*".
-
- 17) SIGGRAPH information online
-
- [from Steve Cunningham and Ralph Orlick]
-
- ACM-SIGGRAPH announces its online information site at siggraph.org
- (128.248.245.250). This site now provides SIGGRAPH information via both
- anonymous ftp and an electronic mail archive server.
-
- The anonymous ftp service is very standard, and the ftp directory includes
- both conference and publications subdirectories.
-
- To retrieve information by electronic mail, send mail to
- archive-server@siggraph.org
- and in the subject or the body of the message include the message send
- followed by the topic and subtopic you wish. A good place to start is with
- the command
- send index
- which will give you an up-to-date list of available information.
-
-
- 18) SIGGRAPH Panels Proceedings available
-
- [from Steve Cunningham and Bob Judd]
-
- ACM SIGGRAPH announces the availability of the SIGGRAPH '91 Panels Proceedings
- at the siggraph.org site (128.248.245.250). The proceedings are available
- in three formats:
- text (ASCII)
- rtf (rich text format, suitable for many word processors)
- word (MS Word for the Macintosh)
- They may be retrieved from siggraph.org in two ways:
-
- (1) by anonymous ftp
- change to one of the directories
- publications/s91/panels_proceedings/[text|rtf|word]
- The text and rtf files may be downloaded in ASCII mode, while the word
- files are stored in MacBinary format and must be downloaded in binary
- mode.
-
- Each directory contains a Table of Contents file (TOC) that describes the
- contents of each panel file.
-
- (2) by electronic mail
- send mail to
- archive-server@siggraph.org
- You can retrieve either the text or rtf files. We suggest that you
- first retrieve the index files by putting one of the messages
- send panel91-txt index
- send panel91-rtf index
- in the subject or body of the message. You will get the necessary
- information to retrieve the actual transcript files.
-
-
- 19) Graphics mailing lists
-
- There are a variety of graphics-related mailing list out there, each
- covering either a single product or a single topic. I have been an
- active participant in one of these for some time now, and find the
- focus and expertise which can be brought to bear on an isolated topic
- to be nothing short of amazing.
-
- Please send me the appropriate information if you have any others you
- would like to see added.
-
- Name: Imagine mailing list
- Description: Discussion forum for users of the Imagine 3D Rendering and
- Animation package by Impulse, Inc.
- Platforms: Amiga, IBM
- Subscription: imagine-request@email.sp.paramax.com
- Posting: imagine@email.sp.paramax.com
-
- Name: DCTV mailing list
- Description: Discussion forum for users of the Digital Creations DCTV
- box, software, and file formats
- Platforms: Amiga
- Subscription: DCTV-request@nova.cc.purdue.edu
- Posting: DCTV@nova.cc.purdue.edu
-
- Name: Rayshade Users mailing list
- Description: Discussion forum for users of the Rayshade raytracer
- Platforms: Most UNIX boxes, Amiga, Mac, IBM
- Subscription: rayshade-request@cs.princeton.edu
- Posting: rayshade-users@cs.princeton.edu
-
- Name: Lightwave 3D software for Toaster mailing list
- Description: Discussion forum for users of Lightwave, the Video
- Toaster modelling and rendering package
- Platforms: Amiga
- Subscription: lightwave-request@bobsbox.rent.com
- with "subscribe lightwave-l" in your message
- Posting: lightwave@bobsbox.rent.com
-
- Name: POV mailing list
- Description: Discussion forum for DKBTrace and POV renderers
- Platforms: Unix
- Subscription: listserv@trearn.bitnet
- Posting: dkb-l@trearn.bitnet
-
- Name: Mailing List For Massive Parallel Rendering
- Description: same?
- Platforms: Unix
- Subscription: mp-render-request@icase.edu
- Posting: mp-render@icase.edu
-
- 20) Specific references on file formats
-
- Graphics File Formats, David Kay and John Levine, Windcrest/McGraw-Hill
- 1992, ISBN 0-8306-3059-7 paper, ISBN 0-8306-3060-0 $36.95 hardcover,
- ISBN 0-8306-3059-7 $24.95 paper. Comments - 26 formats, no software
- (this is good, IMHO - I prefer books which are non-platform-dependent).
- Questions about this book may be sent to gbook@iecc.cambridge.ma.us.
-
-
- 21) What about GIF?
-
- GIF stands for Graphics Interchange Format. It is portable and usable upon
- a wide variety of platforms. It is quite limited in some ways (yes, the
- keeper of the FAQ has some opinions after all), and in fact, I don't like
- it much. However, it looks to me like the most-Frequently Asked Question
- which was not previously covered in this list. The following is a list
- of newsgroups and the like where one could go to find out about GIF.
-
- Subject: alt.binaries.pictures FAQ - General info
- Subject: alt.binaries.pictures FAQ - OS specific info
- Newsgroups: alt.binaries.pictures.d,alt.binaries.pictures.misc,
- alt.binaries.pictures.utilities,alt.binaries.pictures.fractals,
- alt.binaries.pictures.fine-art.d,news.answers
-
- Available in the indicated USENET newsgroup(s), or via anonymous ftp from
- pit-manager.mit.edu in the files:
-
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/pictures-faq/part1
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/pictures-faq/part2
-
- Also available from mail-server@pit-manager.mit.edu by sending a mail
- message containing any or all of:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/pictures-faq/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/pictures-faq/part2
-
- Send a message containing "help" to get general information about the
- mail server.
-
- Also, you could check out the resources described in sections 7, 8, and
- 20 above for more information.
-
-
- 22) What is morphing?
-
- Warping is the deformation of an image by mapping each pixel to a new
- location. Morphing is blending from one image or object to another one.
- Valerie Hall has written an excellent introduction to warping and
- morphing. This is available for anonymous ftp from marsh.cs.curtin.edu.au
- in the directory pub/graphics/bibliography/Morph. There are three files:
-
- morph_intro.ps.Z (PostScript version, many pictures - 1.5M)
- morph_intro.txt.Z (text version)
- m_responses.Z (Responses to morphing questions)
-
- The files are compressed, so you must use binary transfer and
- uncompress them afterwards.
-
-
- 23) How to ray-trace height fields
- Height fields are a special case in ray-tracing. They have a number of uses,
- such as terrain rendering, and some optimization is possible. Thus, they
- get their own FAQ section. Note that further references can no doubt be
- located via the ray-tracing bibs in section 16 above.
-
- The following paper seems to be the definitive reference:
-
- F. Kenton Musgrave
- Grid Tracing: Fast Ray Tracing For Height Fields
- July, 1988
- <musg88.ps.Z>
-
-
- This is available as "Research Report YALEU/DCS/RR-639" from Yale University,
- it's also in the SIGGRAPH '91 Fractal Modeling in 3D Computer Graphics and
- Imaging course notes, and (best of all) it's available on the net:
-
- nic.funet.fi pub/sci/papers/musg88.ps.Z
- weedeater.math.yale.edu pub/Papers/musg88.ms.Z
- princeton.edu pub/Graphics/Papers/musg88.ms.Z
- coral.cs.jcu.edu.au graphics/papers/musg88.ps.Z
- gondwana.ecr.mu.OZ.AU pub/papers/musg88.ms.Z and musg88.ps.Z
-
- An implementation of this paper may be found in Rayshade.
-
- Another paper exists:
-
- %A David W. Paglieroni
- %A Sidney M. Petersen
- %T Parametric Height Field Ray Tracing
- %J Proceedings of Graphics Interface '92
- %I Canadian Information Processing Society
- %C Toronto, Ontario
- %D May 1992
- %P 192-200
-
- And still one more:
-
- Musgrave, Kolb, and Mace
- "The Synthesis and Rendering of Eroded Fractal Terrains",
- Computer Graphics Vol 23, No. 3 (SIGGRAPH '89 procedings) p. 41-50
-
-
-
- 24) How to find the area of a 3D polygon
-
- The area of a triangle is given by (in C notation),
-
- area = 0.5 * ( ( x[0] * y[1] ) + ( x[1] * y[2] ) + ( x[2] * y[0] ) -
- ( x[1] * y[0] ) - ( x[2] * y[1] ) - ( x[0] * y[2] ) );
-
- and the area of a planar polygon is given by
-
- area = 0.0;
-
- for ( i = 0; i < n - 1; i++ )
- area += ( x[i] * y[i + 1] ) - ( x[i + 1] * y[i] );
- area += ( x[n - 1] * y[0] ) - ( x[0] * y[n - 1] );
- area /= 2.0;
-
- If the area is a negative number, the polygon or triangle is
- clockwise, if positive, it is counterclockwise.
-
- >From Ronald Golman's Gem (in Graphics Gems II - see section 1 above), "Area
- of Planar Polygons and Volume of Polyhedra:"
-
- The area of a polygon P0, P1, P2, ... Pn, not in the x-y plane, is
- given by
-
- Area(Polygon) = 1/2 * | N . Sigma { Pk x Pk+1 } |
-
- where N is the unit vector normal to the plane and P is a polygonal
- vertex. The . represents the dot product operator and the x
- represents the cross product operator. Sigma represents the summation
- operator. | | represents the absolute value operator. Pn+1 is equal
- to P0.
-
-
- 25) How to join ACM/SIGGRAPH
-
- Probably the easiest way to join ACM/SIGGRAPH is to trot over to your
- local technical library and find a copy of Communications of the ACM.
- Somewhere within the first few pages will be an application blank.
- Fill it out and mail it in. ACM membership for students costs $23.00,
- Voting or Associate Membership $77.00 (yearly)
-
- SIGGRAPH student membership costs an additional $16.00, $26.00 for
- Voting or Associate Members (also yearly). To get TOG (Transactions
- on Graphics) it's another $26.00 for students and $31.00 for Voting or
- Associate Members.
-
- If you just want to join SIGGRAPH without joining ACM, it'll cost you
- $59.00 (no student discount).
-
- There are surcharges for overseas airmailing of publications.
-
- ACM Member services may be contacted via email at acmhelp@acmvm.bitnet.
- Their phone number is (212) 626-0500. FAX number (212) 944-1318.
- Snailmail address:
-
- ACM
- PO Box 12114
- Church Street Station
- New York, New York 10257
-
- SIGGRAPH `93 will be held in Anaheim, California, at the Anaheim
- Convention Center (just up the street from Disneyland) on August 1-6, 1993.
-
- 26) Where can I find MRI and CT scan volume data?
-
- Volume data sets are available from the University of North Carolina at
- omicron.cs.unc.edu (152.2.128.159) in /pub/softlab/CHVRTD. (Commerical
- use is prohibited.)
-
- Head data - A 109-slice MRI data set of a human head.
-
- Knee data - A 127-slice MRI data set of a human knee.
-
- HIPIP data - The result of a quantum mechanical calculation of a SOD data
- of a one-electron orbital of HIPIP, an iron protein.
-
- SOD data - An electron density map of the active site of SOD (superoxide
- dismutase).
-
- CT Cadaver Head data - A 113-slice MRI data set of a CT study of a cadaver
- head.
-
- MR Brain data - A 109-slice MRI data set of a head with skull partially
- removed to reveal brain.
-
- RNA data - An electron density map for Staphylococcus Aureus Ribonuclease.
-
-
- 27) Specific references on spatial data structures including quadtrees
- and octrees
-
- H. Samet,
- The Design and Analysis of Spatial Data Structures,
- Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1990.
- ISBN 0-201-50255-0.
-
- H. Samet,
- Applications of Spatial Data Structures: Computer Graphics, Image Processing, a
- nd GIS,
- Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1990.
- ISBN 0-201-50300-0.
-
-
- 28) Where can I get a program to plot XY(Z) data or f(x) data?
-
- Gnuplot is a command-driven interactive data/function plotting program. It
- runs on just about any machine, and is very flexible in terms of supported
- output devices. The official North American distribution site for the latest
- version is dartmouth.edu in /pub/gnuplot. More information is available from
- the USENET newsgroup comp.graphics.gnuplot and its FAQ, graphics/gnuplot-faq.
-
- ACE/gr (xmgr - Motif/xvgr - XView) is a data/function plotting tool for
- workstations or X-terminals using X. Available from ftp.ccalmr.ogi.edu
- in /CCALMR/pub/acegr.
-
- robotx (Robot) is a general purpose plotting and data analysis program.
- Requires XView, X-terminal or workstation. Available from sunsite.unc.edu
- in /pub/academic/data_analysis.
-
- Xgraph is a popular two-dimensional plotting program that accepts data in a
- form similar to the unix program graph and displays line graphs, scatter plots,
- or bar charts on an X11 display. Available from ic.berkeley.edu in /pub.
-
- Drawplot is a program for drawing 2D plots on X10/X11 windows, SUNVIEW
- displays, or HP2648 terminals. Available from xcf.berkeley.edu in /src/local.
-
- 29) Specific references on PEX and PHIGS
-
- PEXlib Programming Manual, Tom Gaskins, 1154 pages, O'Reilly & Associates,
- ISBN 1-56592-028-7
-
- PEXlib Reference Manual, edited by Steve Talbott, 577 pages, O'Reilly &
- Associates, ISBN 1-56592-029-5
-
- PHIGS Programming Manual, Tom Gaskins, 908 pages, O'Reilly & Associates,
- ISBN 0-93775-85-4 (softcover), ISBN 0-937175-92-7 (casebound)
-
- PHIGS Reference Manual, edited by Linda Kosko, 1099 pages, O'Reilly &
- Associates, ISBN 0-937175-91-9
-
-
-