| 584 |  | added to the picture file name along with the standard ".pic" suffix. | 
| 585 |  |  | 
| 586 |  | The standard views are specified by strings of the form | 
| 587 | < | "[Xx]?[Yy]?[Zz]?[vlahc]?". | 
| 587 | > | "[Xx]?[Yy]?[Zz]?[vlahsc]?". | 
| 588 |  | (That is, an optional upper or lower case X followed by an optional | 
| 589 |  | upper or lower case Y followed by an optional upper or lower case Z | 
| 590 | < | followed by an optional lower case V, L, A, H or C.) | 
| 590 | > | followed by an optional lower case view type.) | 
| 591 |  | The letters indicate the desired view position, where upper case "X" | 
| 592 |  | means maximum X, lower case "y" means minimum Y and so on. | 
| 593 |  | The final letter is the view type, where 'v' is perspective (the | 
| 594 |  | default), 'l' is parallel, 'a' is angular fisheye, 'h' is | 
| 595 | < | hemispherical fisheye and 'c' is for cylindrical panorama. | 
| 596 | < | A perspective view from maximum X, minimum Y would be "Xy" or | 
| 597 | < | "Xyv". | 
| 595 | > | hemispherical fisheye, 's' is for planisphere (stereographic) fisheye, | 
| 596 | > | and 'c' is for cylindrical panorama. | 
| 597 | > | A perspective view from maximum X, minimum Y would be "Xy" or "Xyv". | 
| 598 |  | A parallel view from maximum Z would be "Zl". | 
| 599 |  | If "ZONE" is an interior zone, the standard views will | 
| 600 |  | be inside the perimeter. | 
| 633 |  | Consult the rpict(1) manual page for a full description of the various | 
| 634 |  | view options, all of which begin with "-v". | 
| 635 |  | Just briefly, the "-vt?" option sets the view type, where "?" is | 
| 636 | < | replaced by one of the letters "v, l, a, h or c", corresponding to | 
| 636 | > | replaced by one of the letters "v, l, a, h, s or c", corresponding to | 
| 637 |  | perspective, parallel, angular fisheye, hemispherical fisheye | 
| 638 |  | and cylindrical panorama, respectively. | 
| 639 |  | The "-vp x y z" option sets the view position (eyepoint), where "x y z" | 
| 883 |  | It only means that some accuracy and possibly some smoothness | 
| 884 |  | will be traded for speed in the shadow calculations. | 
| 885 |  |  | 
| 886 | + | .Options.Pgmap | 
| 887 | + |  | 
| 888 | + | The "Pgmap" specifies the file to hold the global photons computed | 
| 889 | + | by the "mkpmap" command, followed by the number of photons to generate | 
| 890 | + | (required). | 
| 891 | + | A typical photon count for a global map is on the order of 100-200K. | 
| 892 | + | (A 'K', 'M', or 'G' may follow the value to indicate thousands, millions, | 
| 893 | + | or billions of photons.) | 
| 894 | + | By convention, photon map files are given a ".pmp" suffix. | 
| 895 | + | An optional third parameter specifies the bandwidth to use | 
| 896 | + | for the global photons during rendering, and this value should be | 
| 897 | + | around 50. | 
| 898 | + |  | 
| 899 | + | .Options.PgmDelete | 
| 900 | + |  | 
| 901 | + | The "Delete" button next to the "Pgmap" window on the Options | 
| 902 | + | screen allows you to remove the named global photon map file. | 
| 903 | + | This is usually done when a change is made to the "mkpmap" options, | 
| 904 | + | as the file will be regenerated automatically after most scene changes. | 
| 905 | + |  | 
| 906 | + | .Options.Pcmap | 
| 907 | + |  | 
| 908 | + | The "Pcmap" specifies the file to hold the caustic photons computed | 
| 909 | + | by the "mkpmap" command, followed by the number of photons to generate | 
| 910 | + | (required). | 
| 911 | + | A typical photon count for a global map is on the order of 1000K (1M). | 
| 912 | + | (A 'K', 'M', or 'G' may follow the value to indicate thousands, millions, | 
| 913 | + | or billions of photons.) | 
| 914 | + | By convention, photon map files are given a ".pmp" suffix. | 
| 915 | + | An optional third parameter specifies the bandwidth to use | 
| 916 | + | for the global photons during rendering, and this value should be | 
| 917 | + | around 50. | 
| 918 | + | (See the "Pgmap" topic under the current help category.) | 
| 919 | + |  | 
| 920 | + | .Options.PcmDelete | 
| 921 | + |  | 
| 922 | + | The "Delete" button next to the "Pcmap" window on the Options | 
| 923 | + | screen allows you to remove the named caustic photon map file. | 
| 924 | + | This is usually done when a change is made to the "mkpmap" options, | 
| 925 | + | as the file will be regenerated automatically after most scene changes. | 
| 926 | + |  | 
| 927 |  | .Options.Ambfile | 
| 928 |  |  | 
| 929 |  | The "Ambfile" is the file used to store Radiance ambient values for | 
| 1008 |  | .Options.Mkillum | 
| 1009 |  |  | 
| 1010 |  | The "mkillum opts" window may be used to specify options to the | 
| 1011 | < | mkillum(1) command, whose options are actually passed to rtrace(1). | 
| 1011 | > | mkillum(1) command. | 
| 1012 |  | These options apply only if there are one or more "Illum" files | 
| 1013 |  | named on the Scene screen. | 
| 1014 |  |  | 
| 1015 |  | It is very important to set mkillum options sensibly, | 
| 1016 |  | since rad does not have the intelligence to do it for you. | 
| 1017 | + |  | 
| 1018 | + | .Options.Mkpmap | 
| 1019 | + |  | 
| 1020 | + | The "mkpmap opts" window may be used to specify options | 
| 1021 | + | to the mkpmap(1) command. | 
| 1022 | + | There are no default values, and rad does not set these | 
| 1023 | + | options intelligently. | 
| 1024 |  |  | 
| 1025 |  | .Options.Render | 
| 1026 |  |  |