| 1 | .\" SCCSid "$SunId$ LBL" | 
| 2 | .nr PS 11 | 
| 3 | .ps 11 | 
| 4 | .nr VS 12 | 
| 5 | .vs 12 | 
| 6 | .nr PD .5v | 
| 7 | .ds LF MGF | 
| 8 | .ds RF Version 1.0 | 
| 9 | .DA May 1995 | 
| 10 | .TL | 
| 11 | The Materials and Geometry Format | 
| 12 | .AU | 
| 13 | Greg Ward | 
| 14 | .br | 
| 15 | Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory | 
| 16 | .NH | 
| 17 | Introduction | 
| 18 | .LP | 
| 19 | The Materials and Geometry Format (referred to henceforth as MGF) | 
| 20 | is a description language for 3-dimensional environments expressly | 
| 21 | suited to visible light simulation and rendering. | 
| 22 | The materials are physically-based and rely on standard and | 
| 23 | well-accepted definitions of color, reflectance and transmittance | 
| 24 | for good accuracy and reproducibility. | 
| 25 | The geometry is based on boundary representation using simple | 
| 26 | geometric primitives such as polygons, spheres and cones. | 
| 27 | The file format itself is terse but human-readable ASCII text. | 
| 28 | .NH 2 | 
| 29 | What makes MGF special? | 
| 30 | .LP | 
| 31 | There are three principal reasons to use MGF as an input language for | 
| 32 | lighting simulation and physically-based rendering: | 
| 33 | .RS | 
| 34 | .IP 1. | 
| 35 | It's the only existing format that describes materials physically. | 
| 36 | .IP 2. | 
| 37 | It is endorsed by the Illuminating Engineering Society of North | 
| 38 | America (IESNA) as part of their LM-63-1995 standard for luminaire data. | 
| 39 | .IP 3. | 
| 40 | It's easy and fun to support since it comes with a standard parser | 
| 41 | and sample scenes and objects at the web site, | 
| 42 | "http://radsite.lbl.gov/mgf/HOME.html". | 
| 43 | .RE | 
| 44 | .LP | 
| 45 | The standard parser provides both immediate and a long-term | 
| 46 | benefits, since it presents a programming interface that is more | 
| 47 | stable even than the language itself. | 
| 48 | Unlike AutoCAD DXF and other de facto standards, a change to the | 
| 49 | language will not break existing programs. | 
| 50 | This is because the parser gives the calling software only those | 
| 51 | entities it can handle. | 
| 52 | If the translator understands only polygons, it will be given only | 
| 53 | polygons. | 
| 54 | If a new geometric primitive is included in a later version of the | 
| 55 | standard, the new parser that comes with it will still be able to | 
| 56 | express this entity as polygons. | 
| 57 | Thus, the urgency of modifying code to support a changing standard | 
| 58 | is removed, and long-term stability is assured. | 
| 59 | .LP | 
| 60 | This notion of | 
| 61 | .I extensibility | 
| 62 | is a cornerstone of the format, and it goes well beyond the | 
| 63 | extensibility of other languages because is guarantees that new | 
| 64 | versions of the standard will not break existing programs, and the | 
| 65 | new information will be used as much as possible. | 
| 66 | Other languages either require that all translators stay up to date | 
| 67 | with the latest standard, or allow forward compatibility by simply | 
| 68 | .I ignoring | 
| 69 | new entities. | 
| 70 | In MGF, if NURBS are added at some point and the translator or | 
| 71 | loader does not handle them directly, the new version of the parser | 
| 72 | will automatically convert them to smoothed polygons without | 
| 73 | changing a single line of the calling program. | 
| 74 | It is merely necessary to link to the new library, and all the new | 
| 75 | entities are supported\(dg. | 
| 76 | .FS | 
| 77 | \(dgIf an old version of the parser encounters new entities it does | 
| 78 | not recognize, the default action is to ignore them, printing a warning | 
| 79 | message. | 
| 80 | This may be overridden to support custom entities, but such | 
| 81 | practice is discouraged because it weakens the standard. | 
| 82 | .FE | 
| 83 | .NH 2 | 
| 84 | What does MGF look like? | 
| 85 | .LP | 
| 86 | MGF has a simple entity-per-line structure, with a similar | 
| 87 | appearance to Wavefront's .OBJ format. | 
| 88 | Each entity is specified by a short keyword, and | 
| 89 | arguments are separated by white space (tabs and/or spaces). | 
| 90 | A newline may be escaped with a backslash ('\\'), in which case it | 
| 91 | counts as a space. | 
| 92 | Lines and continued lines may have up to 4096 characters, including | 
| 93 | newlines, tabs and spaces. | 
| 94 | A comment is an ignored entity whose keyword is the pound sign ('#'). | 
| 95 | .LP | 
| 96 | Here is an MGF file that describes a simple two-drawer file cabinet: | 
| 97 | .DS | 
| 98 | # Conversion from inches to meters | 
| 99 | xf -s .0254 | 
| 100 | # Surface material | 
| 101 | m burgundy_formica = | 
| 102 | c | 
| 103 | cxy .362 .283 | 
| 104 | rd .0402 | 
| 105 | c | 
| 106 | rs .0284 .05 | 
| 107 | sides 1 | 
| 108 | # Cabinet vertices | 
| 109 | v fc.xy = | 
| 110 | p .05 0 0 | 
| 111 | v fc.xY = | 
| 112 | p .05 18 0 | 
| 113 | v fc.XY = | 
| 114 | p 35.95 18 0 | 
| 115 | v fc.Xy = | 
| 116 | p 35.95 0 0 | 
| 117 | # Cabinet | 
| 118 | prism fc.xy fc.xY fc.XY fc.Xy 24 | 
| 119 | # Drawer vertices | 
| 120 | v fcd.Xz = | 
| 121 | p 34 0 0 | 
| 122 | v fcd.XZ = | 
| 123 | p 34 0 10 | 
| 124 | v fcd.xZ = | 
| 125 | p 0 0 10 | 
| 126 | v fcd.xz = | 
| 127 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 128 | # Two drawers | 
| 129 | o drawer | 
| 130 | xf -t 1 18.1 2 -a 2 -t 0 0 11 | 
| 131 | prism fcd.xz fcd.Xz fcd.XZ fcd.xZ .9 | 
| 132 | xf | 
| 133 | o | 
| 134 | # End of units conversion | 
| 135 | xf | 
| 136 | .DE | 
| 137 | .NH 2 | 
| 138 | MGF's place in the world of standards | 
| 139 | .LP | 
| 140 | MGF was developed initially to support detailed geometric | 
| 141 | description of light fixtures for the IESNA luminaire data standard, | 
| 142 | publication LM-63\(dg. | 
| 143 | .FS | 
| 144 | \(dgTo obtain the latest version of this standard, write to: | 
| 145 | Illuminating Engineering Society of North America, | 
| 146 | 345 East 47th St., | 
| 147 | New York, NY  10017. | 
| 148 | .FE | 
| 149 | Existing standards for geometric description were either too | 
| 150 | cumbersome (e.g. | 
| 151 | .I Radiance) | 
| 152 | or did not include physical materials (e.g. IGES). | 
| 153 | It was noted early on that a standard able to fully describe | 
| 154 | luminaires would necessarily be | 
| 155 | capable of describing other objects as well; indeed whole | 
| 156 | environments could be defined this way. | 
| 157 | Since the descriptions would be physical, they could serve as input | 
| 158 | to both lighting simulation and rendering software. | 
| 159 | A standard language for describing the appearance of physical | 
| 160 | objects has been lacking for some time, and current efforts in this | 
| 161 | direction (i.e. STEP) seem several years away from fruition. | 
| 162 | (There are other languages for describing realistic scenes | 
| 163 | that deserve mention here, such as VRML and the Manchester Scene | 
| 164 | Description Language, but none give specific attention to physical | 
| 165 | material properties and are thus unsuitable for lighting | 
| 166 | simulation.)\0 | 
| 167 | .LP | 
| 168 | In short, we saw this as an opportunity to offer the lighting and | 
| 169 | rendering community a simple and easy-to-support standard for | 
| 170 | describing environments in a physically valid way. | 
| 171 | Our hope is that this will promote sharing color, material and object | 
| 172 | libraries as well as complete scene descriptions. | 
| 173 | Sharing libraries is of obvious benefit to users and software | 
| 174 | developers alike. | 
| 175 | Sharing scenes should also permit | 
| 176 | comparisons between rendering systems and | 
| 177 | intervalidation of lighting calculations. | 
| 178 | As anyone who works in this field knows, modeling is the most | 
| 179 | difficult step in creating any simulation or rendering, and there is | 
| 180 | no excuse for this data being held prisoner by a proprietary data | 
| 181 | format. | 
| 182 | .NH | 
| 183 | MGF Basics | 
| 184 | .LP | 
| 185 | The default coordinate system in MGF is right-handed with | 
| 186 | distances given in meters, though this can be effectively changed | 
| 187 | by specifying a global transformation. | 
| 188 | The transformation context is affected by the | 
| 189 | .UL xf | 
| 190 | entity, and the whole of MGF can be understood in terms of entities | 
| 191 | and contexts. | 
| 192 | .NH 2 | 
| 193 | Entities and Contexts | 
| 194 | .LP | 
| 195 | An | 
| 196 | .I entity | 
| 197 | in MGF is any non-blank line, which must be one of a finite set of | 
| 198 | command keywords followed by zero or more arguments. | 
| 199 | (As mentioned previously, an entity may continue over multiple lines | 
| 200 | by escaping the newline with a backslash.)\0 | 
| 201 | Table 1 gives a list of entities and their expected arguments. | 
| 202 | Section 3 gives more detailed information on each entity. | 
| 203 | .KF | 
| 204 | .TS | 
| 205 | expand, box; | 
| 206 | l l l. | 
| 207 | Keyword Arguments       Interpretation | 
| 208 | =       =       = | 
| 209 | #       [anything ...]  a comment | 
| 210 | o       [name]  begin/end object context | 
| 211 | xf      [xform] begin/end transformation context | 
| 212 | i       pathname [xform]        include file (with transformation) | 
| 213 | ies     pathname [-m f][xform]  include IES luminaire (with transformation) | 
| 214 | _       _       _ | 
| 215 | c       [id [= [template]]]     get/set color context | 
| 216 | cxy     x y     set CIE (x,y) chromaticity for current color | 
| 217 | cspec   l_min l_max v1 v2 ...   set relative spectrum for current color | 
| 218 | cct     temperature     set spectrum based on black body temperature | 
| 219 | cmix    w1 c1 w2 c2 ... mix named colors to make current color | 
| 220 | _       _       _ | 
| 221 | m       [id [= [template]]]     get/set material context | 
| 222 | sides   {1|2}   set number of sides for current material | 
| 223 | rd      rho_d   set diffuse reflectance for current material | 
| 224 | td      tau_d   set diffuse transmittance for current material | 
| 225 | ed      epsilon_d       set diffuse emittance for current material | 
| 226 | rs      rho_s alpha_r   set specular reflectance for current material | 
| 227 | ts      tau_s alpha_t   set specular transmittance for current material | 
| 228 | ir      n_real n_imag   set index of refraction for current material | 
| 229 | _       _       _ | 
| 230 | v       [id [= [template]]]     get/set vertex context | 
| 231 | p       x y z   set point position for current vertex | 
| 232 | n       dx dy dz        set surface normal for current vertex | 
| 233 | _       _       _ | 
| 234 | f       v1 v2 v3 ...    polygon using current material, spec. vertices | 
| 235 | sph     vc radius       sphere | 
| 236 | cyl     v1 radius v2    truncated right cylinder (open-ended) | 
| 237 | cone    v1 rad1 v2 rad2 truncated right cone (open-ended) | 
| 238 | prism   v1 v2 v3 ... length     truncated right prism (closed solid) | 
| 239 | ring    vc rmin rmax    circular ring with inner and outer radii | 
| 240 | torus   vc rmin rmax    circular torus with inner and outer radii | 
| 241 | .TE | 
| 242 | .QP | 
| 243 | .B "Table 1". | 
| 244 | MGF entities and their arguments. | 
| 245 | Arguments in brackets are optional. | 
| 246 | Arguments in curly braces mean one of the given choices must | 
| 247 | appear. | 
| 248 | Ellipsis (...) mean that any number of arguments may be given. | 
| 249 | .sp | 
| 250 | .KE | 
| 251 | .LP | 
| 252 | A | 
| 253 | .I context | 
| 254 | describes the current state of the interpreter, and affects or is | 
| 255 | affected by certain entities as they are read in. | 
| 256 | MGF contexts can be divided into two types, | 
| 257 | .I "hierarchical contexts" | 
| 258 | and | 
| 259 | .I "named contexts". | 
| 260 | .LP | 
| 261 | Hierarchical contexts are manipulated by a single entity and | 
| 262 | have an associated "stack" onto which new | 
| 263 | contexts are "pushed" using the entity. | 
| 264 | The last context may be "popped" by giving the entity again with no | 
| 265 | arguments. | 
| 266 | The two hierarchical contexts in MGF are the current transformation, | 
| 267 | manipulated with the | 
| 268 | .UL xf | 
| 269 | entity, and the current object, manipulated with the | 
| 270 | .UL o | 
| 271 | entity. | 
| 272 | .KF | 
| 273 | .TS | 
| 274 | expand, allbox; | 
| 275 | l c l l l. | 
| 276 | Context Cntl. Entity    Default Value   Field Entities  Affects | 
| 277 | =       =       =       =       = | 
| 278 | Object  o       -       -       - | 
| 279 | Transform       xf      -       -       T{ | 
| 280 | f, sph, cyl, cone, | 
| 281 | ring, torus, prism | 
| 282 | T} | 
| 283 | Material        m       2-sided black   T{ | 
| 284 | sides, rd, td, | 
| 285 | ed, rs, ts | 
| 286 | T}      T{ | 
| 287 | f, sph, cyl, cone, | 
| 288 | ring, torus, prism | 
| 289 | T} | 
| 290 | Color   c       neutral grey    T{ | 
| 291 | cxy, cspec, cct, cmix | 
| 292 | T}      T{ | 
| 293 | rd, td, ed, rs, ts | 
| 294 | T} | 
| 295 | Vertex  v       T{ | 
| 296 | (0,0,0), | 
| 297 | no normal | 
| 298 | T}      p, n    T{ | 
| 299 | f, sph, cyl, cone, | 
| 300 | ring, torus, prism | 
| 301 | T} | 
| 302 | .TE | 
| 303 | .QP | 
| 304 | .B "Table 2". | 
| 305 | MGF contexts and their related entities and default values. | 
| 306 | .sp | 
| 307 | .KE | 
| 308 | .LP | 
| 309 | Named contexts in contrast hold sets of values that are swapped | 
| 310 | in and out one at a time. | 
| 311 | There are three named contexts in MGF, the current material, the | 
| 312 | current color and the current vertex. | 
| 313 | Each one may be associated with an identifier (any non-white | 
| 314 | sequence of printing ASCII characters beginning with a letter), | 
| 315 | and one of each is in effect at any given time. | 
| 316 | Initially, these contexts are unnamed, and invoking an unnamed | 
| 317 | context always returns to the original (default) values. | 
| 318 | (See Table 2 for a list of contexts, their related | 
| 319 | entities and defaults.)\0 | 
| 320 | .LP | 
| 321 | It is easiest to think of a context as a "scratch space" where | 
| 322 | values are written by some entities and read by others. | 
| 323 | Naming a context allows us to reestablish the same scratch space | 
| 324 | later, usually for reference but it can be altered as well. | 
| 325 | Let us say we wanted to create a smooth blue plastic material with a | 
| 326 | diffuse reflectance of 20% and a specular reflectance of 4%: | 
| 327 | .DS | 
| 328 | # Establish a new material context called "blue_plastic" | 
| 329 | m blue_plastic = | 
| 330 | # Reestablish a previous color context called "blue" | 
| 331 | c blue | 
| 332 | # Set the diffuse reflectance, which uses the above color | 
| 333 | rd .20 | 
| 334 | # Get the unnamed color context (always starts out grey) | 
| 335 | c | 
| 336 | # Set the specular reflectance, which is uncolored | 
| 337 | rs .04 0 | 
| 338 | # We're done, the current material context is now "blue_plastic" | 
| 339 | .DE | 
| 340 | Note that the above assumes that we have previously defined a color | 
| 341 | context named "blue". | 
| 342 | If we forgot to do that, the above description would generate an | 
| 343 | "undefined" error. | 
| 344 | The color context affects the material context indirectly because it | 
| 345 | is read by the specular and diffuse reflectance entities, which are | 
| 346 | in turn written to the current material. | 
| 347 | It is not necessary to indent the entities that affect the material | 
| 348 | definition, but it improves readability. | 
| 349 | Note also that there is no explicit end to the material definition. | 
| 350 | As long as a context remains in effect, its contents may be altered | 
| 351 | by its field entities. | 
| 352 | This will not affect previous uses of the context, however. | 
| 353 | For example, a surface entity following the above definition will | 
| 354 | have the specified color and reflectance, and later changes to the | 
| 355 | material "blue_plastic" will have no effect on it. | 
| 356 | .LP | 
| 357 | Each of the three named contexts has an associated entity that | 
| 358 | controls it. | 
| 359 | The material context is controlled by the | 
| 360 | .UL m | 
| 361 | entity, the color context is controlled by the | 
| 362 | .UL c | 
| 363 | entity, and the vertex context is controlled by the | 
| 364 | .UL v | 
| 365 | entity. | 
| 366 | There are exactly four forms for each entity. | 
| 367 | The first form is the keyword by itself, which establishes | 
| 368 | an unnamed context with predetermined default values. | 
| 369 | This is a useful way to set values without worrying about saving | 
| 370 | them for recall later. | 
| 371 | The second form is to give the keyword with a previously defined | 
| 372 | name. | 
| 373 | This reestablishes a prior context for reuse. | 
| 374 | The third form is to give the keyword with a name followed by an | 
| 375 | equals sign. | 
| 376 | (There must be a space between the name and the equals sign, since | 
| 377 | it is a separate argument.)\0 | 
| 378 | This establishes a new context and assigns it the same default | 
| 379 | values as the unnamed context. | 
| 380 | The fourth and final form gives the keyword followed by a name then | 
| 381 | an equals then the name of a previous context definition. | 
| 382 | This establishes a new context for the first name, assigning the | 
| 383 | values from the second named context rather than the usual defaults. | 
| 384 | This is a convenient way create an alias or | 
| 385 | to modify a context under a new name (i.e. "save as"). | 
| 386 | .NH 2 | 
| 387 | Hierarchical Contexts and Transformations | 
| 388 | .LP | 
| 389 | As mentioned in the last subsection, there are two hierarchical | 
| 390 | contexts in MGF, the current object and the current transformation. | 
| 391 | We will start by discussing the current object, since it is | 
| 392 | the simpler of the two. | 
| 393 | .NH 3 | 
| 394 | Objects | 
| 395 | .LP | 
| 396 | There is no particular need in lighting simulation or rendering to | 
| 397 | name objects, but it may help the user | 
| 398 | to know what object a particular surface is associated with. | 
| 399 | The | 
| 400 | .UL o | 
| 401 | entity provides a convenient mechanism for associating names with | 
| 402 | surfaces. | 
| 403 | The basic use of this entity is as follows: | 
| 404 | .DS | 
| 405 | o object_name | 
| 406 | [object entities...] | 
| 407 | o subobject_name | 
| 408 | [subobject entities...] | 
| 409 | o | 
| 410 | [more object entities and subobjects...] | 
| 411 | o | 
| 412 | .DE | 
| 413 | The | 
| 414 | .UL o | 
| 415 | keyword by itself marks the end of an object context. | 
| 416 | Any number of hierarchical context levels are supported, and there are no | 
| 417 | rules governing the choice of object names except that they begin | 
| 418 | with a letter and be made up of printing, non-white ASCII characters. | 
| 419 | Indentation is not necessary of course, but it does improve | 
| 420 | readability. | 
| 421 | .NH 3 | 
| 422 | Transformations | 
| 423 | .LP | 
| 424 | MGF supports only rigid-body (i.e. non-distorting) transformations | 
| 425 | with uniform scaling. | 
| 426 | Unlike the other contexts, transformations have no associated | 
| 427 | name, only arguments. | 
| 428 | Thus, there is no way to reestablish a previous transformation other | 
| 429 | than to give the same arguments over again. | 
| 430 | Since the arguments are concise and self-explanatory, this was thought | 
| 431 | sufficient. | 
| 432 | The following transformation flags and | 
| 433 | parameters are defined: | 
| 434 | .TS | 
| 435 | center; | 
| 436 | l l. | 
| 437 | -t dx dy dz     translate objects along the given vector | 
| 438 | -rx degrees     rotate objects about the X-axis | 
| 439 | -ry degrees     rotate objects about the Y-axis | 
| 440 | -rz degrees     rotate objects about the Z-axis | 
| 441 | -s scalefactor  scale objects by the given factor | 
| 442 | -mx     mirror objects about the Y-Z plane | 
| 443 | -my     mirror objects about the X-Z plane | 
| 444 | -mz     mirror objects about the X-Y plane | 
| 445 | -i N    repeat the following arguments N times | 
| 446 | -a N    make an array of N geometric instances | 
| 447 | .TE | 
| 448 | Transform arguments have a cumulative effect. | 
| 449 | That is, a rotation | 
| 450 | about X of 20 degrees followed by a rotation about X of -50 degrees | 
| 451 | results in a total rotation of -30 degrees. | 
| 452 | However, if the two | 
| 453 | rotations are separated by some translation vector, the cumulative | 
| 454 | effect is quite different. | 
| 455 | It is best to think of each argument as | 
| 456 | acting on the included geometric objects, and each subsequent transformation | 
| 457 | argument affects the objects relative to their new position/orientation. | 
| 458 | .LP | 
| 459 | For example, rotating an object about its center is most easily done | 
| 460 | by translating | 
| 461 | the object back to the origin, applying the desired rotation, and translating | 
| 462 | it again back to its original position, like so: | 
| 463 | .DS | 
| 464 | # rotate an included object 20 degrees clockwise looking down | 
| 465 | # an axis parallel to Y and passing through the point (15,0,-35) | 
| 466 | xf -t -15 0 35 -ry -20 -t 15 0 -35 | 
| 467 | i object.mgf | 
| 468 | xf | 
| 469 | .DE | 
| 470 | Note that the include entity, | 
| 471 | .UL i, | 
| 472 | permits a transformation to be given with it, so the above could | 
| 473 | have been written more compactly as: | 
| 474 | .DS | 
| 475 | i object.mgf -t -15 0 35 -ry -20 -t 15 0 -35 | 
| 476 | .DE | 
| 477 | .LP | 
| 478 | Rotations are given in degrees counter-clockwise about a principal axis. | 
| 479 | That is, with the thumb of the right hand pointing in the direction | 
| 480 | of the axis, rotation follows the curl of the fingers. | 
| 481 | .LP | 
| 482 | The transform entity itself is cumulative, but in the reverse | 
| 483 | order to its arguments. | 
| 484 | That is, later transformations (i.e. enclosed transformations) | 
| 485 | are prepended to existing (i.e. enclosing) ones. | 
| 486 | A transform command | 
| 487 | with no arguments is used to return to the previous condition. | 
| 488 | It is | 
| 489 | necessary that transforms and their end statements ("xf" by itself) be | 
| 490 | balanced in a file, so that later or enclosing files are not affected. | 
| 491 | .LP | 
| 492 | Transformations apply only to geometric types, e.g. polygons, spheres, etc. | 
| 493 | Vertices and the components that go into geometry are not directly affected. | 
| 494 | This is to avoid confusion and the inadvertent multiple application of a | 
| 495 | given transformation. | 
| 496 | For example: | 
| 497 | .DS | 
| 498 | xf -t 5 0 0 | 
| 499 | v v1 = | 
| 500 | p 0 10 0 | 
| 501 | n 0 0 1 | 
| 502 | xf -rx 180 | 
| 503 | # Transform now in effect is "-rx 180 -t 5 0 0" | 
| 504 | ring v1 0 2 | 
| 505 | xf | 
| 506 | xf | 
| 507 | .DE | 
| 508 | The final ring center is (5,-10,0) -- note that the vertex itself is | 
| 509 | not affected by the transformation, only the geometry that calls on | 
| 510 | it. | 
| 511 | The normal orientation is (0,0,-1) due to the rotation about X, | 
| 512 | which also reversed the sign of the central Y coordinate. | 
| 513 | .NH 3 | 
| 514 | Arrays | 
| 515 | .LP | 
| 516 | The -a N transform specification causes the following transform | 
| 517 | arguments to be repeated along with the contents of the included | 
| 518 | objects N times. | 
| 519 | The first instance of the geometry will be in its | 
| 520 | initial location; the second instance will be repositioned according | 
| 521 | to the named transformation; the third instance will be repositioned by | 
| 522 | applying this transformation twice, and so on up to N-1 applications. | 
| 523 | .LP | 
| 524 | Multi-dimensional arrays may be specified with a single include | 
| 525 | entity by giving multiple array commands separated by their | 
| 526 | corresponding transforms. | 
| 527 | A final transformation may be given | 
| 528 | by preceding it with a -i 1 specification. | 
| 529 | In other words, the | 
| 530 | scope of an array command continues until the next -i or -a option. | 
| 531 | .LP | 
| 532 | The following MGF description places 60 spheres at a one unit spacing | 
| 533 | in a 3x4x5 array, then moves the whole thing to an origin of | 
| 534 | (15,30,45): | 
| 535 | .DS | 
| 536 | v v0 = | 
| 537 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 538 | xf -a 3 -t 1 0 0 -a 4 -t 0 1 0 -a 5 -t 0 0 1 -i 1 -t 15 30 45 | 
| 539 | sph v0 0.1 | 
| 540 | xf | 
| 541 | .DE | 
| 542 | Note the "-i 1" in the specification, which marks the end of the | 
| 543 | third array arguments before the final translation. | 
| 544 | .NH 2 | 
| 545 | Detailed MGF Example | 
| 546 | .LP | 
| 547 | The following example of a simple room with a single door | 
| 548 | and six file cabinets shows MGF in action, with copious comments to | 
| 549 | help explain what's going on. | 
| 550 | .LP | 
| 551 | .DS | 
| 552 | # "ceiling_tile" is a diffuse white surface with 75% reflectance: | 
| 553 | # Create new named material context and clear it | 
| 554 | m ceiling_tile = | 
| 555 | # Specify one-sided material so we can see through from above | 
| 556 | sides 1 | 
| 557 | # Set neutral color | 
| 558 | c | 
| 559 | # Set diffuse reflectance | 
| 560 | rd .75 | 
| 561 | # "stainless_steel" is a mostly specular surface with 70% reflectance: | 
| 562 | m stainless_steel = | 
| 563 | sides 1 | 
| 564 | c | 
| 565 | # Set specular reflectance to 50%, .08 roughness | 
| 566 | rs .5 .08 | 
| 567 | # Other 20% reflectance is diffuse | 
| 568 | rd .2 | 
| 569 |  | 
| 570 | # The following materials were measured with a spectrophotometer: | 
| 571 | m beige_paint = | 
| 572 | sides 1 | 
| 573 | # Set diffuse spectral reflectance | 
| 574 | c | 
| 575 | # Spectrum measured in 10 nm increments from 400 to 700 nm | 
| 576 | cspec 400 700 35.29 44.87 47.25 47.03 46.87 47.00 47.09 \\\\ | 
| 577 | 47.15 46.80 46.17 46.26 48.74 51.08 51.31 51.10 \\\\ | 
| 578 | 51.11 50.52 50.36 51.72 53.61 53.95 52.08 49.49 \\\\ | 
| 579 | 48.30 48.75 49.99 51.35 52.75 54.44 56.34 58.00 | 
| 580 | rd 0.5078 | 
| 581 | # Neutral (grey) specular component | 
| 582 | c | 
| 583 | rs 0.0099 0.08000 | 
| 584 | m mottled_carpet = | 
| 585 | sides 1 | 
| 586 | c | 
| 587 | cspec 400 700 11.23 11.28 11.39 11.49 11.61 11.73 11.88 \\\\ | 
| 588 | 12.02 12.12 12.19 12.30 12.37 12.37 12.36 12.34 \\\\ | 
| 589 | 12.28 12.22 12.29 12.45 12.59 12.70 12.77 12.82 \\\\ | 
| 590 | 12.88 12.98 13.24 13.67 14.31 15.55 17.46 19.75 | 
| 591 | rd 0.1245 | 
| 592 | m reddish_cloth = | 
| 593 | # 2-sided so we can observe it from behind | 
| 594 | sides 2 | 
| 595 | c | 
| 596 | cspec 400 700 28.62 27.96 27.86 28.28 29.28 30.49 31.61 \\\\ | 
| 597 | 32.27 32.26 31.83 31.13 30.07 29.14 29.03 29.69 \\\\ | 
| 598 | 30.79 32.30 33.90 34.56 34.32 33.85 33.51 33.30 \\\\ | 
| 599 | 33.43 34.06 35.26 37.04 39.41 42.55 46.46 51.00 | 
| 600 | rd 0.3210 | 
| 601 | m burgundy_formica = | 
| 602 | sides 1 | 
| 603 | c | 
| 604 | cspec 400 700  3.86  3.74  3.63  3.51  3.34  3.21  3.14 \\\\ | 
| 605 | 3.09  3.08  3.14  3.13  2.91  2.72  2.74  2.72 \\\\ | 
| 606 | 2.60  2.68  3.40  4.76  6.05  6.65  6.75  6.68 \\\\ | 
| 607 | 6.63  6.56  6.51  6.46  6.41  6.36  6.34  6.34 | 
| 608 | rd 0.0402 | 
| 609 | c | 
| 610 | rs 0.0284 0.05000 | 
| 611 | m speckled_grey_formica = | 
| 612 | sides 1 | 
| 613 | c | 
| 614 | cspec 400 700 30.95 44.77 51.15 52.60 53.00 53.37 53.68 \\\\ | 
| 615 | 54.07 54.33 54.57 54.85 55.20 55.42 55.51 55.54 \\\\ | 
| 616 | 55.46 55.33 55.30 55.52 55.81 55.91 55.92 56.00 \\\\ | 
| 617 | 56.22 56.45 56.66 56.72 56.58 56.44 56.39 56.39 | 
| 618 | rd 0.5550 | 
| 619 | c | 
| 620 | rs 0.0149 0.15000 | 
| 621 |  | 
| 622 | # 40' x 22' x 9' office space with no windows and one door | 
| 623 |  | 
| 624 | # All measurements are in inches, so enclose with a metric conversion: | 
| 625 | xf -s .0254 | 
| 626 |  | 
| 627 | # The room corner vertices: | 
| 628 | v rc.xyz = | 
| 629 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 630 | v rc.Xyz = | 
| 631 | p 480 0 0 | 
| 632 | v rc.xYz = | 
| 633 | p 0 264 0 | 
| 634 | v rc.xyZ = | 
| 635 | p 0 0 108 | 
| 636 | v rc.XYz = | 
| 637 | p 480 264 0 | 
| 638 | v rc.xYZ = | 
| 639 | p 0 264 108 | 
| 640 | v rc.XyZ = | 
| 641 | p 480 0 108 | 
| 642 | v rc.XYZ = | 
| 643 | p 480 264 108 | 
| 644 |  | 
| 645 | # The floor: | 
| 646 | # Push object name | 
| 647 | o floor | 
| 648 | # Get previously defined carpet material | 
| 649 | m mottled_carpet | 
| 650 | # Polygonal face using defined vertices | 
| 651 | f rc.xyz rc.Xyz rc.XYz rc.xYz | 
| 652 | # Pop object name | 
| 653 | o | 
| 654 |  | 
| 655 | # The ceiling: | 
| 656 | o ceiling | 
| 657 | m ceiling_tile | 
| 658 | f rc.xyZ rc.xYZ rc.XYZ rc.XyZ | 
| 659 | o | 
| 660 |  | 
| 661 | # The door outline vertices: | 
| 662 | v do.xz = | 
| 663 | p 216 0 0 | 
| 664 | v do.Xz = | 
| 665 | p 264 0 0 | 
| 666 | v do.xZ = | 
| 667 | p 216 0 84 | 
| 668 | v do.XZ = | 
| 669 | p 264 0 84 | 
| 670 |  | 
| 671 | # The walls: | 
| 672 | o wall | 
| 673 | m beige_paint | 
| 674 | o x | 
| 675 | f rc.xyz rc.xYz rc.xYZ rc.xyZ | 
| 676 | o | 
| 677 | o X | 
| 678 | f rc.Xyz rc.XyZ rc.XYZ rc.XYz | 
| 679 | o | 
| 680 | o y | 
| 681 | f rc.xyz rc.xyZ rc.XyZ rc.Xyz do.Xz do.XZ do.xZ do.xz | 
| 682 | o | 
| 683 | o Y | 
| 684 | f rc.xYz rc.XYz rc.XYZ rc.xYZ | 
| 685 | o | 
| 686 | o | 
| 687 |  | 
| 688 | # The door and jam vertices: | 
| 689 | v djo.xz = | 
| 690 | p 216 .5 0 | 
| 691 | v djo.xZ = | 
| 692 | p 216 .5 84 | 
| 693 | v djo.XZ = | 
| 694 | p 264 .5 84 | 
| 695 | v djo.Xz = | 
| 696 | p 264 .5 0 | 
| 697 | v dji.Xz = | 
| 698 | p 262 .5 0 | 
| 699 | v dji.XZ = | 
| 700 | p 262 .5 82 | 
| 701 | v dji.xZ = | 
| 702 | p 218 .5 82 | 
| 703 | v dji.xz = | 
| 704 | p 218 .5 0 | 
| 705 | v door.xz = | 
| 706 | p 218 0 0 | 
| 707 | v door.xZ = | 
| 708 | p 218 0 82 | 
| 709 | v door.XZ = | 
| 710 | p 262 0 82 | 
| 711 | v door.Xz = | 
| 712 | p 262 0 0 | 
| 713 |  | 
| 714 | # The door, jam and knob | 
| 715 | o door | 
| 716 | m burgundy_formica | 
| 717 | f door.xz door.xZ door.XZ door.Xz | 
| 718 | o jam | 
| 719 | m beige_paint | 
| 720 | f djo.xz djo.xZ djo.XZ djo.Xz dji.Xz dji.XZ dji.xZ dji.xz | 
| 721 | f djo.xz do.xz do.xZ djo.xZ | 
| 722 | f djo.xZ do.xZ do.XZ djo.XZ | 
| 723 | f djo.Xz djo.XZ do.XZ do.Xz | 
| 724 | f dji.xz dji.xZ door.xZ door.xz | 
| 725 | f dji.xZ dji.XZ door.XZ door.xZ | 
| 726 | f dji.Xz door.Xz door.XZ dji.XZ | 
| 727 | o | 
| 728 | o knob | 
| 729 | m stainless_steel | 
| 730 | # Define vertices needed for curved geometry | 
| 731 | v kb1 = | 
| 732 | p 257 0 36 | 
| 733 | v kb2 = | 
| 734 | p 257 .25 36 | 
| 735 | n 0 1 0 | 
| 736 | v kb3 = | 
| 737 | p 257 2 36 | 
| 738 | # 1" diameter cylindrical base from kb1 to kb2 | 
| 739 | cyl kb1 1 kb2 | 
| 740 | # Ring at base of knob stem | 
| 741 | ring kb2 .4 1 | 
| 742 | # Knob stem | 
| 743 | cyl kb2 .4 kb3 | 
| 744 | # Spherical knob | 
| 745 | sph kb3 .85 | 
| 746 | o | 
| 747 | o | 
| 748 |  | 
| 749 | # Six file cabinets (36" wide each) | 
| 750 | # ("filecab.inc" was given as an earlier example in Section 1.2) | 
| 751 | o filecab.x | 
| 752 | # include a file as an array of three 36" apart | 
| 753 | i filecab.inc -t -36 0 0 -rz -90 -t 1 54 0 -a 3 -t 0 36 0 | 
| 754 | o | 
| 755 | o filecab.X | 
| 756 | # the other three cabinets | 
| 757 | i filecab.inc -rz 90 -t 479 54 0 -a 3 -t 0 36 0 | 
| 758 | o | 
| 759 |  | 
| 760 | # End of transform from inches to meters: | 
| 761 | xf | 
| 762 |  | 
| 763 | # The 10 recessed fluorescent ceiling fixtures | 
| 764 | ies hlrs2gna.ies -t 1.2192 2.1336 2.74 -a 5 -t 2.4384 0 0 -a 2 -t 0 2.4384 0 | 
| 765 | .DE | 
| 766 | .bp | 
| 767 | .NH | 
| 768 | MGF Entity Reference | 
| 769 | .LP | 
| 770 | There are currently 28 entities in the MGF specification. | 
| 771 | For ease of reference we have broken these into five categories: | 
| 772 | .IP 1. | 
| 773 | General | 
| 774 | .TS | 
| 775 | lw(.75i) lw(1.75i) lw(3i). | 
| 776 | #       [anything ...]  a comment | 
| 777 | o       [name]  begin/end object context | 
| 778 | xf      [xform] begin/end transformation context | 
| 779 | i       pathname [xform]        include file (with transformation) | 
| 780 | ies     pathname [-m f][xform]  include IES luminaire (with transformation) | 
| 781 | .TE | 
| 782 | .IP 2. | 
| 783 | Color | 
| 784 | .TS | 
| 785 | lw(.75i) lw(1.75i) lw(3i). | 
| 786 | c       [id [= [template]]]     get/set color context | 
| 787 | cxy     x y     set CIE (x,y) chromaticity for current color | 
| 788 | cspec   l_min l_max v1 v2 ...   set relative spectrum for current color | 
| 789 | cct     temperature     set spectrum based on black body temperature | 
| 790 | cmix    w1 c1 w2 c2 ... mix named colors to make current color | 
| 791 | .TE | 
| 792 | .IP 3. | 
| 793 | Material | 
| 794 | .TS | 
| 795 | lw(.75i) lw(1.75i) lw(3i). | 
| 796 | m       [id [= [template]]]     get/set material context | 
| 797 | sides   {1|2}   set number of sides for current material | 
| 798 | rd      rho_d   set diffuse reflectance for current material | 
| 799 | td      tau_d   set diffuse transmittance for current material | 
| 800 | ed      epsilon_d       set diffuse emittance for current material | 
| 801 | rs      rho_s alpha_r   set specular reflectance for current material | 
| 802 | ts      tau_s alpha_t   set specular transmittance for current material | 
| 803 | ir      n_real n_imag   set index of refraction for current material | 
| 804 | .TE | 
| 805 | .IP 4. | 
| 806 | Vertex | 
| 807 | .TS | 
| 808 | lw(.75i) lw(1.75i) lw(3i). | 
| 809 | v       [id [= [template]]]     get/set vertex context | 
| 810 | p       x y z   set point position for current vertex | 
| 811 | n       dx dy dz        set surface normal for current vertex | 
| 812 | .TE | 
| 813 | .IP 5. | 
| 814 | Geometry | 
| 815 | .TS | 
| 816 | lw(.75i) lw(1.75i) lw(3i). | 
| 817 | f       v1 v2 v3 ...    polygon using current material, spec. vertices | 
| 818 | sph     vc radius       sphere | 
| 819 | cyl     v1 radius v2    truncated right cylinder (open-ended) | 
| 820 | cone    v1 rad1 v2 rad2 truncated right cone (open-ended) | 
| 821 | prism   v1 v2 v3 ... length     truncated right prism (closed solid) | 
| 822 | ring    vc rmin rmax    circular ring with inner and outer radii | 
| 823 | torus   vc rmin rmax    circular torus with inner and outer radii | 
| 824 | .TE | 
| 825 | .ds LH General Entities | 
| 826 | .ds RH # | 
| 827 | .bp | 
| 828 | .SH | 
| 829 | NAME | 
| 830 | .LP | 
| 831 | # - a comment | 
| 832 | .SH | 
| 833 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 834 | .LP | 
| 835 | .B # | 
| 836 | [ | 
| 837 | .I anything | 
| 838 | ] | 
| 839 | .SH | 
| 840 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 841 | .LP | 
| 842 | A comment is a bit of text explanation. | 
| 843 | Since it is an entity like any other (except that it has no effect), | 
| 844 | there must be at least one space between the keyword (which is a | 
| 845 | pound sign) and the "arguments," and the end of line may be escaped | 
| 846 | as usual with the backslash character ('\\'). | 
| 847 | .LP | 
| 848 | A comment may actually be used to hold auxiliary information such as | 
| 849 | view parameters, which may be interpreted by some destination program. | 
| 850 | Care should be taken under such circumstances that the user does not | 
| 851 | inadvertently mung or mimic this information in other comments, and | 
| 852 | it is therefore advisable to use an additional set of identifying | 
| 853 | characters to distinguish such data. | 
| 854 | .SH | 
| 855 | EXAMPLE | 
| 856 | .DS | 
| 857 | # The following include file is in inches, so convert to meters | 
| 858 | i cubgeom.inc -s .0254 | 
| 859 | # Stuff we don't want to see at the moment: | 
| 860 | # i person.mgf -t 3 2 0 | 
| 861 | # ies hlrs3gna.ies -rz 90 -t 1.524 1.8288 2.74 \\\\ | 
| 862 | -a 6 -t 1.8288 0 0 -a 2 -t 0 3.048 0 | 
| 863 | .DE | 
| 864 | .ds RH O | 
| 865 | .bp | 
| 866 | .SH | 
| 867 | NAME | 
| 868 | .LP | 
| 869 | o - begin or end object context | 
| 870 | .SH | 
| 871 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 872 | .LP | 
| 873 | .B o | 
| 874 | [ | 
| 875 | .I name | 
| 876 | ] | 
| 877 | .SH | 
| 878 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 879 | .LP | 
| 880 | If | 
| 881 | .I name | 
| 882 | is given, we push a new object context onto the stack, which is to | 
| 883 | say that we begin a new subobject by this name\(dg. | 
| 884 | .FS | 
| 885 | \(dgA name is any sequence of printing, non-white ASCII characters | 
| 886 | beginning with a letter. | 
| 887 | .FE | 
| 888 | If the | 
| 889 | .UL o | 
| 890 | keyword is given by itself, then we pop the last object context off | 
| 891 | the stack, which means that we leave the current subobject. | 
| 892 | .LP | 
| 893 | All geometry between the start of an object context and its matching | 
| 894 | end statement is associated with the given name. | 
| 895 | This may be used in modeling software to help identify objects and | 
| 896 | subobjects, or it may be ignored altogether. | 
| 897 | .LP | 
| 898 | Object begin and end statements should be balanced in a file, and | 
| 899 | care should be taken not to overlap transform | 
| 900 | .UL (xf) | 
| 901 | contexts with object contexts, especially when arrays are involved. | 
| 902 | This is because the standard parser will assign object contexts to | 
| 903 | instanced geometry, which can get confused with other object | 
| 904 | contexts if a clear enclosure is not maintained. | 
| 905 | .SH | 
| 906 | EXAMPLE | 
| 907 | .DS | 
| 908 | o body | 
| 909 | o torso | 
| 910 | i torso.mgf | 
| 911 | o | 
| 912 | o arm | 
| 913 | o left | 
| 914 | i leftarm.mgf | 
| 915 | o | 
| 916 | o right | 
| 917 | i leftarm.mgf -mx | 
| 918 | o | 
| 919 | o | 
| 920 | o | 
| 921 | .DE | 
| 922 | .SH | 
| 923 | SEE ALSO | 
| 924 | .LP | 
| 925 | .UL xf | 
| 926 | .ds RH XF | 
| 927 | .bp | 
| 928 | .SH | 
| 929 | NAME | 
| 930 | .LP | 
| 931 | xf - begin or end transformation context | 
| 932 | .SH | 
| 933 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 934 | .LP | 
| 935 | .B xf | 
| 936 | [ | 
| 937 | .I transform | 
| 938 | ] | 
| 939 | .SH | 
| 940 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 941 | .LP | 
| 942 | If a set of | 
| 943 | .I transform | 
| 944 | arguments are given, we push a new transformation context onto the | 
| 945 | stack. | 
| 946 | If the | 
| 947 | .UL xf | 
| 948 | keyword is given by itself, then we pop the last transformation | 
| 949 | context off the stack. | 
| 950 | The total transformation in effect at any given time is | 
| 951 | computed by prepending each set subcontext arguments onto those of | 
| 952 | its enclosing context. | 
| 953 | This and other details about transformation specifications | 
| 954 | are explained in some detail in section 2.2.2. | 
| 955 | .LP | 
| 956 | The following transformation flags and | 
| 957 | parameters are defined: | 
| 958 | .TS | 
| 959 | center; | 
| 960 | l l. | 
| 961 | -t dx dy dz     translate objects along the given vector | 
| 962 | -rx degrees     rotate objects about the X-axis | 
| 963 | -ry degrees     rotate objects about the Y-axis | 
| 964 | -rz degrees     rotate objects about the Z-axis | 
| 965 | -s scalefactor  scale objects by the given factor | 
| 966 | -mx     mirror objects about the Y-Z plane | 
| 967 | -my     mirror objects about the X-Z plane | 
| 968 | -mz     mirror objects about the X-Y plane | 
| 969 | -i N    repeat the following arguments N times | 
| 970 | -a N    make an array of N geometric instances | 
| 971 | .TE | 
| 972 | .SH | 
| 973 | EXAMPLE | 
| 974 | .DS | 
| 975 | # Create 3x5 array of evenly-spaced spheres (grid size = 3) | 
| 976 | v vc = | 
| 977 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 978 | xf -t 1 1 10 -a 3 -t 3 0 0 -a 5 -t 0 3 0 | 
| 979 | sph vc .5 | 
| 980 | xf | 
| 981 | .DE | 
| 982 | .SH | 
| 983 | SEE ALSO | 
| 984 | .LP | 
| 985 | .UL i, | 
| 986 | .UL ies, | 
| 987 | .UL o | 
| 988 | .ds RH I | 
| 989 | .bp | 
| 990 | .SH | 
| 991 | NAME | 
| 992 | .LP | 
| 993 | i - include MGF data file | 
| 994 | .SH | 
| 995 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 996 | .LP | 
| 997 | .B i | 
| 998 | .I pathname | 
| 999 | [ | 
| 1000 | .I transform | 
| 1001 | ] | 
| 1002 | .SH | 
| 1003 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1004 | .LP | 
| 1005 | Include the information contained in the file | 
| 1006 | .I pathname. | 
| 1007 | If a | 
| 1008 | .I transform | 
| 1009 | specification is given, then it will be applied as though the | 
| 1010 | include statement were enclosed by beginning and ending | 
| 1011 | .UL xf | 
| 1012 | entities with this transformation. | 
| 1013 | .LP | 
| 1014 | The | 
| 1015 | .I pathname | 
| 1016 | will be interpreted relative to the enclosing MGF file. | 
| 1017 | That is, if the file containing the include statement is in some | 
| 1018 | parent or subdirectory, then the given pathname is appended to this | 
| 1019 | directory. | 
| 1020 | It is illegal to specify a | 
| 1021 | .I pathname | 
| 1022 | relative to the root directory, and the MGF standard requires that | 
| 1023 | all filenames adhere to the ISO-9660 8.3 name format for maximum | 
| 1024 | portability between systems. | 
| 1025 | The directory separator is defined to be slash ('/'), and drive | 
| 1026 | specifications (such as "c:") are not allowed. | 
| 1027 | All pathnames should be given in lower case, and will be converted to | 
| 1028 | upper case on systems that require it. | 
| 1029 | (That way, there are no accidental name collisions.)\0 | 
| 1030 | .LP | 
| 1031 | The suggested suffix for MGF-adherent files is ".mgf". | 
| 1032 | Files that are not in metric units but are in MGF may be given any | 
| 1033 | suffix, but we suggest using ".inc" as a convention. | 
| 1034 | .SH | 
| 1035 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1036 | .DS | 
| 1037 | # Define vertices for 62x30" partition | 
| 1038 | i pv62x30.inc | 
| 1039 | # Insert 2 62x30" partitions | 
| 1040 | o cpart1 | 
| 1041 | i partn.inc -t 75 130.5 0 | 
| 1042 | o | 
| 1043 | o cpart3 | 
| 1044 | i partn.inc -t 186 130.5 0 | 
| 1045 | o | 
| 1046 | # Define vertices for 62x36" partition | 
| 1047 | i pv62x36.inc | 
| 1048 | # Insert 62x36" partition | 
| 1049 | o cpart2 | 
| 1050 | i partn.inc -t 105 130.5 0 | 
| 1051 | o | 
| 1052 | .DE | 
| 1053 | .SH | 
| 1054 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1055 | .LP | 
| 1056 | .UL ies, | 
| 1057 | .UL o, | 
| 1058 | .UL xf | 
| 1059 | .ds RH IES | 
| 1060 | .bp | 
| 1061 | .SH | 
| 1062 | NAME | 
| 1063 | .LP | 
| 1064 | ies - include IESNA luminaire file | 
| 1065 | .SH | 
| 1066 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1067 | .LP | 
| 1068 | .B ies | 
| 1069 | .I pathname | 
| 1070 | [ | 
| 1071 | .B \-m | 
| 1072 | .I multiplier | 
| 1073 | ] | 
| 1074 | [ | 
| 1075 | .I transform | 
| 1076 | ] | 
| 1077 | .SH | 
| 1078 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1079 | .LP | 
| 1080 | Load the IES standard luminaire information contained in the file | 
| 1081 | .I pathname. | 
| 1082 | If a | 
| 1083 | .I multiplier | 
| 1084 | is given, all candela values will be multiplied by this factor. | 
| 1085 | (This option must appear first if present.)\0 | 
| 1086 | If a | 
| 1087 | .I transform | 
| 1088 | specification is given, then it will be applied as though the | 
| 1089 | statement were enclosed by beginning and ending | 
| 1090 | .UL xf | 
| 1091 | entities with this transformation. | 
| 1092 | .LP | 
| 1093 | The | 
| 1094 | .I pathname | 
| 1095 | will be interpreted relative to the enclosing MGF file, and all | 
| 1096 | restrictions discussed under the | 
| 1097 | .UL i | 
| 1098 | entity also apply to the IES file name. | 
| 1099 | The suggested suffix is ".ies", but this has not been followed | 
| 1100 | consistently by lighting manufacturers. | 
| 1101 | .SH | 
| 1102 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1103 | .DS | 
| 1104 | # Insert 10 2x4' fluorescent troffers in two groups | 
| 1105 | ies cf9pr240.ies -t 3.6576 2.1336 2.74 -a 3 -t 2.4384 0 0 -a 2 -t 0 2.4384 0 | 
| 1106 | ies cf9pr240.ies -rz 90 -t 1.2192 1.8288 2.74 \\\\ | 
| 1107 | -a 2 -t 9.7536 0 0 -a 2 -t 0 3.048 0 | 
| 1108 | .DE | 
| 1109 | .SH | 
| 1110 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1111 | .LP | 
| 1112 | .UL i, | 
| 1113 | .UL o, | 
| 1114 | .UL xf | 
| 1115 | .ds LH Color Entities | 
| 1116 | .ds RH C | 
| 1117 | .bp | 
| 1118 | .SH | 
| 1119 | NAME | 
| 1120 | .LP | 
| 1121 | c - get or set the current color context | 
| 1122 | .SH | 
| 1123 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1124 | .LP | 
| 1125 | .B c | 
| 1126 | [ | 
| 1127 | .I id | 
| 1128 | [ | 
| 1129 | .B = | 
| 1130 | [ | 
| 1131 | .I template | 
| 1132 | ] | 
| 1133 | ] | 
| 1134 | ] | 
| 1135 | .SH | 
| 1136 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1137 | .LP | 
| 1138 | If the | 
| 1139 | .UL c | 
| 1140 | keyword is given by itself, then it establishes the unnamed color | 
| 1141 | context, which is neutral (i.e. equal-energy) grey. | 
| 1142 | This context may be modified, but the changes will not be saved. | 
| 1143 | .LP | 
| 1144 | If the keyword is followed by an identifier | 
| 1145 | .I id, | 
| 1146 | then it reestablishes a previous context. | 
| 1147 | If the specified context was never defined, an error will result. | 
| 1148 | .LP | 
| 1149 | If the entity is given with an identifier | 
| 1150 | followed by an equals sign ('='), then a new context is established, | 
| 1151 | and cleared to the default neutral grey. | 
| 1152 | (Note that the equals sign must be separated from other | 
| 1153 | arguments by white space to be properly recognized.)\0 | 
| 1154 | If the equals sign is followed by a second identifier | 
| 1155 | .I template, | 
| 1156 | then this previously defined color will be used as a source of | 
| 1157 | default values rather than grey. | 
| 1158 | This is most useful for establishing a color alias. | 
| 1159 | .SH | 
| 1160 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1161 | .DS | 
| 1162 | # Define the color "red32" | 
| 1163 | c red32 = | 
| 1164 | cxy .42 .15 | 
| 1165 | # Make "cabinet_color" an alias for "red32" | 
| 1166 | c cabinet_color = red32 | 
| 1167 |  | 
| 1168 | # Later in another part of the description... | 
| 1169 |  | 
| 1170 | # Get our cabinet color | 
| 1171 | c cabinet_color | 
| 1172 | # Get the geometry | 
| 1173 | i cabgeom.mgf | 
| 1174 | .DE | 
| 1175 | .SH | 
| 1176 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1177 | .LP | 
| 1178 | .UL cct, | 
| 1179 | .UL cmix, | 
| 1180 | .UL cspec, | 
| 1181 | .UL cxy, | 
| 1182 | .UL m | 
| 1183 | .ds RH CXY | 
| 1184 | .bp | 
| 1185 | .SH | 
| 1186 | NAME | 
| 1187 | .LP | 
| 1188 | cxy - set the CIE (x,y) chromaticity for the current color | 
| 1189 | .SH | 
| 1190 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1191 | .LP | 
| 1192 | .B cxy | 
| 1193 | .I "x y" | 
| 1194 | .SH | 
| 1195 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1196 | .LP | 
| 1197 | This entity sets the current color using (x,y) chromaticity | 
| 1198 | coordinates for the 1931 CIE standard 2 degree observer. | 
| 1199 | Legal values for | 
| 1200 | .I x | 
| 1201 | and | 
| 1202 | .I y | 
| 1203 | are greater than zero and sum to less than one, and more | 
| 1204 | specifically they must fit within the curve of the visible spectrum. | 
| 1205 | The | 
| 1206 | .I x | 
| 1207 | coordinate roughly corresponds to the red part of the spectrum and | 
| 1208 | the | 
| 1209 | .I y | 
| 1210 | coordinate corresponds to the green. | 
| 1211 | The CIE z coordinate is implicit, since it is equal to (1-x-y). | 
| 1212 | .LP | 
| 1213 | All colors in MGF are absolute, thus colorimeter measurements should | 
| 1214 | be conducted the same for surfaces as for light sources. | 
| 1215 | Applying a standard illuminant calculation is redundant and | 
| 1216 | introduces inaccuracies, and should therefore be avoided if | 
| 1217 | possible. | 
| 1218 | .LP | 
| 1219 | Conversion between CIE colors and those more commonly used in | 
| 1220 | computer graphics are described in the application notes section | 
| 1221 | 6.1.1. | 
| 1222 | .SH | 
| 1223 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1224 | .DS | 
| 1225 | # Set unnamed color context | 
| 1226 | c | 
| 1227 | # Set CIE chromaticity to a bluish hue | 
| 1228 | cxy .15 .2 | 
| 1229 | # Apply color to diffuse reflectance of 15% | 
| 1230 | rd .15 | 
| 1231 | .DE | 
| 1232 | .SH | 
| 1233 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1234 | .LP | 
| 1235 | .UL c, | 
| 1236 | .UL cct, | 
| 1237 | .UL cmix, | 
| 1238 | .UL cspec | 
| 1239 | .ds RH CSPEC | 
| 1240 | .bp | 
| 1241 | .SH | 
| 1242 | NAME | 
| 1243 | .LP | 
| 1244 | cspec - set the relative spectrum for the current color | 
| 1245 | .SH | 
| 1246 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1247 | .LP | 
| 1248 | .B cspec | 
| 1249 | .I "l_min l_max o1 o2 ... oN" | 
| 1250 | .SH | 
| 1251 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1252 | .LP | 
| 1253 | Assign a relative spectrum measured between | 
| 1254 | .I l_min | 
| 1255 | and | 
| 1256 | .I l_max | 
| 1257 | nanometers at evenly spaced intervals. | 
| 1258 | The first value, | 
| 1259 | .I o1 | 
| 1260 | corresponds to the measurement at | 
| 1261 | .I l_min, | 
| 1262 | and the last value, | 
| 1263 | .I oN | 
| 1264 | corresponds to the measurement at | 
| 1265 | .I l_max. | 
| 1266 | Values in between are separated by | 
| 1267 | .I "(l_max-l_min)/(N-1)" | 
| 1268 | nanometers. | 
| 1269 | All values must be non-negative, and the spectrum outside of the | 
| 1270 | specified range is assumed to be zero. | 
| 1271 | (The visible range is 380 to 780 nm.)\0 | 
| 1272 | The actual units and scale of the measurements do not matter, | 
| 1273 | since the total will be | 
| 1274 | normalized according to whatever the color is modifying | 
| 1275 | (e.g. photometric reflectance or emittance). | 
| 1276 | .SH | 
| 1277 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1278 | .DS | 
| 1279 | # Color measured at 10 nm increments from 400 to 700 | 
| 1280 | m reddish_cloth = | 
| 1281 | c | 
| 1282 | cspec 400 700 28.62 27.96 27.86 28.28 29.28 30.49 31.61 \\\\ | 
| 1283 | 32.27 32.26 31.83 31.13 30.07 29.14 29.03 29.69 \\\\ | 
| 1284 | 30.79 32.30 33.90 34.56 34.32 33.85 33.51 33.30 \\\\ | 
| 1285 | 33.43 34.06 35.26 37.04 39.41 42.55 46.46 51.00 | 
| 1286 | rd 0.3210 | 
| 1287 | .DE | 
| 1288 | .SH | 
| 1289 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1290 | .LP | 
| 1291 | .UL c, | 
| 1292 | .UL cct, | 
| 1293 | .UL cmix, | 
| 1294 | .UL cxy | 
| 1295 | .ds RH CCT | 
| 1296 | .bp | 
| 1297 | .SH | 
| 1298 | NAME | 
| 1299 | .LP | 
| 1300 | cct - set the current color to a black body spectrum | 
| 1301 | .SH | 
| 1302 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1303 | .LP | 
| 1304 | .B cct | 
| 1305 | .I temperature | 
| 1306 | .SH | 
| 1307 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1308 | .LP | 
| 1309 | The | 
| 1310 | .UL cct | 
| 1311 | entity sets the current color to the spectrum of an ideal | 
| 1312 | black body radiating at | 
| 1313 | .I temperature | 
| 1314 | degrees Kelvin. | 
| 1315 | This is often the most convenient way to set the color of an | 
| 1316 | incandescent light source, but it is not recommended for | 
| 1317 | fluorescent lamps or other materials that do not fit a | 
| 1318 | black body spectrum. | 
| 1319 | .SH | 
| 1320 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1321 | .DS | 
| 1322 | # Define an incandescent source material at 3000 degrees K | 
| 1323 | m incand3000k = | 
| 1324 | c | 
| 1325 | cct 3000 | 
| 1326 | ed 1500 | 
| 1327 | .DE | 
| 1328 | .SH | 
| 1329 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1330 | .LP | 
| 1331 | .UL c, | 
| 1332 | .UL cmix, | 
| 1333 | .UL cspec, | 
| 1334 | .UL cxy | 
| 1335 | .ds RH CMIX | 
| 1336 | .bp | 
| 1337 | .SH | 
| 1338 | NAME | 
| 1339 | .LP | 
| 1340 | cmix - mix two or more named colors to make the current color | 
| 1341 | .SH | 
| 1342 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1343 | .LP | 
| 1344 | .B cmix | 
| 1345 | .I "w1 c1 w2 c2 ..." | 
| 1346 | .SH | 
| 1347 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1348 | .LP | 
| 1349 | The | 
| 1350 | .UL cmix | 
| 1351 | entity sums together two or more named colors using specified | 
| 1352 | weighting coefficients, which correspond to the relative | 
| 1353 | photometric brightness of each. | 
| 1354 | As in all color specifications, the result is normalized so the | 
| 1355 | absolute scale of the weights does not matter, only their relative | 
| 1356 | values. | 
| 1357 | .LP | 
| 1358 | If any of the colors is a spectral quantity (i.e. from a | 
| 1359 | .UL cspec | 
| 1360 | or | 
| 1361 | .UL cct | 
| 1362 | entity), then all the colors are first converted to spectral | 
| 1363 | quantities. | 
| 1364 | This is done with an approximation for CIE (x,y) chromaticities, | 
| 1365 | which may be problematic depending on their values. | 
| 1366 | In general, it is safest to add together colors that are either | 
| 1367 | all spectral quantities or all CIE quantities. | 
| 1368 | .SH | 
| 1369 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1370 | .DS | 
| 1371 | # Define RGB primaries for a standard color monitor | 
| 1372 | c R = | 
| 1373 | cxy 0.640 0.330 | 
| 1374 | c G = | 
| 1375 | cxy 0.290 0.600 | 
| 1376 | c B = | 
| 1377 | cxy 0.150 0.060 | 
| 1378 | # Mix them together in appropriate amounts for white | 
| 1379 | c white = | 
| 1380 | cmix 0.265 R 0.670 G 0.065 B | 
| 1381 | .DE | 
| 1382 | .SH | 
| 1383 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1384 | .LP | 
| 1385 | .UL c, | 
| 1386 | .UL cct, | 
| 1387 | .UL cspec, | 
| 1388 | .UL cxy | 
| 1389 | .ds LH Material Entities | 
| 1390 | .ds RH M | 
| 1391 | .bp | 
| 1392 | .SH | 
| 1393 | NAME | 
| 1394 | .LP | 
| 1395 | m - get or set the current material context | 
| 1396 | .SH | 
| 1397 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1398 | .LP | 
| 1399 | .B m | 
| 1400 | [ | 
| 1401 | .I id | 
| 1402 | [ | 
| 1403 | .B = | 
| 1404 | [ | 
| 1405 | .I template | 
| 1406 | ] | 
| 1407 | ] | 
| 1408 | ] | 
| 1409 | .SH | 
| 1410 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1411 | .LP | 
| 1412 | If the | 
| 1413 | .UL m | 
| 1414 | keyword is given by itself, then it establishes | 
| 1415 | the unnamed material context, which is a perfect two-sided black absorber. | 
| 1416 | This context may be modified, but the changes will not be saved. | 
| 1417 | .LP | 
| 1418 | If the keyword is followed by an identifier | 
| 1419 | .I id, | 
| 1420 | then it reestablishes a previous context. | 
| 1421 | If the specified context was never defined, an error will result. | 
| 1422 | .LP | 
| 1423 | If the entity is given with an identifier | 
| 1424 | followed by an equals sign ('='), then a new context is established, | 
| 1425 | and cleared to the default material. | 
| 1426 | (Note that the equals sign must be separated from other | 
| 1427 | arguments by white space to be properly recognized.)\0 | 
| 1428 | If the equals sign is followed by a second identifier | 
| 1429 | .I template, | 
| 1430 | then this previously defined material will be used as a source of | 
| 1431 | default values instead. | 
| 1432 | This may be used to establish a material alias, or to modify an | 
| 1433 | existing material and give it a new name. | 
| 1434 | .LP | 
| 1435 | The sum of the diffuse and specular reflectances and transmittances | 
| 1436 | must not be greater than one (with no negative values, obviously). | 
| 1437 | These values are assumed to be measured at normal incidence. | 
| 1438 | If an index of refraction is given, this may modify the balance between | 
| 1439 | diffuse and specular reflectance at other incident angles. | 
| 1440 | If the | 
| 1441 | material is one-sided (see | 
| 1442 | .UL sides | 
| 1443 | entity), then it may be a dielectric interface. | 
| 1444 | In this case, the specular transmittance given is that which would be | 
| 1445 | measured at normal incidence for a pane of the material 5 mm thick. | 
| 1446 | This is important for figuring the actual transmittance for non-planar | 
| 1447 | geometries assuming a uniformly absorbing medium. | 
| 1448 | (Diffuse transmittance will not be affected by thickness.)\0 | 
| 1449 | If the index of | 
| 1450 | refraction has an imaginary part, then the surface is a metal and this | 
| 1451 | implies other properties as well. | 
| 1452 | The default index of refraction is that of a vacuum, i.e. (1,0). | 
| 1453 | .SH | 
| 1454 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1455 | .DS | 
| 1456 | # Define a blue enamel paint | 
| 1457 | m blue_enamel = | 
| 1458 | c | 
| 1459 | cxy 0.2771 0.2975 | 
| 1460 | rd 0.5011 | 
| 1461 | c | 
| 1462 | rs 0.0100 0.0350 | 
| 1463 | # Assign blue_enamel to be the color of the south wall | 
| 1464 | m swall_mat = blue_enamel | 
| 1465 | # ... | 
| 1466 | # South wall face | 
| 1467 | m swall_mat | 
| 1468 | f sv1 sv2 sv3 sv4 | 
| 1469 | .DE | 
| 1470 | .SH | 
| 1471 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1472 | .LP | 
| 1473 | .UL ed, | 
| 1474 | .UL ir, | 
| 1475 | .UL rd, | 
| 1476 | .UL rs, | 
| 1477 | .UL sides, | 
| 1478 | .UL td, | 
| 1479 | .UL ts | 
| 1480 | .ds RH SIDES | 
| 1481 | .bp | 
| 1482 | .SH | 
| 1483 | NAME | 
| 1484 | .LP | 
| 1485 | sides - set the number of sides for the current material | 
| 1486 | .SH | 
| 1487 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1488 | .LP | 
| 1489 | .B sides | 
| 1490 | { | 
| 1491 | .B 1 | 
| 1492 | | | 
| 1493 | .B 2 | 
| 1494 | } | 
| 1495 | .SH | 
| 1496 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1497 | .LP | 
| 1498 | The | 
| 1499 | .UL sides | 
| 1500 | entity is used to set the number of sides for the current material. | 
| 1501 | If a surface is two-sided, then it will appear | 
| 1502 | identical when viewed from either the front or the back. | 
| 1503 | If a surface is one-sided, | 
| 1504 | then it appears invisible when viewed from the back side. | 
| 1505 | This means | 
| 1506 | that a transmitting object will affect the light coming in through the | 
| 1507 | front surface and ignore the characteristics of the back surface, | 
| 1508 | unless the index of refraction is set. | 
| 1509 | If the index of refraction is set, then the object will act as a | 
| 1510 | solid piece of dielectric material. | 
| 1511 | In either case, the transmission properties of the exiting surface | 
| 1512 | should be the same as the incident surface for the model to be | 
| 1513 | physically valid. | 
| 1514 | .LP | 
| 1515 | The default number of sides is two. | 
| 1516 | .SH | 
| 1517 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1518 | .DS | 
| 1519 | # Describe a blue crystal ball | 
| 1520 | m blue_crystal = | 
| 1521 | ir 1.650000 0 | 
| 1522 | # Solid dielectrics must use one-sided materials | 
| 1523 | sides 1 | 
| 1524 | c | 
| 1525 | rs 0.0602 0 | 
| 1526 | c | 
| 1527 | cxy 0.3127 0.2881 | 
| 1528 | ts 0.6425 0 | 
| 1529 | v sc = | 
| 1530 | p 10 15 1.5 | 
| 1531 | sph sc .02 | 
| 1532 | .DE | 
| 1533 | .SH | 
| 1534 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1535 | .LP | 
| 1536 | .UL ed, | 
| 1537 | .UL ir, | 
| 1538 | .UL m, | 
| 1539 | .UL rd, | 
| 1540 | .UL rs, | 
| 1541 | .UL td, | 
| 1542 | .UL ts | 
| 1543 | .ds RH RD | 
| 1544 | .bp | 
| 1545 | .SH | 
| 1546 | NAME | 
| 1547 | .LP | 
| 1548 | rd - set the diffuse reflectance for the current material | 
| 1549 | .SH | 
| 1550 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1551 | .LP | 
| 1552 | .B rd | 
| 1553 | .I rho_d | 
| 1554 | .SH | 
| 1555 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1556 | .LP | 
| 1557 | Set the diffuse reflectance for the current material to | 
| 1558 | .I rho_d | 
| 1559 | using the current color to determine the spectral characteristics. | 
| 1560 | This is the fraction of visible light that is reflected from a | 
| 1561 | surface equally in all directions according to Lambert's law, and is | 
| 1562 | often called the "Lambertian component." | 
| 1563 | Photometric reflectance is measured according to v(lambda) | 
| 1564 | response function of the 1931 CIE standard 2 | 
| 1565 | degree observer, and assumes an equal-energy white light source. | 
| 1566 | The value must be between zero and one, and may be further | 
| 1567 | restricted by the luminosity of the selected color. | 
| 1568 | (I.e. it is impossible to have a violet material with a photometric | 
| 1569 | reflectance close to one since the eye is less sensitive in this part | 
| 1570 | of the spectrum.)\0 | 
| 1571 | .LP | 
| 1572 | The default diffuse reflectance is zero. | 
| 1573 | .SH | 
| 1574 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1575 | .DS | 
| 1576 | # An off-white paint with 70% reflectance | 
| 1577 | m flat_white70 = | 
| 1578 | c | 
| 1579 | cxy .3632 .3420 | 
| 1580 | rd .70 | 
| 1581 | .DE | 
| 1582 | .SH | 
| 1583 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1584 | .LP | 
| 1585 | .UL c, | 
| 1586 | .UL ed, | 
| 1587 | .UL ir, | 
| 1588 | .UL m, | 
| 1589 | .UL rs, | 
| 1590 | .UL sides, | 
| 1591 | .UL td, | 
| 1592 | .UL ts | 
| 1593 | .ds RH TD | 
| 1594 | .bp | 
| 1595 | .SH | 
| 1596 | NAME | 
| 1597 | .LP | 
| 1598 | td - set the diffuse transmittance for the current material | 
| 1599 | .SH | 
| 1600 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1601 | .LP | 
| 1602 | .B td | 
| 1603 | .I tau_d | 
| 1604 | .SH | 
| 1605 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1606 | .LP | 
| 1607 | Set the diffuse transmittance for the current material to | 
| 1608 | .I tau_d | 
| 1609 | using the current color to determine the spectral characteristics. | 
| 1610 | This is the fraction of visible light that is transmitted through a | 
| 1611 | surface equally in all (transmitted) directions. | 
| 1612 | Like reflectance, transmittance is measured according to the | 
| 1613 | standard v(lambda) curve, and assumes an equal-energy white light source. | 
| 1614 | It is probably not possible to create a material with a diffuse | 
| 1615 | transmittance above 50%, since well-diffused light will be reflected | 
| 1616 | as well. | 
| 1617 | .LP | 
| 1618 | The default diffuse transmittance is zero. | 
| 1619 | .SH | 
| 1620 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1621 | .DS | 
| 1622 | # Model a perfect spherical diffuser, i.e. light hitting \ | 
| 1623 | either side will be scattered equally in all directions | 
| 1624 | m wonderland_diffuser = | 
| 1625 | c | 
| 1626 | td .5 | 
| 1627 | rd .5 | 
| 1628 | .DE | 
| 1629 | .SH | 
| 1630 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1631 | .LP | 
| 1632 | .UL c, | 
| 1633 | .UL ed, | 
| 1634 | .UL ir, | 
| 1635 | .UL m, | 
| 1636 | .UL rd, | 
| 1637 | .UL rs, | 
| 1638 | .UL sides, | 
| 1639 | .UL ts | 
| 1640 | .ds RH ED | 
| 1641 | .bp | 
| 1642 | .SH | 
| 1643 | NAME | 
| 1644 | .LP | 
| 1645 | ed - set the diffuse emittance for the current material | 
| 1646 | .SH | 
| 1647 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1648 | .LP | 
| 1649 | .B ed | 
| 1650 | .I epsilon_d | 
| 1651 | .SH | 
| 1652 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1653 | .LP | 
| 1654 | Set the diffuse emittance for the current material to | 
| 1655 | .I epsilon_d | 
| 1656 | lumens per square meter using the current color to determine the | 
| 1657 | spectral characteristics. | 
| 1658 | Note that this is emittance rather than exitance, and therefore | 
| 1659 | does not include reflected or transmitted light, which is a function | 
| 1660 | of the other material settings and the illuminated environment. | 
| 1661 | .LP | 
| 1662 | The total lumen output of a convex emitting object | 
| 1663 | is the radiating area of that object multiplied by its emittance. | 
| 1664 | Therefore, one can compute the appropriate | 
| 1665 | .I epsilon_d | 
| 1666 | value for an emitter by dividing the total lumen output by the | 
| 1667 | radiating area (in square meters). | 
| 1668 | .LP | 
| 1669 | The default emittance is zero. | 
| 1670 | .SH | 
| 1671 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1672 | .DS | 
| 1673 | # A 100-watt incandescent bulb (1600 lumens) modeled as a sphere | 
| 1674 | m | 
| 1675 | c | 
| 1676 | cct 3000 | 
| 1677 | ed 87712 | 
| 1678 | v cent = | 
| 1679 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 1680 | sph cent .0381 | 
| 1681 | .DE | 
| 1682 | .SH | 
| 1683 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1684 | .LP | 
| 1685 | .UL c, | 
| 1686 | .UL ir, | 
| 1687 | .UL m, | 
| 1688 | .UL rd, | 
| 1689 | .UL rs, | 
| 1690 | .UL sides, | 
| 1691 | .UL td, | 
| 1692 | .UL ts | 
| 1693 | .ds RH RS | 
| 1694 | .bp | 
| 1695 | .SH | 
| 1696 | NAME | 
| 1697 | .LP | 
| 1698 | rs - set the specular reflectance for the current material | 
| 1699 | .SH | 
| 1700 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1701 | .LP | 
| 1702 | .B rs | 
| 1703 | .I "rho_s alpha_r" | 
| 1704 | .SH | 
| 1705 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1706 | .LP | 
| 1707 | Set the specular reflectance for the current material to | 
| 1708 | .I rho_s | 
| 1709 | using the current color to determine the spectral characteristics. | 
| 1710 | The surface roughness parameter is set to | 
| 1711 | .I alpha_r, | 
| 1712 | which is the RMS height of surface variations over the | 
| 1713 | autocorrelation distance (equivalent to RMS facet slope). | 
| 1714 | A roughness value of zero means a perfectly smooth surface, and | 
| 1715 | values greater than 0.2 are unusual. | 
| 1716 | (See application notes section 6.1.2 for a comparison between the | 
| 1717 | roughness parameter and Phong specular power.)\0 | 
| 1718 | .LP | 
| 1719 | The default specular reflectance is zero. | 
| 1720 | .SH | 
| 1721 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1722 | .DS | 
| 1723 | # Define a slightly rough brass metallic surface | 
| 1724 | m rough_brass = | 
| 1725 | c | 
| 1726 | cxy .3820 .4035 | 
| 1727 | # 30% specular, 9% diffuse | 
| 1728 | rs .30 .08 | 
| 1729 | rd .09 | 
| 1730 | .DE | 
| 1731 | .SH | 
| 1732 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1733 | .LP | 
| 1734 | .UL c, | 
| 1735 | .UL ed, | 
| 1736 | .UL ir, | 
| 1737 | .UL m, | 
| 1738 | .UL rd, | 
| 1739 | .UL sides, | 
| 1740 | .UL td, | 
| 1741 | .UL ts | 
| 1742 | .ds RH TS | 
| 1743 | .bp | 
| 1744 | .SH | 
| 1745 | NAME | 
| 1746 | .LP | 
| 1747 | ts - set the specular transmittance for the current material | 
| 1748 | .SH | 
| 1749 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1750 | .LP | 
| 1751 | .B ts | 
| 1752 | .I "tau_s alpha_t" | 
| 1753 | .SH | 
| 1754 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1755 | .LP | 
| 1756 | Set the specular transmittance for the current material to | 
| 1757 | .I tau_s | 
| 1758 | using the current color to determine the spectral characteristics. | 
| 1759 | The effective surface roughness is set to | 
| 1760 | .I alpha_t. | 
| 1761 | Rays will be transmitted with the same distribution as they would | 
| 1762 | have been reflected with if this roughness value were given to the | 
| 1763 | .UL rs | 
| 1764 | entity. | 
| 1765 | .LP | 
| 1766 | The default specular transmittance is zero. | 
| 1767 | .SH | 
| 1768 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1769 | .DS | 
| 1770 | # Define a green glass material (58% transmittance) | 
| 1771 | m glass = | 
| 1772 | sides 2 | 
| 1773 | ir 1.52 0 | 
| 1774 | c | 
| 1775 | rs 0.0725 0 | 
| 1776 | c | 
| 1777 | cxy .23 .38 | 
| 1778 | ts 0.5815 0 | 
| 1779 | # Define an uncolored translucent plastic (40% transmittance) | 
| 1780 | m translucent = | 
| 1781 | sides 2 | 
| 1782 | ir 1.4 0 | 
| 1783 | c | 
| 1784 | rs .045 0 | 
| 1785 | ts .40 .05 | 
| 1786 | .DE | 
| 1787 | .SH | 
| 1788 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1789 | .LP | 
| 1790 | .UL c, | 
| 1791 | .UL ed, | 
| 1792 | .UL ir, | 
| 1793 | .UL m, | 
| 1794 | .UL rd, | 
| 1795 | .UL rs, | 
| 1796 | .UL sides, | 
| 1797 | .UL td | 
| 1798 | .ds RH IR | 
| 1799 | .bp | 
| 1800 | .SH | 
| 1801 | NAME | 
| 1802 | .LP | 
| 1803 | ir - set the complex index of refraction for the current material | 
| 1804 | .SH | 
| 1805 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1806 | .LP | 
| 1807 | .B ir | 
| 1808 | .I "n_real n_imag" | 
| 1809 | .SH | 
| 1810 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1811 | .LP | 
| 1812 | Set the index of refraction for the current material to | 
| 1813 | .I (n_real,n_imag). | 
| 1814 | If the material is a dielectric (as opposed to metallic), then | 
| 1815 | .I n_imag | 
| 1816 | should be zero. | 
| 1817 | For solid dielectric objects, the material should be made one-sided. | 
| 1818 | If it is being used for thin objects, then a two-sided | 
| 1819 | material is appropriate. | 
| 1820 | (See the | 
| 1821 | .UL sides | 
| 1822 | entity.)\0 | 
| 1823 | .LP | 
| 1824 | The default index of refraction is that of a vacuum, (1,0). | 
| 1825 | .SH | 
| 1826 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1827 | .DS | 
| 1828 | # Define polished aluminum material | 
| 1829 | m polished_aluminum = | 
| 1830 | # Complex index of refraction (from physics table) | 
| 1831 | ir .770058 6.08351 | 
| 1832 | c | 
| 1833 | rs .75 0 | 
| 1834 | .DE | 
| 1835 | .SH | 
| 1836 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1837 | .LP | 
| 1838 | .UL c, | 
| 1839 | .UL ed, | 
| 1840 | .UL m, | 
| 1841 | .UL rd, | 
| 1842 | .UL rs, | 
| 1843 | .UL sides, | 
| 1844 | .UL td, | 
| 1845 | .UL ts | 
| 1846 | .ds LH Vertex Entities | 
| 1847 | .ds RH V | 
| 1848 | .bp | 
| 1849 | .SH | 
| 1850 | NAME | 
| 1851 | .LP | 
| 1852 | v - get or set the current vertex context | 
| 1853 | .SH | 
| 1854 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1855 | .LP | 
| 1856 | .B v | 
| 1857 | [ | 
| 1858 | .I id | 
| 1859 | [ | 
| 1860 | .B = | 
| 1861 | [ | 
| 1862 | .I template | 
| 1863 | ] | 
| 1864 | ] | 
| 1865 | ] | 
| 1866 | .SH | 
| 1867 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1868 | .LP | 
| 1869 | If the | 
| 1870 | .UL v | 
| 1871 | keyword is given by itself, then it establishes | 
| 1872 | the unnamed vertex context, which is the origin with no normal. | 
| 1873 | This context may be modified, but the changes will not be saved. | 
| 1874 | (The unnamed vertex is never used except as a source of default | 
| 1875 | values since all geometric entities call their vertices by name.)\0 | 
| 1876 | .LP | 
| 1877 | If the keyword is followed by an identifier | 
| 1878 | .I id, | 
| 1879 | then it reestablishes a previous context. | 
| 1880 | If the specified context was never defined, an error will result. | 
| 1881 | .LP | 
| 1882 | If the entity is given with an identifier | 
| 1883 | followed by an equals sign ('='), then a new context is established, | 
| 1884 | and cleared to the default vertex (the origin). | 
| 1885 | (Note that the equals sign must be separated from other | 
| 1886 | arguments by white space to be properly recognized.)\0 | 
| 1887 | If the equals sign is followed by a second identifier | 
| 1888 | .I template, | 
| 1889 | then this previously defined vertex will be used as a source of | 
| 1890 | default values instead. | 
| 1891 | This may be used to establish a vertex alias, or to modify an | 
| 1892 | existing vertex and give it a new name. | 
| 1893 | .LP | 
| 1894 | A non-zero vertex normal must be given for | 
| 1895 | certain entities, specifically | 
| 1896 | .UL ring | 
| 1897 | and | 
| 1898 | .UL torus | 
| 1899 | require a normal direction. | 
| 1900 | An | 
| 1901 | .UL f | 
| 1902 | entity will interpolate vertex normals if given, and | 
| 1903 | use the polygon plane normal otherwise. | 
| 1904 | See the | 
| 1905 | .UL prism | 
| 1906 | entry for an explanation of how it interprets and uses vertex | 
| 1907 | normals. | 
| 1908 | The other entities ignore vertex normals if present. | 
| 1909 | .LP | 
| 1910 | The actual position and normal direction for a vertex is determined | 
| 1911 | at the time of use by a geometric entity. | 
| 1912 | Specifically, the transformation in effect at the time the vertex is | 
| 1913 | defined is irrelevant. | 
| 1914 | The only transformation that matters is the one that is applied to | 
| 1915 | the geometry itself. | 
| 1916 | This prevents double-transformation of vertices and allows one set | 
| 1917 | of vertices to be used for multiple purposes, e.g. the front and | 
| 1918 | back sides of a drawer. | 
| 1919 | .SH | 
| 1920 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1921 | .DS | 
| 1922 | # Make a capped cylinder | 
| 1923 | v end1 = | 
| 1924 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 1925 | n 0 0 -1 | 
| 1926 | v end2 = | 
| 1927 | p 0 0 1 | 
| 1928 | cyl end1 1.2 end2 | 
| 1929 | # Forgot normal for end2 | 
| 1930 | v end2 | 
| 1931 | n 0 0 1 | 
| 1932 | ring end1 0 1.2 | 
| 1933 | ring end2 0 1.2 | 
| 1934 | .DE | 
| 1935 | .SH | 
| 1936 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1937 | .LP | 
| 1938 | .UL cone, | 
| 1939 | .UL cyl, | 
| 1940 | .UL f, | 
| 1941 | .UL n, | 
| 1942 | .UL p, | 
| 1943 | .UL prism, | 
| 1944 | .UL ring, | 
| 1945 | .UL sph, | 
| 1946 | .UL torus | 
| 1947 | .ds RH P | 
| 1948 | .bp | 
| 1949 | .SH | 
| 1950 | NAME | 
| 1951 | .LP | 
| 1952 | p - set the point location for the current vertex | 
| 1953 | .SH | 
| 1954 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1955 | .LP | 
| 1956 | .B p | 
| 1957 | .I "px py pz" | 
| 1958 | .SH | 
| 1959 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 1960 | .LP | 
| 1961 | Set the 3-dimensional position for the current vertex to | 
| 1962 | .I (px,py,pz). | 
| 1963 | The actual position of the vertex will be determined by the | 
| 1964 | transformation in effect at the time the vertex is applied to a | 
| 1965 | geometric surface entity. | 
| 1966 | The transform current when the position is set is irrelevant. | 
| 1967 | .LP | 
| 1968 | The default vertex position is the origin, (0,0,0). | 
| 1969 | .SH | 
| 1970 | EXAMPLE | 
| 1971 | .DS | 
| 1972 | # Make a small circle of 6 spheres | 
| 1973 | v scent = | 
| 1974 | p 1 0 0 | 
| 1975 | xf -a 6 -rz 60 | 
| 1976 | sph scent .05 | 
| 1977 | xf | 
| 1978 | .DE | 
| 1979 | .SH | 
| 1980 | SEE ALSO | 
| 1981 | .LP | 
| 1982 | .UL cone, | 
| 1983 | .UL cyl, | 
| 1984 | .UL f, | 
| 1985 | .UL n, | 
| 1986 | .UL prism, | 
| 1987 | .UL ring, | 
| 1988 | .UL sph, | 
| 1989 | .UL torus, | 
| 1990 | .UL v | 
| 1991 | .ds RH N | 
| 1992 | .bp | 
| 1993 | .SH | 
| 1994 | NAME | 
| 1995 | .LP | 
| 1996 | n - set the surface normal direction for the current vertex | 
| 1997 | .SH | 
| 1998 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 1999 | .LP | 
| 2000 | .B n | 
| 2001 | .I "dx dy dz" | 
| 2002 | .SH | 
| 2003 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2004 | .LP | 
| 2005 | Set the 3-dimensional surface normal for the current vertex to the | 
| 2006 | normalized vector along | 
| 2007 | .I (dx,dy,dz). | 
| 2008 | If this vector is zero, then the surface normal is effectively | 
| 2009 | unset. | 
| 2010 | The actual surface normal orientation of the vertex will be determined | 
| 2011 | by the transformation in effect at the time the vertex is applied to a | 
| 2012 | geometric surface entity. | 
| 2013 | The current transform when the normal is set is irrelevant. | 
| 2014 | .LP | 
| 2015 | The default vertex normal is the zero vector (i.e. no normal). | 
| 2016 | .SH | 
| 2017 | EXAMPLE | 
| 2018 | .DS | 
| 2019 | # Make a chain of 10 interlocking doughnuts | 
| 2020 | v tcent = | 
| 2021 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 2022 | n 0 1 0 | 
| 2023 | xf -a 10 -rx 90 -t .2 0 0 | 
| 2024 | torus tcent .1 .2 | 
| 2025 | xf | 
| 2026 | .DE | 
| 2027 | .SH | 
| 2028 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2029 | .LP | 
| 2030 | .UL f, | 
| 2031 | .UL p, | 
| 2032 | .UL prism, | 
| 2033 | .UL ring, | 
| 2034 | .UL torus, | 
| 2035 | .UL v | 
| 2036 | .ds LH Geometric Entities | 
| 2037 | .ds RH F | 
| 2038 | .bp | 
| 2039 | .SH | 
| 2040 | NAME | 
| 2041 | .LP | 
| 2042 | f - create an N-sided polygonal face | 
| 2043 | .SH | 
| 2044 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2045 | .LP | 
| 2046 | .B f | 
| 2047 | .I "v1 v2 ... vN" | 
| 2048 | .SH | 
| 2049 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2050 | .LP | 
| 2051 | Create a polygonal face made of the current material | 
| 2052 | by connecting the named vertices in order, and connecting the last | 
| 2053 | vertex to the first. | 
| 2054 | There must be at least three vertices, and if any vertex is undefined, | 
| 2055 | an error will result. | 
| 2056 | .LP | 
| 2057 | The surface orientation is determined by the right-hand rule; when | 
| 2058 | the curl of the fingers follows the given order of the vertices, the | 
| 2059 | surface normal points in the thumb direction. | 
| 2060 | Face vertices should be coplanar, though this is difficult to guarantee | 
| 2061 | in a 3-dimensional specification. | 
| 2062 | .LP | 
| 2063 | If any vertices have associated surface normals, they will be used | 
| 2064 | instead of the average plane normal, though it is safest to specify | 
| 2065 | either all normals or no normals, and to stick with triangles | 
| 2066 | when normals are used. | 
| 2067 | Also, specified normals should point in the general direction of the | 
| 2068 | surface for best results. | 
| 2069 | .LP | 
| 2070 | There is no explicit representation of holes in MGF.  A hole must be | 
| 2071 | represented implicitly by connecting vertices to form "seams."  For | 
| 2072 | example, a wall with a window in it might look as shown in Figure 1. | 
| 2073 | In many systems, the wall itself would be represented with the first | 
| 2074 | list of vertices, (v1,v2,v3,v4) and the hole associated with that | 
| 2075 | wall as a second set of vertices (v5,v6,v7,v8).  In MGF, we must | 
| 2076 | give the whole thing as a single polygon, connecting the vertices so | 
| 2077 | as to create a "seam," as shown in Figure 2. | 
| 2078 | This could be written in MGF as "f v1 v2 v3 v4 v5 v6 v7 v8 v5 v4". | 
| 2079 | .LP | 
| 2080 | It is very important that the order of the hole be opposite to the | 
| 2081 | order of the outer perimeter, otherwise the polygon will be | 
| 2082 | "twisted" on top of itself.  Note also that the seam was traversed | 
| 2083 | in both directions, once going from v4 to v5, and again returning | 
| 2084 | from v5 to v4.  This is a necessary condition for a proper seam. | 
| 2085 | .LP | 
| 2086 | The choice of vertices to make into a seam is somewhat arbitrary, but | 
| 2087 | some rendering systems may not give sane results if you cross over a | 
| 2088 | hole with part of your seam.  If we had chosen to create the seam | 
| 2089 | between v2 and v5 in the above example instead of v4 and v5, the seam | 
| 2090 | would cross our hole and may not render correctly\(dg. | 
| 2091 | .FS | 
| 2092 | \(dgFor systems that | 
| 2093 | are sensitive to this, it is probably safest for their MGF | 
| 2094 | loader/translator to re-expresses seams in terms of holes again, which can | 
| 2095 | be done easily so long as vertices are shared in the fashion shown. | 
| 2096 | .FE | 
| 2097 | .bp | 
| 2098 | Replace this page with the first page from "figures.ps". | 
| 2099 | .bp | 
| 2100 | .SH | 
| 2101 | EXAMPLE | 
| 2102 | .DS | 
| 2103 | # Make a pyramid | 
| 2104 | v apex = | 
| 2105 | p 1 1 1 | 
| 2106 | v base0 = | 
| 2107 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 2108 | v base1 = | 
| 2109 | p 0 2 0 | 
| 2110 | v base2 = | 
| 2111 | p 2 2 0 | 
| 2112 | v base3 = | 
| 2113 | p 2 0 0 | 
| 2114 | # Bottom | 
| 2115 | f base0 base1 base2 base3 | 
| 2116 | # Sides | 
| 2117 | f base0 apex base1 | 
| 2118 | f base1 apex base2 | 
| 2119 | f base2 apex base3 | 
| 2120 | f base3 apex base0 | 
| 2121 | .DE | 
| 2122 | .SH | 
| 2123 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2124 | .LP | 
| 2125 | .UL cone, | 
| 2126 | .UL cyl, | 
| 2127 | .UL m, | 
| 2128 | .UL prism, | 
| 2129 | .UL ring, | 
| 2130 | .UL sph, | 
| 2131 | .UL torus, | 
| 2132 | .UL v | 
| 2133 | .ds RH SPH | 
| 2134 | .bp | 
| 2135 | .SH | 
| 2136 | NAME | 
| 2137 | .LP | 
| 2138 | sph - create a sphere | 
| 2139 | .SH | 
| 2140 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2141 | .LP | 
| 2142 | .B sph | 
| 2143 | .I "vc rad" | 
| 2144 | .SH | 
| 2145 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2146 | .LP | 
| 2147 | Create a sphere made of the current material with its center at the | 
| 2148 | named vertex | 
| 2149 | .I vc | 
| 2150 | and a radius of | 
| 2151 | .I rad. | 
| 2152 | If the vertex is undefined an error will result. | 
| 2153 | .LP | 
| 2154 | The surface normal is usually directed outward, but will be directed | 
| 2155 | inward if the given radius is negative. | 
| 2156 | (This typically matters only for one-sided materials.)\0 | 
| 2157 | A zero radius is illegal. | 
| 2158 | .SH | 
| 2159 | EXAMPLE | 
| 2160 | .DS | 
| 2161 | # Create a thick glass sphere with a hollow inside | 
| 2162 | m glass = | 
| 2163 | sides 1 | 
| 2164 | ir 1.52 0 | 
| 2165 | c | 
| 2166 | rs .06 0 | 
| 2167 | ts .88 0 | 
| 2168 | v cent = | 
| 2169 | p 0 0 1.1 | 
| 2170 | # The outer shell | 
| 2171 | sph cent .1 | 
| 2172 | # The inner bubble | 
| 2173 | sph cent -.08 | 
| 2174 | .DE | 
| 2175 | .SH | 
| 2176 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2177 | .LP | 
| 2178 | .UL cone, | 
| 2179 | .UL cyl, | 
| 2180 | .UL f, | 
| 2181 | .UL m, | 
| 2182 | .UL prism, | 
| 2183 | .UL ring, | 
| 2184 | .UL torus, | 
| 2185 | .UL v | 
| 2186 | .ds RH CYL | 
| 2187 | .bp | 
| 2188 | .SH | 
| 2189 | NAME | 
| 2190 | .LP | 
| 2191 | cyl - create an open-ended, truncated right cylinder | 
| 2192 | .SH | 
| 2193 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2194 | .LP | 
| 2195 | .B cyl | 
| 2196 | .I "v1 rad v2" | 
| 2197 | .SH | 
| 2198 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2199 | .LP | 
| 2200 | Create a truncated right cylinder of radius | 
| 2201 | .I rad | 
| 2202 | using the current material, starting at the named vertex | 
| 2203 | .I v1 | 
| 2204 | and continuing to | 
| 2205 | .I v2. | 
| 2206 | The ends will be open, but may be capped using the | 
| 2207 | .UL ring | 
| 2208 | entity if desired. | 
| 2209 | .LP | 
| 2210 | The surface normal will usually be directed outward, but may be | 
| 2211 | directed inward by giving a negative value for | 
| 2212 | .I rad. | 
| 2213 | A zero radius is illegal, and | 
| 2214 | .I v1 | 
| 2215 | cannot equal | 
| 2216 | .I v2. | 
| 2217 | .SH | 
| 2218 | EXAMPLE | 
| 2219 | .DS | 
| 2220 | # A stylus with one rounded and one pointed end | 
| 2221 | o stylus | 
| 2222 | v vtip0 = | 
| 2223 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 2224 | v vtip1 = | 
| 2225 | p 0 0 .005 | 
| 2226 | v vend = | 
| 2227 | p 0 0 .05 | 
| 2228 | cyl vtip1 .0015 vend | 
| 2229 | sph vend .0015 | 
| 2230 | cone vtip0 0 vtip1 .0015 | 
| 2231 | o | 
| 2232 | .DE | 
| 2233 | .SH | 
| 2234 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2235 | .LP | 
| 2236 | .UL cone, | 
| 2237 | .UL f, | 
| 2238 | .UL m, | 
| 2239 | .UL prism, | 
| 2240 | .UL ring, | 
| 2241 | .UL sph, | 
| 2242 | .UL torus, | 
| 2243 | .UL v | 
| 2244 | .ds RH CONE | 
| 2245 | .bp | 
| 2246 | .SH | 
| 2247 | NAME | 
| 2248 | .LP | 
| 2249 | cone - create an open-ended, truncated right cone | 
| 2250 | .SH | 
| 2251 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2252 | .LP | 
| 2253 | .B cone | 
| 2254 | .I "v1 rad1 v2 rad2" | 
| 2255 | .SH | 
| 2256 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2257 | .LP | 
| 2258 | Create a truncated right cone using the current material. | 
| 2259 | The starting radius is | 
| 2260 | .I rad1 | 
| 2261 | at | 
| 2262 | .I v1 | 
| 2263 | and the ending radius is | 
| 2264 | is | 
| 2265 | .I rad2 | 
| 2266 | at | 
| 2267 | .I v2. | 
| 2268 | The ends will be open, but may be capped using the | 
| 2269 | .UL ring | 
| 2270 | entity if desired. | 
| 2271 | .LP | 
| 2272 | The surface normal will usually be directed outward, but may be | 
| 2273 | directed inward by giving negative values for both radii. | 
| 2274 | (It is illegal for the signs of the two radii to disagree.)\0 | 
| 2275 | One but not both radii may be zero, indicating that the cone comes | 
| 2276 | to a point. | 
| 2277 | .LP | 
| 2278 | Although it is not strictly forbidden to have equal cone radii, the | 
| 2279 | .UL cyl | 
| 2280 | entity should be used in such cases. | 
| 2281 | Likewise, the | 
| 2282 | .UL ring | 
| 2283 | entity must be used if | 
| 2284 | .I v1 | 
| 2285 | and | 
| 2286 | .I v2 | 
| 2287 | are equal. | 
| 2288 | .SH | 
| 2289 | EXAMPLE | 
| 2290 | .DS | 
| 2291 | # A parasol | 
| 2292 | o parasol | 
| 2293 | v v1 = | 
| 2294 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 2295 | v v2 = | 
| 2296 | p 0 0 .75 | 
| 2297 | v v3 = | 
| 2298 | p 0 0 .7 | 
| 2299 | m handle_mat | 
| 2300 | cyl v1 .002 v2 | 
| 2301 | m parasol_paper | 
| 2302 | cyl v2 0 v3 .33 | 
| 2303 | o | 
| 2304 | .DE | 
| 2305 | .SH | 
| 2306 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2307 | .LP | 
| 2308 | .UL cyl, | 
| 2309 | .UL f, | 
| 2310 | .UL m, | 
| 2311 | .UL prism, | 
| 2312 | .UL ring, | 
| 2313 | .UL sph, | 
| 2314 | .UL torus, | 
| 2315 | .UL v | 
| 2316 | .ds RH PRISM | 
| 2317 | .bp | 
| 2318 | .SH | 
| 2319 | NAME | 
| 2320 | .LP | 
| 2321 | prism - create a closed right prism | 
| 2322 | .SH | 
| 2323 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2324 | .LP | 
| 2325 | .B prism | 
| 2326 | .I "v1 v2 ... vN length" | 
| 2327 | .SH | 
| 2328 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2329 | .LP | 
| 2330 | Create a closed right prism using the current material. | 
| 2331 | One end face will be enclosed by the named vertices, and the | 
| 2332 | opposite end face will be a mirror image at a distance | 
| 2333 | .I length | 
| 2334 | from the original. | 
| 2335 | The edges will be extruded into N quadrilaterals connecting | 
| 2336 | the two end faces. | 
| 2337 | .LP | 
| 2338 | The order of vertices determines the original face orientation | 
| 2339 | according to the right-hand rule as explained for the | 
| 2340 | .UL f | 
| 2341 | entity. | 
| 2342 | Normally, the prism is extruded in the direction opposite to the | 
| 2343 | original surface normal, resulting in faces that all point outward. | 
| 2344 | If the specified | 
| 2345 | .I length | 
| 2346 | is negative, the prism will be extruded above the original face | 
| 2347 | and all surface normals will point inward. | 
| 2348 | .LP | 
| 2349 | If the vertices have associated normals, they are applied to the | 
| 2350 | side faces only, and should generally point in the appropriate | 
| 2351 | direction (i.e. in or out depending on whether | 
| 2352 | .I length | 
| 2353 | is negative or positive). | 
| 2354 | .SH | 
| 2355 | EXAMPLE | 
| 2356 | .DS | 
| 2357 | # Make a unit cube starting at the origin and \\\\ | 
| 2358 | extending to the positive octant | 
| 2359 | v cv0 = | 
| 2360 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 2361 | v cv1 = | 
| 2362 | p 0 1 0 | 
| 2363 | v cv2 = | 
| 2364 | p 1 1 0 | 
| 2365 | v cv3 = | 
| 2366 | p 1 0 0 | 
| 2367 | # Right hand rule has original face looking in -Z direction | 
| 2368 | prism cv0 cv1 cv2 cv3 1 | 
| 2369 | .DE | 
| 2370 | .SH | 
| 2371 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2372 | .LP | 
| 2373 | .UL cyl, | 
| 2374 | .UL cone, | 
| 2375 | .UL f, | 
| 2376 | .UL m, | 
| 2377 | .UL ring, | 
| 2378 | .UL sph, | 
| 2379 | .UL torus, | 
| 2380 | .UL v | 
| 2381 | .ds RH RING | 
| 2382 | .bp | 
| 2383 | .SH | 
| 2384 | NAME | 
| 2385 | .LP | 
| 2386 | ring - create a circular ring with inner and outer radii | 
| 2387 | .SH | 
| 2388 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2389 | .LP | 
| 2390 | .B cyl | 
| 2391 | .I "vc rmin rmax" | 
| 2392 | .SH | 
| 2393 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2394 | .LP | 
| 2395 | Create a circular face of the current material centered on the named | 
| 2396 | vertex | 
| 2397 | .I vc | 
| 2398 | with an inner radius of | 
| 2399 | .I rmin | 
| 2400 | and an outer radius of | 
| 2401 | .I rmax. | 
| 2402 | The surface orientation is determined by the normal vector | 
| 2403 | associated with | 
| 2404 | .I vc. | 
| 2405 | If this vertex is undefined or has no normal, an error will result. | 
| 2406 | The minimum radius may be equal to but not less than zero, and the | 
| 2407 | maximum radius must be strictly greater than the minimum. | 
| 2408 | .SH | 
| 2409 | EXAMPLE | 
| 2410 | .DS | 
| 2411 | # The proverbial brass ring | 
| 2412 | o brass_ring | 
| 2413 | m brass | 
| 2414 | v end1 = | 
| 2415 | p 0 -.005 0 | 
| 2416 | n 0 -1 0 | 
| 2417 | v end2 = | 
| 2418 | p 0 .005 0 | 
| 2419 | n 0 1 0 | 
| 2420 | ring end1 .02 .03 | 
| 2421 | cyl end1 .03 end2 | 
| 2422 | ring end2 .02 .03 | 
| 2423 | cyl end2 -.02 end1 | 
| 2424 | o | 
| 2425 | .DE | 
| 2426 | .SH | 
| 2427 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2428 | .LP | 
| 2429 | .UL cyl, | 
| 2430 | .UL cone, | 
| 2431 | .UL f, | 
| 2432 | .UL m, | 
| 2433 | .UL prism, | 
| 2434 | .UL sph, | 
| 2435 | .UL torus, | 
| 2436 | .UL v | 
| 2437 | .ds RH TORUS | 
| 2438 | .bp | 
| 2439 | .SH | 
| 2440 | NAME | 
| 2441 | .LP | 
| 2442 | torus - create a regular torus | 
| 2443 | .SH | 
| 2444 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2445 | .LP | 
| 2446 | .B torus | 
| 2447 | .I "vc rmin rmax" | 
| 2448 | .SH | 
| 2449 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2450 | .LP | 
| 2451 | Create a torus of the current material centered on the named vertex | 
| 2452 | .I vc | 
| 2453 | with an inner radius of | 
| 2454 | .I rmin | 
| 2455 | and an outer radius of | 
| 2456 | .I rmax. | 
| 2457 | The plane of the torus will be perpendicular to the normal vector | 
| 2458 | associated with | 
| 2459 | .I vc. | 
| 2460 | If this vertex is undefined or has no normal, an error will result. | 
| 2461 | .LP | 
| 2462 | If a torus with an inward facing surface normal is desired, | 
| 2463 | .I rmin | 
| 2464 | and | 
| 2465 | .I rmax | 
| 2466 | may be negative. | 
| 2467 | The minimum radius may be zero, but may not be negative when | 
| 2468 | .I rmax | 
| 2469 | is positive or vice versa. | 
| 2470 | The magnitude or | 
| 2471 | .I rmax | 
| 2472 | must always be strictly greater than that of | 
| 2473 | .I rmin. | 
| 2474 | .SH | 
| 2475 | EXAMPLE | 
| 2476 | .DS | 
| 2477 | # The proverbial brass ring -- easy grip version | 
| 2478 | o brass_ring | 
| 2479 | m brass | 
| 2480 | v center = | 
| 2481 | p 0 0 0 | 
| 2482 | n 0 1 0 | 
| 2483 | torus center .02 .03 | 
| 2484 | o | 
| 2485 | .DE | 
| 2486 | .SH | 
| 2487 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2488 | .LP | 
| 2489 | .UL cyl, | 
| 2490 | .UL cone, | 
| 2491 | .UL f, | 
| 2492 | .UL m, | 
| 2493 | .UL prism, | 
| 2494 | .UL ring, | 
| 2495 | .UL sph, | 
| 2496 | .UL v | 
| 2497 | .ds RH | 
| 2498 | .ds LH | 
| 2499 | .bp | 
| 2500 | .NH | 
| 2501 | MGF Translators | 
| 2502 | .LP | 
| 2503 | Initially, there are four translators for MGF data, but only | 
| 2504 | one of these is distributed with the MGF parser itself, | 
| 2505 | .I mgfilt. | 
| 2506 | Two of the other translators, | 
| 2507 | .I mgf2rad | 
| 2508 | and | 
| 2509 | .I rad2mgf | 
| 2510 | convert between MGF and the Radiance scene description language, | 
| 2511 | and are distributed for free with the rest of the Radiance | 
| 2512 | package\(dg. | 
| 2513 | .FS | 
| 2514 | \(dgRadiance is available by anonymous ftp from hobbes.lbl.gov and | 
| 2515 | nestor.epfl.ch, or by WWW from | 
| 2516 | "http://radsite.lbl.gov/radiance/HOME.html" | 
| 2517 | .FE | 
| 2518 | A third translator, | 
| 2519 | .I mgf2meta, | 
| 2520 | converts to a 2-dimensional line plot, and is also | 
| 2521 | distributed with Radiance. | 
| 2522 | .LP | 
| 2523 | Mgfilt is a simple but useful utility that takes MGF on its input | 
| 2524 | and produces MGF on its output. | 
| 2525 | It uses the parser to convert entities that are not wanted or | 
| 2526 | understood, and produces only the requested ones. | 
| 2527 | This is useful for seeing what exactly a program must understand | 
| 2528 | when it supports a given set of entities, and may serve as a | 
| 2529 | substitute for linking to the parser library for programmers who | 
| 2530 | wish to interpret the ASCII input directly but without all the | 
| 2531 | unwanted entities. | 
| 2532 | In future releases of MGF, this utility will also be handy for | 
| 2533 | taking new entities and producing older versions of MGF for | 
| 2534 | translators that have not yet been updated properly. | 
| 2535 | .ds LH Translators | 
| 2536 | .ds RH MGFILT | 
| 2537 | .bp | 
| 2538 | .SH | 
| 2539 | NAME | 
| 2540 | .LP | 
| 2541 | mgfilt - get usable MGF entities from input | 
| 2542 | .SH | 
| 2543 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2544 | .LP | 
| 2545 | .B mgfilt | 
| 2546 | .B version | 
| 2547 | [ | 
| 2548 | .B input .. | 
| 2549 | ] | 
| 2550 | .br | 
| 2551 | or | 
| 2552 | .br | 
| 2553 | .B mgfilt | 
| 2554 | .B "e1,e2,.." | 
| 2555 | [ | 
| 2556 | .B input .. | 
| 2557 | ] | 
| 2558 | .SH | 
| 2559 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2560 | .LP | 
| 2561 | .I Mgfilt | 
| 2562 | takes one or more MGF input files and converts all the entities to | 
| 2563 | the types listed. | 
| 2564 | In the first form, a single integer is given for the | 
| 2565 | .I version | 
| 2566 | of MGF that is to be produced. | 
| 2567 | Since MGF is in its first major release, this is not yet a useful | 
| 2568 | form, but it will be when the second major release comes out. | 
| 2569 | .LP | 
| 2570 | In the second form, | 
| 2571 | .I mgfilt | 
| 2572 | produces only the entities listed in the first argument, which must | 
| 2573 | be comma-separated. | 
| 2574 | The listed entity order is not important, but all entities given | 
| 2575 | must be defined in the current version of MGF. | 
| 2576 | Unknown entities will be summarily discarded on the input, and a | 
| 2577 | warning message will be printed to the standard error. | 
| 2578 | .SH | 
| 2579 | EXAMPLES | 
| 2580 | .LP | 
| 2581 | To take an MGF version 3 file and send it to a version 2 | 
| 2582 | translator: | 
| 2583 | .IP | 
| 2584 | mgfilt 2 input.mgf | mgf2rad > input.rad | 
| 2585 | .LP | 
| 2586 | To take an MGF file and produce only flat polygonal faces | 
| 2587 | with no materials: | 
| 2588 | .IP | 
| 2589 | mgfilt f,v,p,xf input.mgf > flatpoly.mgf | 
| 2590 | .SH | 
| 2591 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2592 | .LP | 
| 2593 | mgf2rad, rad2mgf | 
| 2594 | .ds RH MGF2RAD | 
| 2595 | .bp | 
| 2596 | .SH | 
| 2597 | NAME | 
| 2598 | .LP | 
| 2599 | mgf2rad - convert Materials and Geometry Format file to RADIANCE description | 
| 2600 | .SH | 
| 2601 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2602 | .LP | 
| 2603 | .B mgf2rad | 
| 2604 | [ | 
| 2605 | .B "\-m matfile" | 
| 2606 | ][ | 
| 2607 | .B "\-e mult" | 
| 2608 | ][ | 
| 2609 | .B "\-g dist" | 
| 2610 | ] | 
| 2611 | [ | 
| 2612 | .B input .. | 
| 2613 | ] | 
| 2614 | .SH | 
| 2615 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2616 | .LP | 
| 2617 | .I Mgf2rad | 
| 2618 | converts one or more Materials and Geometry Format (MGF) | 
| 2619 | files to a RADIANCE scene description. | 
| 2620 | By definition, all output dimensions are in meters. | 
| 2621 | The material names and properties | 
| 2622 | for the surfaces will be those assigned in MGF. | 
| 2623 | Any materials not defined in MGF will result in an error during | 
| 2624 | translation. | 
| 2625 | Light sources are described inline as IES luminaire files, and | 
| 2626 | .I mgf2rad | 
| 2627 | calls the program | 
| 2628 | .I ies2rad(1) | 
| 2629 | to translate these files. | 
| 2630 | If an IES file in turn contains an MGF description of the local | 
| 2631 | fixture geometry, this may result in a recursive call to | 
| 2632 | .I mgf2rad, | 
| 2633 | which is normal and should be transparent. | 
| 2634 | The only side-effect of this additional translation is the | 
| 2635 | appearance of other RADIANCE scene and data files produced | 
| 2636 | automatically by | 
| 2637 | .I ies2rad. | 
| 2638 | .LP | 
| 2639 | The | 
| 2640 | .I \-m | 
| 2641 | option may be used to put all the translated materials into a separate | 
| 2642 | RADIANCE file. | 
| 2643 | This is not always advisable, as any given material name may be | 
| 2644 | reused at different points in the MGF description, and writing them | 
| 2645 | to a separate file loses the contextual association between | 
| 2646 | materials and surfaces. | 
| 2647 | As long as unique material names are used throughout the MGF | 
| 2648 | description and material properties are not redefined, there | 
| 2649 | will be no problem. | 
| 2650 | Note that this is the only way to get all the translated materials | 
| 2651 | into a single file, since no output is produced for unreferenced | 
| 2652 | materials; i.e. translating just the MGF materials does not work. | 
| 2653 | .LP | 
| 2654 | The | 
| 2655 | .I \-e | 
| 2656 | option may be used to multiply all the emission values by the | 
| 2657 | given | 
| 2658 | .I mult | 
| 2659 | factor. | 
| 2660 | The | 
| 2661 | .I \-g | 
| 2662 | option may be used to establish a glow distance (in meters) | 
| 2663 | for all emitting surfaces. | 
| 2664 | These two options are employed principally by | 
| 2665 | .I ies2rad, | 
| 2666 | and are not generally useful to most users. | 
| 2667 | .SH | 
| 2668 | EXAMPLES | 
| 2669 | .LP | 
| 2670 | To translate two MGF files into one RADIANCE materials file and | 
| 2671 | one geometry file: | 
| 2672 | .IP | 
| 2673 | mgf2rad -m materials.rad building1.mgf building2.mgf > building1+2.rad | 
| 2674 | .LP | 
| 2675 | To create an octree directly from two MGF files and one RADIANCE | 
| 2676 | file: | 
| 2677 | .IP | 
| 2678 | oconv '\\!mgf2rad materials.mgf scene.mgf' source.rad > scene.oct | 
| 2679 | .SH | 
| 2680 | FILES | 
| 2681 | .LP | 
| 2682 | tmesh.cal       Used to smooth polygonal geometry | 
| 2683 | .br | 
| 2684 | *.rad           RADIANCE source descriptions created by ies2rad | 
| 2685 | .br | 
| 2686 | *.dat           RADIANCE source data created by ies2rad | 
| 2687 | .br | 
| 2688 | source.cal      Used for IES source coordinates | 
| 2689 | .SH | 
| 2690 | AUTHOR | 
| 2691 | .LP | 
| 2692 | Greg Ward | 
| 2693 | .SH | 
| 2694 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2695 | .LP | 
| 2696 | ies2rad(1), mgf2meta(1), obj2rad(1), oconv(1), rad2mgf(1), xform(1) | 
| 2697 | .ds RH RAD2MGF | 
| 2698 | .bp | 
| 2699 | .SH | 
| 2700 | NAME | 
| 2701 | .LP | 
| 2702 | rad2mgf - convert RADIANCE scene description to Materials and Geometry Format | 
| 2703 | .SH | 
| 2704 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2705 | .LP | 
| 2706 | .B rad2mgf | 
| 2707 | [ | 
| 2708 | .B \-dU | 
| 2709 | ] | 
| 2710 | [ | 
| 2711 | .B input .. | 
| 2712 | ] | 
| 2713 | .SH | 
| 2714 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2715 | .LP | 
| 2716 | .I Rad2mgf | 
| 2717 | converts one or more RADIANCE scene files | 
| 2718 | to the Materials and Geometry Format (MGF). | 
| 2719 | Input units are specified with the | 
| 2720 | .I \-mU | 
| 2721 | option, where | 
| 2722 | .I U | 
| 2723 | is one of 'm' (meters), 'c' (centimeters), 'f' (feet) or 'i' | 
| 2724 | (inches). | 
| 2725 | The assumed unit is meters, which is the required output unit for | 
| 2726 | MGF (thus the need to know). | 
| 2727 | If the input dimensions are in none of these units, then the user | 
| 2728 | should apply | 
| 2729 | .I xform(1) | 
| 2730 | with the | 
| 2731 | .I \-s | 
| 2732 | option to bring the units into line prior to translation. | 
| 2733 | .LP | 
| 2734 | The MGF material names and properties | 
| 2735 | for the surfaces will be those assigned in RADIANCE. | 
| 2736 | If a referenced material has not been defined, then its name will | 
| 2737 | be invoked in the MGF output without definition, and the description | 
| 2738 | will be incomplete. | 
| 2739 | .SH | 
| 2740 | LIMITATIONS | 
| 2741 | .LP | 
| 2742 | Although MGF supports all of the geometric types and the most | 
| 2743 | common material types used in RADIANCE, there is currently no | 
| 2744 | support for advanced BRDF materials, patterns, textures or mixtures. | 
| 2745 | Also, the special types "source" and "antimatter" are not supported, | 
| 2746 | and all light source materials are converted to simple diffuse emitters | 
| 2747 | (except "illum" materials, which are converted to their alternates). | 
| 2748 | These primitives are reproduced as comments in the output and | 
| 2749 | must be replaced manually if necessary. | 
| 2750 | .LP | 
| 2751 | The RADIANCE "instance" type is treated specially. | 
| 2752 | .I Rad2mgf | 
| 2753 | converts each instance to an MGF include statement, using the corresponding | 
| 2754 | transformation and a file name derived from the octree name. | 
| 2755 | (The original octree suffix is replaced by ".mgf".)\0 | 
| 2756 | For this to work, the user must separately create the referenced | 
| 2757 | MGF files from the original RADIANCE descriptions. | 
| 2758 | The description file names can usually be determined using the | 
| 2759 | .I getinfo(1) | 
| 2760 | command run on the octrees in question. | 
| 2761 | .SH | 
| 2762 | EXAMPLES | 
| 2763 | .LP | 
| 2764 | To convert three RADIANCE files (in feet) to one MGF file: | 
| 2765 | .IP | 
| 2766 | mgf2rad -df file1.rad file2.rad file3.rad > scene.mgf | 
| 2767 | .LP | 
| 2768 | To translate a RADIANCE materials file to MGF: | 
| 2769 | .IP | 
| 2770 | mgf2rad materials.rad > materials.mgf | 
| 2771 | .SH | 
| 2772 | AUTHOR | 
| 2773 | .LP | 
| 2774 | Greg Ward | 
| 2775 | .SH | 
| 2776 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2777 | .LP | 
| 2778 | getinfo(1), ies2rad(1), mgf2meta(1), mgf2rad(1), obj2rad(1), oconv(1), xform(1) | 
| 2779 | .ds RH MGF2META | 
| 2780 | .bp | 
| 2781 | .SH | 
| 2782 | NAME | 
| 2783 | .LP | 
| 2784 | mgf2meta - convert Materials and Geometry Format file to Metafile graphics | 
| 2785 | .SH | 
| 2786 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 2787 | .LP | 
| 2788 | .B mgf2meta | 
| 2789 | [ | 
| 2790 | .B "-t threshold" | 
| 2791 | ] | 
| 2792 | .B "{x|y|z} xmin xmax ymin ymax zmin zmax" | 
| 2793 | [ | 
| 2794 | .B input .. | 
| 2795 | ] | 
| 2796 | .SH | 
| 2797 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 2798 | .LP | 
| 2799 | .I Mgf2meta | 
| 2800 | converts one or more Materials and Geometry Format (MGF) | 
| 2801 | files to a 2-D orthographic projection along the selected axis in the | 
| 2802 | .I metafile(1) | 
| 2803 | graphics format. | 
| 2804 | All geometry is clipped to the specified bounding box, and the | 
| 2805 | resulting orientation is as follows: | 
| 2806 | .sp .5 | 
| 2807 | .nf | 
| 2808 | Projection      Orientation | 
| 2809 | ======= ======== | 
| 2810 | x               Y-axis right, Z-axis up | 
| 2811 | y               Z-axis right, X-axis up | 
| 2812 | z               X-axis right, Z-axis up | 
| 2813 | .fi | 
| 2814 | .LP | 
| 2815 | If multiple input files are given, the first file prints in black, | 
| 2816 | the second prints in red, the third in green and the fourth in blue. | 
| 2817 | If more than four input files are given, they cycle through the | 
| 2818 | colors again in three other line types:  dashed, dotted and | 
| 2819 | dot-dashed. | 
| 2820 | .LP | 
| 2821 | The | 
| 2822 | .I \-t | 
| 2823 | option may be used to randomly throw out line segments that are | 
| 2824 | shorter than the given | 
| 2825 | .I threshold | 
| 2826 | (given as a fraction of the plot width). | 
| 2827 | Segments are included with a | 
| 2828 | probability equal to the square of the line length over the square | 
| 2829 | of the threshold. | 
| 2830 | This can greatly reduce the number of lines in the drawing (and | 
| 2831 | therefore improve the drawing speed) with only a modest loss in | 
| 2832 | quality. | 
| 2833 | A typical value for this parameter is 0.005. | 
| 2834 | .LP | 
| 2835 | All MGF material information is ignored on the input. | 
| 2836 | .SH | 
| 2837 | EXAMPLES | 
| 2838 | .LP | 
| 2839 | To project two MGF files along the Z-axis and display them under | 
| 2840 | X11: | 
| 2841 | .IP | 
| 2842 | mgf2meta z 0 10 0 15 0 9 building1.mgf building2.mgf | x11meta | 
| 2843 | .LP | 
| 2844 | To convert a RADIANCE scene to a line drawing in RADIANCE picture | 
| 2845 | format: | 
| 2846 | .IP | 
| 2847 | rad2mgf scene.rad | mgf2meta x `getbbox -h scene.rad` | meta2tga | | 
| 2848 | ra_t8 -r > scene.pic | 
| 2849 | .SH | 
| 2850 | AUTHOR | 
| 2851 | .LP | 
| 2852 | Greg Ward | 
| 2853 | .SH | 
| 2854 | SEE ALSO | 
| 2855 | .LP | 
| 2856 | getbbox(1), meta2tga(1), metafile(5), mgf2rad(1), pflip(1), | 
| 2857 | protate(1), psmeta(1), ra_t8(1), rad2mgf(1), t4014(1), x11meta(1) | 
| 2858 | .ds RH | 
| 2859 | .ds LH | 
| 2860 | .bp | 
| 2861 | .NH | 
| 2862 | MGF Parser Library | 
| 2863 | .LP | 
| 2864 | The principal motivation for creating a standard parser library for | 
| 2865 | MGF is to make it easy for software developers to offer some base | 
| 2866 | level of compliance. | 
| 2867 | The key to making MGF easy to support in fact is the parser, which | 
| 2868 | has the ability to express higher order entities in terms of | 
| 2869 | lower order ones. | 
| 2870 | For example, tori are part of the MGF specification, but if a given | 
| 2871 | program or translator does not support them, the parser will convert | 
| 2872 | them to cones. | 
| 2873 | If cones are not supported either, it will convert them further into | 
| 2874 | smoothed polygons. | 
| 2875 | If smoothing (vertex normal information) is not supported, it will | 
| 2876 | be ignored and the program will just get flat polygons. | 
| 2877 | This is done in such a way that future versions of the standard may | 
| 2878 | include new entities that old software does not even have to know | 
| 2879 | about, and they will be converted appropriately. | 
| 2880 | Forward compatibility is thus built right into the parser loading | 
| 2881 | mechanism itself -- the programmer simply links to the new code and | 
| 2882 | the new standard is supported without any further changes. | 
| 2883 | .SH | 
| 2884 | Language | 
| 2885 | .LP | 
| 2886 | The provided MGF parser is written in ANSI-C. | 
| 2887 | This language was chosen for reasons of portability and efficiency. | 
| 2888 | Almost all systems support some form of ANSI-compatible C, and many | 
| 2889 | languages can cross-link to C libraries without modification. | 
| 2890 | Backward compatibility to Kernighan and Ritchie C is achieved by | 
| 2891 | compiling with the -DNOPROTO flag. | 
| 2892 | .LP | 
| 2893 | All of the data structures and prototypes needed for the library | 
| 2894 | are in the header file "parser.h". | 
| 2895 | This file is the best resource for the parser and is updated with | 
| 2896 | each MGF release. | 
| 2897 | .SH | 
| 2898 | Mechanism | 
| 2899 | .LP | 
| 2900 | The parser works by a simple callback mechanism to routines that | 
| 2901 | actually interpret the individual entities. | 
| 2902 | Some of these routines will belong to the calling program, and some | 
| 2903 | will be entity support routines included in the library itself. | 
| 2904 | There is a global array of function pointers, called | 
| 2905 | .I mg_ehand. | 
| 2906 | It is defined thus: | 
| 2907 | .DS | 
| 2908 | extern int      (*mg_ehand[MG_NENTITIES])(int argc, char **argv); | 
| 2909 | .DE | 
| 2910 | Before parsing begins, this dispatch table is initialized to point to the | 
| 2911 | routines that will handle each supported entity. | 
| 2912 | Every entity handler has the same basic prototype, which is the | 
| 2913 | same as the | 
| 2914 | .I main | 
| 2915 | function, i.e: | 
| 2916 | .DS | 
| 2917 | extern int      \f2handler\f1(int argc, char **argv); | 
| 2918 | .DE | 
| 2919 | The first argument is the number of words in the MGF entity | 
| 2920 | (counting the entity itself) and the second argument is an array of | 
| 2921 | nul-terminated strings with the entity and its arguments. | 
| 2922 | The function should return zero or one of the error | 
| 2923 | codes defined in "parser.h". | 
| 2924 | A non-zero return value causes the parser to abort, returning the | 
| 2925 | error up through its call stack to the entry function, usually | 
| 2926 | .I mg_load. | 
| 2927 | .LP | 
| 2928 | A special function pointer for undefined entities is | 
| 2929 | defined as follows: | 
| 2930 | .DS | 
| 2931 | extern int      (*mg_uhand)(int argc, char **argv); | 
| 2932 | .DE | 
| 2933 | By default, this points to the library function | 
| 2934 | .I mg_defuhand, | 
| 2935 | which prints an error message on the first unknown entity and keeps a | 
| 2936 | count from then on, which is stored in the global unsigned integer | 
| 2937 | .I mg_nunknown. | 
| 2938 | If the | 
| 2939 | .I mg_uhand | 
| 2940 | pointer is assigned a value of NULL instead, parsing will abort at the | 
| 2941 | first unrecognized entity. | 
| 2942 | The reason this is not the default action is that ignoring unknown entities | 
| 2943 | offers a certain base level of forward compatibility. | 
| 2944 | Ignoring things one does not understand is not the best approach, but it | 
| 2945 | is usually better than quitting with an error message if the input is | 
| 2946 | in fact valid, but is a later version of the standard. | 
| 2947 | The real solution is to update the interpreter by linking to a new version | 
| 2948 | of the parser, or use a new version of the | 
| 2949 | .I mgfilt | 
| 2950 | command to convert the new MGF input to an older standard. | 
| 2951 | .LP | 
| 2952 | The | 
| 2953 | .I mg_uhand | 
| 2954 | pointer may also be used to customize the language for a particular | 
| 2955 | application by adding entities, though this is discouraged because it | 
| 2956 | tends to weaken the standard. | 
| 2957 | .LP | 
| 2958 | The skeletal framework for an MGF loader or translator is to assign | 
| 2959 | function pointers to the | 
| 2960 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 2961 | array, call the parser initialization function | 
| 2962 | .I mg_init, | 
| 2963 | then call the file loader function | 
| 2964 | .I mg_load | 
| 2965 | once for each input file. | 
| 2966 | This will in turn make calls back to the functions assigned to | 
| 2967 | .I mg_ehand. | 
| 2968 | To give a simple example, let us look at a | 
| 2969 | translator that understands only flat polygonal faces, putting out | 
| 2970 | vertex locations immediately after each "face" keyword: | 
| 2971 | .DS | 
| 2972 | #include <stdio.h> | 
| 2973 | #include "parser.h" | 
| 2974 |  | 
| 2975 | int | 
| 2976 | myfaceh(ac, av)                 /* face handling routine */ | 
| 2977 | int     ac; | 
| 2978 | char    **av; | 
| 2979 | { | 
| 2980 | C_VERTEX        *vp;    /* vertex structure pointer */ | 
| 2981 | FVECT   vert;           /* vertex point location */ | 
| 2982 | int     i; | 
| 2983 |  | 
| 2984 | if (ac < 4)                     /* check # arguments */ | 
| 2985 | return(MG_EARGC); | 
| 2986 | printf("face\\\\n");            /* begin face output */ | 
| 2987 | for (i = 1; i < ac; i++) { | 
| 2988 | if ((vp = c_getvert(av[i])) == NULL)    /* vertex from name */ | 
| 2989 | return(MG_EUNDEF); | 
| 2990 | xf_xfmpoint(vert, vp->p);                       /* apply transform */ | 
| 2991 | printf("%15.9f %15.9f %15.9f\\\\n", | 
| 2992 | vert[0], vert[1], vert[2]);                     /* output vertex */ | 
| 2993 | } | 
| 2994 | printf(";\\\\n");                       /* end of face output */ | 
| 2995 | return(MG_OK);                  /* normal exit */ | 
| 2996 | } | 
| 2997 |  | 
| 2998 | main(argc, argv)                /* translate MGF file(s) */ | 
| 2999 | int     argc; | 
| 3000 | char    **argv; | 
| 3001 | { | 
| 3002 | int     i; | 
| 3003 | /* initialize dispatch table */ | 
| 3004 | mg_ehand[MG_E_FACE] = myfaceh;          /* ours */ | 
| 3005 | mg_ehand[MG_E_VERTEX] = c_hvertex;              /* parser lib */ | 
| 3006 | mg_ehand[MG_E_POINT] = c_hvertex;               /* parser lib */ | 
| 3007 | mg_ehand[MG_E_XF] = xf_handler;         /* parser lib */ | 
| 3008 | mg_init();                              /* initialize parser */ | 
| 3009 | for (i = 1; i < argc; i++)              /* load each file argument */ | 
| 3010 | if (mg_load(argv[i]) != MG_OK)  /* and check for error */ | 
| 3011 | exit(1); | 
| 3012 | exit(0);                        /* all done! */ | 
| 3013 | } | 
| 3014 | .DE | 
| 3015 | Hopefully, this example demonstrates just how easy it is to | 
| 3016 | write an MGF translator. | 
| 3017 | Of course, translators get more complicated the more entity | 
| 3018 | types they support, but the point is that one does not | 
| 3019 | .I have | 
| 3020 | to support every entity -- the parser handles what the translator | 
| 3021 | does not. | 
| 3022 | Also, the library includes many general entity handlers, | 
| 3023 | further reducing the burden on the programmer. | 
| 3024 | This same principle means that it is not necessary to modify an | 
| 3025 | existing program to accommodate a new version of MGF -- one need only | 
| 3026 | link to the new parser library to comply with the new standard. | 
| 3027 | .SH | 
| 3028 | Division of Labor | 
| 3029 | .LP | 
| 3030 | As seen in the previous example, there are two parser routines that | 
| 3031 | are normally called directly in an MGF translator or loader program. | 
| 3032 | The first is | 
| 3033 | .I mg_init, | 
| 3034 | which takes no arguments but relies on the program having | 
| 3035 | initialized those parts of the global | 
| 3036 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3037 | array it cares about. | 
| 3038 | The second routine is | 
| 3039 | .I mg_load, | 
| 3040 | which is called once on each input file. | 
| 3041 | (A third routine, | 
| 3042 | .I mg_clear, | 
| 3043 | may be called to free the parser data structures after each file or | 
| 3044 | after all files, if the program plans to continue rather than | 
| 3045 | exit.)\0 | 
| 3046 | .LP | 
| 3047 | The rest of the routines in a translator or loader program are | 
| 3048 | called indirectly through the | 
| 3049 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3050 | dispatch table, and they are the ones that do the real work of | 
| 3051 | supporting the MGF entities. | 
| 3052 | In addition to converting or discarding entities that the calling | 
| 3053 | program does not know or care about, the parser library includes a | 
| 3054 | set of context handlers that greatly simplify the translation | 
| 3055 | process. | 
| 3056 | There are three handlers for each of the three named contexts and | 
| 3057 | their constituents, and two handlers for the two hierarchical | 
| 3058 | context entities. | 
| 3059 | To use these handlers, one simply sets the appropriate positions in the | 
| 3060 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3061 | dispatch table to point to these functions. | 
| 3062 | Additional functions and global data structures provide convenient | 
| 3063 | access to the relevant contexts, and all of these are detailed in | 
| 3064 | the following manual pages. | 
| 3065 | .ds LH Basic Parser Routines | 
| 3066 | .ds RH MG_INIT | 
| 3067 | .bp | 
| 3068 | .SH | 
| 3069 | NAME | 
| 3070 | .LP | 
| 3071 | mg_init, mg_ehand, mg_uhand - initialize MGF entity handlers | 
| 3072 | .SH | 
| 3073 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3074 | .LP | 
| 3075 | #include "parser.h" | 
| 3076 | .LP | 
| 3077 | .B void | 
| 3078 | mg_init( | 
| 3079 | .B void | 
| 3080 | ) | 
| 3081 | .LP | 
| 3082 | .B int | 
| 3083 | mg_defuhand( | 
| 3084 | .B int | 
| 3085 | argc, | 
| 3086 | .B char | 
| 3087 | **argv ) | 
| 3088 | .LP | 
| 3089 | .B "extern int" | 
| 3090 | (*mg_ehand[MG_NENTITIES])( | 
| 3091 | .B int | 
| 3092 | argc, | 
| 3093 | .B char | 
| 3094 | **argv ) | 
| 3095 | .LP | 
| 3096 | .B "extern int" | 
| 3097 | (*mg_uhand)( | 
| 3098 | .B int | 
| 3099 | argc, | 
| 3100 | .B char | 
| 3101 | **argv ) | 
| 3102 | .LP | 
| 3103 | .B "extern unsigned" | 
| 3104 | mg_nunknown | 
| 3105 | .SH | 
| 3106 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3107 | .LP | 
| 3108 | The parser dispatch table, | 
| 3109 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3110 | is initially set to all NULL pointers, and it | 
| 3111 | is the duty of the calling program to assign entity handler functions to | 
| 3112 | each of the supported entity positions in the array. | 
| 3113 | The entities are given in the include file "parser.h" as the | 
| 3114 | following: | 
| 3115 | .DS | 
| 3116 | #define MG_E_COMMENT    0               /* #            */ | 
| 3117 | #define MG_E_COLOR              1               /* c            */ | 
| 3118 | #define MG_E_CCT                2               /* cct          */ | 
| 3119 | #define MG_E_CONE               3               /* cone */ | 
| 3120 | #define MG_E_CMIX               4               /* cmix */ | 
| 3121 | #define MG_E_CSPEC              5               /* cspec        */ | 
| 3122 | #define MG_E_CXY                6               /* cxy          */ | 
| 3123 | #define MG_E_CYL                7               /* cyl          */ | 
| 3124 | #define MG_E_ED         8               /* ed           */ | 
| 3125 | #define MG_E_FACE               9               /* f            */ | 
| 3126 | #define MG_E_INCLUDE    10              /* i            */ | 
| 3127 | #define MG_E_IES                11              /* ies          */ | 
| 3128 | #define MG_E_IR                 12              /* ir           */ | 
| 3129 | #define MG_E_MATERIAL   13              /* m            */ | 
| 3130 | #define MG_E_NORMAL     14              /* n            */ | 
| 3131 | #define MG_E_OBJECT     15              /* o            */ | 
| 3132 | #define MG_E_POINT              16              /* p            */ | 
| 3133 | #define MG_E_PRISM              17              /* prism        */ | 
| 3134 | #define MG_E_RD         18              /* rd           */ | 
| 3135 | #define MG_E_RING               19              /* ring */ | 
| 3136 | #define MG_E_RS         20              /* rs           */ | 
| 3137 | #define MG_E_SIDES              21              /* sides        */ | 
| 3138 | #define MG_E_SPH                22              /* sph  */ | 
| 3139 | #define MG_E_TD         23              /* td           */ | 
| 3140 | #define MG_E_TORUS              24              /* torus        */ | 
| 3141 | #define MG_E_TS         25              /* ts           */ | 
| 3142 | #define MG_E_VERTEX     26              /* v            */ | 
| 3143 | #define MG_E_XF         27              /* xf           */ | 
| 3144 |  | 
| 3145 | #define MG_NENTITIES    28              /* total # entities */ | 
| 3146 | .DE | 
| 3147 | .LP | 
| 3148 | Once the | 
| 3149 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3150 | array has been set by the program, the | 
| 3151 | .I mg_init | 
| 3152 | routine must be called to complete the initialization process. | 
| 3153 | This should be done once and only once per invocation, before any other | 
| 3154 | parser routines are called. | 
| 3155 | .LP | 
| 3156 | The | 
| 3157 | .I mg_uhand | 
| 3158 | variable points to the current handler for unknown entities | 
| 3159 | encountered on the input. | 
| 3160 | Its default value points to the | 
| 3161 | .I mg_defuhand | 
| 3162 | function, which simply increments the global variable | 
| 3163 | .I mg_nunknown, | 
| 3164 | printing a warning message on the standard error on the first | 
| 3165 | offense. | 
| 3166 | (This message may be avoided by incrementing | 
| 3167 | .I mg_nunknown | 
| 3168 | before processing begins.)\0 | 
| 3169 | If | 
| 3170 | .I mg_uhand | 
| 3171 | is assigned a value of NULL, then an unknown entity will return an | 
| 3172 | .I MG_EUNK | 
| 3173 | error, which will cause the parser to abort. | 
| 3174 | (See the | 
| 3175 | .I mg_load | 
| 3176 | page for a list of errors.)\0 | 
| 3177 | If the | 
| 3178 | .I mg_uhand | 
| 3179 | pointer is assigned to another function, that function will receive | 
| 3180 | any unknown entities and their arguments, and the parsing will | 
| 3181 | abort if the new function returns a non-zero error value. | 
| 3182 | This offers a convenient way to customize the language by adding | 
| 3183 | non-standard entities. | 
| 3184 | .SH | 
| 3185 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 3186 | .LP | 
| 3187 | If an inconsistent set of entities has been set for support, the | 
| 3188 | .I mg_init | 
| 3189 | routine will print an informative message to standard error and abort | 
| 3190 | the calling program with a call to | 
| 3191 | .I exit. | 
| 3192 | This is normally unacceptable behavior for a library routine, but since | 
| 3193 | such an error indicates a fault with the calling program itself, | 
| 3194 | recovery is impossible. | 
| 3195 | .SH | 
| 3196 | SEE ALSO | 
| 3197 | .LP | 
| 3198 | mg_load, mg_handle | 
| 3199 | .ds RH MG_LOAD | 
| 3200 | .bp | 
| 3201 | .SH | 
| 3202 | NAME | 
| 3203 | .LP | 
| 3204 | mg_load, mg_clear, mg_file, mg_err - load MGF file, clear data structures | 
| 3205 | .SH | 
| 3206 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3207 | .LP | 
| 3208 | #include "parser.h" | 
| 3209 | .LP | 
| 3210 | .B int | 
| 3211 | mg_load( | 
| 3212 | .B char | 
| 3213 | *filename ) | 
| 3214 | .LP | 
| 3215 | .B void | 
| 3216 | mg_clear( | 
| 3217 | .B void | 
| 3218 | ) | 
| 3219 | .LP | 
| 3220 | .B extern | 
| 3221 | MG_FCTXT *mg_file | 
| 3222 | .LP | 
| 3223 | .B "extern char" | 
| 3224 | *mg_err[MG_NERRS] | 
| 3225 | .SH | 
| 3226 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3227 | .LP | 
| 3228 | The | 
| 3229 | .I mg_load | 
| 3230 | function loads the named file, or standard input if | 
| 3231 | .I filename | 
| 3232 | is the NULL pointer. | 
| 3233 | Calls back to the appropriate MGF handler routines are made through the | 
| 3234 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3235 | dispatch table. | 
| 3236 | .LP | 
| 3237 | The global | 
| 3238 | .I mg_file | 
| 3239 | variable points to the current file context structure, which | 
| 3240 | may be useful for the interpretation of certain entities, such as | 
| 3241 | .UL ies, | 
| 3242 | which must know the directory path of the enclosing file. | 
| 3243 | This structure is of the defined type | 
| 3244 | .I MG_FCTXT, | 
| 3245 | given in "parser.h" as: | 
| 3246 | .DS | 
| 3247 | typedef struct mg_fctxt { | 
| 3248 | char    fname[96];                      /* file name */ | 
| 3249 | FILE    *fp;                            /* stream pointer */ | 
| 3250 | int     fid;                            /* unique file context id */ | 
| 3251 | char    inpline[4096];          /* input line */ | 
| 3252 | int     lineno;                 /* line number */ | 
| 3253 | struct mg_fctxt *prev;  /* previous context */ | 
| 3254 | } MG_FCTXT; | 
| 3255 | .DE | 
| 3256 | .SH | 
| 3257 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 3258 | .LP | 
| 3259 | If an error is encountered during parsing, | 
| 3260 | .I mg_load | 
| 3261 | will print an appropriate error message to the standard error stream | 
| 3262 | and return one of the non-zero values from "parser.h" listed below: | 
| 3263 | .DS | 
| 3264 | #define MG_OK                   0               /* normal return value */ | 
| 3265 | #define MG_EUNK         1               /* unknown entity */ | 
| 3266 | #define MG_EARGC                2               /* wrong number of arguments */ | 
| 3267 | #define MG_ETYPE                3               /* argument type error */ | 
| 3268 | #define MG_EILL                         4               /* illegal argument value */ | 
| 3269 | #define MG_EUNDEF               5               /* undefined reference */ | 
| 3270 | #define MG_ENOFILE              6               /* cannot open input file */ | 
| 3271 | #define MG_EINCL                7               /* error in included file */ | 
| 3272 | #define MG_EMEM         8               /* out of memory */ | 
| 3273 | #define MG_ESEEK                9               /* file seek error */ | 
| 3274 | #define MG_EBADMAT      10              /* bad material specification */ | 
| 3275 |  | 
| 3276 | #define MG_NERRS        11 | 
| 3277 | .DE | 
| 3278 | If it is inappropriate to send output to standard error, the calling | 
| 3279 | program should use the routines listed under | 
| 3280 | .I mg_open | 
| 3281 | for better control over the parsing process. | 
| 3282 | .LP | 
| 3283 | The | 
| 3284 | .I mg_err | 
| 3285 | array contains error messages corresponding to each of the values | 
| 3286 | listed above in the native country's language. | 
| 3287 | .SH | 
| 3288 | SEE ALSO | 
| 3289 | .LP | 
| 3290 | mg_fgetpos, mg_handle, mg_init, mg_open | 
| 3291 | .ds RH MG_OPEN | 
| 3292 | .bp | 
| 3293 | .SH | 
| 3294 | NAME | 
| 3295 | .LP | 
| 3296 | mg_open, mg_read, mg_parse, mg_close - MGF file loading subroutines | 
| 3297 | .SH | 
| 3298 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3299 | .LP | 
| 3300 | #include "parser.h" | 
| 3301 | .LP | 
| 3302 | .B int | 
| 3303 | mg_open( MG_FCTXT *fcp, | 
| 3304 | .B char | 
| 3305 | *filename ) | 
| 3306 | .LP | 
| 3307 | .B int | 
| 3308 | mg_read( | 
| 3309 | .B void | 
| 3310 | ) | 
| 3311 | .LP | 
| 3312 | .B int | 
| 3313 | mg_parse( | 
| 3314 | .B void | 
| 3315 | ) | 
| 3316 | .LP | 
| 3317 | .B void | 
| 3318 | mg_close( | 
| 3319 | .B void | 
| 3320 | ) | 
| 3321 | .SH | 
| 3322 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3323 | .LP | 
| 3324 | Most loaders and translators will call the | 
| 3325 | .I mg_load | 
| 3326 | routine to handle the above operations, but some programs or | 
| 3327 | entity handlers require tighter control over the loading process. | 
| 3328 | .LP | 
| 3329 | The | 
| 3330 | .I mg_open | 
| 3331 | routine takes an uninitialized | 
| 3332 | .I MG_FCTXT | 
| 3333 | structure and a file name as its arguments. | 
| 3334 | If | 
| 3335 | .I filename | 
| 3336 | is the NULL pointer, the standard input is "opened." | 
| 3337 | The | 
| 3338 | .I fcp | 
| 3339 | structure will be set by | 
| 3340 | .I mg_open | 
| 3341 | prior to its return, and the global | 
| 3342 | .I mg_file | 
| 3343 | pointer will be assigned to point to it. | 
| 3344 | This variable must not be destroyed until after the file is closed | 
| 3345 | with a call to | 
| 3346 | .I mg_close. | 
| 3347 | (See the | 
| 3348 | .I mg_load | 
| 3349 | page for a definition of | 
| 3350 | .I mg_file | 
| 3351 | and the | 
| 3352 | .I MG_FCTXT | 
| 3353 | type.)\0 | 
| 3354 | .LP | 
| 3355 | The | 
| 3356 | .I mg_read | 
| 3357 | function reads the next input line from the current file, | 
| 3358 | returning the number of characters in the line, or zero if the | 
| 3359 | end of file is reached or there is a file error. | 
| 3360 | The function skips over escaped newlines, and keeps track of the | 
| 3361 | line number in the current file context | 
| 3362 | .I mg_file, | 
| 3363 | which also contains the line that was read. | 
| 3364 | .LP | 
| 3365 | The | 
| 3366 | .I mg_parse | 
| 3367 | function breaks the current line in the | 
| 3368 | .I mg_file | 
| 3369 | structure into words and calls the appropriate handler routine, if | 
| 3370 | any. | 
| 3371 | Blank lines and unsupported entities cause a quick return. | 
| 3372 | .LP | 
| 3373 | The | 
| 3374 | .I mg_close | 
| 3375 | routine closes the current input file (unless it is the standard | 
| 3376 | input) and returns to the previous file context (if any). | 
| 3377 | .SH | 
| 3378 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 3379 | .LP | 
| 3380 | The | 
| 3381 | .I mg_open | 
| 3382 | function returns | 
| 3383 | .I MG_OK | 
| 3384 | (0) normally, or | 
| 3385 | .I MG_ENOFILE | 
| 3386 | if the open fails for some reason. | 
| 3387 | .LP | 
| 3388 | The | 
| 3389 | .I mg_parse | 
| 3390 | function returns | 
| 3391 | .I MG_OK | 
| 3392 | if the current line was successfully interpreted, or one of the | 
| 3393 | defined error values if there is a problem. | 
| 3394 | (See the | 
| 3395 | .I mg_load | 
| 3396 | page for the defined error values.)\0 | 
| 3397 | .SH | 
| 3398 | SEE ALSO | 
| 3399 | .LP | 
| 3400 | mg_fgetpos, mg_handle, mg_init, mg_load | 
| 3401 | .ds RH MG_FGETPOS | 
| 3402 | .bp | 
| 3403 | .SH | 
| 3404 | NAME | 
| 3405 | .LP | 
| 3406 | mg_fgetpos, mg_fgoto - get current file position and seek to pointer | 
| 3407 | .SH | 
| 3408 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3409 | .LP | 
| 3410 | #include "parser.h" | 
| 3411 | .LP | 
| 3412 | .B void | 
| 3413 | mg_fgetpos( MG_FPOS *pos ) | 
| 3414 | .LP | 
| 3415 | .B int | 
| 3416 | mg_fgoto( MG_FPOS *pos ) | 
| 3417 | .SH | 
| 3418 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3419 | .LP | 
| 3420 | The | 
| 3421 | .I mg_fgetpos | 
| 3422 | gets the current MGF file position and loads it into the passed | 
| 3423 | .I MG_FPOS | 
| 3424 | structure, | 
| 3425 | .I pos. | 
| 3426 | .LP | 
| 3427 | The | 
| 3428 | .I mg_fgoto | 
| 3429 | function seeks to the position | 
| 3430 | .I pos, | 
| 3431 | taken from a previous call to | 
| 3432 | .I mg_fgetpos. | 
| 3433 | .SH | 
| 3434 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 3435 | .LP | 
| 3436 | If | 
| 3437 | .I mg_fgoto | 
| 3438 | is passed an illegal pointer or one that does not correspond to the | 
| 3439 | current | 
| 3440 | .I mg_file | 
| 3441 | context, it will return the | 
| 3442 | .I MG_ESEEK | 
| 3443 | error value. | 
| 3444 | Normally, it returns | 
| 3445 | .I MG_OK | 
| 3446 | (0). | 
| 3447 | .SH | 
| 3448 | SEE ALSO | 
| 3449 | .LP | 
| 3450 | mg_load, mg_open | 
| 3451 | .ds RH MG_HANDLE | 
| 3452 | .bp | 
| 3453 | .SH | 
| 3454 | NAME | 
| 3455 | .LP | 
| 3456 | mg_handle, mg_entity, mg_ename, mg_nqcdivs - entity assistance and control | 
| 3457 | .SH | 
| 3458 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3459 | .LP | 
| 3460 | .B int | 
| 3461 | mg_handle( | 
| 3462 | .B int | 
| 3463 | en, | 
| 3464 | .B int | 
| 3465 | ac, | 
| 3466 | .B char | 
| 3467 | *av ) | 
| 3468 | .LP | 
| 3469 | .B int | 
| 3470 | mg_entity( | 
| 3471 | .B char | 
| 3472 | *name ) | 
| 3473 | .LP | 
| 3474 | .B "extern char" | 
| 3475 | mg_ename[MG_NENTITIES][MG_MAXELEN] | 
| 3476 | .LP | 
| 3477 | .B "extern int" | 
| 3478 | mg_nqcdivs | 
| 3479 | .SH | 
| 3480 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3481 | .LP | 
| 3482 | The | 
| 3483 | .I mg_handle | 
| 3484 | routine may be used to pass entities back to the parser | 
| 3485 | to be redirected through the | 
| 3486 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3487 | dispatch table. | 
| 3488 | This method is recommended rather than calling through | 
| 3489 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3490 | directly, since the parser sometimes has its own support routines | 
| 3491 | that it needs to call for specific entities. | 
| 3492 | The first argument, | 
| 3493 | .I en, | 
| 3494 | is the corresponding entity number, or -1 if | 
| 3495 | .I mg_handle | 
| 3496 | should figure it out from the first | 
| 3497 | .I av | 
| 3498 | argument. | 
| 3499 | .LP | 
| 3500 | The | 
| 3501 | .I mg_entity | 
| 3502 | function gets an entity number from its name, using a hash | 
| 3503 | table on the | 
| 3504 | .I mg_ename | 
| 3505 | list. | 
| 3506 | .LP | 
| 3507 | The | 
| 3508 | .I mg_ename | 
| 3509 | table contains the string names corresponding to each MGF entity in | 
| 3510 | the designated order. | 
| 3511 | (See the | 
| 3512 | .I mg_init | 
| 3513 | page for the list of MGF entities.)\0 | 
| 3514 | .LP | 
| 3515 | The global integer variable | 
| 3516 | .I mg_nqcdivs | 
| 3517 | tells the parser how many subdivisions to use per quarter circle (90 | 
| 3518 | degrees) when tesselating curved geometry. | 
| 3519 | The default value is 5, and it may be reset at any time by the | 
| 3520 | calling program. | 
| 3521 | .SH | 
| 3522 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 3523 | .LP | 
| 3524 | The | 
| 3525 | .I mg_handle | 
| 3526 | function returns | 
| 3527 | .I MG_OK | 
| 3528 | if the entity is handled correctly, or one of the predefined error | 
| 3529 | values if there is a problem. | 
| 3530 | (See the | 
| 3531 | .I mg_load | 
| 3532 | page for a list of error values.)\0 | 
| 3533 | .LP | 
| 3534 | The | 
| 3535 | .I mg_entity | 
| 3536 | function returns -1 if the passed name does not appear in the | 
| 3537 | .I mg_ename | 
| 3538 | list. | 
| 3539 | .SH | 
| 3540 | SEE ALSO | 
| 3541 | .LP | 
| 3542 | mg_init, mg_load, mg_open | 
| 3543 | .ds RH ISINT, ISFLT, ISNAME | 
| 3544 | .bp | 
| 3545 | .SH | 
| 3546 | NAME | 
| 3547 | .LP | 
| 3548 | isint, isflt, isname - determine if string fits integer or real format, | 
| 3549 | or is legal identifier | 
| 3550 | .SH | 
| 3551 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3552 | .LP | 
| 3553 | .B int | 
| 3554 | isint( | 
| 3555 | .B char | 
| 3556 | *str ) | 
| 3557 | .LP | 
| 3558 | .B int | 
| 3559 | isflt( | 
| 3560 | .B char | 
| 3561 | *str ) | 
| 3562 | .LP | 
| 3563 | .B int | 
| 3564 | isname( | 
| 3565 | .B char | 
| 3566 | *str ) | 
| 3567 | .SH | 
| 3568 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3569 | .LP | 
| 3570 | The | 
| 3571 | .I isint | 
| 3572 | function checks to see if the passed string | 
| 3573 | .I str | 
| 3574 | matches a decimal integer format (positive or negative), | 
| 3575 | and returns 1 or 0 based on whether it does or does not. | 
| 3576 | .LP | 
| 3577 | The | 
| 3578 | .I isflt | 
| 3579 | function checks to see if the passed string | 
| 3580 | .I str | 
| 3581 | matches a floating point format (positive or negative with optional | 
| 3582 | exponent), and returns 1 or 0 based on whether it does or does not. | 
| 3583 | .LP | 
| 3584 | The | 
| 3585 | .I isname | 
| 3586 | function checks to see if the passed string | 
| 3587 | .I str | 
| 3588 | is a legal identifier name. | 
| 3589 | In MGF, a legal identifier must begin with a letter and contain only | 
| 3590 | visible ASCII characters (those between decimal 33 and 127 inclusive). | 
| 3591 | The one caveat to this is that names may begin with one or more | 
| 3592 | underscores ('_'), but this is a trick employed by the parser to | 
| 3593 | maintain a separate name space from the user, and is not legal usage | 
| 3594 | otherwise. | 
| 3595 | .LP | 
| 3596 | Note that a string that matches an integer format is also a valid | 
| 3597 | floating point value. | 
| 3598 | Conversely, a string that is not a floating point number cannot be a | 
| 3599 | valid integer. | 
| 3600 | .LP | 
| 3601 | These routines are useful for checking arguments passed to entity | 
| 3602 | handlers that certain types in certain positions. | 
| 3603 | If an invalid argument is passed, the handler should return an | 
| 3604 | .I MG_ETYPE | 
| 3605 | error. | 
| 3606 | .SH | 
| 3607 | SEE ALSO | 
| 3608 | .LP | 
| 3609 | mg_init, mg_load | 
| 3610 | .ds LH Entity Support Routines | 
| 3611 | .ds RH C_HVERTEX | 
| 3612 | .bp | 
| 3613 | .SH | 
| 3614 | NAME | 
| 3615 | .LP | 
| 3616 | c_hvertex, c_getvert, c_cvname, c_cvertex - vertex entity support | 
| 3617 | .SH | 
| 3618 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3619 | .LP | 
| 3620 | #include "parser.h" | 
| 3621 | .LP | 
| 3622 | .B int | 
| 3623 | c_hvertex( | 
| 3624 | .B int | 
| 3625 | argc, | 
| 3626 | .B char | 
| 3627 | **argv ) | 
| 3628 | .LP | 
| 3629 | C_VERTEX *c_getvert( | 
| 3630 | .B char | 
| 3631 | *name ) | 
| 3632 | .LP | 
| 3633 | .B "extern char" | 
| 3634 | *c_vname | 
| 3635 | .LP | 
| 3636 | .B extern | 
| 3637 | C_VERTEX *c_cvertex | 
| 3638 | .SH | 
| 3639 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3640 | .LP | 
| 3641 | The | 
| 3642 | .I c_hvertex | 
| 3643 | function handles the MGF vertex entities, | 
| 3644 | .UL v, | 
| 3645 | .UL p | 
| 3646 | and | 
| 3647 | .UL n. | 
| 3648 | If either | 
| 3649 | .UL p | 
| 3650 | or | 
| 3651 | .UL n | 
| 3652 | is supported, then | 
| 3653 | .UL v | 
| 3654 | must be also. | 
| 3655 | The assignments are normally made to the | 
| 3656 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3657 | array prior to parser initialization, like so: | 
| 3658 | .DS | 
| 3659 | mg_ehand[MG_E_VERTEX] = c_hvertex;              /* support "v" entity */ | 
| 3660 | mg_ehand[MG_E_POINT] = c_hvertex;               /* support "p" entity */ | 
| 3661 | mg_ehand[MG_E_NORMAL] = c_hvertex;      /* support "n" entity */ | 
| 3662 | /* other entity handler assignments... */ | 
| 3663 | mg_init();                      /* initialize parser */ | 
| 3664 | .DE | 
| 3665 | If vertex normals are not understood by any of the program-supported | 
| 3666 | entities, then the | 
| 3667 | .I MG_E_NORMAL | 
| 3668 | entry may be left with its original NULL assignment. | 
| 3669 | .LP | 
| 3670 | The | 
| 3671 | .I c_getvert | 
| 3672 | call takes the name of a defined vertex and returns a pointer to its | 
| 3673 | .I C_VERTEX | 
| 3674 | structure, defined in "parser.h" as: | 
| 3675 | .DS | 
| 3676 | typedef FLOAT  FVECT[3];        /* a 3-d real vector */ | 
| 3677 |  | 
| 3678 | typedef struct { | 
| 3679 | int     clock;                  /* incremented each change -- resettable */ | 
| 3680 | FVECT   p, n;           /* point and normal */ | 
| 3681 | } C_VERTEX;             /* vertex context */ | 
| 3682 | .DE | 
| 3683 | The | 
| 3684 | .I clock | 
| 3685 | member will be incremented each time the value gets changed by a | 
| 3686 | .UL p | 
| 3687 | or | 
| 3688 | .UL n | 
| 3689 | entity, and may be reset by the controlling program if desired. | 
| 3690 | This is a convenient way to keep track of whether or not a vertex has | 
| 3691 | changed since its last use. | 
| 3692 | To link identical vertices, one must also check that the current | 
| 3693 | transform has not changed, which is uniquely identified by the | 
| 3694 | global | 
| 3695 | .I xf_context->xid | 
| 3696 | variable, but only if one is using the parser libraries transform | 
| 3697 | handler. | 
| 3698 | (See the | 
| 3699 | .I xf_handler | 
| 3700 | page.)\0 | 
| 3701 | .LP | 
| 3702 | It is possible but not recommended to alter the contents of the | 
| 3703 | vertex structure returned by | 
| 3704 | .I c_getvert. | 
| 3705 | Normally it is read during the | 
| 3706 | interpretation of entities using named vertices. | 
| 3707 | .LP | 
| 3708 | The name of the current vertex is given by the global | 
| 3709 | .I c_cvname | 
| 3710 | variable, which is set to NULL if the unnamed vertex is current. | 
| 3711 | The current vertex value is pointed to by the global variable | 
| 3712 | .I c_cvertex, | 
| 3713 | which should never be NULL. | 
| 3714 | .SH | 
| 3715 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 3716 | .LP | 
| 3717 | The | 
| 3718 | .I c_hvertex | 
| 3719 | function returns | 
| 3720 | .I MG_OK | 
| 3721 | (0) if the vertex is handled correctly, or one of the predefined | 
| 3722 | error values if there is a problem. | 
| 3723 | (See the | 
| 3724 | .I mg_load | 
| 3725 | page for a list of errors.)\0 | 
| 3726 | .LP | 
| 3727 | The | 
| 3728 | .I c_getvert | 
| 3729 | function returns NULL if the specified vertex name is undefined, at | 
| 3730 | which point the calling function should return an | 
| 3731 | .I MG_EUNDEF | 
| 3732 | error. | 
| 3733 | .SH | 
| 3734 | SEE ALSO | 
| 3735 | .LP | 
| 3736 | c_hcolor, c_hmaterial, mg_init, mg_load, xf_handler | 
| 3737 | .ds RH C_HCOLOR | 
| 3738 | .bp | 
| 3739 | .SH | 
| 3740 | NAME | 
| 3741 | .LP | 
| 3742 | c_hcolor, c_getcolor, c_ccname, c_ccolor, c_ccvt, c_isgrey - | 
| 3743 | color entity support | 
| 3744 | .SH | 
| 3745 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3746 | .LP | 
| 3747 | #include "parser.h" | 
| 3748 | .LP | 
| 3749 | .B int | 
| 3750 | c_hcolor( | 
| 3751 | .B int | 
| 3752 | argc, | 
| 3753 | .B char | 
| 3754 | **argv ) | 
| 3755 | .LP | 
| 3756 | C_COLOR *c_getcolor( | 
| 3757 | .B char | 
| 3758 | *name ) | 
| 3759 | .LP | 
| 3760 | .B "extern char" | 
| 3761 | *c_ccname | 
| 3762 | .LP | 
| 3763 | .B extern | 
| 3764 | C_COLOR *c_ccolor | 
| 3765 | .LP | 
| 3766 | .B void | 
| 3767 | c_ccvt( C_COLOR *cvp, | 
| 3768 | .B int | 
| 3769 | cflags ) | 
| 3770 | .LP | 
| 3771 | .B int | 
| 3772 | c_isgrey( C_COLOR *cvp ) | 
| 3773 | .SH | 
| 3774 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3775 | .LP | 
| 3776 | The | 
| 3777 | .I c_hcolor | 
| 3778 | function supports the MGF entities, | 
| 3779 | .UL c, | 
| 3780 | .UL cxy, | 
| 3781 | .UL cspec, | 
| 3782 | .UL cct | 
| 3783 | and | 
| 3784 | .UL cmix. | 
| 3785 | It is an error to support any of the color field entities without | 
| 3786 | supporting the | 
| 3787 | .UL c | 
| 3788 | entity itself. | 
| 3789 | The assignments are normally made to the | 
| 3790 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3791 | array prior to parser initialization, like so: | 
| 3792 | .DS | 
| 3793 | mg_ehand[MG_E_COLOR] = c_hcolor;        /* support "c" entity */ | 
| 3794 | mg_ehand[MG_E_CXY] = c_hcolor;  /* support "cxy" entity */ | 
| 3795 | mg_ehand[MG_E_CSPEC] = c_hcolor;        /* support "cspec" entity */ | 
| 3796 | mg_ehand[MG_E_CCT] = c_hcolor;          /* support "cct" entity */ | 
| 3797 | mg_ehand[MG_E_CMIX] = c_hcolor; /* support "cmix" entity */ | 
| 3798 | /* other entity handler assignments... */ | 
| 3799 | mg_init();                      /* initialize parser */ | 
| 3800 | .DE | 
| 3801 | If the loader/translator has no use for spectral data, the entries for | 
| 3802 | .UL cspec | 
| 3803 | and | 
| 3804 | .UL cct | 
| 3805 | may be left with their original NULL assignments and these entities will | 
| 3806 | be re-expressed appropriately as tristimulus values. | 
| 3807 | .LP | 
| 3808 | The | 
| 3809 | .I c_getcolor | 
| 3810 | function takes the name of a defined color and returns a pointer to its | 
| 3811 | .I C_COLOR | 
| 3812 | structure, defined in "parser.h" as: | 
| 3813 | .DS | 
| 3814 | #define C_CMINWL        380                                     /* minimum wavelength */ | 
| 3815 | #define C_CMAXWL        780                                     /* maximum wavelength */ | 
| 3816 | #define C_CNSS          41                                      /* number of spectral samples */ | 
| 3817 | #define C_CWLI          ((C_CMAXWL-C_CMINWL)/(C_CNSS-1)) | 
| 3818 | #define C_CMAXV         10000                   /* nominal maximum sample value */ | 
| 3819 | #define C_CLPWM         (683./C_CMAXV)  /* peak lumens/watt multiplier */ | 
| 3820 |  | 
| 3821 | typedef struct { | 
| 3822 | int     clock;                  /* incremented each change */ | 
| 3823 | short   flags;                  /* what's been set */ | 
| 3824 | short   ssamp[C_CNSS];  /* spectral samples, min wl to max */ | 
| 3825 | long    ssum;                   /* straight sum of spectral values */ | 
| 3826 | float   cx, cy;         /* xy chromaticity value */ | 
| 3827 | float   eff;                    /* efficacy (lumens/watt) */ | 
| 3828 | } C_COLOR;              /* color context */ | 
| 3829 | .DE | 
| 3830 | The | 
| 3831 | .I clock | 
| 3832 | member will be incremented each time the value gets changed by a | 
| 3833 | color field entity, and may be reset by the calling program if | 
| 3834 | desired. | 
| 3835 | This is a convenient way to keep track of whether or not a color has | 
| 3836 | changed since its last use. | 
| 3837 | The | 
| 3838 | .I flags | 
| 3839 | member indicates which color representations have been assigned, | 
| 3840 | and is an inclusive OR of one or more of the following: | 
| 3841 | .DS | 
| 3842 | #define C_CSSPEC        01              /* flag if spectrum is set */ | 
| 3843 | #define C_CDSPEC        02              /* flag if defined w/ spectrum */ | 
| 3844 | #define C_CSXY          04              /* flag if xy is set */ | 
| 3845 | #define C_CDXY          010             /* flag if defined w/ xy */ | 
| 3846 | #define C_CSEFF         020             /* flag if efficacy set */ | 
| 3847 | .DE | 
| 3848 | .LP | 
| 3849 | It is possible but not recommended to alter the contents of the | 
| 3850 | color structure returned by | 
| 3851 | .I c_getcolor. | 
| 3852 | Normally, this routine is never called directly, since there are no | 
| 3853 | entities that access colors by name other than | 
| 3854 | .UL c. | 
| 3855 | .LP | 
| 3856 | The global variable | 
| 3857 | .I c_ccname | 
| 3858 | points to the name of the current color, or NULL if it is unnamed. | 
| 3859 | The variable | 
| 3860 | .I c_ccolor | 
| 3861 | points to the current color value, which should never be NULL. | 
| 3862 | .LP | 
| 3863 | The | 
| 3864 | .I c_ccvt | 
| 3865 | routine takes a | 
| 3866 | .I C_COLOR | 
| 3867 | structure and a set of desired flag settings and computes the | 
| 3868 | missing color representation(s). | 
| 3869 | .LP | 
| 3870 | The | 
| 3871 | .I c_isgrey | 
| 3872 | function returns 1 if the passed color is very close to neutral | 
| 3873 | grey, or 0 otherwise. | 
| 3874 | .SH | 
| 3875 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 3876 | .LP | 
| 3877 | The | 
| 3878 | .I c_hcolor | 
| 3879 | function returns | 
| 3880 | .I MG_OK | 
| 3881 | (0) if the color is handled correctly, or one of the predefined | 
| 3882 | error values if there is a problem. | 
| 3883 | (See the | 
| 3884 | .I mg_load | 
| 3885 | page for a list of errors.)\0 | 
| 3886 | .LP | 
| 3887 | The | 
| 3888 | .I c_getcolor | 
| 3889 | function returns NULL if the specified color name is undefined, at | 
| 3890 | which point the calling function should return an | 
| 3891 | .I MG_EUNDEF | 
| 3892 | error. | 
| 3893 | .SH | 
| 3894 | SEE ALSO | 
| 3895 | .LP | 
| 3896 | c_hmaterial, c_hvertex, mg_init, mg_load | 
| 3897 | .ds RH C_HMATERIAL | 
| 3898 | .bp | 
| 3899 | .SH | 
| 3900 | NAME | 
| 3901 | .LP | 
| 3902 | c_hmaterial, c_getmaterial, c_cmname, c_cmaterial - | 
| 3903 | material entity support | 
| 3904 | .SH | 
| 3905 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 3906 | .LP | 
| 3907 | #include "parser.h" | 
| 3908 | .LP | 
| 3909 | .B int | 
| 3910 | c_hmaterial( | 
| 3911 | .B int | 
| 3912 | argc, | 
| 3913 | .B char | 
| 3914 | **argv ) | 
| 3915 | .LP | 
| 3916 | C_MATERIAL *c_getmaterial( | 
| 3917 | .B char | 
| 3918 | *name ) | 
| 3919 | .LP | 
| 3920 | .B "extern char" | 
| 3921 | *c_cmname | 
| 3922 | .LP | 
| 3923 | .B extern | 
| 3924 | C_MATERIAL *c_cmaterial | 
| 3925 | .SH | 
| 3926 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 3927 | .LP | 
| 3928 | The | 
| 3929 | .I c_hmaterial | 
| 3930 | function supports the MGF entities, | 
| 3931 | .UL m, | 
| 3932 | .UL ed, | 
| 3933 | .UL ir, | 
| 3934 | .UL rd, | 
| 3935 | .UL rs, | 
| 3936 | .UL sides, | 
| 3937 | .UL td, | 
| 3938 | and | 
| 3939 | .UL ts. | 
| 3940 | It is an error to support any of the material field entities without | 
| 3941 | supporting the | 
| 3942 | .UL m | 
| 3943 | entity itself. | 
| 3944 | The assignments are normally made to the | 
| 3945 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 3946 | array prior to parser initialization, like so: | 
| 3947 | .DS | 
| 3948 | mg_ehand[MG_E_MATERIAL] = c_hmaterial;  /* support "m" entity */ | 
| 3949 | mg_ehand[MG_E_ED] = c_hmaterial;                /* support "ed" entity */ | 
| 3950 | mg_ehand[MG_E_IR] = c_hmaterial;                /* support "ir" entity */ | 
| 3951 | mg_ehand[MG_E_RD] = c_hmaterial;                /* support "rd" entity */ | 
| 3952 | mg_ehand[MG_E_RS] = c_hmaterial;                /* support "rs" entity */ | 
| 3953 | mg_ehand[MG_E_SIDES] = c_hmaterial;             /* support "sides" entity */ | 
| 3954 | mg_ehand[MG_E_TD] = c_hmaterial;                /* support "td" entity */ | 
| 3955 | mg_ehand[MG_E_TS] = c_hmaterial;                /* support "ts" entity */ | 
| 3956 | /* other entity handler assignments... */ | 
| 3957 | mg_init();                      /* initialize parser */ | 
| 3958 | .DE | 
| 3959 | Any of the above entities besides | 
| 3960 | .UL m | 
| 3961 | may be unsupported, but the parser will not attempt to include their | 
| 3962 | effect into other members, e.g. an unsupported | 
| 3963 | .UL rs | 
| 3964 | component will not be added back into the | 
| 3965 | .UL rd | 
| 3966 | member. | 
| 3967 | It is therefore safer to support all of the relevant material | 
| 3968 | entities and make final approximations from the complete | 
| 3969 | .I C_MATERIAL | 
| 3970 | structure. | 
| 3971 | .LP | 
| 3972 | The | 
| 3973 | .I c_getmaterial | 
| 3974 | function takes the name of a defined material and returns a pointer to its | 
| 3975 | .I C_MATERIAL | 
| 3976 | structure, defined in "parser.h" as: | 
| 3977 | .DS | 
| 3978 | #define C_1SIDEDTHICK   0.005           /* assumed thickness of 1-sided mat. */ | 
| 3979 |  | 
| 3980 | typedef struct { | 
| 3981 | int     clock;          /* incremented each change -- resettable */ | 
| 3982 | int     sided;          /* 1 if surface is 1-sided, 0 for 2-sided */ | 
| 3983 | float   nr, ni;         /* index of refraction, real and imaginary */ | 
| 3984 | float   rd;             /* diffuse reflectance */ | 
| 3985 | C_COLOR rd_c;   /* diffuse reflectance color */ | 
| 3986 | float   td;             /* diffuse transmittance */ | 
| 3987 | C_COLOR td_c;   /* diffuse transmittance color */ | 
| 3988 | float   ed;             /* diffuse emittance */ | 
| 3989 | C_COLOR ed_c;   /* diffuse emittance color */ | 
| 3990 | float   rs;             /* specular reflectance */ | 
| 3991 | C_COLOR rs_c;   /* specular reflectance color */ | 
| 3992 | float   rs_a;           /* specular reflectance roughness */ | 
| 3993 | float   ts;             /* specular transmittance */ | 
| 3994 | C_COLOR ts_c;   /* specular transmittance color */ | 
| 3995 | float   ts_a;           /* specular transmittance roughness */ | 
| 3996 | } C_MATERIAL;   /* material context */ | 
| 3997 | .DE | 
| 3998 | The | 
| 3999 | .I clock | 
| 4000 | member will be incremented each time the value gets changed by a | 
| 4001 | material field entity, and may be reset by the calling program if | 
| 4002 | desired. | 
| 4003 | This is a convenient way to keep track of whether or not a material has | 
| 4004 | changed since its last use. | 
| 4005 | .LP | 
| 4006 | All reflectance and transmittance values correspond to normal | 
| 4007 | incidence, and may vary as a function of angle depending on the | 
| 4008 | index of refraction. | 
| 4009 | A solid object is normally represented with a one-sided material. | 
| 4010 | A two-sided material is most appropriate for thin surfaces, though | 
| 4011 | it may be used also when the surface normal orientations in a model | 
| 4012 | are unreliable. | 
| 4013 | .LP | 
| 4014 | If a transparent or translucent surface is one-sided, then the | 
| 4015 | absorption will change as a function of distance through the | 
| 4016 | material, and a single value for diffuse or specular transmittance is | 
| 4017 | ambiguous. | 
| 4018 | We therefore define a standard thickness, | 
| 4019 | .I C_1SIDEDTHICK, | 
| 4020 | which is the object thickness to which the given values correspond, | 
| 4021 | so that one may compute the isotropic absorptance of the material. | 
| 4022 | .LP | 
| 4023 | It is possible but not recommended to alter the contents of the | 
| 4024 | material structure returned by | 
| 4025 | .I c_getmaterial. | 
| 4026 | Normally, this routine is never called directly, since there are no | 
| 4027 | entities that access materials by name other than | 
| 4028 | .UL m. | 
| 4029 | .LP | 
| 4030 | The global variable | 
| 4031 | .I c_cmname | 
| 4032 | points to the name of the current material, or NULL if it is unnamed. | 
| 4033 | The variable | 
| 4034 | .I c_cmaterial | 
| 4035 | points to the current material value, which should never be NULL. | 
| 4036 | .SH | 
| 4037 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 4038 | .LP | 
| 4039 | The | 
| 4040 | .I c_hmaterial | 
| 4041 | function returns | 
| 4042 | .I MG_OK | 
| 4043 | (0) if the color is handled correctly, or one of the predefined | 
| 4044 | error values if there is a problem. | 
| 4045 | (See the | 
| 4046 | .I mg_load | 
| 4047 | page for a list of errors.)\0 | 
| 4048 | .LP | 
| 4049 | The | 
| 4050 | .I c_getmaterial | 
| 4051 | function returns NULL if the specified material name is undefined, at | 
| 4052 | which point the calling function should return an | 
| 4053 | .I MG_EUNDEF | 
| 4054 | error. | 
| 4055 | .SH | 
| 4056 | SEE ALSO | 
| 4057 | .LP | 
| 4058 | c_hcolor, c_hvertex, mg_init, mg_load | 
| 4059 | .ds RH OBJ_HANDLER | 
| 4060 | .bp | 
| 4061 | .SH | 
| 4062 | NAME | 
| 4063 | .LP | 
| 4064 | obj_handler, obj_clear, obj_nnames, obj_name - object name support | 
| 4065 | .SH | 
| 4066 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 4067 | .LP | 
| 4068 | .B int | 
| 4069 | obj_handler( | 
| 4070 | .B int | 
| 4071 | argc, | 
| 4072 | .B char | 
| 4073 | **argv ) | 
| 4074 | .LP | 
| 4075 | .B void | 
| 4076 | obj_clear( | 
| 4077 | .B void | 
| 4078 | ) | 
| 4079 | .LP | 
| 4080 | .B "extern int" | 
| 4081 | obj_nnames | 
| 4082 | .LP | 
| 4083 | .B "extern char" | 
| 4084 | **obj_name | 
| 4085 | .SH | 
| 4086 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 4087 | .LP | 
| 4088 | The | 
| 4089 | .I obj_handler | 
| 4090 | routine should be assigned to the | 
| 4091 | .I MG_E_OBJECT | 
| 4092 | entry of the parser's | 
| 4093 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 4094 | array prior to calling | 
| 4095 | .I mg_load | 
| 4096 | if the loader/translator wishes to support hierarchical object | 
| 4097 | names. | 
| 4098 | .LP | 
| 4099 | The | 
| 4100 | .I obj_clear | 
| 4101 | function may be used to clear the object name stack and free any | 
| 4102 | associated memory, but this is usually not necessary since | 
| 4103 | .UL o | 
| 4104 | begin and end entities are normally balanced in the input. | 
| 4105 | .LP | 
| 4106 | The global | 
| 4107 | .I obj_nnames | 
| 4108 | variable indicates the number of names currently in the object | 
| 4109 | stack, and the | 
| 4110 | .I obj_name | 
| 4111 | list contains the name strings in the same order as they were | 
| 4112 | encountered on the input. | 
| 4113 | (I.e. the most recently pushed name is last.)\0 | 
| 4114 | .SH | 
| 4115 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 4116 | .LP | 
| 4117 | The | 
| 4118 | .I obj_handler | 
| 4119 | function returns | 
| 4120 | .I MG_OK | 
| 4121 | (0) if the color is handled correctly, or one of the predefined | 
| 4122 | error values if there is a problem. | 
| 4123 | (See the | 
| 4124 | .I mg_load | 
| 4125 | page for a list of errors.)\0 | 
| 4126 | .SH | 
| 4127 | SEE ALSO | 
| 4128 | .LP | 
| 4129 | mg_init, mg_load, xf_handler | 
| 4130 | .ds RH XF_HANDLER | 
| 4131 | .bp | 
| 4132 | .SH | 
| 4133 | NAME | 
| 4134 | .LP | 
| 4135 | xf_handler, xf_clear, xf_context, xf_argend - transformation support | 
| 4136 | .SH | 
| 4137 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 4138 | .LP | 
| 4139 | .B int | 
| 4140 | xf_handler( | 
| 4141 | .B int | 
| 4142 | argc, | 
| 4143 | .B char | 
| 4144 | **argv ) | 
| 4145 | .LP | 
| 4146 | .B void | 
| 4147 | xf_clear( | 
| 4148 | .B void | 
| 4149 | ) | 
| 4150 | .LP | 
| 4151 | .B extern | 
| 4152 | XF_SPEC *xf_context | 
| 4153 | .LP | 
| 4154 | .B "extern char" | 
| 4155 | **xf_argend | 
| 4156 | .SH | 
| 4157 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 4158 | .LP | 
| 4159 | The | 
| 4160 | .I xf_handler | 
| 4161 | routine should be assigned to the | 
| 4162 | .I MG_E_XF | 
| 4163 | entry of the parser's | 
| 4164 | .I mg_ehand | 
| 4165 | array prior to calling | 
| 4166 | .I mg_load | 
| 4167 | if the loader/translator wishes to support hierarchical | 
| 4168 | transformations. | 
| 4169 | (Note that all MGF geometric entities require this support.)\0 | 
| 4170 | .LP | 
| 4171 | The | 
| 4172 | .I xf_clear | 
| 4173 | function may be used to clear the transform stack and free any | 
| 4174 | associated memory, but this is usually not necessary since | 
| 4175 | .UL xf | 
| 4176 | begin and end entities are normally balanced in the input. | 
| 4177 | .LP | 
| 4178 | The global | 
| 4179 | .I xf_context | 
| 4180 | variable points to the current transformation context, which is of | 
| 4181 | the type | 
| 4182 | .I XF_SPEC, | 
| 4183 | described in "parser.h": | 
| 4184 | .DS | 
| 4185 | typedef struct xf_spec { | 
| 4186 | long    xid;                            /* unique transform id */ | 
| 4187 | short   xac;                            /* context argument count */ | 
| 4188 | short   rev;                            /* boolean true if vertices reversed */ | 
| 4189 | XF      xf;                             /* cumulative transformation */ | 
| 4190 | struct xf_array *xarr;          /* transformation array pointer */ | 
| 4191 | struct xf_spec  *prev;  /* previous transformation context */ | 
| 4192 | } XF_SPEC;              /* followed by argument buffer */ | 
| 4193 | .DE | 
| 4194 | The | 
| 4195 | .I xid | 
| 4196 | member is a identifier associated with this transformation, | 
| 4197 | which should be the same for identical transformations, as an aid to | 
| 4198 | vertex sharing. | 
| 4199 | (See also the | 
| 4200 | .I c_hvertex | 
| 4201 | page.)\0 | 
| 4202 | The | 
| 4203 | .I xac | 
| 4204 | member indicates the total number of transform arguments, and is | 
| 4205 | used to indicate the position of the first argument relative to the | 
| 4206 | last one pointed to by the global | 
| 4207 | .I xf_argend | 
| 4208 | variable. | 
| 4209 | .LP | 
| 4210 | The first transform argument starts at | 
| 4211 | .I xf_argv, | 
| 4212 | which is a macro defined in "parser.h" as: | 
| 4213 | .DS | 
| 4214 | #define xf_argv         (xf_argend - xf_context->xac) | 
| 4215 | .DE | 
| 4216 | Note that accessing this macro will result in a segmentation violation | 
| 4217 | if the current context is NULL, so one should first test the second macro | 
| 4218 | .I xf_argc | 
| 4219 | against zero. | 
| 4220 | This macro is defined as: | 
| 4221 | .DS | 
| 4222 | #define xf_argc         (xf_context==NULL ? 0 : xf_context->xac) | 
| 4223 | .DE | 
| 4224 | .LP | 
| 4225 | Normally, neither of these macros will be used, since there are | 
| 4226 | routines for transforming points, vectors and scalars directly based | 
| 4227 | on the current transformation context. | 
| 4228 | (See the | 
| 4229 | .I xf_xfmpoint | 
| 4230 | page for details.)\0 | 
| 4231 | .LP | 
| 4232 | The | 
| 4233 | .I rev | 
| 4234 | member of the | 
| 4235 | .I XF_SPEC | 
| 4236 | structure indicates whether or not this transform reverses the order | 
| 4237 | of polygon vertices. | 
| 4238 | This member will be 1 if the transformation mirrors about an odd | 
| 4239 | number of coordinate axes, thus inverting faces. | 
| 4240 | The usual thing to do in this circumstance is to interpret the | 
| 4241 | vertex arguments in the reverse order, so as to bring the face back | 
| 4242 | to its original orientation in the new position. | 
| 4243 | .LP | 
| 4244 | The | 
| 4245 | .I xf | 
| 4246 | member contains the transformation scalefactor (in xf.sca) | 
| 4247 | and 4x4 homogeneous matrix (in xf.xfm), but these will usually not | 
| 4248 | be accessed directly. | 
| 4249 | Likewise, the | 
| 4250 | .I xarr | 
| 4251 | and | 
| 4252 | .I prev | 
| 4253 | members point to data that should not be needed by the calling | 
| 4254 | program. | 
| 4255 | .SH | 
| 4256 | DIAGNOSTICS | 
| 4257 | .LP | 
| 4258 | The | 
| 4259 | .I xf_handler | 
| 4260 | function returns | 
| 4261 | .I MG_OK | 
| 4262 | (0) if the color is handled correctly, or one of the predefined | 
| 4263 | error values if there is a problem. | 
| 4264 | (See the | 
| 4265 | .I mg_load | 
| 4266 | page for a list of errors.)\0 | 
| 4267 | .SH | 
| 4268 | SEE ALSO | 
| 4269 | .LP | 
| 4270 | mg_init, mg_load, obj_handler, xf_xfmpoint | 
| 4271 | .ds RH XF_XFMPOINT | 
| 4272 | .bp | 
| 4273 | .SH | 
| 4274 | NAME | 
| 4275 | .LP | 
| 4276 | xf_xfmpoint, xf_xfmvect, xf_rotvect, xf_scale - apply current | 
| 4277 | transformation | 
| 4278 | .SH | 
| 4279 | SYNOPSIS | 
| 4280 | .LP | 
| 4281 | .B void | 
| 4282 | xf_xfmpoint( FVECT pnew, FVECT pold ) | 
| 4283 | .LP | 
| 4284 | .B void | 
| 4285 | xf_xfmvect( FVECT vnew, FVECT vold ) | 
| 4286 | .LP | 
| 4287 | .B void | 
| 4288 | xf_rotvect( FVECT nnew, FVECT nold ) | 
| 4289 | .LP | 
| 4290 | .B double | 
| 4291 | xf_scale( | 
| 4292 | .B double | 
| 4293 | sold ) | 
| 4294 | .SH | 
| 4295 | DESCRIPTION | 
| 4296 | .LP | 
| 4297 | The | 
| 4298 | .I xf_xfmpoint | 
| 4299 | routine applies the current transformation defined by | 
| 4300 | .I xf_context | 
| 4301 | to the point | 
| 4302 | .I pold, | 
| 4303 | scaling, rotating and moving it to its proper location, which is put in | 
| 4304 | .I pnew. | 
| 4305 | (As for | 
| 4306 | .I xf_xfmvect | 
| 4307 | and | 
| 4308 | .I xf_rotvect, | 
| 4309 | the two arguments may point to the same vector.)\0 | 
| 4310 | .LP | 
| 4311 | The | 
| 4312 | .I xf_xfmvect | 
| 4313 | routine applies the current transformation to the vector | 
| 4314 | .I vold, | 
| 4315 | scaling and rotating it to its proper location, which is put in | 
| 4316 | .I vnew. | 
| 4317 | The only difference between | 
| 4318 | .I xf_xfmpoint | 
| 4319 | and | 
| 4320 | .I xf_xfmvect | 
| 4321 | is that in the latter, the final translation is not applied. | 
| 4322 | .LP | 
| 4323 | The | 
| 4324 | .I xf_rotvect | 
| 4325 | routine rotates the vector | 
| 4326 | .I nold | 
| 4327 | using the current transformation, and stores the result in | 
| 4328 | .I nnew. | 
| 4329 | No translation or scaling is applied, which is the appropriate | 
| 4330 | action for surface normal vectors for example. | 
| 4331 | .LP | 
| 4332 | The | 
| 4333 | .I xf_scale | 
| 4334 | function takes a scalar argument | 
| 4335 | .I sold | 
| 4336 | and applies the current scale factor, returning the result. | 
| 4337 | .SH | 
| 4338 | SEE ALSO | 
| 4339 | .LP | 
| 4340 | xf_handler | 
| 4341 | .ds LH | 
| 4342 | .ds RH | 
| 4343 | .bp | 
| 4344 | .NH | 
| 4345 | Application Notes | 
| 4346 | .NH 2 | 
| 4347 | Relation to Standard Practices in Computer Graphics | 
| 4348 | .LP | 
| 4349 | For those coming from a computer graphics background, some of the | 
| 4350 | choices in the material model may seem strange or even capricious. | 
| 4351 | Why not simply stick with RGB colors and a Phong specular component | 
| 4352 | like everyone else? | 
| 4353 | What is the point in choosing the number of sides to a material? | 
| 4354 | .LP | 
| 4355 | In the real world, a surface can have only one side, | 
| 4356 | defining the interface between one volume and another. | 
| 4357 | Many object-space rendering packages (e.g. z-buffer algorithms) take | 
| 4358 | advantage of this fact by culling back-facing polygons and thus saving | 
| 4359 | as much as 50% of the preprocessing time. | 
| 4360 | However, many models rely on an | 
| 4361 | approximation whereby a single surface is used to represent a very thin | 
| 4362 | volume, such as a pane of glass, and this also can provide significant | 
| 4363 | calculational savings in an image-space algorithm (such as | 
| 4364 | ray-tracing). | 
| 4365 | Also, many models are created in such a way that the front vs. back | 
| 4366 | information is lost or confused, so that the back side of one or | 
| 4367 | more surfaces may have to serve as the front side during rendering. | 
| 4368 | (AutoCAD is one easily identified culprit in this department.)\0 | 
| 4369 | Since both types of surface models are useful and any | 
| 4370 | rendering algorithm may ultimately be applied, MGF provides a way | 
| 4371 | to specify sidedness rather than picking one interpretation or the other. | 
| 4372 | .LP | 
| 4373 | The problem with RGB is that there is no accepted standard, and even | 
| 4374 | if we were to set one it would either be impossible to realize (i.e. | 
| 4375 | impossible to create phosphors with the chosen colors) or it would | 
| 4376 | have a gamut that excludes many saturated colors. | 
| 4377 | The CIE color system was very carefully conceived and developed, | 
| 4378 | and is the standard to which all photometric measurements adhere. | 
| 4379 | It is therefore the logical choice in any standard format, though it | 
| 4380 | has been too often ignored by the computer graphics community. | 
| 4381 | .LP | 
| 4382 | Regarding Phong shading, this was never a physical model and making it | 
| 4383 | behave basic laws of reciprocity and energy balance is difficult. | 
| 4384 | More to the point, specular power has almost nothing to do with | 
| 4385 | surface microstructure, and is difficult to set properly | 
| 4386 | even if every physical characteristic of a material has | 
| 4387 | been carefully measured. | 
| 4388 | This is the ultimate indictment of any physical model -- that it | 
| 4389 | is incapable of reproducing any measurement whatsoever. | 
| 4390 | .LP | 
| 4391 | Admittedly, the compliment of diffuse and specular component plus | 
| 4392 | surface roughness and index of refraction used in MGF is less than a | 
| 4393 | perfect model, but it is serviceable for most materials and | 
| 4394 | relatively simple to incorporate into a rendering algorithm. | 
| 4395 | In the long term, MGF shall probably include full spectral | 
| 4396 | scattering functions, though the sheer quantity of data involved | 
| 4397 | makes this burdensome from both the measurement side and the | 
| 4398 | simulation side. | 
| 4399 | .NH 3 | 
| 4400 | Converting between Phong Specular Power and Gaussian Roughness | 
| 4401 | .LP | 
| 4402 | So-called specular reflection and transmission are modeled using a | 
| 4403 | Gaussian distribution of surface facets. | 
| 4404 | The roughness parameters to the | 
| 4405 | .UL rs | 
| 4406 | and | 
| 4407 | .UL ts | 
| 4408 | entities specify | 
| 4409 | the root-mean-squared (RMS) surface facet slope, which varies from 0 | 
| 4410 | for a perfectly smooth surface to around .2 for a fairly rough one. | 
| 4411 | The effect this will have on the reflected component distribution is | 
| 4412 | well-defined, but predicting the behavior of the transmitted | 
| 4413 | component requires further assumptions. | 
| 4414 | We assume that the surface | 
| 4415 | scatters light passing through it just as much as it scatters | 
| 4416 | reflected light. | 
| 4417 | This assumption is approximately correct for a | 
| 4418 | two-sided transparent material with an index of refraction of 1.5 | 
| 4419 | (like glass) and both sides having the given RMS facet slope. | 
| 4420 | .LP | 
| 4421 | Oftentimes, one is translating from a Phong exponent on the cosine | 
| 4422 | of the half-vector-to-normal angle to the more physical but less | 
| 4423 | familiar Gaussian model of MGF. | 
| 4424 | The hardest part is translating the specular power to a roughness value. | 
| 4425 | For this, we recommend the following approximation: | 
| 4426 | .IP | 
| 4427 | roughness = 0.6/sqrt(specular_power) | 
| 4428 | .LP | 
| 4429 | It is not a perfect correlation, but it is about as close as one can get. | 
| 4430 | .NH 3 | 
| 4431 | Converting between RGB and CIE Colors | 
| 4432 | .LP | 
| 4433 | Unlike most graphics languages, MGF does not use an RGB color model, | 
| 4434 | simply because there is no recognized definition for this model. | 
| 4435 | It is based on computer monitor phosphors, which vary from one | 
| 4436 | CRT to the next. | 
| 4437 | (There is an RGB standard defined in the TV | 
| 4438 | industry, but this has a rather poor correlation to most computer | 
| 4439 | monitors and it is impossible to express many real-world colors | 
| 4440 | within its limited gamut.)\0 | 
| 4441 | .LP | 
| 4442 | MGF uses two alternative, well-defined standards, spectral power | 
| 4443 | distributions and the 1931 CIE 2 degree standard observer. | 
| 4444 | With the CIE standard, any viewable | 
| 4445 | color may be exactly represented as an (x,y) chromaticity value. | 
| 4446 | Unfortunately, the interaction between | 
| 4447 | colors (i.e. colored light sources and interreflections) cannot be | 
| 4448 | specified exactly with any finite coordinate set, including CIE | 
| 4449 | chromaticities. | 
| 4450 | So, MGF offers the ability to give reflectance, | 
| 4451 | transmittance or emittance as a function of wavelength over the visible | 
| 4452 | spectrum. | 
| 4453 | This function is still discretized, but at a user-selectable | 
| 4454 | resolution. | 
| 4455 | Furthermore, spectral colors may be mixed, providing (nearly) | 
| 4456 | arbitrary basis functions, which can produce more accurate results in | 
| 4457 | some cases and are merely a convenience for translation in others. | 
| 4458 | .LP | 
| 4459 | Conversion back and forth between CIE chromaticity coordinates and spectral | 
| 4460 | samples is provided within the MGF parser. | 
| 4461 | Unfortunately, conversion | 
| 4462 | to and from RGB values depends on a particular RGB definition, and as we | 
| 4463 | have said, there is no recognized standard. | 
| 4464 | We therefore recommend that | 
| 4465 | you decide yourself what chromaticity values to use for each RGB primary, | 
| 4466 | and adopt the following code to convert between CIE and RGB coordinates. | 
| 4467 | .LP | 
| 4468 | .nf | 
| 4469 | #ifdef  NTSC | 
| 4470 | #define  CIE_x_r                0.670           /* standard NTSC primaries */ | 
| 4471 | #define  CIE_y_r                0.330 | 
| 4472 | #define  CIE_x_g                0.210 | 
| 4473 | #define  CIE_y_g                0.710 | 
| 4474 | #define  CIE_x_b                0.140 | 
| 4475 | #define  CIE_y_b                0.080 | 
| 4476 | #define  CIE_x_w                0.3333          /* monitor white point */ | 
| 4477 | #define  CIE_y_w                0.3333 | 
| 4478 | #else | 
| 4479 | #define  CIE_x_r                0.640           /* nominal CRT primaries */ | 
| 4480 | #define  CIE_y_r                0.330 | 
| 4481 | #define  CIE_x_g                0.290 | 
| 4482 | #define  CIE_y_g                0.600 | 
| 4483 | #define  CIE_x_b                0.150 | 
| 4484 | #define  CIE_y_b                0.060 | 
| 4485 | #define  CIE_x_w                0.3333          /* monitor white point */ | 
| 4486 | #define  CIE_y_w                0.3333 | 
| 4487 | #endif | 
| 4488 |  | 
| 4489 | #define CIE_D           (       CIE_x_r*(CIE_y_g - CIE_y_b) + \\ | 
| 4490 | CIE_x_g*(CIE_y_b - CIE_y_r) + \\ | 
| 4491 | CIE_x_b*(CIE_y_r - CIE_y_g)     ) | 
| 4492 | #define CIE_C_rD        ( (1./CIE_y_w) * \\ | 
| 4493 | ( CIE_x_w*(CIE_y_g - CIE_y_b) - \\ | 
| 4494 | CIE_y_w*(CIE_x_g - CIE_x_b) + \\ | 
| 4495 | CIE_x_g*CIE_y_b - CIE_x_b*CIE_y_g     ) ) | 
| 4496 | #define CIE_C_gD        ( (1./CIE_y_w) * \\ | 
| 4497 | ( CIE_x_w*(CIE_y_b - CIE_y_r) - \\ | 
| 4498 | CIE_y_w*(CIE_x_b - CIE_x_r) - \\ | 
| 4499 | CIE_x_r*CIE_y_b + CIE_x_b*CIE_y_r     ) ) | 
| 4500 | #define CIE_C_bD        ( (1./CIE_y_w) * \\ | 
| 4501 | ( CIE_x_w*(CIE_y_r - CIE_y_g) - \\ | 
| 4502 | CIE_y_w*(CIE_x_r - CIE_x_g) + \\ | 
| 4503 | CIE_x_r*CIE_y_g - CIE_x_g*CIE_y_r     ) ) | 
| 4504 |  | 
| 4505 | #define CIE_rf          (CIE_y_r*CIE_C_rD/CIE_D) | 
| 4506 | #define CIE_gf          (CIE_y_g*CIE_C_gD/CIE_D) | 
| 4507 | #define CIE_bf          (CIE_y_b*CIE_C_bD/CIE_D) | 
| 4508 |  | 
| 4509 | float  xyz2rgbmat[3][3] = {     /* XYZ to RGB */ | 
| 4510 | {(CIE_y_g - CIE_y_b - CIE_x_b*CIE_y_g + CIE_y_b*CIE_x_g)/CIE_C_rD, | 
| 4511 | (CIE_x_b - CIE_x_g - CIE_x_b*CIE_y_g + CIE_x_g*CIE_y_b)/CIE_C_rD, | 
| 4512 | (CIE_x_g*CIE_y_b - CIE_x_b*CIE_y_g)/CIE_C_rD}, | 
| 4513 | {(CIE_y_b - CIE_y_r - CIE_y_b*CIE_x_r + CIE_y_r*CIE_x_b)/CIE_C_gD, | 
| 4514 | (CIE_x_r - CIE_x_b - CIE_x_r*CIE_y_b + CIE_x_b*CIE_y_r)/CIE_C_gD, | 
| 4515 | (CIE_x_b*CIE_y_r - CIE_x_r*CIE_y_b)/CIE_C_gD}, | 
| 4516 | {(CIE_y_r - CIE_y_g - CIE_y_r*CIE_x_g + CIE_y_g*CIE_x_r)/CIE_C_bD, | 
| 4517 | (CIE_x_g - CIE_x_r - CIE_x_g*CIE_y_r + CIE_x_r*CIE_y_g)/CIE_C_bD, | 
| 4518 | (CIE_x_r*CIE_y_g - CIE_x_g*CIE_y_r)/CIE_C_bD} | 
| 4519 | }; | 
| 4520 |  | 
| 4521 | float  rgb2xyzmat[3][3] = {     /* RGB to XYZ */ | 
| 4522 | {CIE_x_r*CIE_C_rD/CIE_D,CIE_x_g*CIE_C_gD/CIE_D,CIE_x_b*CIE_C_bD/CIE_D}, | 
| 4523 | {CIE_y_r*CIE_C_rD/CIE_D,CIE_y_g*CIE_C_gD/CIE_D,CIE_y_b*CIE_C_bD/CIE_D}, | 
| 4524 | {(1.-CIE_x_r-CIE_y_r)*CIE_C_rD/CIE_D, | 
| 4525 | (1.-CIE_x_g-CIE_y_g)*CIE_C_gD/CIE_D, | 
| 4526 | (1.-CIE_x_b-CIE_y_b)*CIE_C_bD/CIE_D} | 
| 4527 | }; | 
| 4528 |  | 
| 4529 |  | 
| 4530 | cie_rgb(rgbcolor, ciecolor)             /* convert CIE to RGB */ | 
| 4531 | register float  *rgbcolor, *ciecolor; | 
| 4532 | { | 
| 4533 | register int  i; | 
| 4534 |  | 
| 4535 | for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) { | 
| 4536 | rgbcolor[i] =   xyz2rgbmat[i][0]*ciecolor[0] + | 
| 4537 | xyz2rgbmat[i][1]*ciecolor[1] + | 
| 4538 | xyz2rgbmat[i][2]*ciecolor[2] ; | 
| 4539 | if (rgbcolor[i] < 0.0)          /* watch for negative values */ | 
| 4540 | rgbcolor[i] = 0.0; | 
| 4541 | } | 
| 4542 | } | 
| 4543 |  | 
| 4544 |  | 
| 4545 | rgb_cie(ciecolor, rgbcolor)             /* convert RGB to CIE */ | 
| 4546 | register float  *ciecolor, *rgbcolor; | 
| 4547 | { | 
| 4548 | register int  i; | 
| 4549 |  | 
| 4550 | for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) | 
| 4551 | ciecolor[i] =   rgb2xyzmat[i][0]*rgbcolor[0] + | 
| 4552 | rgb2xyzmat[i][1]*rgbcolor[1] + | 
| 4553 | rgb2xyzmat[i][2]*rgbcolor[2] ; | 
| 4554 | } | 
| 4555 | .fi | 
| 4556 | .LP | 
| 4557 | An alternative to adopting the above code is to use the MGF "cmix" | 
| 4558 | entity to convert from RGB directly by naming the three primaries in | 
| 4559 | terms of their chromaticities, e.g: | 
| 4560 | .DS | 
| 4561 | c R = | 
| 4562 | cxy 0.640 0.330 | 
| 4563 | c G = | 
| 4564 | cxy 0.290 0.600 | 
| 4565 | c B = | 
| 4566 | cxy 0.150 0.060 | 
| 4567 | .DE | 
| 4568 | .LP | 
| 4569 | Then, converting from RGB to MGF colors is as simple as multiplying each | 
| 4570 | component by its relative luminance in a cmix statement, for instance: | 
| 4571 | .DS | 
| 4572 | c white = | 
| 4573 | cmix 0.265 R 0.670 G 0.065 B | 
| 4574 | .DE | 
| 4575 | .LP | 
| 4576 | For the chosen RGB standard, the above specification would result a pure | 
| 4577 | white. | 
| 4578 | The reason the coefficients are not all 1 as you might expect is | 
| 4579 | that cmix uses relative luminance as the standard for its weights. | 
| 4580 | Since | 
| 4581 | blue is less luminous for the same energy than red, which is in turn | 
| 4582 | less luminous than green, the weights cannot be the same to achieve an | 
| 4583 | even spectral balance. | 
| 4584 | Unfortunately, computing these relative weights | 
| 4585 | is not straightforward, though it is given in the above macros as CIE_rf, | 
| 4586 | CIE_gf and CIE_bf. | 
| 4587 | (The common factors in these macros may of course | 
| 4588 | be removed since | 
| 4589 | .UL cmix | 
| 4590 | weights are all relative.)\0 | 
| 4591 | Alternatively, one could measure the actual full scale luminance of | 
| 4592 | the phosphors with a luminance probe and get the same relative | 
| 4593 | values. | 
| 4594 | .NH 2 | 
| 4595 | Relation to IESNA LM-63 and Luminaire Catalogs | 
| 4596 | .LP | 
| 4597 | Recently, the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America | 
| 4598 | (IESNA) adopted MGF as the official standard for | 
| 4599 | representing luminaire geometry and materials. | 
| 4600 | The way this works in an IES luminaire data file is through the | 
| 4601 | addition of a keyword called LUMINOUSGEOMETRY, which is given on a | 
| 4602 | line in the header portion of a file (before the TILT specification) | 
| 4603 | like so: | 
| 4604 | .LP | 
| 4605 | .B [LUMINOUSGEOMETRY] | 
| 4606 | .I mgf_file | 
| 4607 | .LP | 
| 4608 | The given MGF file must exist relative to the directory containing | 
| 4609 | the IES file (i.e. the same stipulations and restrictions on pathnames | 
| 4610 | apply as for the MGF | 
| 4611 | .UL i | 
| 4612 | entity). | 
| 4613 | Furthermore, the position of the MGF geometry must be | 
| 4614 | such that the gross geometric specification of emitting surfaces | 
| 4615 | in the IES file completely | 
| 4616 | blocks or encloses the luminous portions of the MGF description. | 
| 4617 | Specifically, any ray traced towards the MGF geometry must strike | 
| 4618 | the IES gross geometry before it strikes any luminous surface in the | 
| 4619 | MGF description. | 
| 4620 | This provides a convenient way of preventing overcounting in the | 
| 4621 | illumination calculation, while still allowing for accurate fixture | 
| 4622 | appearance. | 
| 4623 | .LP | 
| 4624 | To give two examples, let us consider first a recessed can, followed | 
| 4625 | by a hanging direct/indirect fluorescent fixture. | 
| 4626 | .LP | 
| 4627 | The most appropriate IES geometric specification for the emitting | 
| 4628 | area of a can light would be a circular disk. | 
| 4629 | Since the IES gross geometry gives only the diameter of the disk, the | 
| 4630 | actual 3-dimensional placement is implicitly defined as having a | 
| 4631 | center at the origin, with the radiating disk facing in the | 
| 4632 | negative Z direction (nadir, downwards). | 
| 4633 | The MGF geometry would then be placed such that any luminous portion | 
| 4634 | was above this disk, and no portion of it would obstruct the IES | 
| 4635 | geometry. | 
| 4636 | The most sensible position therefore has the IES disk flush with the | 
| 4637 | MGF can opening, as shown in Figure 3. | 
| 4638 | .bp | 
| 4639 | Replace this page with the second page from "figures.ps". | 
| 4640 | .bp | 
| 4641 | .LP | 
| 4642 | In the case of a direct/indirect fluorescent fixture, light will | 
| 4643 | exit both the top and the bottom sides, and the IES geometry must | 
| 4644 | enclose the radiating portion of the fixture entirely. | 
| 4645 | It is acceptable to have additional MGF geometry above the | 
| 4646 | fixture so long as it does not radiate, which is what we must do if | 
| 4647 | we wish to include the support rods, as shown in Figure 4. | 
| 4648 | .LP | 
| 4649 | Note that the origin is always in the exact center of the IES | 
| 4650 | geometry. | 
| 4651 | .LP | 
| 4652 | Not all fixtures will fit the simple IES geometry specification so | 
| 4653 | nicely. | 
| 4654 | For odd-shaped fixtures, it may be necessary to use an IES geometry | 
| 4655 | that does not match the radiating area terribly well in order that | 
| 4656 | it completely block or enclose the required MGF specification. | 
| 4657 | .LP | 
| 4658 | The unit of length in the MGF file is always meters, regardless of | 
| 4659 | the units specified in the enclosing IES file. | 
| 4660 | However, any and all multipliers applied to the candlepower data in the | 
| 4661 | IES file will also be applied to the emittance of surfaces in the | 
| 4662 | MGF specification, so that one MGF file may serve similar | 
| 4663 | luminaires that differ in their total output. | 
| 4664 | .NH | 
| 4665 | Credits | 
| 4666 | .LP | 
| 4667 | The MGF language grew out of a joint investigation into physical | 
| 4668 | representations for rendering undertaken by the author | 
| 4669 | (Greg Ward of LBL) and Holly Rushmeier of the National | 
| 4670 | Institute of Standards and Technology. | 
| 4671 | After deciding that a complete and robust specification was | 
| 4672 | an extreme challenge, we shelved the project for another time. | 
| 4673 | A few months later, the author spoke with Ian Ashdown and Robert | 
| 4674 | Shakespeare, who are both members of the IES Computing Committee, | 
| 4675 | about the need for extending the existing data standard to | 
| 4676 | include luminaire geometry and near-field photometry. | 
| 4677 | We then moved forward as a team towards a somewhat less ambitious | 
| 4678 | approach to physical materials and geometry that had the advantage | 
| 4679 | of simplicity and the possibility of support with a standard parser | 
| 4680 | library. | 
| 4681 | The author went to work over the next two months | 
| 4682 | on the detailed design of the language | 
| 4683 | and an ANSI-C parser, with regular feedback from the other three | 
| 4684 | team members. | 
| 4685 | Several months and several versions later, we arrived at release | 
| 4686 | 1.0, which is the occasion of this document's creation. | 
| 4687 | .LP | 
| 4688 | Funding for this work... would be nice. |