Snowflake with the Duplicate Layer

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The 1st part is very simple : We'll create a single snowflake branch with the {{l|BLine Tool}} (or the {{l|Polygon Tool}}). <br/>
 
The 1st part is very simple : We'll create a single snowflake branch with the {{l|BLine Tool}} (or the {{l|Polygon Tool}}). <br/>
Select the Bline tool, and in the tools options, make sure that only Create Region Bline is selected. (If you use the polygon tool, select either Create Polygon Layer or Create Region Layer, as you wish).
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Select the {{Literal|Bline tool}}, and in the tools options, make sure that only {{Literal|Create Region Bline}} is checked. (If you use the {{Literal|Polygon tool}}, check either {{Literal|Create Polygon Layer}} or {{Literal|Create Region Layer}}, as you wish).
  
 
Draw the branch in the upper middle part of your image. Once it's drawn, select the newly created layer (I will refer to it as the "Branch layer") and make sure that the bottom of the branch is more or less at the same place as the green dot showing the center of the image. You can move your branch by selecting all the points (Ctrl-A) and using the {{l|Normal Tool}}
 
Draw the branch in the upper middle part of your image. Once it's drawn, select the newly created layer (I will refer to it as the "Branch layer") and make sure that the bottom of the branch is more or less at the same place as the green dot showing the center of the image. You can move your branch by selecting all the points (Ctrl-A) and using the {{l|Normal Tool}}

Revision as of 10:23, 28 November 2012

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This tutorial explain a simple example of the use of the Duplicate Layer, to create a snowflake.

First branch of the snowflake

The 1st part is very simple : We'll create a single snowflake branch with the BLine Tool (or the Polygon Tool).
Select the "Bline tool", and in the tools options, make sure that only "Create Region Bline" is checked. (If you use the "Polygon tool", check either "Create Polygon Layer" or "Create Region Layer", as you wish).

Draw the branch in the upper middle part of your image. Once it's drawn, select the newly created layer (I will refer to it as the "Branch layer") and make sure that the bottom of the branch is more or less at the same place as the green dot showing the center of the image. You can move your branch by selecting all the points (Ctrl-A) and using the Normal Tool

snow_step1.png

Adding the Rotate and Duplicate Layers

To make a whole 6-branches snowflake, we need to make several copies of the branch, and rotate them.
First, we need a Rotation layer. Right click on the image and select Layer > New Layer > Transform > Rotate. You should now have a Rotate Layer on top of the Branch layer.

Then, we'll use the Duplicate Layer. Right click on the image and select Layer > New Layer > Other > Duplicate.

So far, no change is visible on our image, it's normal :). In the Layers Panel, make sure that the layers are in the following order : Duplicate on top, Rotate in the middle, and the "Branch" layer on the bottom.

snow_step2.png


Connecting everything together

Select the Duplicate layer and look at the Params Panel. There's an "Index" value that is automaticaly exported. Its name is "Index 1". (It looks like "Index(Index 1)" in the panel).
This value is made of 3 subparameters : From, To and Step. Those parameters tells how many times an object is duplicated. We need 6 branches so set the To parameter to 6 (keep From and Step to 1).

snow_step3.png

Now move to the Children Panel, and select our "Index 1" value. (Unfold the ValueBase Node if necessary).

In order to have 6 rotated branches, we need to link the duplication and the rotation together.

Select the Rotate layer, and go back to the Params panel.
The Rotate layer has just 2 parameters: Origin and Amount. The important one here is Amount, it tells the angle of the rotation.

Right click on Amount and select Convert > Scale.
Now Amount is made of 2 subparameters, Link (an angle) and Scalar (a real), the whole rotation being equal to Link * Scalar.

Set the Link subparameter to 60 (that's the angle between the snowflake branches).

Right click on the Scalar parameter and select Connect. It will connect the previously selected "Index 1" value (in the Children panel) to the Scalar parameter.

How it looks after the connection:
snow_step4.png


You should now have a complete snowflake, yay!

snow_step5.png


What happened?

We linked the "Scalar" value of the rotation to the duplicate layer:
Thanks to the Duplicate, the Scalar parameter was set to values between 1 and 6 (From and To), by steps of 1 - instead of being set to a single value.
So we had 5 rotations in addition to the original branche : One of 60° (Scalar * Link = 1 * 60°), another of 120° ( 2 * 60°), another of 180°, etc. And all of these rotations were displayed together.

You can think of the Duplicate Layer as something allowing you to have a list of values, that you can link to a (real) parameter in the same way you could link a single value to a parameter.


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