Point to one object

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Revision as of 20:22, 2 March 2012 by Genete (Talk | contribs) (Initial draft.)

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Introduction

The object of this tutorial is that achieve that one object points to other regardless the movement of both objects. For this tutorial I've selected one moving eye following one mofing fly. This is the result you'll obtain:

Look-the fly!.gif

Create the objects to move

First lets create the fly. In this case I've drawn three regions emulating the two wings and the body. Once created with the BLine Tool, encapsulate them into a Paste Canvas Layer.

Then create the Eye. To create it I simply create three Circle Layers: One black in the background (countour of the eyeball), one white in the middle (white eyeball) slightly smaller than the black one, and one smaller black for the pupil. Once created place them in that order and below the fly paste canvas layer.

Add a Solid Color layer for the background and move it down to the bottom.

We are ready to start to make the magik ;)

It should look like this (I have a zoom to make a close up screenshot):

Canvas window Point to Object.png Point to Object layers.png

Export some parameters

  • First go to the Paste Canvas layer of that holds the fly and select the Origin parameter.
  • Right click it and select 'Export' give the name of 'fly'.
  • Then go to the white circle layer and the back black circle layer and select both at the same time. You can do this holding CTRL meanwhile you click on the layers.Once selected both, the paramters on the Parameter layer is slightly different. The common parameters are shown (all them because the layers are the same type) but the parameters that have different value are greyed indicating that.
  • Do right click to the Origin parameter and select 'Link'.
  • That would allow to move the origin of both circles as one.
  • Now select only one of the white or black back circles.
  • Once selected only of them, repeat the right click on the Origin parameter and you'll obtain other contextual menu.
  • Select 'Export' and name the value node to be 'origin'
  • Go to the pupil layer and select the Radious parameter of the circle.
  • Right click and select Export. Give the name of 'pupil radious'. It will be used later.

Convert some parameters


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