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# 2 10-06-2007 , 10:01 AM
publicFunction's Avatar
Senior Software Developer
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Livingston, Scotland
Posts: 1,701
Wow,

Some questions there. OK let me see if I can answer them all for you.

1) there is no real difference to 3 or 4 sided polys par se, just that they have 3 or 4 edges/verts. But it all comes down to what you are going to do with those polys once you are happy with the geometry of your model. Now 4 sided polys are best when you are going to be converting you poly model into a Sub-D, this ensures good geometry flow and stops you getting issues with geometry. If however you are going to use a model within a game engine then you MUST ensure that the 4 sided geometry is triangulated. This is for one simple reason... realtime render ...All geometry is converted into tri at render time, be it a model for an image or a game model running within a game engine. Always try to model as much as possilble using 4 sided polys.

2) I have had this issue before and found it could be down to something as simple as your machine specs or the image file you are using is very large.

3) Simple Answer... No. But there is a MEL script out there that allows on the selected geometry to be on XRay whilst the remainder stays as is. It is called "Xray Toggle Object" (https://www.highend3d.com/maya/downlo...misc/3507.html). This should solve your problem and allow you to work with your image refs.

4) Delete by Type History is a tool used everyday by about 100% of 3D artists regardless of the application used. Maya uses an operator stack to remember what you have done to a peice of geo from start to finish. This builds up a history of the object that you may be able to go back and change certain elements from older operations you have done, bevels, extrusions, texture projections, the list goes on. Now with all this data still existing on your object, this increases the stress on Maya, your RAM and most importantly the size of your file. I would delete type history on any object once you are happy doing what you are going to do with it. Once you are 100% sure what you have done is fine and you wont need to ammend or undo any previous action.

5) Yes, in the preferences you can use the menu to set any of those to their defaults. Also deleting/renaming your env file in the prefs directory in maya your maya folder will set everything back to default.

6) Its your choice... Kurts process is to create a nurbs object and work from that to get his shape and then moves into polys by converting his NURBS objects. This is a fine process that works for him, but might not be suited by everyone. Its a personal preference. I would not however start in Sub-D's. Polys or NURBS is where to start. I would for the time being follow Kurts example as it worked for me and most people on this site from the begining. I normally go from polys, but it depends on what I am doing.

7) Easy one... Display > Heads Up Display > Poly Count. If remember right.


Chris (formerly R@nSiD)
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