[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
The old sky color for rainy days and the new one for sunny days.
This would allow us to simulate both weather conditions perfectly.
Just take a look at the difference yourself by changing
the light.cxx file like described above and recompile flightgear.
Jim Wilson wrote:
And because the color matches the real sky color on a nice day
much better now i think flightgear should have a feature that
allows us to switch the color of the sky to the right color for
different weather and pollution conditions.
The old sky color for rainy days and the new
I wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
The old sky color for rainy days and the new one for sunny days.
This would allow us to simulate both weather conditions perfectly.
Just take a look at the difference yourself by changing
the light.cxx file like described above and
On Sunday 30 Nov 2003 9:43 am, Frederic Bouvier wrote:
I don't know where on earth you can see sky so blue without colour
enhancer on your camera (polarizer or blue filter), especially
when looking at the sun.
EGTP = Perranporth 50.331585 deg N 5.177602 deg W!
Jonathan Richards wrote:
On Sunday 30 Nov 2003 9:43 am, Frederic Bouvier wrote:
I don't know where on earth you can see sky so blue without colour
enhancer on your camera (polarizer or blue filter), especially
when looking at the sun.
EGTP = Perranporth 50.331585 deg N 5.177602 deg W!
Frederic Bouvier wrote:
Jonathan Richards wrote:
On Sunday 30 Nov 2003 9:43 am, Frederic Bouvier wrote:
I don't know where on earth you can see sky so blue without colour
enhancer on your camera (polarizer or blue filter), especially
when looking at the sun.
Erik Hofman writes:
Jim Wilson wrote:
Your suggestion sounds interesting, but those screen shots are way too blue.
We get a lot of those dry polution free days here in Maine. And it doesn't
look like that. Keep in mind that your optical sense can be a tricking thing.
Print a
Erik Hofman [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Also, scanned printed photographs don't show the real sky color.
Especially the sky color gets changed dramatically due to the processes
the picture goes through.
Oh yes, that's for sure! If you color matched printer to screen shot using
software
Frederic Bouvier [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
To be fair and moderate my tone, you can find days and sector of the
sky deep blue, but the shade greatly depends on the sector of the
sky you are looking at, and as Jim said, the day must be dry,
on late fall or winter. I made a trip to Italy
Jim Wilson wrote:
Frederic Bouvier [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
To be fair and moderate my tone, you can find days and sector of the
sky deep blue, but the shade greatly depends on the sector of the
sky you are looking at, and as Jim said, the day must be dry,
on late fall or winter. I
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/frbouvi/photos/Italy/
Wow. Excellent photographs. Italy is on the top of my list of places I
haven't been yet. How long were you there?
I'll second that, Wow! Thanks for sharing these.
Jon
___
Flightgear-devel
Norman Vine [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
ie these FGLight variables should be exposed
// ambient, diffuse and specular component
GLfloat _scene_ambient[4];
GLfloat _scene_diffuse[4];
GLfloat _scene_specular[4];
// clear sky, fog and cloud color
GLfloat _sky_color[4];
On Sunday 30 November 2003 18:36, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sunday 30 November 2003 07:08, Jim Wilson wrote:
Your suggestion sounds interesting, but those screen shots are way too
blue.
Ok, they are a little to much blue but we could re-adjust them a little bit
and make them a little
Hello,
Last week i looked at some real photos of earth's sky
and found out, that the sky color in flightgear only corresponds
with the color of the real sky when it is a raining day or when you are in
an area that has a high air pollution.
But it does not correspond to the color of the real sky
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Last week i looked at some real photos of earth's sky
and found out, that the sky color in flightgear only corresponds
with the color of the real sky when it is a raining day or when you are in
an area that has a high air pollution.
Actually,
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