houdini's handling of transforms is about as good as it gets.

by default, you will get a zeroed out transform on creation but this can
be pushed back onto the stack
as needed.

you can also quite happily stack utility transforms ala xsiNulls too if
that floats your boat.

the real eye opener though, is when you realise you can pull a transform
from anywhere, at any time, from any object
and branch however you like.

it really does make the awkward maya (and xsi to some extent) type
workarounds painfully trivial.

pre/post firing morphs are trivial, as is quat/angle based triggering of
morphs.

there are really only 2 downsides to houdini for rigging/character setup
- 

deformations are painfully slow - on a production scale character, you
will be segmenting your mesh (hello 2004) and using bog standard
non-deforming parenting to get anything remotely approaching realtime
feedback.
even the dist based skin is slow as mollasses.

if your animator is used to (and wants/needs) the niceties of char
pickers or on char controls  
expect to spend lots of time with pyside/pyqt.

of course, that is if you can find an animator who doesn't look at you
like your insane for suggesting houdidni as a char anim platform.

Jordi hinted at something coming down the pipe for anim/char setup so,
there's hope for it yet.


gimbal mode is there if you need it.

-- 
  Jon Swindells
  [email protected]

On Thu, Apr 24, 2014, at 02:47 PM, David Saber wrote:
> Cool! How about transforms on rig objects, how do you "zero out" control 
> objects? Is the object's coordinate relative to its parent, like in 
> XSI's "parent" translation mode? is there "add" mode for rotations?
> 
> On 2014-04-24 13:23, Max Evgrafov wrote:
> > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7bRzijbsnA&feature=youtu.be   
> >  completed the effect of collisions. (there are some bugs in the 
> > corners of obstacles. but I'm tired of doing this rig. :)
> >
> > Next step creating digital asset( I think it like model in XSI), Reach 
> > an understanding how working reference models in Houdini  and then do 
> > animation.

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