""BTW: I finally got a look at the "T-set" in 3-D. It looks like an extruded Mandelbrot! Here's a video rendered by Paul Bourke in POVRay: http://ixitol.com/html/viddies.html "" Hey that viddie is way cool! How you do that! I see I have some competition now :( Someone else said: Here are detailed steps of how to save frame by frame: These keystrokes work in DOS Fractint -- to save separate .gif images of each step of the color map cycle type: - r to load the desired image - s to save the picture with a name in the numbered series of images you are now starting to generate - (possibly) s to save another copy of the same image but with a different name (repeat to get as many copies of the same image as needed -- see discussion below) - c to enter color cycling mode - <comma> or <less_than> to cycle one color map step, or - <period> or <greater_than> to cycle one color map step the other direction - <esc> to exit color map mode - s to save the picture - (possibly) s to save another copy of the same image but with a different name (repeat to get as many copies of the same image as needed -- see discussion below) Repeat the above steps starting at "c to enter color cycling mode" for each of the 256 color map steps. Well, I didn't know about the comma, period or less/greater than to step thru the individual cycles. It should be possible to write a fractint autokey scrip to do this and it will save the frames automatically in sequence. Lemme work on that ... Answer: No, I do not rotate or do anything with the color pallette during a zoom. I set LogMap=2 and it happens all by itself! Cheers JoTz
On Tuesday 30 August 2005 18:59, JackOfTradeZ wrote:
""BTW: I finally got a look at the "T-set" in 3-D. It looks like an extruded Mandelbrot! Here's a video rendered by Paul Bourke in POVRay:
http://ixitol.com/html/viddies.html ""
Hey that viddie is way cool! How you do that! I see I have some competition now :(
Someone else said:
who said that ?, might come in use. sammi
participants (2)
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JackOfTradeZ -
sam ende