Replies

  • Aha! That's a handy thing to be able to do.

    Thanks.

    Jeremy Saise said:

    Hi

    So i am making some renders of some products and i was asked to produce some pictures from 2 views from the front but from different corners but at the same angle. 

    So I used notepad++ to edit the nxt data at the top of the jpg file.

    to reverse the x directions + to - or - to +

    *@nXt;Persp: 1
    *@nXt;Eye: (-52.5344772, -112.80864, 40.8144875)
    *@nXt;Eye2: (-52.53, -112.8, 40.81)
    *@nXt;Dir: (0.455610245, 0.889129817, -0.0432147086)
    *@nXt;Dir2: (0.4556, 0.8891, -0.04321)
    *@nXt;Up: (0.019707473, 0.0384594128, 0.999065816)
    *@nXt;FOV: 45.000000
    *@nXt;


    4276679241?profile=RESIZE_710x

    4276689532?profile=RESIZE_710x

  • Hi

    So i am making some renders of some products and i was asked to produce some pictures from 2 views from the front but from different corners but at the same angle. 

    So I used notepad++ to edit the nxt data at the top of the jpg file.

    to reverse the x directions + to - or - to +

    *@nXt;Persp: 1
    *@nXt;Eye: (-52.5344772, -112.80864, 40.8144875)
    *@nXt;Eye2: (-52.53, -112.8, 40.81)
    *@nXt;Dir: (0.455610245, 0.889129817, -0.0432147086)
    *@nXt;Dir2: (0.4556, 0.8891, -0.04321)
    *@nXt;Up: (0.019707473, 0.0384594128, 0.999065816)
    *@nXt;FOV: 45.000000
    *@nXt;


    4276679241?profile=RESIZE_710x

    4276689532?profile=RESIZE_710x

  • Sorry, I don't follow what you are saying. Could you explain that a bit more?

    Jeremy Saise said:

    HI Thanks for the quick answer.

    I was also going to ask how to reverse the scene, but I worked it out by editing the nxt data at the top of the jpg :)

  • HI Thanks for the quick answer.

    I was also going to ask how to reverse the scene, but I worked it out by editing the nxt data at the top of the jpg :)

  • I assume that you are asking about views saved with the IRender nXt View Wizard?

    These views are saved in the your APPDATA folder, in a folder named something like:

    C:\Users\[Your User Name]\AppData\Roaming\RPS\Saved Views

    You could simply copy that entire folder to your laptop, or possibly use the Command Window command 'mklink' to link that folder to a shared folder on Dropbox, after copying that Saved Views folder to Dropbox.

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