treboscis
treboscis
2 / 0
3rd Aug 2014
3rd Aug 2014
as some of you know, changing the tmp of FILT also changes what it does. Theses are the 10 FILT tmp's {tmp1:AND, tmp2:OR, tmp3:Subtract Colour, tmp4:Red Shift, tmp5:Blue shift, tmp6:No Effect, tmp7:XOR, tmp8:NOT, tmp9: OLD QRTZ Scattering, tmp10: unkown}

Comments

  • treboscis
    treboscis
    3rd Aug 2014
    Also, i forgot to add that tmp 7 uses the mixed color and the original color to make an AB patter instead of A being red and B being blue (it would be red and purple)
  • treboscis
    treboscis
    3rd Aug 2014
    yeah, 10+ is all unknown mode which pretty much acts like regular filter (unless theres something i dont know about)
  • jacksonmj
    jacksonmj
    3rd Aug 2014
    Also, try sending coloured photons into FILT with tmp=4 or 5, and compare the spectrum before and after. Red photons into blue shift FILT, for example. It's not quite filtering out blue, it's moving all the colours towards the blue end of the spectrum - red becomes yellow, yellow becomes green, green becomes blue. Although with white photons, you're right, this does have the effect of filtering out all colours but blue.
  • jacksonmj
    jacksonmj
    3rd Aug 2014
    tmp=10 and above does not do anything special (I think it defaults to acting like tmp=0, which is the normal "assign colour" behaviour, since no special behaviour is defined).