Oh, I’m just viewing it as points. viewer active - press v. Or right click - view as points. It doesn’t change the output of the node - it just changes the viewer to points instead of a rasterized image.
@@supermarketsallad Oh no!That must be my mistake somewhere else.I use view as points at slope,but the center points of those points are not at the midpoint like in the video.What could possibly lead to this?
Did you put in “one minus” (1-blah blah) And if you did - is the parameter you are referencing (the multiply of math1) set to something small like 0.002?
@@leonidkrykhtinoh - maybe you accidentally put that expression into math1 You should put the python expression into math2 - referencing math 1. Nothing should change in math 1
GENIO!...gracias por tanto, perdón por tan poco
happy new year, thanks for that amazing video! love
another amazing tutorial....
Your awesome! Thanks, keep up the good work!
i can't thank you enough
Very cool video ;) thx
What did you do at 7:44?Slope was originally yellow and then turned black. I can't turn it into a circle after composite.
Oh, I’m just viewing it as points.
viewer active - press v. Or right click - view as points.
It doesn’t change the output of the node - it just changes the viewer to points instead of a rasterized image.
@@supermarketsallad Oh no!That must be my mistake somewhere else.I use view as points at slope,but the center points of those points are not at the midpoint like in the video.What could possibly lead to this?
sorry!
In the slope - “Zero point” needs to be zero. I accidentally edited that step out - but you can see it in my settings of the slope.
@@supermarketsallad Yeah!Finally find this mistake.Thanks!
do you know a way to give this reflecting boundry conditions ?
Let me have a think. it’s not super-obvious
after adding the Python everything becomes black and that's it in my case
Did you put in “one minus” (1-blah blah)
And if you did - is the parameter you are referencing (the multiply of math1) set to something small like 0.002?
@@supermarketsallad multiply of math1 automatically became 0
@@leonidkrykhtinoh - maybe you accidentally put that expression into math1
You should put the python expression into math2 - referencing math 1.
Nothing should change in math 1
@@supermarketsallad Righhhhht! Exactly, you are correct. Just changed it and the green/red stuff appeared back!
:)