Thank You, Nice Explanation . Now I have understand what subpixels are . Actually I am planning to buy Samsung 49NU8000 T.V and some youtubers said that it has a subpixel panel .
Fantastic visual explanation! I saw linus tech tips' explained video and I love him but he didn't explain much at all. This video shows exactly what is going on. Thanks!
@@soraaoixxthebluesky Not in comparison to Video Memory. Processing Power is readily available to change transparency at rapid rate for each pixel, it's the memory resources that we pay the price for.
@@soraaoixxthebluesky not that much, many game engines do support transparency and the current CPUs/Graphics Cards/SOCs can easily accomplish it, I mean unless you are using a computer/phone older than 3-5(not sure) years, it is not heavy computation, not like you need to put this sort of animation anywhere + you can always create it in art software than export it as a non-transparent image and use it like that, sorry if it's too overwhelming and also sorry if I offended you
Nothing specifically, but explaining topics that aren't much talked about like selective outlining or breaking down complicated ones like isometric pixel art would be great
@@ThePassiveAggressor ,I checked Krita out , the problem with it - is that it transform vector to raster graphics , so while you can manipulate the nodes it will still be pixelated. a cool thing though is that its possible to copy paste directly from inkscape.
What a brilliant explanation of a complex concept. Well done!
Thanks! glad you like it :)
The ONLY video that subpixel and antialias makes sense for me, thanks for all useful tips! Super helpful!
Thank you for you nice comment, glad it helped :)
This was so useful . First time i fully understood anti aliasing. Also now i know how to proper do sub pixel animation. Thx so much
Your very welcome, glad you found it useful :)
this video is so 2007.
great one though, using transparency as anti aliasing tool hasnt even crossed my mind
Glad you liked it. I am a bit old school ;-)
You broke this down to Teletubbie level. THANK YOU! Using this system makes it way easier to animate. AWESOME VIDEO! Subbed for sure.
Thanks v much, glad you liked it :)
Really useful information, thank you!
Your very welcome, glad you found it useful :)
After hours of searching... I finally understand it! Thanks!
Great explanation of concepts and showcase of how to apply them!
Thanks! glad you liked it :)
Thank You, Nice Explanation . Now I have understand what subpixels are . Actually I am planning to buy Samsung 49NU8000 T.V and some youtubers said that it has a subpixel panel .
Fantastic visual explanation! I saw linus tech tips' explained video and I love him but he didn't explain much at all. This video shows exactly what is going on. Thanks!
Thanks for the kind words, very glad you liked it :)
thanks, i've been wondering how people can get such smooth looking pixel animations
Your very welcome, glad you liked it :)
weird we're discussing subpixel on a square grid LCD display instead of on a CRT where it you literally see the movement due to phosphor grid.
ah yes, interesting comment. lots of "old school" pixel art was designed for CRT specifically
Indie videogame Devs should see this
Thanks :)
Transparency is expensive to compute.
@@soraaoixxthebluesky what???
@@soraaoixxthebluesky Not in comparison to Video Memory. Processing Power is readily available to change transparency at rapid rate for each pixel, it's the memory resources that we pay the price for.
@@soraaoixxthebluesky not that much, many game engines do support transparency and the current CPUs/Graphics Cards/SOCs can easily accomplish it, I mean unless you are using a computer/phone older than 3-5(not sure) years, it is not heavy computation, not like you need to put this sort of animation anywhere + you can always create it in art software than export it as a non-transparent image and use it like that, sorry if it's too overwhelming and also sorry if I offended you
what software is being used to do all of this stuff in the video?
It was Photoshop but you could easily use other software like Krita for example
@@ThePassiveAggressor thank you
Explained quite well 👏
Thanks :)
Inkscape automaticly anti-aliases when you export as .png
Thank you. This video is easy to follow and has tons of information. Will you do more pixel art videos in the future, by any chance?
Thanks :) Yes I probably will, is there anything, in particular, you'd like to see?
Nothing specifically, but explaining topics that aren't much talked about like selective outlining or breaking down complicated ones like isometric pixel art would be great
Great tutorial
Thanks :)
This is the best AA explanation on internet I found so far. Is that all there is too it ?
Thank you :) basically yes, its then just practice.
which software can do both high res and pixel graphics beside photoshop ?
well, off the top of my head theres: Krita (free), Gimp (free), Affinity Photo (cheap) and I'm sure there's more
@@ThePassiveAggressor ,I checked Krita out , the problem with it - is that it transform vector to raster graphics , so while you can manipulate the nodes it will still be pixelated. a cool thing though is that its possible to copy paste directly from inkscape.
Good explanation!
Thanks! glad you found it useful
what's the program you used?
It was Photoshop but you could easily use other software like Krita for example
great video
Thanks, glad you liked it :)
wil tis make difference in 2k lcd n full HD dlp projector ?
Technically yes but it probably won't be noticeable
thanks for replying im in 3d printer development n If it's yes theoretically then n which will give better output 2k lcd or dlp full HD?
If I understand your question, most LCD screens still have better image quality than most projectors.
ThePassiveAggressor, sub pixels lcd vs dlp varies then the print quality will also vary. even if lcd image quality is better than dlp right?
I believe so
Nice tutorial.
Thanks! glad you liked it :)
Thank-you
Your very welcome :)
Simple but cool
Thanks, I considered making a more complex tutorial but wanted to keep it short :)
No entendi una mierda pero se ve genial.
Lo siento, no lo entendiste. Aunque me alegro de que se vea bien :)
Like someone who use opengl didn't heard about anti-aliasing, right)))