Fog 您所在的位置:网站首页 [fog] Fog

Fog

2024-07-08 19:27| 来源: 网络整理| 查看: 265

This article is part of a series of articles about three.js. The first article is three.js fundamentals. If you haven't read that yet and you're new to three.js you might want to consider starting there. If you haven't read about cameras you might want to start with this article.

Fog in a 3D engine is generally a way of fading to a specific color based on the distance from the camera. In three.js you add fog by creating Fog or FogExp2 object and setting it on the scene's fog property.

Fog lets you choose near and far settings which are distances from the camera. Anything closer than near is unaffected by fog. Anything further than far is completely the fog color. Parts between near and far fade from their material color to the fog color.

There's also FogExp2 which grows exponentially with distance from the camera.

To use either type of fog you create one and and assign it to the scene as in

const scene = new THREE.Scene(); { const color = 0xFFFFFF; // white const near = 10; const far = 100; scene.fog = new THREE.Fog(color, near, far); }

or for FogExp2 it would be

const scene = new THREE.Scene(); { const color = 0xFFFFFF; const density = 0.1; scene.fog = new THREE.FogExp2(color, density); }

FogExp2 is closer to reality but Fog is used more commonly since it lets you choose a place to apply the fog so you can decide to show a clear scene up to a certain distance and then fade out to some color past that distance.

THREE.Fog THREE.FogExp2

It's important to note that the fog is applied to things that are rendered. It is part of the calculation of each pixel of the color of the object. What that means is if you want your scene to fade to a certain color you need to set the fog and the background color to the same color. The background color is set using the scene.background property. To pick a background color you attach a THREE.Color to it. For example

scene.background = new THREE.Color('#F00'); // red fog blue, background red fog blue, background blue

Here is one of our previous examples with fog added. The only addition is right after setting up the scene we add the fog and set the scene's background color

const scene = new THREE.Scene(); +{ + const near = 1; + const far = 2; + const color = 'lightblue'; + scene.fog = new THREE.Fog(color, near, far); + scene.background = new THREE.Color(color); +}

In the example below the camera's near is 0.1 and its far is 5. The camera is at z = 2. The cubes are 1 unit large and at Z = 0. This means with a fog setting of near = 1 and far = 2 the cubes will fade out right around their center.

click here to open in a separate window

Let's add an interface so we can adjust the fog. Again we'll use lil-gui. lil-gui takes an object and a property and automagically makes an interface for that type of property. We could just simply let it manipulate the fog's near and far properties but it's invalid to have near be greater than far so let's make a helper so lil-gui can manipulate a near and far property but we'll make sure near is less than or equal to far and far is greater than or equal near.

// We use this class to pass to lil-gui // so when it manipulates near or far // near is never > far and far is never < near class FogGUIHelper { constructor(fog) { this.fog = fog; } get near() { return this.fog.near; } set near(v) { this.fog.near = v; this.fog.far = Math.max(this.fog.far, v); } get far() { return this.fog.far; } set far(v) { this.fog.far = v; this.fog.near = Math.min(this.fog.near, v); } }

We can then add it like this

{ const near = 1; const far = 2; const color = 'lightblue'; scene.fog = new THREE.Fog(color, near, far); scene.background = new THREE.Color(color); + + const fogGUIHelper = new FogGUIHelper(scene.fog); + gui.add(fogGUIHelper, 'near', near, far).listen(); + gui.add(fogGUIHelper, 'far', near, far).listen(); }

The near and far parameters set the minimum and maximum values for adjusting the fog. They are set when we setup the camera.

The .listen() at the end of the last 2 lines tells lil-gui to listen for changes. That way when we change near because of an edit to far or we change far in response to an edit to near lil-gui will update the other property's UI for us.

It might also be nice to be able to change the fog color but like was mentioned above we need to keep both the fog color and the background color in sync. So, let's add another virtual property to our helper that will set both colors when lil-gui manipulates it.

lil-gui can manipulate colors in 4 ways, as a CSS 6 digit hex string (eg: #112233). As an hue, saturation, value, object (eg: {h: 60, s: 1, v: }). As an RGB array (eg: [255, 128, 64]). Or, as an RGBA array (eg: [127, 200, 75, 0.3]).

It's easiest for our purpose to use the hex string version since that way lil-gui is only manipulating a single value. Fortunately THREE.Color as a getHexString method we get use to easily get such a string, we just have to prepend a '#' to the front.

// We use this class to pass to lil-gui // so when it manipulates near or far // near is never > far and far is never < near +// Also when lil-gui manipulates color we'll +// update both the fog and background colors. class FogGUIHelper { * constructor(fog, backgroundColor) { this.fog = fog; + this.backgroundColor = backgroundColor; } get near() { return this.fog.near; } set near(v) { this.fog.near = v; this.fog.far = Math.max(this.fog.far, v); } get far() { return this.fog.far; } set far(v) { this.fog.far = v; this.fog.near = Math.min(this.fog.near, v); } + get color() { + return `#${this.fog.color.getHexString()}`; + } + set color(hexString) { + this.fog.color.set(hexString); + this.backgroundColor.set(hexString); + } }

We then call gui.addColor to add a color UI for our helper's virtual property.

{ const near = 1; const far = 2; const color = 'lightblue'; scene.fog = new THREE.Fog(color, near, far); scene.background = new THREE.Color(color); * const fogGUIHelper = new FogGUIHelper(scene.fog, scene.background); gui.add(fogGUIHelper, 'near', near, far).listen(); gui.add(fogGUIHelper, 'far', near, far).listen(); + gui.addColor(fogGUIHelper, 'color'); }

click here to open in a separate window

You can see setting near to like 1.9 and far to 2.0 gives a very sharp transition between un-fogged and completely fogged. where as near = 1.1 and far = 2.9 should just about be the smoothest given our cubes are spinning 2 units away from the camera.

One last thing, there is a boolean fog property on a material for whether or not objects rendered with that material are affected by fog. It defaults to true for most materials. As an example of why you might want to turn the fog off, imagine you're making a 3D vehicle simulator with a view from the driver's seat or cockpit. You probably want the fog off for everything inside the vehicle when viewing from inside the vehicle.

A better example might be a house and thick fog outside house. Let's say the fog is set to start 2 meters away (near = 2) and completely fogged out at 4 meters (far = 4). Rooms are longer than 2 meters and the house is probably longer than 4 meters so you need to set the materials for the inside of the house to not apply fog otherwise when standing inside the house looking outside the wall at the far end of the room will look like it's in the fog.

fog: true, all

Notice the walls and ceiling at the far end of the room are getting fog applied. By turning fog off on the materials for the house we can fix that issue.

fog: true, only outside materials



【本文地址】

公司简介

联系我们

今日新闻

    推荐新闻

    专题文章
      CopyRight 2018-2019 实验室设备网 版权所有