Documentation:Mac OS Section 4

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Windows

Message Window

The Message Window shows statistics and other important information when rendering.

MacImgMessageswindow.gif

Message Window

Text Editor Window

The Text Editor Window is used to edit scene and include files. It does syntax coloring, auto-indenting, and supports tabs, and lets you assign your own markers in the file, using the Marker popup menu. It also offer quick navigation using the include popup menu, declared popup menu and macro popup menu (f).

MacImgEditorwindow.gif

Editor Window

Render Preview Window

The Render Preview Window shows the final image being rendered. There will be one Preview Window for each scene, but there cannot be multiple Preview Windows for one scene.

MacImgPreviewwindow.png

Image Preview Window

The Selection toggle in the upper right can be on (shown above) or off. When it is on, you can drag out a selection area on the Preview Window, and the next time you render, just that selected area will be rendered. To turn this feature off and render the whole image, click the Selection toggle to turn it off. Also with the selection mode off, you can drag the image itself out of the window and drop it as a clipping onto the desktop, or into another image application that expects PICTs to be dropped into it directly. If the selection mode is on, you can hold down the shift key and drag the selected area out as a PICT clipping.

The Alpha-channel toggle in the lower left can be on (shown above) or off. When it is on, any part of the scene that has partial or full alpha-channel transparency will be displayed as a grayscale checkerboard showing through the scene. Leaving this feature on can slow down display and rendering somewhat. To turn this feature off, click the Alpha-channel Toggle to turn it off.

The Dither toggle in the lower left can be on or off (shown above). If it is on, the image will be dithered to the screen. This is most useful if you only have a 256 color or thousands of colors display. The image colors will be "smoothed", and not look blocky and banded. If you have you monitor set to millions of colors, you can leave this off, as it will not change the display at all. Leaving dithering off also can speed up the display somewhat.

The Image Size popup lets you change the displayed size of the image. Note that this does not change the size of the final saved image file, just how you see it on the screen. The popup menu lets you choose from several different sizes.

There are some shortcuts to setting certain image sizes. Holding down the control and command keys while pressing the 1, 2, 3, or 4 keys will change the image size to 100%, 200%, 300%, or 400%. You can now scroll the image window with the arrow keys. Holding down the shift key while arrow-scrolling will scroll faster.

Note: If you choose a percentage less than 100% in the Preview Window's Image Size popup menu, then POV-Ray will not be able to display every pixel as it is rendered, since each dot is now smaller than a pixel. Instead, POV-Ray will refresh the entire window every few minutes or so.

Templates Window

The Templates Window allows a convenient way to browse and insert templates that come with POV-Ray. You can simply drag & drop templates from the window into text editor.

MacImgTemplateswindow.gif

Templates Window

In addition to viewing, the template window allows searching for templates by name. Note that the search options see in the image may not be available in your version of POV-Ray.

Note: The Templates Window is only available is you are running Mac OS 8.6 or newer with CarbonLib 1.6 or newer!


Help Menu Dialogs


This document is protected, so submissions, corrections and discussions should be held on this documents talk page.