its a very powerful feature in mograph. U can sort from numbers to UI data, to cities based on building heights. Its a little advance mograph tip this one, but when u ll need it, u ll know :)
This is a general example that shows how to pick a clone using values. Its applications are not only for sorting by height but for any type of setup that requires you to change the clone based on any data. You could create an effect similar to how Airport Display Signs change letters (old signs with flip text), or randomizing text... there's no way to write in a single post everything you could do with this. Also, there are many types of tutorials. Some are "recipes" for making a specific thing. Quicktips, and the type of tutorials I like to do are mostly to explain how the tool works. The rest is up to the Artist. If you have a specific issue with a setup you're trying to make, DM me on Twitter @nosemangr and I'll take it from there...
No doubt, it is remarkable that this is a very powerful resource. However, I'm sharing my point of view as a layperson trying to find an application for it. Sometimes, by showing examples of animations that have already used this resource commercially and simply commenting on them, I believe it adds another dimension to its use for beginners. After all, tutorials are aimed at this audience, or should be right? I appreciate your effort, and I really like your teaching approach. I just wanted to make a suggestion that might inspire many users.@@noseman
@@Ricardo-de9ju This tutorial is clearly not showing the final output but how to solve a problem that you may encounter. And it doesn't take a lot of creativity to come up with applications for this. You could for example use a vertex map field instead of a linear field and paint where which building is supposed to go. Or you could have a map of population density and want to pick the building based on how many people live in a neighbourhood.
Thanks Noseman....very useful
Yes thats so cool, easy built your game world!
Remember this one from certification. Great example.
as ever the nose knows! tx realy usefull❤
I love me some Cinema 4D. Hey that rhymed. I'm a poet and I realize it.
Omg
Interesting, but give me a real-life usage for this. That's always the main complain about tutorials, I have no idea what to do with it.
its a very powerful feature in mograph. U can sort from numbers to UI data, to cities based on building heights. Its a little advance mograph tip this one, but when u ll need it, u ll know :)
This is a general example that shows how to pick a clone using values. Its applications are not only for sorting by height but for any type of setup that requires you to change the clone based on any data. You could create an effect similar to how Airport Display Signs change letters (old signs with flip text), or randomizing text... there's no way to write in a single post everything you could do with this.
Also, there are many types of tutorials. Some are "recipes" for making a specific thing. Quicktips, and the type of tutorials I like to do are mostly to explain how the tool works. The rest is up to the Artist.
If you have a specific issue with a setup you're trying to make, DM me on Twitter @nosemangr and I'll take it from there...
No doubt, it is remarkable that this is a very powerful resource. However, I'm sharing my point of view as a layperson trying to find an application for it. Sometimes, by showing examples of animations that have already used this resource commercially and simply commenting on them, I believe it adds another dimension to its use for beginners. After all, tutorials are aimed at this audience, or should be right? I appreciate your effort, and I really like your teaching approach. I just wanted to make a suggestion that might inspire many users.@@noseman
@@Ricardo-de9ju This tutorial is clearly not showing the final output but how to solve a problem that you may encounter. And it doesn't take a lot of creativity to come up with applications for this. You could for example use a vertex map field instead of a linear field and paint where which building is supposed to go. Or you could have a map of population density and want to pick the building based on how many people live in a neighbourhood.
the thing is that's not a tutorial. It's a quicktip as it says in the title.