X-Git-Url: http://git.hungrycats.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=xscreensaver;a=blobdiff_plain;f=hacks%2Fconfig%2Fjigglypuff.xml;h=02a7e149eaf79a97d9ef263b097efb831a9434cc;hp=dfca665600bf83b9f70d2bfcadb6654439f6580e;hb=49f5b54f312fe4ac2e9bc47581a72451bd0e8439;hpb=ccb7f4903325f92555a9722bba74b58346654ba0 diff --git a/hacks/config/jigglypuff.xml b/hacks/config/jigglypuff.xml index dfca6656..02a7e149 100644 --- a/hacks/config/jigglypuff.xml +++ b/hacks/config/jigglypuff.xml @@ -4,76 +4,80 @@ - + - +
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- + + - <_description> -This little gem does bad things with quasi-spherical objects. +
+
-The gist of it is that you have what is, structurally, a tetrahedron -with tesselated faces. the vertices on these faces have forces on -them in the form of one proportional to their distance from the surface -of a sphere, and one which is proportional to how far they differ from -some ideal distance from their neighbors. They also have inertia. -The forces and distance are parameters and there are also a couple -of visual parameters. + + + <_description> +This does bad things with quasi-spherical objects. -The resulting effect can range from a shape that does nothing, to -a frenetic polygon storm. Somewhere in between there it usually manifests -as a blob that jiggles in a kind of disturbing manner. woo. +You have a tetrahedron with tesselated faces. The vertices on these +faces have forces on them: one proportional to the distance from the +surface of a sphere; and one proportional to the distance from the +neighbors. They also have inertia. -It doesn't matter, however. You should just pick 'random'. It overrides all -the other options, except for fps, delay and complexity. +The resulting effect can range from a shape that does nothing, to a +frenetic polygon storm. Somewhere in between there it usually +manifests as a blob that jiggles in a kind of disturbing manner. -By Keith Macleod +Written by Keith Macleod; 2003.