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1
2 OPCODE distribution 1.3 (june 2003)
3 -----------------------
4
5 New in Opcode 1.3:
6 - fixed the divide by 0 bug that was happening when all centers where located on a coordinate axis (thanks to Jorrit T)
7 - linearized "complete" vanilla AABB trees
8 - ANSI-compliant "for" loops (for the ones porting it to Linux...)
9 - callbacks & pointers moved to mesh interface
10 - support for triangle & vertex strides
11 - optimized the sphere-triangle overlap code a bit
12 - dynamic trees (refit)
13 - more builders
14 - ValidateSubdivision in builders
15 - LSS collider
16 - primitive-bv tests can now be skipped in most volume queries
17 - temporal coherence now also works for airborne objects
18 - temporal coherence completed for boxes / all contacts, LSS, etc
19 - ray-collider now uses a callback
20 - some common "usages" have been introduced (only picking for now)
21 - SPLIT_COMPLETE removed (now implicitely using mLimit = 1)
22 - hybrid collision models
23 - sweep-and-prune code added, moved from my old Z-Collide lib
24 - it now works with meshes made of only 1 triangle (except in mesh-mesh case!)
25
26 Disclaimer:
27
28 - I forced myself to actually *do* the release today no matter what. Else it would never have been done. That's
29 why the code may not be very polished. I also removed a *lot* of things (more usages, distance queries, etc...)
30 that weren't ready for prime-time (or that were linked to too many of my supporting libs)
31
32 - Some comments may also be obsolete here and there. The old User Manual for Opcode 1.2 may not fit version 1.3
33 either, since there's a new "mesh interface" to support strides, etc.
34
35 - Everything in the "Ice" directory has been hacked out of my engine and edited until everything compiled. Don't
36 expect anything out there to be cute or something. In particular, some CPP files are not even included when not
37 needed, so you can expect some linker errors if you try messing around with them...
38
39 Otherwise, it should be just like previous version, only better. In particular, hybrid models can be very
40 memory-friendly (sometimes using like 10 times less ram than the best trees from version 1.2). The possible
41 speed hit is often invisible (if it even exists), especially using temporal coherence in "all contacts" mode.
42 (Admittedly, this depends on your particular usage pattern / what you do on collided triangles).
43
44 The sweep-and-prune code is similar to the "vanilla" version found in V-Collide (but that one's better IMHO...)
45 The simple "radix" version is often just as good, see for yourself.
46
47 OPCODE distribution 1.2 (august 2002)
48 -----------------------
49
50 New in Opcode 1.2:
51 - new VolumeCollider base class
52 - simplified callback setup
53 - you can now use callbacks or pointers (setup at compile time)
54 - destination array not needed anymore in the RayCollider (faster in-out tests)
55 - renamed classes: AABBRayCollider => RayCollider, AABBSphereCollider => SphereCollider
56 - the sphere query now only returns a list of faces (extra info discarded). On the other hand it's a lot faster.
57 - OBB, AABB and planes queries. Original OBB and AABB queries contributed by Erwin de Vries.
58 - cosmetic changes in OPC_BoxBoxOverlap.h contributed by Gottfried Chen
59 - some inlining problems fixed
60 - faster ray-mesh tests using the separating axis theorem
61 - new split value in AABB tree construction (contributed by Igor Kravtchenko). Provides faster queries most of the time.
62 - improved temporal coherence for sphere & AABB queries (works in "All contacts" mode)
63
64 Notes:
65
66 - Everything in the "Ice code" directory (in VC++) is basically copy-pasted from my engine, with a lot
67 of code removed until there was no link error anymore. Don't expect those files to be cute or anything,
68 they've never been meant to be released and they're often updated/modified/messy.
69 - Some experimental features have been removed as well. Else I would never have released the 1.2...
70 - Not as polished/optimal as I would like it to be, but that's life. I promised myself to release it
71 before october 2002 (one YEAR later ?!).... That's the only reason why it's there.
72 - Some people reported ColDet was faster. Uh, come on. They were using Opcode in
73 "All contacts" mode whereas ColDet was doing "first contact"...
74
75 OPCODE distribution 1.1 (october 2001)
76 -----------------------
77
78 New in Opcode 1.1:
79 - stabbing queries
80 - sphere queries
81 - abtract base class for colliders
82 - settings validation methods
83 - compilation flags now grouped in OPC_Settings.h
84 - smaller files, new VC++ virtual dirs (cleaner)
85
86 Notes:
87
88 - "override(baseclass)" is a personal cosmetic thing. It's the same as "virtual", but provides more info.
89 - I code in 1600*1200, so some lines may look a bit long..
90 - This version is not as polished as the previous one due to lack of time. The stabbing & sphere queries
91 can still be optimized: for example by trying other atomic overlap tests. I'm using my first ray-AABB
92 code, but the newer one seems better. Tim Schröder's one is good as well. See: www.codercorner.com/RayAABB.cpp
93 - The trees can easily be compressed even more, I save this for later (lack of time, lack of time!)
94 - I removed various tests before releasing this one:
95 - a separation line, a.k.a. "front" in QuickCD, because gains were unclear
96 - distance queries in a PQP style, because it was way too slow
97 - support for deformable models, too slow as well
98 - You can easily use Opcode to do your player-vs-world collision detection, in a Nettle/Telemachos way.
99 If someone out there wants to donate some art / level for the cause, I'd be glad to release a demo. (current
100 demo uses copyrighted art I'm not allowed to spread)
101 - Sorry for the lack of real docs and/or solid examples. I just don't have enough time.
102
103 OPCODE distribution 1.0 (march 2001)
104 -----------------------
105
106 - First release
107
108 ===============================================================================
109
110 WHAT ?
111
112 OPCODE means OPtimized COllision DEtection.
113 So this is a collision detection package similar to RAPID. Here's a
114 quick list of features:
115
116 - C++ interface, developed for Windows systems using VC++ 6.0
117 - Works on arbitrary meshes (convex or non-convex), even polygon soups
118 - Current implementation uses AABB-trees
119 - Introduces Primitive-BV overlap tests during recursive collision queries (whereas
120 standard libraries only rely on Primitive-Primitive and BV-BV tests)
121 - Introduces no-leaf trees, i.e. collision trees whose leaf nodes have been removed
122 - Supports collision queries on quantized trees (decompressed on-the-fly)
123 - Supports "first contact" or "all contacts" modes (ā la RAPID)
124 - Uses temporal coherence for "first contact" mode (~10 to 20 times faster, useful
125 in rigid body simulation during bisection)
126 - Memory footprint is 7.2 times smaller than RAPID's one, which is ideal for console
127 games with limited ram (actually, if you use the unmodified RAPID code using double
128 precision, it's more like 13 times smaller...)
129 - And yet it often runs faster than RAPID (according to RDTSC, sometimes more than 5
130 times faster when objects are deeply overlapping)
131 - Performance is usually close to RAPID's one in close-proximity situations
132 - Stabbing, planes & volume queries (sphere, AABB, OBB, LSS)
133 - Sweep-and-prune
134 - Now works with deformable meshes
135 - Hybrid trees
136
137
138 What it can be used for:
139 - standard mesh-mesh collision detection (similar to RAPID, SOLID, QuickCD, PQP, ColDet...)
140 - N-body collisions (similar to V-Collide)
141 - camera-vs-world collisions (similar to Telemachos/Paul Nettle/Stan Melax articles)
142 - shadow feelers to speed up lightmap computations
143 - in-out tests to speed up voxelization processes
144 - picking
145 - rigid body simulation
146 - view frustum culling
147 - etc
148
149 WHY ?
150
151 - Because RAPID uses too many bytes.
152 - Because the idea was nice...
153
154 WHEN ?
155
156 It's been coded in march 2001 following a thread on the GD-Algorithms list.
157
158 GDAlgorithms-list mailing list
159 GDAlgorithms-list@lists.sourceforge.net
160 http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gdalgorithms-list
161
162 WHO ?
163
164 Pierre Terdiman
165 June, 1, 2003
166
167 p.terdiman@wanadoo.fr
168 p.terdiman@codercorner.com
169
170 http://www.codercorner.com
171 http://www.codercorner.com/Opcode.htm