Project Workflow



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Once you've installed Autodesk VIZ (see the Installation Guide included with your software package), you open it from the Start menu, or use any other Windows method. The figure below shows the application window with a scene file loaded.

Main program window

Note: If you open Autodesk VIZ from a Command Prompt window or batch file, you can add command-line switches. See Starting Autodesk VIZ from the Command Line.

Note: Autodesk VIZ is a single-document application, meaning you can work on only one scene at a time. However, you can open more than one copy of Autodesk VIZ and open a different scene in each copy. Opening additional copies of Autodesk VIZ requires a lot of RAM. For the best performance, you should plan to open one copy and work on one scene at a time.

Opening multiple copies of Autodesk VIZ is not supported in Windows ME.

Modeling Objects

You model and animate objects in the viewports, whose layout is configurable. You can start with a variety of 3D geometric primitives. You can also use 2D shapes as the basis for lofted or extruded objects. You can convert objects to a variety of editable surface types, which you can then model further by pulling vertices and using other tools.

Another modeling tool is to apply modifiers to objects. Modifiers can change object geometry. Bend and Twist are examples of modifiers.

Modeling, editing, and animation tools are available in the command panels and toolbar. See Modeling Objects. Also, you can learn a good deal about modeling from the tutorials available from Help menu > Tutorials.

Material Design

You design materials using the Material Editor, which appears in its own window. You use the Material Editor to create realistic materials by defining hierarchies of surface characteristics. The surface characteristics can represent static materials, or be animated (using image-sequence maps). See Material Editor.

Lights and Cameras

You create lights with various properties to illuminate your scene. The lights can cast shadows, project images, and create volumetric effects for atmospheric lighting. Physically-based lights let you use real-world lighting data in your scenes and Radiosity provides incredibly accurate light simulation in renderings. See Lights. You can learn more about lighting by following the Lighting tutorial.

The cameras you create have real-world controls for lens length, field of view, and motion control such as truck, dolly, and pan. See Cameras.

Animation

You can begin animating your scene at any time by turning on the Auto Key button. Turn the button off to return to modeling. You can learn more about animating in the Animating Your Scene topic and from most of the tutorials.

When the Auto Key button is on, Autodesk VIZ automatically records the movement, rotation, and scale changes you make, not as changes to a static scene, but as keys on certain frames that represent time. You can also animate many parameters to make lights and cameras change over time, and preview your animation directly in the Autodesk VIZ viewports.

You use Track View to control animation. Track View is a floating window where you edit animation keys, set up animation controllers, or edit motion curves for your animated effects.

Rendering

Rendering adds color and shading to your scene. The renderers available with Autodesk VIZ include features such as selective ray tracing, analytical antialiasing, motion blur, volumetric lighting, and environmental effects. See Rendering Your Scene. The tutorials can help you learn about rendering.

When you use the default scanline renderer, a radiosity solution can provide accurate light simulation in renderings, including the ambient lighting that results from reflected light. When you use the mental ray renderer, a comparable effect is provided by global illumination.

If your workstation is part of a network, network rendering can distribute rendering jobs over multiple workstations. See Network Rendering.

A Typical Project Workflow

These topics explain the basic procedures for creating scenes:

Setting Up Your Scene

Modeling Objects

Using Materials

Placing Lights and Cameras

Animating Your Scene

Rendering Your Scene


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