The International Simutrans Forum

PakSets and Customization => Other paksets => Pak64.USA => Topic started by: Packer on January 05, 2014, 01:45:38 AM

Poll
Question: Should the shading be reversed (TTD) or standard (Simutrans)
Option 1: Standard votes: 3
Option 2: Reversed votes: 3
Title: Shading, reversed or standard
Post by: Packer on January 05, 2014, 01:45:38 AM
I'm still stuck on this decision. It's been about a year I think.

So far factories, grounds, trains, and trams are done in reversed shading. Buildings are about 50/50 (although town halls are being a pain with animation) now. Planes, trucks, and bridges have yet to be done.

However for planes and ships, I have permission to use a set for each. So if we use those (and pluck the American planes out, the plane set uses some USSR designs) they won't need to be flipped. Which would just leave trucks.
Title: Re: Shading, reversed or standard
Post by: prissi on January 05, 2014, 09:07:31 PM
Simutrans does not really use a flipped shading compared to OpenTTD. Also the direction of light is turned by 45° ...
Title: Re: Shading, reversed or standard
Post by: VS on January 12, 2014, 03:41:50 PM
If you're taking everything straight out of ottd, keep it for less work.

If you're going to mix stuff, flip the other stuff so as to fit standard - you can automate that one-off task, and it will be fixed forever. Vehicles already contain all the needed information (take a view, flip, it's now the opposite heading - see attachment), everything else does not lose anything when flipped.
Title: Re: Shading, reversed or standard
Post by: Packer on February 08, 2014, 09:51:54 PM
After much thinking (and this thread) I'm thinking it *may* be easier to flip the trains and the few buildings I'm not using from Simutrans.

This means that the ways and such won't have to be adjusted...

VS, what do you mean automate "that one-off task"?
Title: Re: Shading, reversed or standard
Post by: VS on February 23, 2014, 11:41:24 AM
Well, you have to take a sprite sheet, select one view, flip that horizontally, ditto for the "mirrored" view, and then swap some reference which says that one is west and another eastward facing (just an example).

If you spend a hour writing some program or script that does this for you, you save yourself countless clicks :)