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6a7b316572
Vim's autoformating doesn't like our style of comments, so I have to force it to do what I want. Having to set the appropriate options every time I edit a file got to be a RPITA, so time to get the computer to do it for me :)
87 lines
3.1 KiB
Text
87 lines
3.1 KiB
Text
//unfortunately, have to wrap the docs in a C comment for doxygen
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// vim:tw=74:formatoptions-=l
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/**
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\page mapformat Map (.map) File Format
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"//" marks a comment which extends to the end of the current line
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Note that () and {} characters require white space around them.
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A map consists of a series of entities delineated by {}
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An entity consists of a series of either epairs or brushes, one per "line".
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An epair is a pair of quoted (via "quotes") strings. The first string of the
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pair is the key, the second string the value. epairs are used to populate the
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dictionary of the entity.
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A brush is a simple, convex polytope delineated by {}. The format of a brush
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is as follows:
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\verbatim
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{
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[optional vertex list]
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<plane spec> <texture name> <texcoord spec> [optional flags]
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<plane spec> <texture name> <texcoord spec> [optional flags]
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<plane spec> <texture name> <texcoord spec> [optional flags]
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...
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}
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\endverbatim
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That is, an optional vertex list followed by a number of surface specs, one
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per line.
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The optional vertex list, found in map files produced by Quest3d, is denoted
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by a colon followed by a number indicating the number of vertexes in the list.
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Following this, one per line, come the 3d coordinates of the vertexes, one
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vertex per line. The vertex coordinates are listed in X Y Z order.
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There are two formats for the plane spec, selected via the presence (vertex
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mode) or absence (plane point mode) of the vertex list.
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In vertex mode, the plane spec directly describes the shape of the surface
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polygon. It is simply a number indicating the number of vertexes, followed by a
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set of 0 based indexes, enclosed in (). The indexes indicate which of the
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vertexes from the vertex list to use. When compiling the map, only the first 3
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vertexes are significant: they are used as the 3 points for calculating the
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plane.
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In point plane mode, the plane spec consists of three point vectors, each
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enclosed in ().
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The three points (from either mode) are then used to calculate the plane
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normal and offset:
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\verbatim
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n = (p0 - p1) x (p2 - p1) # normal
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d = p1 . n # offset
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\endverbatim
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The texture name is just a simple string (no spaces) that specifies the name
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of the texture within the wadfile.
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The texcoord spec is black magic. :) It can be either:
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(halflife style)
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\verbatim
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[ sx sy sz s ] [ tx ty tz t ] r s_scale t_scale
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\endverbatim
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or (quake style)
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\verbatim
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s t r s_scale t_scale
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\endverbatim
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In quake style, the basis vectors for s and t (sv and tv) are taken as the
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most appropriate axial plane for the surface plane. In halflife style, they're
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given directly via sv = (sx sy sz), tv = (tx ty tz). sv and tv are then
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transformed by rotating around their perpendicular by r degrees. How this
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interacts with halflife style is currently unknown. When rendering, the texture
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coords (rs, rt) for vertex v are calculated as:
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\verbatim
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rs = v . sv + s
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rt = v . tv + t
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\endverbatim
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The optional flags indicate various options for the surface. So far, the only
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flag supported is "detail", indicating that the brush is a detail brush and not
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to be used for visibility calculations. If any surface has the detail flag set,
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the whole brush is affected.
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Example map file (vertex mode):
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\verbinclude cliptest.map
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*/
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