thanks Chris! J
On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 11:15 AM, chris <[email protected]> wrote: > > the expression says to divide a number (in this case the frame variable) > by 24 and if the reminder is smaller then 1, then set the output to 4, > otherwise to 1. (btw, personally i'd use: frame%24==0?4:1 > it's easier to read and less likely to cause problems) > > so if you want to shift it by 5, you could do: > (frame+5)%24==0?4:1 > > note that if you want to get it to happen on frame 5, you'd have to enter > 19 (ie. 24-9) as the offset. > ++ chris > > > > > On 10/10/12 at 7:56 PM, [email protected] (Jason P Nguyen) wrote: > > btw, how do I offset the starting frame of the entire >> curve with this expression (frame%24<1?4:1). I have 2 of >> these going on & I want them not to start at the same >> time. I want to shift the entire curve to the frame that >> I wanted. >> > > ______________________________**_________________ > Nuke-users mailing list > [email protected].**co.uk<[email protected]>, > http://forums.thefoundry.co.**uk/ <http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/> > http://support.thefoundry.co.**uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/**nuke-users<http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users> >
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