We don't support sharable Node. Some one will have to do the cloning of
the scenegraph, either the application or JavaFX. Now I may have opened
a can of worms. ;-)
- Chien
On 7/25/2013 5:20 PM, Richard Bair wrote:
Having to clone the nodes hardly seems like simultaneous viewing from different
points of view?
On Jul 25, 2013, at 5:17 PM, Chien Yang <chien.y...@oracle.com> wrote:
Hi August,
We did talk through some use cases such as PIP and rear view mirror. You
can do simultaneous viewing from different points of view into a single 3D
scene via the use of SubScenes. The key point, as you have clearly stated, is
the need to clone the scene graph nodes per SubScene.
- Chien
On 7/25/2013 10:37 AM, Richard Bair wrote:
Hi August,
"I think we already do multiple active cameras?"
More precisely: simultaneous viewing from different points of view into a
single 3D scene graph was meant, i.e. several cameras are attached to one scene
graph.
A SubScene has exactly one camera attached which renders the associated scene
graph into the corresponding SubScene's rectangle. Implementing simultaneous
viewing requires a cloned 3D scene graph for the second, third, and so on
SubScene/Camera. Material, Mesh, and Image objects can be re-used because they
are shareable. Animations of Nodes' Transforms seem to be shareable as well.
But Transitions (Rotate, Scale, Translate) have to be cloned because they
operate on a Node's methods directly. So, simultaneous viewing seems
practicable.
Jasper or Kevin will have to comment, but I know this scenario was talked about
extensively in the design for the renderToImage and cameras, and I thought this
was possible today.