tailieunhanh - Essential Blender- P12

Essential Blender- P12: You may copy and distribute exact replicas of the OpenContent (OC) as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty; and give any other recipients of the OC a copy of this License along with the OC. | shark attack guy tells the object to ignore the NLA Editor and use the Action linked in the Action Editor instead. Before proceeding with this tutorial make sure that Hank is set to NLA mode. With the mouse over the 3D view press Alt-A to play the current animation. Note that the character takes two steps and then stops at frame 21 because well. that s the end of the walkcycle. This is about to change. Figure The NLA Transform Properties panel. In the NLA Editor press the N-key. As in other window types the N-key brings up a transform properties panel. In the NLA Editor this panel is used to work with strip settings. Change the value of the Repeat control to 2. Notice that the NLA strip representing the walkcycle now has a faint line down its center dividing it into two sections. Play the animation again with Alt-A in the 3D view. The character takes four steps now because the walkcycle action plays twice. However the walkcycle is almost too fast to see because those four steps are being taken in only 21 frames. Twice the number of steps in the same amount of frames equals twice the speed. Figure Repeat set to 2 and Strip End set to 41. In the properties panel change the Strip End control to 41. Play the animation again. There are still four steps but they are now taking place over the course of forty-two frames which gives a better result. By changing the values in the strip properties panel you can adjust the speed and number of steps of a walkcycle. Strips can also be scaled directly within the NLA Editor with the S-key. Figure Repeat set to 5 and the strip scaled to around Frame 120. Set the walkcycle to a Repeat value of 5. Make sure the frame counter is on Frame 1. Now instead of typing numbers into the panel controls press the S-key to begin scaling. Note This is easier if you have the mouse cursor to the right of the end point of the current strip before scaling otherwise the scaling gets reversed. Scale the strip until its end point is