Module Effect
The Blender.Effect submodule
INTRODUCTION
The module effect allows you to access all the data of an effect. An
effect can modify an object (typically a mesh) in three different
ways.
a) the build effect : makes the mesh appear progressively.
b) the wave effect : waves appear on the mesh (which should be
fine-grained)
c) the particle effect : every vertex of the mesh emits particles,
which can themselves emit new particles. This effect is the most
parameterizable.
In the blender internals, the effect object is just a placeholder for
the "real" effect, which can be a wave, particle or build
effect. The python API follows this structure : the Effect module grants
access to (the few) data which are shared between all effects. It has
three submodules : Wave, Build, Particle , which grant r/w access to the
real parameters of these effects.
Example:
import Blender
listffects = Blender.Effect.Get()
print listeffects
eff = listeffects[0]
#we suppose the first effect is a build effect
print eff.getLen()
eff.setLen(500)
Classes |
Effect |
This object gives access to generic data from all effects in
Blender. |
Function Summary |
Blender Effect or a list of Blender Effects
|
Get (objname,
position)
Get an Effect from Blender. |
Blender Effect
|
New (type)
Creates a new Effect. |
Get(objname,
position)
Get an Effect from Blender.
-
- Parameters:
objname -
The name of object to which is linked the effect.
(type=string)
position -
The position of the effect in the list of effects liked to the
object.
(type=string)
- Returns:
-
It depends on the 'objname,position' parameters:
-
(objname,position): The Effect linked to the given object
at the given position;
-
(): A list with all Effects in the current scene.
(type=Blender Effect or a list of Blender Effects)
|
New(type)
Creates a new Effect.
-
- Parameters:
type -
Effect type. Can be "wave", "particle" or
"build"
(type=string)
- Returns:
-
The created Effect.
(type=Blender Effect)
|