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| = Application Settings =
| | {{ParaView/Template/DeprecatedUsersGuide}} |
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| Application wide settings are saved in between sessions so that every time you start ParaView on the same machine you get the same behaviors. The settings are stored in an XML file that resides at '''%APPDATA%\ParaView\ParaViewVERSION.ini''' on Windows and '''~/.config/ParaView/ParaViewVERSION.ini''' on all other platforms. If you need to restore ParaView's default settings you can either move this file or run with the '''--disable-registry''' argument.
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| These settings are managed via the settings dialog. On Macintosh this is reached from the '''Preferences''' entry in the '''ParaView''' menu. On Unix, Linux and Windows systems it is reached from the '''Settings''' entry on the '''Edit''' menu. These settings are program wide and are not to be confused with the View settings found under the '''Edit''' menu. Those settings are specific to each View window and are discussed in the [http://paraview.org/Wiki/ParaView/Displaying_Data Displaying Data] chapter.
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| The following figures show the various pages within the settings dialog. Choose from among them by clicking on the page list toward the left. Click on the arrow to expose the three sub pages in the '''Render View''' settings category. Some plugins add their own pages to the dialog but we do not discuss them here and instead refer you to any documentation that comes along with the plugin. Do note though that most settings are documented within the application via tooltips.
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| == General ==
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| <center>[[File:ParaViewUsersGuidesettingsgeneral.png|800px|link=]]</center>
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| <center>'''Figure 1. General Preferences'''</center>
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| * '''Default View''' : choose the View window type that ParaView initially shows when it starts up and connects to any server.
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| * '''On File Open''' : Control the timestep shown by default when ParaView opens a file with multiple time steps.
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| * '''Rescale Data Range Mode''' : Controls how color lookup tables are adjusted when data ranges change
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| * '''Heart-Beat Interval''' : Sets the length of time between keepalive messages that the client sends to the remote server which prevents the TCP connection between the two machines from shutting down.
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| * '''Auto Accept''' : Makes every change take effect immediately rather than requiring you to click the '''Apply''' button.
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| * '''Auto Convert Properties''' : Tells ParaView to do some data conversions automatically so that more filters are immediately applicable to the data you have at hand.
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| * '''Crash Recovery''' : Tells ParaView to save a record of each action you take so that you can easily recover your work if ParaView crashes mid-session.
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| * '''Use Multi-Core''' : Tells ParaView to spawn an MPI parallel server on the same machine that is running the GUI so as to better take advantage of multi-core machines on processing bound problems.
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| == Colors ==
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| <center>[[Image:ParaView_UsersGuide_settings_colors.png|800px]]</center>
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| <center>'''Figure 2. Color Preferences'''</center>
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| When setting up visualizations, most datasets in the visualization are typically colored using scalar colors. However, there may be items in the setup that are simply colored using a solid color including text and other annotations. Also by default ParaView uses a grey background, so the default colors chosen for objects tends to be setup so that it looks appropriate on the gray background. However, when saving a screenshot for printing, one would prefer to white background, for example. In that case, it can be tedious to go to every object and change its color to work with the new background color.
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| To make it easier to change colors on the fly, ParaView defines color categories. Users can choose to assign a color category to any object when specifying a color using the category menu on most color-chooser buttons, as shown below.
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| <center>[[Image:ParaViewUsersGuideColorCategoryMenu.png]]</center>
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| <center>'''''Color Category Menu'' on the Display Tab'''</center>
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| Following associations are setup by default:
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| * Foreground color: outlines and wireframes
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| * Background color: background color in render views
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| * Surface color: solid color to surfaces
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| * Text color: color to 2D text
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| * Selection color: color used to show highlighted/selected elements in render view.
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| * Egde color: used for edges in '''Surface With Edges''' mode.
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| == Animation ==
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| <center>[[File:ParaView_UsersGuide_settings_animation.png|400px|link=]]</center>
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| <center>'''Figure 3. Animation Preferences'''</center>
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| * ''' Cache Geometry''' : When checked this allows ParaView to save and later reuse rather than regenerate visible geometry during animation play back to speed up replay.
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| * '''Cache Limit''' : This is the maximum size of the animation playback geometry cache (on each node when in parallel).
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| == Charts ==
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| <center>[[File:ParaView_UsersGuide_settings_charts.png|400px|link=]]</center>
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| <center>'''Figure 4. Chart Preferences'''</center>
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| * '''Hidden Series''' : Allows you to specify a set of regular expressions that are compared against array names so that various bookkeeping arrays are not drawn in 2D charts and thus distract from the meaningful ones.
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| == Render View General ==
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| <center>[[File:ParaView_UsersGuide_settings_renderview_general.png|400px|link=]]</center>
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| <center>'''Figure 5. General Render View Preferences'''</center>
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| * '''Use Immediate Mode Rendering''' : Controls whether OpenGL display lists are used or not which are generally faster only when rendering relatively small amounts of geometry.
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| The '''LOD Parameters''' settings control if, when and to what extent ParaView will down sample the data it draws while you move the mouse so as to maintain interactivity. The algorithm by which ParaView down samples the data is known as quadric clustering.
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| * '''LOD Threshold''' : Rendered data that is smaller than the specified size is not down sampled.
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| * '''LOD Resolution''' : When data is downsampled, this controls how coarsely.
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| * '''Outline threshold''' : Data that is larger than this threshold is drawn only as a bounding box while you move the camera.
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| * '''Lock Interactive Render''' : Controls how long ParaView waits after you have released the mouse and finished moving the camera before it returns to a full resolution render.
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| * '''Allow Rendering Interrupts''' : makes the drawing process interuptable so that you can move the camera immediately, without having to wait for a potentially slow full resolution render to complete.
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| The '''Depth Peeling''' settings control the algorithm that ParaView uses (given a sufficiently capable GPU) to draw translucent geometry correctly.
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| * '''Enable Depth Peeling''' : Controls whether ParaView will try to use the (potentially slow) depth peeling algorithm at all.
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| * '''Number of Peels''' : Controls the number of passes in the rendering algorithm. Higher produces quality images but increases rendering time.
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| The '''Coincident Topology Resolution''' settings control the method that ParaView uses to draw co-planar polygons in a non conflicting way (to avoid z-tearing in graphics terminology). Changes to these parameters do not take effect until ParaView is restarted.
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| The pull down menu allows you to choose between various algorithms that deal with z-tearing.
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| ** '''Do Nothing''' : does not attempt to resolve overlapping geometry
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| ** '''Use Z-Buffer Shift''' : adjusts OpenGL's Z direction scaling to draw one object slightly in front of the other. The '''Z Shift''' property controls the amount of offset.
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| ** '''Use Polygon Offset''' : adjusts polygon locations (by calling glPolygonOffset()) for the same purpose. For an explanation of the '''Factor''' and '''Units''' parameters, see http://www.opengl.org/resources/faq/technical/polygonoffset.htm. The '''Offset Faces''' parameters controls whether filled polygons are moved rather than the points and edges.
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| * '''Use Offscreen Rendering for Screenshots''' : This checkbox is enabled only when offscreen rendering is available. It tells ParaView to generate images that are being captured as screenshots in offscreen contexts. On some platforms this is necessary to avoid accidentally capturing overlapping pixels (such as a mouse pointer) from the operating system.
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| == Render View Camera ==
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| <center>[[File:ParaView_UsersGuide_settings_camera.png|400px|link=]]</center>
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| <center>'''Figure 6. Camera Preferences'''</center>
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| These settings allow you to assign particular key/mouse press combinations to various camera moving controls.
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| There are two sets of settings. '''Control for 3D Movements''' pertain to the 3D View. '''Control for 2D Movements''' pertain to the 2D View.
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| In the 3D View controls you can assign the following motions to any combination of left, middle or right mouse button press and no, shift or control key press.
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| * '''Pan'''
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| * '''Roll'''
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| * '''Rotate'''
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| * '''Multi-Rotate'''
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| * '''Zoom'''
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| Rotation is not possible in the 2D View, which lacks a down direction to move about. So in this area you can only choose from '''Pan''' and '''Zoom'''.
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| Clicking '''Reset Defaults''' restores the button assignments to the factory settings.
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| == Render View Server ==
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| <center>[[File:ParaView_UsersGuide_settings_server.png|400px|link=]]</center>
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| <center>'''Figure 7. Server Preferences'''</center>
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| These settings control how and where rendering happens when you are connected to a remote server.
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| The '''Remote Rendering Parameters''' are controls that generally affect the breakup of rendering work between the remote server and the local client machine.
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| * '''Remote Render Theshold''' : geometry that is smaller than the set value will be delivered to the client for local rendering. Data that is larger than the set value will be rendered remotely and pixels will be sent instead.
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| * '''Client Outline Threshold''' : while the camera is being manipulated and when geometry is being rendered locally, or in tiled display mode when it is being rendered both locally and remotely, data that is larger than this threshold will be rendered as a bounding box to maintain interactivity
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| * '''Suppress Ordered Compositing''' : This setting turns of the relatively slow transfer of data that must happen in parallel in order to render translucent geometry (as in volume rendering for instance) correctly.
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| The '''Client/Server Parameters''' section has controls that affect how pixels are transfered between the render server and the client while the data is being rendered remotely and images rather than geometry are being delivered to the client. The '''Apply presets for ...''' menu allows you to choose from a set of default settings which are generally well suited to particular network connection bandwidths.
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| * '''Interactive Subsample Rate''' : This setting controls how coarsely the image is downsampled to maintain interactivity while the camera is being manipulated.
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| * '''Image Compression''' : Enables compression of images during interaction. You can choose from either of the two image compression algorithms:
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| ** '''Squirt''' : Chooses IceT's native squirt image compression algorithm. The slider to the right controls the colorspace fidelity of the compression and conversely the interactive responsiveness.
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| ** '''Zlib''' : Chooses the ZLib library's compression algorithm instead. The spin box to the right specifies a compression level (1 through 9). The slider controls the colorspace fidelity. The '''Strip Alpha''' checkbox removed the Opacity channel (if any) from the shipped images.
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| The '''Tile Display Parameters''' section contains controls that take effect when doing tiled display wall rendering.
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| * '''Still Subsample Rate''' : This puts a screen space coarseness limit on the normally full resolution rendering that happens once you release the mouse after moving the camera. Image compositing time can prevent interactivity when working with large displays. This limit allows you to preview your results quickly and then choose to render truly full resolution results only once when you are satisfied with the preview.
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| * '''Compositing Threshold''' : This threshold allows you to get faster rendering times in the circumstance that you are visualizing relatively small data sets on large tiled displays. When the geometry size is below the threshold, the geometry is broadcast to all nodes in the render server. After this broadcast the relatively slow tiled image compositing algorithm is entirely omitted.
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