[Paraview] Paraview

Scott, W Alan wascott at sandia.gov
Wed Jan 26 21:08:54 EST 2011


Maybe you could try writing individual images, and then stitch them together using some free software?  As far as the individual frames goes, try opening up the Animation View, change the mode to Sequence, and the number of frames to 200.  Next, try Filters/ Temporal/ Temporal Interpolator.

If this doesn't save properly, please let me know what type of data you are using, and I will look into it.

Alan 

-----Original Message-----
From: paraview-bounces at paraview.org [mailto:paraview-bounces at paraview.org] On Behalf Of Gerard Droege
Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2011 4:22 PM
To: paraview at paraview.org
Subject: [Paraview] Paraview


Would anyone have any knowledge of how to control the frame rendering 
rate when saving an animation?    I notice that if I make an animation 
at 5  - 10 fps, the resulting avi file looks perfect.   However, if I 
use the same animation sequence and render at 20 - 30 fps, the resulting 
avi file has many holes and greyed out areas in the frames beginning 
about half way through the animation.

I'm wondering if it is possible for the frame rendering to get far 
enough ahead of the IO writing to disk such that frame information can 
be lost?    If the buffer that is holding the frames renders fills up,  
wouldnt it wait for IO writing to disk to catch up first?

thanks,

Gerard
Lunar and Planetary Lab
Tucson AZ
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