![]() ![]() Double-click it to place it in the network. (You can also double-click in the network view to open the node selection dialog). Suppose we want 4 different sizes for the ellipse and 5 different colors.Ĭlick the New Node button again, and choose the sample node. Instead of connecting the grid node directly to the ellipse node, another possibility is to create a translate node and connect the output of ellipse1 to the shape port of translate1 and the output of grid1 to the translate port of translate1.įor the moment we’re drawing the same ellipse on each point of the grid1 node so let’s create some variation in size and color. To change the selected node, click a node once. In the network pane, the selected node has a white stroke around it. In the parameter pane, we look at the selected node.To change the rendered node, double-click a different node. In the network pane, the rendered node has a white triangle at the right bottom of the node. In the viewer, we look at the rendered node.This is the core idea behind NodeBox: nodes passing (in this case) visual geometry or other information to other nodes. This means the changed output of grid1 is passed on to serve as the input of ellipse1. We’ve just updated the grid1 node, but we’re still looking at the results of the ellipse1 node. ![]()
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