Example11.x3d

(.x3d scene, pretty-print source, statistics, info & logs, X3DOM home)

VRML 97 specification example: The LOD node is typically used for switching between different versions of geometry at specified distances from the viewer. However, if the range field is left at its default value, the browser selects the most appropriate child from the list given. It can make this selection based on performance or perceived importance of the object. Children should be listed with most detailed version first just as for the normal case. This "performance LOD" feature can be combined with the normal LOD function to give the browser a selection of children from which to choose at each distance. In this example, the browser is free to choose either a detailed or a less-detailed version of the object when the viewer is closer than 10 meters (as measured in the coordinate space of the LOD). The browser should display the less detailed version of the object if the viewer is between 10 and 50 meters and should display nothing at all if the viewer is farther than 50 meters. Browsers should try to honor the hints given by authors, and authors should try to give browsers as much freedom as they can to choose levels of detail based on performance.

 

X3D Scene   Metadata
archive   https://www.web3d.org/x3d/content/examples/Basic/Vrml97Specification
title   Example11.x3d
translator   Don Brutzman
created   26 June 2000
modified   28 October 2019
creator   X3D working group
description   VRML 97 specification example: The LOD node is typically used for switching between different versions of geometry at specified distances from the viewer. However, if the range field is left at its default value, the browser selects the most appropriate child from the list given. It can make this selection based on performance or perceived importance of the object. Children should be listed with most detailed version first just as for the normal case. This "performance LOD" feature can be combined with the normal LOD function to give the browser a selection of children from which to choose at each distance. In this example, the browser is free to choose either a detailed or a less-detailed version of the object when the viewer is closer than 10 meters (as measured in the coordinate space of the LOD). The browser should display the less detailed version of the object if the viewer is between 10 and 50 meters and should display nothing at all if the viewer is farther than 50 meters. Browsers should try to honor the hints given by authors, and authors should try to give browsers as much freedom as they can to choose levels of detail based on performance.
reference   originals/exampleD_11.wrl
specificationSection   VRML 97, ISO/IEC 14772-1, Part 1: Functional specification and UTF-8 encoding, D.11 Level of detail
specificationUrl   https://www.web3d.org/documents/specifications/14772/V2.0/part1/examples.html#D.11
identifier   https://www.web3d.org/x3d/content/examples/Basic/Vrml97Specification/Example11.x3d
generator   X3D-Edit 3.3, https://savage.nps.edu/X3D-Edit
license   ../license.html
 
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X3DOM node coverage
Supported nodes found Unsupported nodes found Partially supported nodes
Appearance
Box
head
LOD
Material
meta
Scene
Shape
Sphere
WorldInfo
    References: X3DOM browser check, X3DOM home, X3DOM documentation, X3DOM list of supported nodes, and X3D Resources