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Editing 40d Talk:Tilesets

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:Is there something against [TEXTURE_PARAM=LINEAR] over [TEXTURE_PARAM=NEAREST]?  Of course it's just my opinion, but I've been able to (for kicks really) reduce a 16x16 tileset to 4x4 and retain somewhat readability.  The scaling happens after the texture is made, so there is a proper blend between foreground and background colors.  After testing it with a few tilesets, only the ones with text that fakes shading around the edges of the letters look unnatural--sometimes adds too dark of a border/shading at smaller scales. --[[User:Corc|Corc]] 14:43, 16 August 2008 (EDT)
 
:Is there something against [TEXTURE_PARAM=LINEAR] over [TEXTURE_PARAM=NEAREST]?  Of course it's just my opinion, but I've been able to (for kicks really) reduce a 16x16 tileset to 4x4 and retain somewhat readability.  The scaling happens after the texture is made, so there is a proper blend between foreground and background colors.  After testing it with a few tilesets, only the ones with text that fakes shading around the edges of the letters look unnatural--sometimes adds too dark of a border/shading at smaller scales. --[[User:Corc|Corc]] 14:43, 16 August 2008 (EDT)
 
::nothing against that I guess if you know what you are doing.  Just that in general, linear is not recommended for small iconic gfx where pixel details are important (there are usually special algorithms for stretching such gfx.).  Nearest will preserve the contrast and details better for such textures.  Linear will probably cause all the pixel details to disappear.  But it all comes down to personal preference.  I can't comment a lot since I am using the texture at it's default resolution, which is recommended for small bitmaps.  -- [[User:Sphr|Sphr]] 01:03, 17 August 2008 (EDT)
 
::nothing against that I guess if you know what you are doing.  Just that in general, linear is not recommended for small iconic gfx where pixel details are important (there are usually special algorithms for stretching such gfx.).  Nearest will preserve the contrast and details better for such textures.  Linear will probably cause all the pixel details to disappear.  But it all comes down to personal preference.  I can't comment a lot since I am using the texture at it's default resolution, which is recommended for small bitmaps.  -- [[User:Sphr|Sphr]] 01:03, 17 August 2008 (EDT)
:::Have you tried it? LINEAR and NEAREST look the same when no scaling is happening.  LINEAR isn't a blur effect, it's an interpolation when data isn't available. If anything, the small pixel art would be preserved.  Blurriness would only happen when going up in scale, and since no one does (or should do) that, it won't be a problem.--[[User:Corc|Corc]] 11:34, 17 August 2008 (EDT)
 
  
 
== Window sizing (not stretching) ==
 
== Window sizing (not stretching) ==

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