Frames /Orientation /Coordinates Explorer available

All about writing scripts for Celestia in Lua and the .cel system
Topic author
Rjp buisson
Posts: 31
Joined: 18.03.2002
With us: 22 years 8 months
Location: Paris France

Frames /Orientation /Coordinates Explorer available

Post #1by Rjp buisson » 02.06.2004, 10:10

Frames/Orientation/Coordinates Explorer: FOC_explorer.celx

This script allows full user experimentation from within Celestia of the different frames, coordinates and orientation available.

It is a complement to the now finished :D documentation on that subject available on the site :http://ralph.buisson.9online.fr

It permits the user a 'subjective' undestanding (from a user's point of view) of all the 'objective' definitions and aspects described in the other pages of this site.

With this script, a complete experimentation is possible, regarding:
- each Celestia Frame
- each associated Axis and Origin
- each Coordinates sytem ( both rectangular and spherical) related to the observer position in space
- the Orientation system associated with the camera of the observer

For Lua-Celx programmers:
This script is documented to give some hints and first answers to anyone intending to start programming :
- the observer positionning in space, using the different frames of Celestia
- the camera orientation in space, using the quaternion/orientation technology of Celestia

This script, written in Lua celx, is strongly interactive and thus needs a recent version of Celestia (including the celestia_keyboard_callback implementation): Celestia version v.1.3.2 pre7 or higher is fine for this purpose.

Please report any error :? and/or question :o on this forum where my username is 'rjp buisson'

Enjoy...
Jean Pierre
http://ralph.buisson.9online.fr

don
Posts: 1709
Joined: 12.07.2003
With us: 21 years 4 months
Location: Colorado, USA (7000 ft)

Post #2by don » 05.06.2004, 08:03

Sounds great Jean Pierre! Can't wait to get some more time so I can try it. :D

Thank you!
-Don G.
My Celestia Scripting Resources page

Avatar: Total Lunar Eclipse from our back yard, Oct 2004. Panasonic FZ1 digital camera (no telescope), 36X digital zoom, 8 second exposure at f6.5.


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