When Celestia starts, if you go to render/view options, the 'filter stars' section is set to filter stars beyond a distance of '1,000,000' (light years, I assume, although it doesn't say).
Unfortunately it seems that if you manipulate the slider which sets this distance, the maximum you can set is changed to 99,9999. Even if you type '1,000,000' without using the slider, Celestia refuses to accept it.
This is of course a minor bug - I doubt if there are any interesting stars 99,999.8 light years from Earth, although I'm sure somebody can think of one - but it's a bug nonetheless.
Filter stars
LOL
Selden you are starting to sound like Celstia's very own Preacher Man
Quoteing the Users FAQ sections, like the chapters of a Bible.
Selden you are starting to sound like Celstia's very own Preacher Man
Quoteing the Users FAQ sections, like the chapters of a Bible.
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RAM- 2Gb 1066MHz DDR2
Motherboard- Gigabyte P35 DQ6
Video Card- Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS + 640Mb
Hard Drives- 2 SATA Raptor 10000rpm 150GB
OS- Windows Vista Home Premium 32
selden wrote:Don't forget that Celestia currently can draw stars only to a distance of about 16K lightyears. Setting the filter to distances larger than that doesn't do anything useful.
Hmmm, then what is the distance unit in the Filter Stars section of the View Options dialog box? The default value is 1,000,000. If it is light years, then it is in error to be defaulted to this value.
Paul,
Well, I did write most (but not all) of the FAQs and answers!
And they are (or used to be) frequently asked questions, the question about star distance limits is one of them. My impression is that most of the questions that are answered in the FAQ are being asked much less frequently then they used to be. In other words, the FAQ is serving its purpose.
Don,
Just because star distances are limited to 16K LY now does not mean that Celestia always will have that limitation. I think it's appropriate not to build that limit into the user interfaces. When the hardware and software can support depth sorting over a much larger distance, the user interfaces won't have to be updated, too.
Well, I did write most (but not all) of the FAQs and answers!
And they are (or used to be) frequently asked questions, the question about star distance limits is one of them. My impression is that most of the questions that are answered in the FAQ are being asked much less frequently then they used to be. In other words, the FAQ is serving its purpose.
Don,
Just because star distances are limited to 16K LY now does not mean that Celestia always will have that limitation. I think it's appropriate not to build that limit into the user interfaces. When the hardware and software can support depth sorting over a much larger distance, the user interfaces won't have to be updated, too.
Selden
selden wrote:Paul,
Well, I did write most (but not all) of the FAQs and answers!
And they are (or used to be) frequently asked questions, the question about star distance limits is one of them. My impression is that most of the questions that are answered in the FAQ are being asked much less frequently then they used to be. In other words, the FAQ is serving its purpose.
Hey I totally agree, its great and works very well.
I just couldn't hold that post back.
CPU- Intel Pentium Core 2 Quad ,2.40GHz
RAM- 2Gb 1066MHz DDR2
Motherboard- Gigabyte P35 DQ6
Video Card- Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS + 640Mb
Hard Drives- 2 SATA Raptor 10000rpm 150GB
OS- Windows Vista Home Premium 32
RAM- 2Gb 1066MHz DDR2
Motherboard- Gigabyte P35 DQ6
Video Card- Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS + 640Mb
Hard Drives- 2 SATA Raptor 10000rpm 150GB
OS- Windows Vista Home Premium 32
Howdy Selden,selden wrote:Don,
Just because star distances are limited to 16K LY now does not mean that Celestia always will have that limitation.
I wrote "default value", so I'm not sure why you are talking about setting a "limit". . Here is the message I wrote:
don wrote:Hmmm, then what is the distance unit in the Filter Stars section of the View Options dialog box? The default value is 1,000,000. If it is light years, then it is in error to be defaulted to this value.
IMHO, I think a "default value" should be a valid value, not an invalid value, and I stick with my statement. In fact, since you are saying that this value is in fact light years, then I will even extend my statement to say that if 16,000 light years is the MAXIMUM value currently supported by Celestia, then the user interface should not allow any value higher than this. Having 1,000,000 as the default and 999,999 as the slider maximum is just plain wrong and is a bug.
If, as you write, "now" and "future" means nothing in programming (no difference) then why should it mean anything anywhere else? Why doesn't General Motors put a 500 mph speedometer in my car or truck, since it will not always have a 95 mph limitation? Or why doesn't my wife's employer pay her $500,000 right now, since she will earn that much from them eventually?
Why doesn't Fridgers team simply write a paper saying that they have discovered everything there is to discover in Physics, since they won't always be limited to current knowledge? This way, they wouldn't have to write the papers THEN.
Come on Selden, get real.
Don,
The field we're discussing tells Celestia not to draw stars that are further away than the distance specified. By default, I do not want Celestia throwing things away for me. I want the default value for that field to be infinite. (1M LY is a reasonable approximation to infinity for now, but it'd be nicer if it could be even bigger -- 1e32 comes to mind An enabling checkbox would be nice, but I consider that an unnecessary frill.) If I want Celestia not to try to draw stars beyond a certain distance, then I'll set that field to some nearby distance.
Does this clarify things?
The field we're discussing tells Celestia not to draw stars that are further away than the distance specified. By default, I do not want Celestia throwing things away for me. I want the default value for that field to be infinite. (1M LY is a reasonable approximation to infinity for now, but it'd be nicer if it could be even bigger -- 1e32 comes to mind An enabling checkbox would be nice, but I consider that an unnecessary frill.) If I want Celestia not to try to draw stars beyond a certain distance, then I'll set that field to some nearby distance.
Does this clarify things?
Selden