Hidden Surfaces :- In 3D Computer graphics, it is the process in which we decide which surface or part of surface are not visible from a certain viewpoint. It's solution is a hidden surface algorithm that is visibility problem. It was the first major problem in the field of 3D computer graphics. This process of hidden surface is called hiding and algorithm which is used called a hider.
Firstly an image is scanned correctly, which part of the image is not visible that should not be drawn. It also speeds up rendering since objects that are not visible can be removed from the graphics pipeline.
Through many techniques we can determination hidden surface. There are different stages of hidden surfaces determination.
These stages include:-
1. Back face Culling
2. Viewing Frustum Culling
3. Occlusion Culling
4. Contribution Culling.
1. Back face Culling:- In back face culling, these object which are not solid in image, the back side of some Faces or polygons, in the mesh will never face the camera. So, no need to draw those faces. It is the responsibility of effect. If the camera happens to be inside a mesh, rather than seeing the inside surface of mesh it disappear completely.
2. Viewing frustum culling:- In this technique, a viewing frustum is a geometric representation of the volume of the virtual camera. So, those objects which are outside from the volume are not visible in the final image. So, they are discarded object those are lie on the boundary of viewing frustum. Those objects are cut into pieces along this boundary in the process called clipping.
3. Occlusion culling: - Occlusion culling is that where the objects are hidden by the other objects those are front of the computer so it is the fundamental problem of the computer. Here we use painter's Algorithm with this polygons are stored then draw back to front.
4. Contribution Culling: - In contribution culling we check objects those are far away from the view point, so these are not shown then through where we determine that which portion of image is shadow.
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In 3D computer graphics, hidden surface determination (also known as hidden surface removal (HSR), occlusion culling (OC) or visible surface determination (VSD)) is the process used to determine which surfaces and parts of surfaces are not visible from a certain viewpoint. A hidden surface determination algorithm is a solution to the visibility problem, which was one of the first major problems in the field of 3D computer graphics. The process of hidden surface determination is sometimes called hiding, and such an algorithm is sometimes called a hider. The analogue for line rendering is hidden line removal. Hidden surface determination is necessary to render an image correctly, so that one cannot look through walls in virtual reality.
Hidden surface refers to parts of a 3D object that are not visible because they are obstructed by other objects in the scene. Hidden removal is the process of identifying and removing these hidden surfaces from the view to create a more accurate and realistic representation of the scene. This is important in computer graphics to ensure that only visible surfaces are rendered to the viewer.
Mark de Berg has written: 'Ray shooting, depth orders and hidden surface removal' -- subject(s): Geometry, Mathematics, Computer graphics, Data processing
Since you can't see the hidden surface, from your point of view, then the graphics system should not (normally) display the hidden surface except (optionally) to display dashed lines for hidden edges and dashed dimension lines to hidden edges.
The octree method for hidden surface removal involves dividing the 3D space into smaller and smaller octants. Each octant is further divided until a certain criteria is met (e.g., maximum depth or minimum size). This hierarchical structure helps identify and remove hidden surfaces by checking which octants are completely hidden by others. The octree method is efficient for accelerating rendering in complex 3D scenes.
maybe you should get off the computer, and not worry about the hidden computer!
A hidden partition is used to store a new, untouched copy of your computer's OS. It is hidden to keep unauthorized, non-tech people from messing with it. If your computer software is destroyed by a virus or worm, this hidden software can be used to restore your computer to factory settings.
Posined gas.
A hidden surface refers to a surface that is obscured from view by other objects in a scene, while an invisible surface is one that is intentionally made invisible or transparent, such as a glass pane. Hidden surfaces can be revealed by changing the camera angle, whereas invisible surfaces are typically always transparent.
A hidden virus may copy and distribute itself throughout your computer, since most viruses are hidden deep in your computer, it cant do much more than duplicate.
onych/o = nail crypt/o = hidden (ingrown) ectomy = removal so my guess would be onychocryptectomy
Yes.