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Mathematics for Game Programming and Computer Graphics

You're reading from   Mathematics for Game Programming and Computer Graphics Explore the essential mathematics for creating, rendering, and manipulating 3D virtual environments

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801077330
Length 444 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Penny de Byl Penny de Byl
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Penny de Byl
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Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Essential Tools
2. Chapter 1: Hello Graphics Window: You’re On Your Way FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Let’s Start Drawing 4. Chapter 3: Line Plotting Pixel by Pixel 5. Chapter 4: Graphics and Game Engine Components 6. Chapter 5: Let’s Light It Up! 7. Chapter 6: Updating and Drawing the Graphics Environment 8. Chapter 7: Interactions with the Keyboard and Mouse for Dynamic Graphics Programs 9. Part 2 – Essential Trigonometry
10. Chapter 8: Reviewing Our Knowledge of Triangles 11. Chapter 9: Practicing Vector Essentials 12. Chapter 10: Getting Acquainted with Lines, Rays, and Normals 13. Chapter 11: Manipulating the Light and Texture of Triangles 14. Part 3 – Essential Transformations
15. Chapter 12: Mastering Affine Transformations 16. Chapter 13: Understanding the Importance of Matrices 17. Chapter 14: Working with Coordinate Spaces 18. Chapter 15: Navigating the View Space 19. Chapter 16: Rotating with Quaternions 20. Part 4 – Essential Rendering Techniques
21. Chapter 17: Vertex and Fragment Shading 22. Chapter 18: Customizing the Render Pipeline 23. Chapter 19: Rendering Visual Realism Like a Pro 24. Index 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding the purpose of normalization

If you are wondering why we need to normalize a quaternion in the first place, it’s because the values used to create it may produce a quaternion with a length longer than 1, especially if it’s code that you are adding yourself.

Take, for example, the 3D process of moving an object along a vector at a constant speed. In Chapter 10, Getting Acquainted with Lines, Rays, and Normals, we moved an object along a line segment at a constant speed. To achieve a constant speed, we needed to take into consideration the time between frames so we could factor in any changes. The code we created moved an object in equal steps from one end of a line segment to the other. Taking this same idea, we can write code to move an object in 3D along a vector at a constant speed. The essential parts of this script would look something like this:

dt = 0
direction = (0, 0, 0.1)
while not done:
  new_position = old_position + (direction...
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