|
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
|
|
|
The maximum luminance (in EV100) used when calculating auto exposure. When calculating scene average luminance, color values will be clamped to at least this value. This limits the auto-exposure from exposing below a certain brightness, resulting in a cut off point where the scene will remain bright.
|
|
|
</member>
|
|
|
<member name="auto_exposure_min_exposure_value" type="float" setter="set_auto_exposure_min_exposure_value" getter="get_auto_exposure_min_exposure_value" default="-8.0">
|
|
|
- The minimum luminance luminance (in EV100) used when calculating auto exposure. When calculating scene average luminance, color values will be clamped to at least this value. This limits the auto-exposure from exposing above a certain brightness, resulting in a cut off point where the scene will remain dark.
|
|
|
+ The minimum luminance (in EV100) used when calculating auto exposure. When calculating scene average luminance, color values will be clamped to at least this value. This limits the auto-exposure from exposing above a certain brightness, resulting in a cut off point where the scene will remain dark.
|
|
|
</member>
|
|
|
<member name="exposure_aperture" type="float" setter="set_aperture" getter="get_aperture" default="16.0">
|
|
|
Size of the aperture of the camera, measured in f-stops. An f-stop is a unitless ratio between the focal length of the camera and the diameter of the aperture. A high aperture setting will result in a smaller aperture which leads to a dimmer image and sharper focus. A low aperture results in a wide aperture which lets in more light resulting in a brighter, less-focused image. Default is appropriate for outdoors at daytime (i.e. for use with a default [DirectionalLight3D]), for indoor lighting, a value between 2 and 4 is more appropriate.
|