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A point light's attenuation defines how bright it is with respect to its distance from objects. You can set a light's attenuation by using Ogre's Light::setAttenuation function. The function takes four Real parameters: Range, Constant, Linear, and Quadratic.
The Range parameter has nothing to do with the brightness. If an objects distance is greater than the range, the light has no effect on the object. If the object is in range, the light's effect is calculated with the following formulas:
- Luminosity = 1 / Attenuation
- Attenuation = Constant + Linear * Distance + Quadratic * Distance^2
Picking the values by trial and error is time consuming and unintuitive. I have calculated some values for the parameters that work well for specified ranges. Using these numbers, the light has 100% intensity at 0 distance, and trails off to near black at a distance equal to the Range. Keep in mind that most of the light falls in the first 20% of the range.
3250, 1.0, 0.0014, 0.000007
600, 1.0, 0.007, 0.0002
325, 1.0, 0.014, 0.0007
200, 1.0, 0.022, 0.0019
160, 1.0, 0.027, 0.0028
100, 1.0, 0.045, 0.0075
65, 1.0, 0.07, 0.017
50, 1.0, 0.09, 0.032
32, 1.0, 0.14, 0.07
20, 1.0, 0.22, 0.20
13, 1.0, 0.35, 0.44
7, 1.0, 0.7, 1.8
For example, if you wish to have a light that gradually dims until it has no effect at distance 100:
Light *light; //create pointer to light object light = mSceneMgr->createLight("Light #1"); //set the pointer to a newly created light light->setType(Light::LT_POINT); // make this light a point light light->setDiffuseColour(1.0, .5, 0.0); //color the light orange light->setSpecularColour(1.0, 1.0, 0.0); //yellow highlights light->setAttenuation(100, 1.0, 0.045, 0.0075);
Once you have chosen a Range and corresponding values, you can tweak the Constant and Linear values.
Decreasing the Constant parameter toward 0.0 brightens the light, while increasing it dims the light.
Increasing the Linear parameter causes the light to fade more quickly with distance. I don't suggest changing the Quadratic value or decreasing the Linear values, as doing so will require you to recalculate the Range. Negative numbers are not allowed.
Finally, Decreasing the Range value may give your application a performance boost, but decreasing it too much will cause the object to noticeably change brightness when it moves out of range of the point light.
See also
- Light
- Light Attenuation Shortcut - code snippet
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Alias: Point_Light_Attenuation