Computer Graphics from Scratch: A Programmer’s Introduction to 3D Rendering Front Cover

Computer Graphics from Scratch: A Programmer’s Introduction to 3D Rendering

  • Length: 248 pages
  • Edition: 1
  • Publisher:
  • Publication Date: 2021-05-18
  • ISBN-10: 1718500769
  • ISBN-13: 9781718500761
  • Sales Rank: #108220 (See Top 100 Books)
Description

Computer Graphics from Scratch demystifies the algorithms used in modern graphics software and guides beginners through building photorealistic 3D renders.

Computer graphics are at work everywhere today, adding eye-popping details to video games, hyper-realistic CGI to major blockbusters, and life-like imagery to computer-animated films. This beginners book will introduce you to a core slice of this ever-expanding field, 3D rendering, with a focus on two popular algorithmic methods: raytracing and rasterization.

Written to be easily understood by high-school students but rigorous enough for professional engineers, you’ll build each of these surprisingly simple algorithms into complete, fully functional renderers as you build your knowledge base. The first half covers raytracing, which simulates rays of light as they bounce off of objects in a scene; the second half breaks down rasterization, the real-time process for converting 3D graphics into a screen-compatible array of 2D pixels. Every chapter gives you something visually new and exciting to add to your works-in-progress, from creating reflections and shadows that make objects look more realistic, to rendering a scene from any directional point of view.

You’ll learn how to:

  • Represent objects in a scene, and use perspective projection to draw them in
  • Compute the illumination for light sources (point, directional, and ambient)
  • Render mirror-like reflections on surfaces, and cast shadows for depth
  • Use clipping algorithms to render a scene from any camera position
  • Implement flat shading, Gouraud shading, and Phong shading algorithms
  • “Paint” textures that fake surface details and turn shapes into everyday objects

The book uses informal pseudocode throughout the text, so you can write your renderers in any language. In addition, the author provides links to live working versions of his algorithms.

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