http://www.mail-archive.com/openexr-user@nongnu.org/msg00178.html
R G B A Z
Raw Colour: Raw.R .G .B
Reflection Colour: Refl.R .G .B
Diffuse Colour: Diff.R .G .B
Specular Colour: Spec.R .G .B
Backdrop Colour: Backdrop.R .G .B
PreEffect Colour: PreEffect.R .G .B
Single channels:
Special, Luminosity, Diffuse, Specularity, Reflectivity, Transparency, Shading,
Shadow, Geometry, DiffShade, SpecShade
Motion.X .Y
the channel names should all be single-letters, Are there cases where you reed to put more letters? That
would make it easier for people to make layers like "guy.head.spec.R"
and you know that everything before is part of the layer name and the
"R" is the channel.
And also, I think that is you have multiple channels that are tied
together, they should always use the layer format, like Motion.X and
Motion.Y. I see some files that just say "X" or "Y" or "VX" or
"velX" and there's no good algorithmic way to know they're tied
together.
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Channel Names
An OpenEXR image can have any number of channels with arbitrary names. The
specialized RGBA image interface assumes that channels with the names "R", "G",
"B" and "A" mean red, green, blue and alpha. No predefined meaning has been
assigned to any other channels. However, for a few channel names we recommend
the interpretations given in the table below. We expect this table to grow over
time as users employ OpenEXR for data such as shadow maps, motion-vector fields
or images with more than three color channels.
name interpretation
---- --------------
Y luminance, used either alone, for gray-scale images, or
in combination with RY and BY for color images.
RY, BY chroma for luminance/chroma images, see above.
AR, AG, AB red, green and blue alpha/opacity, for colored mattes
(required to composite images of objects like colored
glass correctly).
-------------
A few thoughts on extending this:
- I think "Z" for camera depth should be added to the recommendation list. This
is a de facto standard in many (if not most?) apps already.
- I agree with the other comments that ". " is the best way to
go for all other channels, so that associated channels can be easily matched by
layer.
- Layer names should be mostly unrestricted, but there should probably be a
recommendation for nesting within layer names, for example using dots or
underscores (e.g. layer.sublayer.channel). This could support things like
stereo images each with multiple layers. (For what it's worth, Nuke uses
". " for all channel names, but it doesn't allow dots in the
"" part.)
- For consistency, "" should, if possible, be chosen from the list of
main channels: R/G/B/A/Z/Y/RY/BY. This works for layers that represent colors.
Writers should be strict about using the recommended channel suffixes,
but readers should recognize other reasonable versions, like r/g/b/a,
red/green/blue/alpha, etc..
- What about scalar (single value) layers or layers that represent 3D data like
points/normals/vectors? Some apps currently use x/y/z as channel suffixes, e.g.
N.x, N.y, and N.z for normals. At least one uses nx, ny, and nz with no suffix.
For scalars, most apps I've looked at just output the layer name without a
channel suffix, e.g. "myscalar". It would be nice to have a unified,
deterministic rule to handle all of these cases without requiring complex logic
or lists of legal suffixes. What about using simple numerical indices for all
data (non-color) channels? The layer name should be enough for apps to
interpret the individual channels. Scalars could be the same, but with just a
single index. For example: N.0, N.1, N.2, myscalar.0. This idea could also
handle layers holding a 4-point vector or 16-element matrix at each pixel.
Thoughts? There might be a better approach than numerical indices for data
channels, but I can't think of anything else simple and flexible, at least not
without having a system to declare file-specific channel suffixes in a "channel
suffix declarations" attribute, or something like that. That would be an
interesting idea to explore, but I think we need to be practical. Anything more
than a simple naming convention is unlikely to be incorporated by application
developers any time soon.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
EXR layer naming conventions
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Nuke
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