P3D Lod Frames
Frames are Animation times. They are similar in nature to RTM files.
Only specific models have them, and, they are found only in certain Lod Types of that P3D.
- In MLOD the structure is contained in the #Animation# TaggSet of the lod
- In ODOL the structure is contained in the Lod itself.
Animated Frames are NOT to be confused with ODOLV4x (ARMA) Animation structures. Animation structures are used with skeletons.
Very few models in the official addons for arma1 and arma2 have these frames. Only RacekT.p3d eg
ODOLFrames
struct { ulong nFrames; LodFrame LodFrames[nFrames]; }
LodFrame
struct { float FrameTime; ulong nBones; XYZTriplet BonePositions[nBones]; }
MLODTaggFrame
struct { ulong nBytes; float FrameTime; XYZTriplet BonePositions[nBones]; }
- MLOD: nBones = (nBytes-sizeof(float)) / sizeof(XYZTriplet)
- MLOD: nFrames = as many #Animation#s as are in the TaggStruct
For any lod that has them, there are a contiguous series of Frames making up the total. Each one has an identical number of bones (triplets).
For ODOL7 and both types of MLOD, the nLodPoints in the VertexTable is also the same as the nBones.
For Arma, there are no Vertexes in this lod, hence no LodPoints
NB: There will be 1 'Animation' chunk per Frame. This can result in VERY large p3dm mlod models. A model with three thousand (3,000) odd frames (eg. ActsPercMstpSnonWnonDnon_DancingStefan.rtm) will be approx. 200 Megabytes on disk.
This type of data format for Animation is commonly known as a 'Point Cache' or an 'MDD Point Cache'. It describes the exact location of every point in the LOD in 3D 'Model Space' for each frame.