marzipano wrote:The full screen one (2.1) is the lowest it goes and that is what I am aiming for
I can carry on using 2.1 to get round the issue but is there a way of using 2.2 to achieve this ?
marzipano wrote:I think you are seeing the top of the one below
my site only has the "correct" zoom examples at present but I could send you more info if required
Martin
marzipano wrote:The ones that have caused the issue are partials
I think the 360 ones are OK
mediavets wrote:marzipano wrote:The ones that have caused the issue are partials
I think the 360 ones are OK
Are the pano FOV and vertical offset values correct for the partial panos?
marzipano wrote:mediavets wrote:marzipano wrote:The ones that have caused the issue are partials
I think the 360 ones are OK
Are the pano FOV and vertical offset values correct for the partial panos?
As far as I know (and see the 2 screenshots earlier) but if you want to see for yourself here is the actual partial pano :
https://www.dropbox.com/s/isx2kspgpz61dp6/Valdez.jpg?dl=0
marzipano wrote:Thanks for that analysis
I think that answers my query and I will use that approach in the future
However, as I said earlier (and the reason for my posting) Panotour 2.1 does actually handle these cylindrical projections as I like whereas 2.2 does not. So as an alternative to re-rendering existing panos as spherical it is equally viable to just use Panotour 2.1 on these
Martin
mediavets wrote:marzipano wrote:Thanks for that analysis
I think that answers my query and I will use that approach in the future
However, as I said earlier (and the reason for my posting) Panotour 2.1 does actually handle these cylindrical projections as I like whereas 2.2 does not. So as an alternative to re-rendering existing panos as spherical it is equally viable to just use Panotour 2.1 on these
Martin
Just as an experiment I have used your image and replicated your original settings - output planar projection, etc - in both PTP 2.1.3 and PTP 2.2 and the end result is identical, with no sign of the black bars you reported.
marzipano wrote:mediavets wrote:marzipano wrote:Thanks for that analysis
I think that answers my query and I will use that approach in the future
However, as I said earlier (and the reason for my posting) Panotour 2.1 does actually handle these cylindrical projections as I like whereas 2.2 does not. So as an alternative to re-rendering existing panos as spherical it is equally viable to just use Panotour 2.1 on these
Martin
Just as an experiment I have used your image and replicated your original settings - output planar projection, etc - in both PTP 2.1.3 and PTP 2.2 and the end result is identical, with no sign of the black bars you reported.
That's odd - All I can think of is that I use PT 2.1 and 2.2 not PTP
could they behave differently ?
mediavets wrote:marzipano wrote:Thanks for that analysis
I think that answers my query and I will use that approach in the future
However, as I said earlier (and the reason for my posting) Panotour 2.1 does actually handle these cylindrical projections as I like whereas 2.2 does not. So as an alternative to re-rendering existing panos as spherical it is equally viable to just use Panotour 2.1 on these
Martin
Just as an experiment I have used your image and replicated your original settings - output planar projection, etc - in both PTP 2.1.3 and PTP 2.2 and the end result is identical, with no sign of the black bars you reported.
marzipano wrote:mediavets wrote:marzipano wrote:Thanks for that analysis
I think that answers my query and I will use that approach in the future
However, as I said earlier (and the reason for my posting) Panotour 2.1 does actually handle these cylindrical projections as I like whereas 2.2 does not. So as an alternative to re-rendering existing panos as spherical it is equally viable to just use Panotour 2.1 on these
Martin
Just as an experiment I have used your image and replicated your original settings - output planar projection, etc - in both PTP 2.1.3 and PTP 2.2 and the end result is identical, with no sign of the black bars you reported.
I have to say I'm confused about this. We must be testing these versions differently somehow
I just downloaded trial versions of PT Pro 2.1 and 2.2 and the same difference in zoom functionality occurred with these two. PTP2.1 behaved nicely (for me !) and PTP2.2 exhibited the big black bars
Just to reiterate - I am using the + and - control bar functions to zoom in and out to the maximum / minimum extents possible to generate the zoom differences. Using the mouse wheel has the same effect too
best
Martin
marzipano wrote:Aha - thanks for all your work on that
Personally I prefer the 2.1 functionality where the zoom is limited by screen dimensions but I can see the full pano view may be attractive to others
I think I will just use 2.1 for my existing panos as I am happy with them being cylindrical projections but then try and remember to use spherical projections on new ones
Martin
mediavets wrote:marzipano wrote:Aha - thanks for all your work on that
Personally I prefer the 2.1 functionality where the zoom is limited by screen dimensions but I can see the full pano view may be attractive to others
It is logical behavior for planar images that are typically intended to be seen in their entirety.I think I will just use 2.1 for my existing panos as I am happy with them being cylindrical projections but then try and remember to use spherical projections on new ones
Martin
You can use your cylindrical projection rendered images in PTP 2.2 if you set the Output projection to spherical - then it behaves in almost teh same way as you observe with planar output projection in PTP 2.1.3.
The downside of sticking with 2.1.3 is that you don't benefit from various enhancements and bug fixes made since that release.
marzipano wrote:I started using Panotour 2.2. when it came out (not the Pro version) but have hit a snag
I can't get the minimum zoom working as I like and as it works in 2.1
On 2.1 the minimum zoom by default filled the screen exactly whereas in 2.2 it is possible to display a narrow strip of the whole width of the pano across the screen with big black borders above and below
I can't see the setting to get it back to just filling the whole screen and not smaller
The screen prints below might explain better !
bdd wrote:marzipano wrote:I started using Panotour 2.2. when it came out (not the Pro version) but have hit a snag
I can't get the minimum zoom working as I like and as it works in 2.1
On 2.1 the minimum zoom by default filled the screen exactly whereas in 2.2 it is possible to display a narrow strip of the whole width of the pano across the screen with big black borders above and below
I can't see the setting to get it back to just filling the whole screen and not smaller
The screen prints below might explain better !
This change of behaviour is due to a "fix".
Most users using planar projection complained about the fact they were not able to zoom out enough to see the whole panorama.
If many users like you prefer the first behaviour, then we may add a tunable to choose which one to apply in the tour.
Gérald
mediavets wrote:bdd wrote:marzipano wrote:I started using Panotour 2.2. when it came out (not the Pro version) but have hit a snag
I can't get the minimum zoom working as I like and as it works in 2.1
On 2.1 the minimum zoom by default filled the screen exactly whereas in 2.2 it is possible to display a narrow strip of the whole width of the pano across the screen with big black borders above and below
I can't see the setting to get it back to just filling the whole screen and not smaller
The screen prints below might explain better !
This change of behaviour is due to a "fix".
Most users using planar projection complained about the fact they were not able to zoom out enough to see the whole panorama.
If many users like you prefer the first behaviour, then we may add a tunable to choose which one to apply in the tour.
Gérald
I think the 'fix' behaviour is appropriate for 'proper' planar images.
In his case he was actually using a cylindrical projection stitched pano, but assigning an output projection of planar.
It would have been better to render with a spherical projection and use a spherical output projection to achieve the result he desired.
It even worked quite well using a spherical output projection with his cylindrical projection input image.
...........
If you were to create this option it would really need to be per-pano rather than tour-wide to be useful I think.
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