![]() Technically, these new components are implemented as slave components of the Result component, so they cannot be created using the Components bar. This allows you to create effects and textures that depend on pixel coordinates. To allow pixel-based effects, Filter Forge 5.0 introduces new components that output exact integer coordinates of a pixel that is currently being rendered, and the pixel dimensions (width and height) of the image that is currently being rendered. Pixel Grid.ffxml Pixel-Based Slave Components ![]() As an added benefit, anti-aliasing doesn’t have any effect on these lines so they always remain sharp and precise: Here's an example of a pixel-based effect: a grid where the distance between the grid lines is always a constant number of pixels and the lines are always one-pixel thick, regardless of the resolution of the image or value of the global Size slider. ![]() ![]() This is a very useful feature, but it made impossible a whole class of effects: those that depend on exact pixel coordinates. Regardless of the pixel resolution of the target image, the rendered filters would always look the same. Since its release, Filter Forge has always been very proud of its resolution independence.
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