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Eflouret
Posts: 19
Filters: 2
Hello,

I've just published in my blog an guide about programming Photoshop plugins.

In this article, Filter Forge is mentioned as a developing tool.

This is the link:
http://www.photoshoproadmap.com/Photo...p-plugins/

I'm trying to keep this guide as accurate as I can. Any suggestions or corrections will be appreciated.

Thanks!

Enrique
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Vladimir Golovin
Administrator
Posts: 3446
Filters: 55
Enrique -- thanks for the great article! I'll comment on some of the points:

Quote
Filter Forge - This is a newcomer and it is simply amazing.


Absolutely, positively true! smile:dgrin:

Quote
The best is that you don’t need to know how to program at all. Filter Forge is a visual developing tool based on pre-build components that you have to connect forming a path that leads to a specific result which can be a texture or a image filter.


I'd add that for a plugin programmer Filter Forge can be an excellent prototyping tool -- it allows to focus on the algorithm and eliminates the need to code all the necessities first (rendering code etc etc). Plus, it already has many well-known image processing algorithms implemented as components.

Quote
There is one drawback: You can’t create standalone plugins. Instead you create image filters or texture generators that run inside Filter Forge. But the results are so stunning that you won’t care about that.


One of the reasons why Filter Forge doesn't create standlone 8bf filters is that it uses HDRI images licensed from Sachform (http://www.sachform.de) for lighting, and our agreement with them does not permit embedding these HDRIs into stand-alone filters. Here's the link to an earlier discussion on this topic:

http://www.retouchpro.com/forums/soft...rge-2.html

Quote
The program is in a Beta phase, but you wouldn’t tell that. It is more stable than the vast majority of release version applications.


Yes, the number of bugs we found during the public beta was surprisingly low -- especially for a project that has over 210 000 lines of code.

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PROS: Too many to mention here. A true winner.


Hehe -- fully agree with this smile:D

Quote
CONS: None that cannot be fixed in the release version. Perhaps it is slow on some complex filters.


Regarding the speed -- yes, Filter Forge can be slow on some filters. On the other side, it scales very well with multi-core processors -- we've seen speedups over 96% per core. Dual-cores are already mainstream, quad cores are coming next year, and Intel promises 16 (or was that 32?) cores by 2010, so you can be certain that Filter Forge will get faster every time you upgrade your PC smile:)

Thank you again for the excellent article!
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Vladimir Golovin
Administrator
Posts: 3446
Filters: 55
Quote
Starting from Version 7 of Adobe Photoshop SDK, you can’t create plugins for applications other than Adobe Photoshop. I’m not sure if it is a legal restriction or a technical restriction. You should check with Adobe this situation in case you are planning to create a commercial plugin.


We discussed this recently:
http://www.filterforge.com/forum/read...=9&TID=951
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Vladimir Golovin
Administrator
Posts: 3446
Filters: 55
Quote
» Inno Setup - A great windows installer tool.


I second that -- Filter Forge uses Inno Setup as well.
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Eflouret
Posts: 19
Filters: 2
Thanks Vladimir for your input!
I've just updated the article with some of your interesting comments.

Enrique
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