Hi all, not sure if this is the right place to be posting this but I'm looking for a pre-built version of WMIT. I would go and compile it myself but I don't really want to have to go and install x-code :/ .
I really just want the base VTOL model in any other format than .pie so i'd accept that as a alternative. A more permanent solution to the .pie problem would be if someone made a small application in something universal like java/python to switch models between .pie files and .3ds/other formats.
greenmonkey wrote:Hi all, not sure if this is the right place to be posting this but I'm looking for a pre-built version of WMIT. I would go and compile it myself but I don't really want to have to go and install x-code :/ .
I really just want the base VTOL model in any other format than .pie so i'd accept that as a alternative. A more permanent solution to the .pie problem would be if someone made a small application in something universal like java/python to switch models between .pie files and .3ds/other formats.
edit: I'm kinda having trouble finding the VTOL model in the source though, I know it should be under /data/base/components/prop/ or /data/base/components/bodies but I can't find the exact model...
Are there any docs on what WMIT does, how to use it, etc?
"Dedicated to discovering Warzone artefacts, and sharing them freely for the benefit of the community."
-- https://warzone.atlassian.net/wiki/display/GO
Are there any docs on what WMIT does, how to use it, etc?
I havn't seen any but I might be wrong. however it seems very simple to use, just drag to rotate the model and scrool to zoom in/out and saving the model in different formats with ctrl+s.
Are there any docs on what WMIT does, how to use it, etc?
I am not aware of any formal docs but the main purpose of WMIT is to act as a finisher, so you can take a model made elsewhere and add warzone specific features, scale and rotate it so that it will fit in the game and save it into the .pie format.
It is not finished yet though and I do not not use it enough to be able to tell you how many and to what degree it meets those goals.