DCS Reference/Dynamic Weather: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
mNo edit summary |
m (→) |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
You need these because the basic flow of weather creation is one of: | You need these because the basic flow of weather creation is one of: | ||
* Creating a dummy mission where you place trigger zones as a first approximation of the pressure fronts. | * Creating a dummy mission where you place trigger zones as a first approximation of the pressure fronts. | ||
* Extracting the mission Lua file from the dummy .miz. | * Extracting the “mission” Lua file from the dummy .miz. | ||
* Copying the trigger zone coordinates (and possibly sizes) to a weather | * Opening the mission file in your text editor of choice. | ||
* | * Copying the trigger zone coordinates (and possibly sizes) to a weather parameters. | ||
* | * Re-inserting the edited mission file into the .miz. | ||
* Reload the mission. | |||
* Preview, hate actual result. | * Preview, hate actual result. | ||
* Start over. | * Start over. |
Revision as of 16:40, 25 August 2019
Tools and workflow
To create good, deliberate dynamic weather systems, you absolutely need the following:
- A good zip manipulation tool — anything that lets you seamlessly browse, extract, and add to the file structure of a zip file.
- Notepad++ or a similarly competent text editor. No, not notepad.
- A conversion tool for angles and distances (Windows 10's built-in calculator does this well enough).
- Patience.
- Patience.
- Patience.
You need these because the basic flow of weather creation is one of:
- Creating a dummy mission where you place trigger zones as a first approximation of the pressure fronts.
- Extracting the “mission” Lua file from the dummy .miz.
- Opening the mission file in your text editor of choice.
- Copying the trigger zone coordinates (and possibly sizes) to a weather parameters.
- Re-inserting the edited mission file into the .miz.
- Reload the mission.
- Preview, hate actual result.
- Start over.