thank you all for your input. I am aware that this technique is several years old, but I am somewhat new to this and found the tutorial on this forum. But thanks for the input all the same!
thank you all for your input. I am aware that this technique is several years old, but I am somewhat new to this and found the tutorial on this forum. But thanks for the input all the same!
Hi "aerduin"
keep in mind that in the last 8 YEARS a lot of things have changed in Gimp
gtk is on the way out
and GEGL is now used
script foo is out and python is in
to put things in a bit of a different prospective
in people terms 20 years is one generation
in software 5 years is one generation
8 years would be 1.6 Generations
a young grand parent or a OLD aunt or uncle
-- a baby boomer still
this really is a printing on paper issue3. i am still learning about image size, pixels per inch, grid sizing, grid spacing, etc., and how to get things to line up properly... any tips on how to understand or make sense of all that? like.. explain it like im 5?
raster images have ZERO need to know anything about pixels per inch
only your paper printer needs to know that ( and is set in the printer GUI )
now Maps that are Geo referenced these need to know the earth ( or planet) radii in meters and the pixels per Degree or Meters per pixel
but for the above dungeon map , that really is not needed .
just set a scale in your head like 100 pixels = 1 M
with 8 years difference and many versions of Gimp ( the current is 2.8.16 )2. also yours looks a little more beveled than mine - do i just change the stroke level or something?
back in 2008 it was gimp 2.4
you will have to hack the script
the new API used in the current gimp is very different
900x900 px is TINY , also with the PRINTING ONLY setting of 100 ppiI set my image to 900x900 px. with resolution of 100x100 ppi
this is a 9 inch image if printed on a 8.5x 11 inch paper
BUT the DEFAULT printer resolution is 300 ppi
with 600 ppi as a hi quality print
and 150 ppi as a DRAFT print
now back in 1999 to 2003 that was big ( you had only 32 meg to 512 meg of ram
even in 2008 512meg to 1 gig was average
but today
it is rather hard to find a computer with LESS than 4 Gig of ram
a 4096x4096 pixel image is still a bit small with 4 to 8 + gig of ram
Last edited by johnvanvliet; 05-10-2016 at 03:36 PM.
--- 90 seconds to Midnight ---
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--- Penguin power!!! ---
Having recently updated to Gimp 2.10.6, I downloaded and tried running this script without success. It partially runs, but then stops, and I get the following error message:
Error while executing script_fu_dungeon_map_maker:
Error: ( : 1) eval: unbound variable: OVERLAY-MODE
My understanding is that many script fu batch processes, and some script fu scripts simply won't run in Gimp 2.10. Any suggestions on how to fix this so I can go back to making awesome dungeon maps with a minimum of hassle? Is it possible to install and run two versions of GIMP on the same machine? Failing that, is there an old-school algorithm that walks through the individual steps/filters to be run?
Last edited by Coriolis; 12-27-2018 at 01:34 PM.
Coreiolis,
I ported this script (mostly) to python so that it works very well with Gimp 2.10.18 (do not use 2.10.14)
You can find it here.
dungeon_map_maker.zip
I see in an above where you removed the distortion. If I recall correctly, Rob had put that in at a request from Post 43 in this thread. It allows you to draw fairly quick strait rooms using rectangles and end up with jagged results like ROUGHLY worked walls. If you are still around and would update this back in, I would appreciate it.
My Finished Maps
Works in Progress(or abandoned tests)
My Tutorials:
Explanation of Layer Masks in GIMP
How to create ISO Mountains in GIMP/PS using the Smudge tool
----------------------------------------------------------
Unless otherwise stated by me in the post, all work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.
Ok, I put together a workaround for folks who still want to use this and other older script-fu creations:
1. Download a portable build of Gimp 2.8. You can find one here: https://www.partha.com/
2. Load this and any other script-fu stuff you want into the scripts folder of the portable gimp.
3. Open the floor plan black and white image with portable GIMP and run the dungeon script.
I'm playing with this for the first time in a few years again, and it looks as awesome as ever.
Hey everyone,
I case you were struggling to get the last version of this script up and running with GIMP 2.10, I went and ported it to Python and got most of the functionality where we want it.
I kept the versioning for clarity.
# 1.7 - original port. Kept same version number for clarity
# No Batch Mode
# HEX Grid Removed as I couldn't get the hex script to work with
# GIMP 2.10
# Combined the Stroke Style and Bevel Stroke items in an attempt
# to shorten the input dialog somewhat
# Remove the Distortion settings. Couldn't figure out what they
# were doing anyway
All credit goes to Rob A for the techniques and the logic this script is based on.
BTW, the python call to the bump map function in GIMP 2.10.14 doesn't work. I had to upgrade to the latest [2. 10. 18] to get it working.
Regards and happy creating.
dungeon_map_maker_python.zip
Last edited by Hervis; 04-03-2020 at 01:25 PM.
Here is version 1.8 of this script. 1.7 had an issue with the blur on the wall shadow and wall bevel
dungeon_map_maker.zip