Wings 3D

Wings 3D

Simple editing in Wings 3D
Developer(s) Björn Gustavsson, Dan Gudmundsson, and others
Stable release 1.5.4 / 6 August 2015 (2015-08-06)
Preview release 2.0.3 / 8 April 2016 (2016-04-08)
Written in Erlang
Operating system Cross-platform
Type 3D computer graphics
License BSD license
Website www.wings3d.com

Wings 3D is a free and open source subdivision modeler inspired by Nendo and Mirai from Izware. Wings 3D is named after the winged-edge data structure it uses internally to store coordinate and adjacency data, and is commonly referred to by its users simply as Wings.

Wings 3D is available for most platforms, including Windows, Linux and Mac OS X, using the Erlang environment.

Overview

Wings 3D can be used to model and texture low to mid-range polygon models. Wings does not support animations and has only basic OpenGL rendering facilities, although it can export to external rendering software such as POV-Ray and YafRay. Wings is often used in combination with other software, whereby models made in Wings are exported to applications more specialized in rendering and animation such as Blender.

Interface

Wings 3D uses context-sensitive menus as opposed to a highly graphical, icon-oriented interface. Modeling is done using the mouse and keyboard to select and modify different aspects of a model's geometry in four different selection modes: Vertex, Edge, Face and Body. Because of Wings's context-sensitive design, each selection mode has its own set of mesh tools. Many of these tools offer both basic and advanced uses, allowing users to specify vectors and points to change how a tool will affect their model. Wings also allows users to add textures and materials to models, and has built-in AutoUV mapping facilities.

Features

Supported file formats

Wings loads and saves models in its own format (.wings), but also supports several standard 3D formats.

Import

Export

See also

References

    External links

    Wikibooks has a book on the topic of: Wings 3D
    1. "Wings 3D Development". Wings 3D. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, May 07, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.