Jump to content

Rhinoceros 3D

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 145.94.58.41 (talk) at 10:33, 13 August 2010. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rhinoceros
Developer(s)Robert McNeel & Associates
Stable release
4.0 SR8 / April 13, 2010
Operating systemWindows (2000/XP/Vista), Apple OS X in development phase
Type3D computer graphics
LicenseProprietary
Websitehttp://www.rhino3d.com/

Rhinoceros (Rhino) is a stand-alone, commercial NURBS-based 3-D modeling tool, developed by Robert McNeel & Associates. The software is commonly used for industrial design, architecture, marine design, jewelry design, automotive design, CAD / CAM, rapid prototyping, reverse engineering as well as the multimedia and graphic design industries.[1][2]

A model created in Rhino, illustrating free-form NURBS surfaces (Rendered in Flamingo)

Rhino specializes in free-form non-uniform rational B-spline (NURBS) modeling. Plug-ins developed by McNeel include Flamingo (raytrace rendering), Penguin (non-photorealistic rendering), Bongo, and Brazil (advanced rendering). Over 100 third-party plugins are also available. There are also rendering plug-ins for Maxwell Render, V-ray and many other engines. Additional plugins for CAM and CNC milling are available as well, allowing for toolpath generation directly in Rhino.

Like many modeling applications, Rhino also features a scripting language, based on the Visual Basic language, and an SDK that allows reading and writing Rhino files directly. Rhinoceros 3d gained its popularity in architectural design in part because of the Grasshopper plug-in for computational design. Many new avant-garde architects are using parametric modeling tools, like Grasshopper. [3]

Rhino's increasing popularity is based on its diversity, multi-disciplinary functions, low learning-curve, relatively low cost, and its ability to import and export over 30 file formats, which allows Rhino to act as a 'converter' tool between programs in a design workflow.

Development

Rhino was originally distributed as a free, closed-source, open beta. A broad community of users whose input debugged and added features to the program developed as a result.

The development is on-going; version 4.0 Service Release 8 is the most recent[4] with version 5.0 expected in 2010.[5] Development of a Mac OS X version in progress http://www.irhino3d.com; Beta version on request. Rhino owners can download the latest beta versions and participate in the development process. Free trial versions are available for download.

File format

The Rhino file format (.3DM) is useful for the exchange of NURBS geometry. The Rhino developers started the openNURBS Initiative to provide computer graphics software developers the tools to accurately transfer 3-D geometry between applications. An open-source toolkit, openNURBS includes the 3DM file format specification, documentation, C++ source code libraries and .NET 2.0 assemblies to read and write the file format, on supported platforms (Windows, Windows x64, Mac, and Linux). The McNeel Wiki has more current information.

See also

References

  1. ^ Feature Article - 3D Modeling and Rendering for the Rest of Us - 09/04
  2. ^ Rhino 4.0 - Robert McNeel & Associates (Rhino 4.0)
  3. ^ "AEC Magazine - Rhino Grasshopper".
  4. ^ Rhino 4.0 Service Release 8 Now Available
  5. ^ Modeling tools for designers