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RUNNING TWO ANIMATIONS AT ONCE
Once in a while you may add someone to your HUD and they seem to sometimes dance strangely with jerky movements on some dances or dancing when no one else is dancing. What usually has happened is that the person was dancing on a Dance Ball and then accepted your invitation to dance. Two animations are affecting the person at the same time. You can fix this by asking the person to stop the Dance Ball dance.
You can intentionally run two or more animations at once in a number of ways. Here are some ways to do it:
- Use two dance HUDS at one time
- Use a dance HUD and a Dance Ball dance at one time
- Use your HUD then open a dance from inventory and run it
- Run two dances from inventory at one time.
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DETERMINING ANIMATION PRIORITY LEVELS
You can view the UUID and priority of currently playing animations by selecting Advanced - Character - Animation Info from the menu, or Develop - Avatar - Animation Info on Viewer 2. This gives you information about every animation that your avatar is running. The dance you may be running is listed with the UUID number. If you run two animations at once, you see two UUID numbers.
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DANCE PRIORITIES IN ACTION
Get these three animations from the DANCE QUEENS Freebie Box:
90Whip - a Priority 4 head movement only
c-walk - a priority 4 dance
Boogie - a priority 2 dance
Put these animations to your inventory and let's see priorities in action. Double click all three animations from inventory to get three Animation windows each with a 'Play in World' button and a 'Play Locally' button. When you click the 'Play in World' button the animation starts.
First, let's look at how priorities work. Make sure all the dances are stopped. Start the boogie dance only. Hey, you are dancing an old favorite from pre-MOCAP days. Now, without stopping boogie, start c-walk. You stop boogie and dance c-walk. You can see from your information about priorities that two animations are running at one time, but you are dancing only one. This is because c-walk is priority 4 and boogie is priority 2. Your avatar dances the higher priority dance. OK, stop both dances. For you doubters, let's reverse the order. Start c-walk first, then start boogie. Again you dance only c-walk. Although boogie started after c-walk, you are running both animations and the higher priority is what you dance. Again, stop both animations.
Next, start 90Whip. Your head shakes in a no movement. Now, start c-walk and again you dance the nice freebie c-walk dance. Both 90Whip and c-walk are priority 4 animations, so when you run both at the same time, the last one started has priority. Stop both animations. Now, let's look at the reverse. Start c-walk to dance. Then, start 90Whip. Hey, you are dancing c-walk with your head shaking a strong NO. You are dancing two animations at once.
This happens because an animator can make an animation affect all 23 joints in an avatar
or just some of them. If the animator chooses to affect only some joints, only those joints have the priority set for the animation. The others basically have no priority. When I made 90Whip this is what I did. I made the head movement a priority 4 and the other joints not affected. When the creator of c-walk (Live Gears) made c-walk, he chose to make all 23 joints a priority 4.
When multiple animations, for the same joint, are played at the same time the animation with the highest priority will be effective. If there are multiple animations with the highest priority, then the animation which was started most recently will be effective. In other words, when a new animation is started, each joint is looked at for the priority. If you are running a 4 priority dance like c-walk then start an anim like 90Whip with only the head at priority 4, all the joints except the head dance c-walk and the head uses 90Whip.
xxxx
Nottoo