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There's also an incredibly confusing scene near the end of movie where some of the musicians reunite and play together in the studio. I feel spending so much time talking about him was a mistake and the focus should have been more on the musicians. He comes across as a sleazy industry guy who blatantly lied to market his record and who's only redeeming quality is that he inexplicably knows a lot of famous people (including Gene Simmons who for some reason was chosen to narrate the film). His story is terribly uninteresting and apart from knowing which musicians to hire, the film seems to show that he had little impact on the record. Frankly I feel like less time should have been spent talking about the producer of the album Michael Viner. I found the interviews with Grandmaster Caz and Questlove to be the best part of the film, and I enjoyed seeing the different backgrounds of the studio musicians involved in the making of the album. Despite not being entirely what I expected, there was still some very interesting material in the film. If you know this before viewing, you may have a better experience than I did. This is definitely a movie about the people behind and the making to the The Incredible Bongo Band album with only about 25-35% of the film spent interviewing early hip hop pioneers. This can be done in the Bongo Animation Manager by right clicking the object and unchecking 3D Tweening Enabled.I'll have to preface this review by saying that when I chose to watch this documentary, I thought it would focus more on early hip hop and less on The Incredible Bongo Band. Controlling position with expressions or using Position parameters for arguments is only possible when 3-dimensional tweening is disabled. With 3D-tweening disabled the coordinates are treated separately as numbers. This means that all the 3 coordinates x, y and z aare tweened together.
![opeartion bongo 2 opeartion bongo 2](https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/XiYAAOSwq1JZL~v6/s-l300.jpg)
The letter t has a special meaning in Expressions. You can also use commas to separate the ticks:
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For example, multiplication has a higher precedence than addition so 3+2*2 evaluates to 7 but with parentheses around the addition (3+2)*2 it evaluates to 10.Ī parameter can have multiple expressions by specifying the tick range they are valid in. Parentheses can be used to change the precedence of operators and functions. The argument of the trigonometric functions is in radians, not in degrees. Sqrt(3+#Hinge.WorldAngle#^2) atan(#ObjectA.PositionY#+cos(#Rod.ObjectAngle#*Pi/180)). The argument can be any objects’ transform parameters or properties (as described above) and/or numbers and mathematical operations: e.g. The function’s argument must always be in parentheses. Supported trigonometric functions are sine, cosine, tangent, arcsine, arccosine, arctangent. Supported mathematical functions are square root, floor, ceiling, absolute value and natural logarithm. They take in an argument and return a value. For example the value for scaling along X-axis for an animated object named CoffeeCup has the form #CoffeeCup.Scale X#.įunctions can be applied. The name of the object and the property or transform parameter, separated by a dot, is typed inside number signs.
![opeartion bongo 2 opeartion bongo 2](https://img.yumpu.com/11802716/1/500x640/mf06-10-leg2-rpt-noaa.jpg)
Valid expressions constructed of numbers and operators are for example 54+7 and 7^2+5^2.Īnimated objects’ transform parameters and properties can be used as components in an Expression. They are operators as they combine two values into one. Expressions in BongoĮxpressions in Bongo support basic operations: addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. Rules specify which symbols together form a valid expression. Operators and functions define how numbers together with parameters evaluate to a numeric result. It consists of numbers, parameters, operators and functions. An expression describes how a set of values defines a new value.