Blender (software): Difference between revisions
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Blender is an open-source 3D modelling software.<br> | Blender is an open-source 3D modelling software.<br> | ||
It can be used for creating 3D models for games, 2D/3D animations, and even video games.<br> | It can be used for creating 3D models for games, creating 2D/3D animations, and even creating video games.<br> | ||
==Getting Started== | ==Getting Started== |
Revision as of 13:22, 2 June 2021
Blender is an open-source 3D modelling software.
It can be used for creating 3D models for games, creating 2D/3D animations, and even creating video games.
Getting Started
Installation
- Windows
Direct Download
From chocolatey:
choco install blender
- Ubuntu
Blender is available on the Snap store
sudo snap install blender --classic
Modelling
Scripting
Getting Started
Blender supports scripting as an alternative means of interaction.
Most things are available in the bpy
module.
See one of the following resources to get started:
Saving scripts outside
See using external ide and run external scripts.
By default, everything is stored in the .blend
file including your custom scripts.
If you want to store your scripts outside or use another IDE, you will need to have the script inside Blender call the script outside:
import bpy
filepath = bpy.path.abspath("//myscript.py")
exec(compile(open(filepath).read(), filename, 'exec'))
Resources
- Blender 2.8 Beginner Tutorial by Blender Guru
- This is an updated version of the famous donut tutorial
- See https://www.reddit.com/r/BlenderDoughnuts/
- Complete Blender Creator: Learn 3D Modelling for Beginners (Udemy, $20)