AC3D - 3D Application

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is a 3D design program which has been available since 1994. The software is used by designers for modeling 3D graphics for games and simulations - most notably it is used by the scenery creators at Laminar Research on the X-Plane (simulator)

Initially developed on the , the code was then ported to Silicon Graphics workstations which used the GL graphics library. At that time, the user interface was implemented using X-Window/Motif. A Linux port was released onto the internet in 1994 (the GL graphics were replaced with OpenGL). A windows port followed when the X-Window interface was dropped in favor of the portable Tcl/Tk scripting library.

In 2002 Limited purchased the full intellectual property rights to and continues to develop and market the software. They decided to keep the name for the software.

In 2005, a Mac OS X version of was released.

Modeling

’s modeling is polygon/subdivision-surface based. Unlike some other 3D software, refers to ’surfaces’ rather than ‘polygons’. An surface can be a polygon, polygon-outline or line. An object is a collection of surfaces.

3D files

can load and save a wide variety of 3D file formats but primarily uses its own .ac file format which is ascii.

is the first 3rd party vendor to offer officially sanctioned support for the Second Life sculpted prim format; exporters for other 3D software packages exist, but are solely user-supported.

Scripting and plugins

Extra functionality can be added to via Tcl/Tk scripts and/or C/C++ dynamic libraries (plugins). A software development kit (SDK) is available to licensed users.

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