Admittedly, I've been struggling with the seeming vacuum of JavaFX 3D resources, and the lack of thoroughness in the few resources that I've found. However, I've come up with a satisfying guess.
The transformations are split and nested so that they are performed in order.
Specifically, each Node
(and every class you work with is a subclass of Node
) has its own list of transformations. The Group
class is a special subclass of Node
designed, as far as I can tell, to be a general container of other JavaFX Node
s. The Oracle documentation for Group
says:
Any transform, effect, or state applied to a Group will be applied to all children of that group.
As a result, an instance of XForm
(a Group
subclass that bundles all of the possible transformations together) inside of another XForm
will apply the outer transformation and then the inner transformation to anything on the inside.
In this case the transformations aren't named very well, but cameraXform
is used exclusively for x/y rotation, cameraXform2
is used exclusively for x/y translation, and cameraXform3
is used exclusively for z rotation*. The order (and by extension, the nesting) is important because rotations are performed about the axes; translating first will cause the scene to react in unintuitive ways to the user's input.
*The z rotation (which is set exactly once in the sample app), as far as I can tell, is used so that the y axis is pointed up instead of the JavaFX default of y down. This allows the shapes to be added in the commonly accepted x/y/z axis orientation, while allowing them to be rendered in JavaFX's own orientation.