I can wrap my head around using a 2d perlin noise function to generate the height value but I don't understand why a 3d perlin noise function would be used. In Notch's blog, http://notch.tumblr.com/post/3746989361/terrain-generation-part-1, he mentioned using a 3d perlin noise function for the terrain generation on Minecraft. Does anyone know how that would be done and why it would be useful? If you are passing x,y, and z values doesn't that imply you already have the height?
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Well, Minecraft is about Mines. So, what Notch tried to solve was: "How do I get holes / overhangs in my world?" Since 2D perlin noise generates nice/smooth looking hills, 3d perlin noise will generate nice/smooth hills and nice holes in your 3D voxel grid. An implementation can be found here (while that is an N-dimensional solution). In other use-cases the Z component of a 3D perlin noise is set to the current time. This way you will get a smooth transition between different 2d perlin noises and that can be used as groundwork for fluid textures. |
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The article says exactly why he used 3D noise:
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You should look at the Minetest source, specifically at the files noise.cpp and map.cpp. |
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