3-D
3-D or 3D abbreviates "three dimensional" and is often related to a stereoscopic display that exploits binocular vision.Three dimensional objects have volume and may be measured and described using three orthogonal directions.
In animation, 3-D sometimes refers to shaded, modeled shapes that have an apearance of depth, as opposed to the "flat" rendering of conventional cell animation. An example of this was seen in a particular episode of the animated video cartoon The Simpsons, where Homer escapes his flatland world and enters a universe of higher dimensionality. The figure renderings and visual effects in this episode were accomplished using 3D computer graphics.
See the following articles:
- For 3-D image information see stereogram
- For 3-D image production and display information see stereoscopy
- For 3-D computer graphics and related software see 3D computer graphics.
- For 3-D movie history see 3-D film.
- For 3-D mathematical aspects see dimension.
This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page.