Difference between revisions of "Yaw"
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Erik Krause (talk | contribs) m (linked to image positioning) |
Erik Krause (talk | contribs) m (same look as "pitch") |
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− | {{Glossary|Panning angle, left-and-right. See also [[Pitch]] and [[Roll]].}}'''Yaw''' is the horizontal rotation angle of the camera and part of the panotools [[Image positioning model]]. | + | {{Glossary|Panning angle, left-and-right. See also [[Pitch]] and [[Roll]].|1}} |
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+ | '''Yaw''' is the horizontal rotation angle of the camera and part of the panotools [[Image positioning model]]. | ||
If shooting a panorama you rotate the camera horizontally (around a vertical axis, TrY). You will treat one image as an [[anchor image]] which is considered to have yaw = 0. The angle you rotated your camera relatively to this image is its Yaw value. | If shooting a panorama you rotate the camera horizontally (around a vertical axis, TrY). You will treat one image as an [[anchor image]] which is considered to have yaw = 0. The angle you rotated your camera relatively to this image is its Yaw value. |
Revision as of 00:16, 14 January 2012
Panning angle, left-and-right. See also Pitch and Roll.
Yaw is the horizontal rotation angle of the camera and part of the panotools Image positioning model.
If shooting a panorama you rotate the camera horizontally (around a vertical axis, TrY). You will treat one image as an anchor image which is considered to have yaw = 0. The angle you rotated your camera relatively to this image is its Yaw value.
For a typical 360° panorama the yaw difference from one image to the next can be estimated by dividing 360 by the number of images.