# HG changeset patch # User Jason Maltzen # Date 2015-11-20 08:15:52 # Node ID 361f8fa0f2d5b3aa3d442e27a1b8125a4e42af3f # Parent 5b5f2093c6c5daf5b519af06a98aa9ec9dc99027 README.md edited online with Bitbucket diff --git a/README.md b/README.md --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -41,10 +41,12 @@ Add two ingredients to your paint bench. Occasionally, you will see a warning dialog that informs you that a "Reaction clipped." That means that one or more of the color components moved outside of the testable range. This makes it impossible to calculate the reaction from these two ingredients. -You can solve this by doing a three-way test. To do this, select a third ingredient that has known reaction values with the two ingredients you are attempting to pair, and which will adjust the color component that was clipping, so that it is no longer doing so. Combine that with your two ingredients. In Desert Paint Lab, you'll want to select a known pairing in the first two boxes, and the other ingredient in the third. Desert Paint Lab can then do all the math to figure out the mystery reaction. +You can solve this by doing a three-way test. To do this, select a third ingredient that has known reaction values with the two ingredients you are attempting to pair, and which will adjust the color component that was clipping, so that it is no longer doing so. Use this additional ingredient as the first ingredient in the new test and combine that with your two ingredients that clipped. In Desert Paint Lab, you'll want to select a known pairing in the first two boxes, and the other ingredient in the third. Desert Paint Lab can then do all the math to figure out the mystery reaction. In many cases, it may be easiest to go back and do these three-way tests after you have finished all of your other testing. +Example: Toad Skin and Saltpeter clipped with red too low. You know that Red Sand (high red) and Toad Skin don't react, so attempt a reaction using Red Sand, Toad Skin, and Saltpeter. + ### Finishing Up When you're done testing your reactions, you can either use the built-in Pigment Lab simulator (`Window > Run Simulator`) to experiment with recipes, without dipping into your precious ingredient stocks. Alternatively, you can export your reactions in PracticalPaint format. @@ -69,4 +71,4 @@ A: That's in the works, along with a Win ## For Developers -This application was developed using [MonoDevelop](http://www.monodevelop.com/), using the [Stetic GTK UI designer](http://www.monodevelop.com/documentation/stetic-gui-designer/). +This application was developed using [MonoDevelop](http://www.monodevelop.com/), using the [Stetic GTK UI designer](http://www.monodevelop.com/documentation/stetic-gui-designer/). \ No newline at end of file