best way for animations in HISE
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 Hi there, what is the best way to insert an animation in HISE? via timer and filmstrip, Lottie or webview? I have animations with 300 photos. 
 I tried the option from the following post, but only 60 frames run smoothly, everything above that isn't displayed correctly to me.
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 On your road of animating in HISE you'll discover great many things. Here are my findings so far: - rasterised animations with a lot of frames are a RAM hog; the PNGs get uncompressed to raw bitmap data. You can safely estimate the RAM hit to he 4x the total size of your PNG files.
- 128 frames for a small knob is more than enough
- transition and passive animations are best done with a timer. don't go above 60fps. for smaller widgets, 30 is enough
- you'll achieve the smoothest output by drawing vector graphics directly in HISE. that way you can be calculating the exact frametime using the Date.getSystemTimeMs() and applying corrections due to frametime inconsistencies
- large areas with attempted high fps will still choke the message thread and will definitely act differently across systems and DAWs
- webview sure, but your webview is always on top, so you cannot place any HISE widgets underneath it
- if you NEED super smooth animations, your best bet is writing shaders with OpenGL. But that'll only work consistently on Windows
 *the fadeComponent() method is broken on mac and Windows as it occasionally fails and instantly changes the visibility instead of fading
 
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 Well, obviously all of that. Can you tell us the context of the animation? I needed to tweak the HISE source code to remove the timer-limit to get smooth animations. (But don't do this.) 
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 @clevername27 said in best way for animations in HISE: I needed to tweak the HISE source code to remove the timer-limit That might explain the issue you were having when running multiple plugin instances. 
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 @d-healey Especially given Chris's explanation, yes. 
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 @aaronventure what about lottie animations? my animation has 500x500px and ~300 images 
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 @treynterrio said in best way for animations in HISE: 500x500px and ~300 images That will eat up RAM. Lottie might be more efficient but it's a specialised skill set and you'll probably get better results creating vectors directly in HISE. One thing to keep in mind with UIs in general is that once a user has setup the plugin in their project they will likely close the UI and rarely look at it again unless they need to adjust something. 
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 @d-healey yeah that depends on the plugin type. For orchestral projects sure, but synths and drum plugins are far more likely to be interacted with on a regular basis. But I would also try to keep the footprint of the UI as low as possible - it's a bit ridiculous to optimize the streaming of the samples to the last byte and then load in hundreds of MB of filmstrip images. 
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 This post is deleted!
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 @Christoph-Hart unless that's your whole thing (Softube for example) 

