09-25-2015, 04:44 AM
Welp, I have NO ideas...
Nothing appears to be encoded in the png file, but i don't have the tools to really analyze png metadata, anyways.
Even so, some websites automatically delete metadata from images... Maybe try uploading the original image to dropbox as well
Those csv's are ...IDK...
I cannot think of anything that seems it would be a valid data format, and advise trying to find the code that is used to read them. Finding other data files is also probably a good idea. These just lack FAR too much data to possibly be everything required for an animation
My only guesses were frame numbers, which were too many consistencies...
rgba /argb, rgb or something similar color values also seemed possible, but still didn't make too much sense...
Or maybe the id's of sprite components, but again...NOTHING SEEMS TO FIT...
This is all I can do/say, so...
Good luck!
Oh, and if you're having issues opening csv, try Excel.
There are probably other free, and not exclusively windows solutions, but idk what they might be.
Possibly the document editors (namely for spreadsheets) in google drive/google docs.
I rarely encounter any form of spread sheet or other data tables, such as csv. That said, I don't research them too much.
Nothing appears to be encoded in the png file, but i don't have the tools to really analyze png metadata, anyways.
Even so, some websites automatically delete metadata from images... Maybe try uploading the original image to dropbox as well
Those csv's are ...IDK...
I cannot think of anything that seems it would be a valid data format, and advise trying to find the code that is used to read them. Finding other data files is also probably a good idea. These just lack FAR too much data to possibly be everything required for an animation
My only guesses were frame numbers, which were too many consistencies...
rgba /argb, rgb or something similar color values also seemed possible, but still didn't make too much sense...
Or maybe the id's of sprite components, but again...NOTHING SEEMS TO FIT...
This is all I can do/say, so...
Good luck!
Oh, and if you're having issues opening csv, try Excel.
There are probably other free, and not exclusively windows solutions, but idk what they might be.
Possibly the document editors (namely for spreadsheets) in google drive/google docs.
I rarely encounter any form of spread sheet or other data tables, such as csv. That said, I don't research them too much.