script-blender-automation
À propos
Cette compétence génère des scripts Python pour Blender en utilisant l'API bpy afin d'automatiser la modélisation procédurale, l'animation et les tâches de traitement par lots. Elle est conçue pour automatiser les flux de travail répétitifs, créer des extensions personnalisées et intégrer Blender à des pipelines de données externes. Utilisez-la pour des automatisations avancées, comme générer de la géométrie à partir d'algorithmes ou configurer le rendu par lots avec des variations de paramètres.
Installation rapide
Claude Code
Recommandénpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/script-blender-automationCopiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence
Documentation
Script Blender Automation
Advanced Blender Python scripting for procedural modeling, keyframe animation, batch ops, operator registration, add-on development. Covers complex geometry generation, automated workflows, integration with external data sources.
When Use
- Automating repetitive modeling or animation tasks
- Generating procedural geometry from algorithms or data
- Creating batch rendering pipelines with parameter variations
- Building custom operators or add-ons for workflow enhancement
- Integrating Blender with external data pipelines or APIs
- Scripting complex animations with mathematical precision
- Developing reusable tools for team workflows
Inputs
| Input | Type | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Automation requirements | Specification | Task description, parameters, constraints | Render 100 variations, animate path from data |
| Data sources | Files/APIs | External data for procedural generation | CSV coordinates, JSON parameters, API responses |
| Algorithm definitions | Code/Math | Procedural generation logic | Fractal patterns, parametric curves, L-systems |
| Operator specifications | Requirements | Custom tool behavior and UI | Tool name, properties, modal interaction |
| Animation parameters | Keyframes/Data | Timing, easing, constraints | Frame ranges, interpolation curves |
Steps
1. Procedural Geometry Generation
Make mesh geometry programmatically with BMesh.
import bpy
import bmesh
import math
def create_parametric_surface(name, u_res=32, v_res=32):
"""Generate parametric surface using mathematical function."""
mesh = bpy.data.meshes.new(name)
obj = bpy.data.objects.new(name, mesh)
bpy.context.collection.objects.link(obj)
bm = bmesh.new()
# Create vertices using parametric equations
verts = []
for i in range(u_res):
for j in range(v_res):
u = (i / (u_res - 1)) * 2 * math.pi
v = (j / (v_res - 1)) * math.pi
# Sphere parametric equations
x = math.sin(v) * math.cos(u)
y = math.sin(v) * math.sin(u)
z = math.cos(v)
vert = bm.verts.new((x, y, z))
verts.append(vert)
# Create faces
bm.verts.ensure_lookup_table()
for i in range(u_res - 1):
for j in range(v_res - 1):
v1 = verts[i * v_res + j]
v2 = verts[(i + 1) * v_res + j]
v3 = verts[(i + 1) * v_res + (j + 1)]
v4 = verts[i * v_res + (j + 1)]
bm.faces.new([v1, v2, v3, v4])
# Write to mesh
bm.to_mesh(mesh)
bm.free()
return obj
Got: Complex geometry generated from math functions
If fail: Check BMesh API calls, verify vertex indexing, ensure faces manifold
2. Keyframe Animation Automation
Script animation keyframes + drivers.
def animate_rotation(obj, start_frame=1, end_frame=250, axis='Z', rotations=2):
"""Animate object rotation over time."""
# Set initial keyframe
obj.rotation_euler[2] = 0 # Z axis
obj.keyframe_insert(data_path="rotation_euler", index=2, frame=start_frame)
# Set end keyframe
obj.rotation_euler[2] = rotations * 2 * math.pi
obj.keyframe_insert(data_path="rotation_euler", index=2, frame=end_frame)
# Set interpolation
if obj.animation_data and obj.animation_data.action:
for fcurve in obj.animation_data.action.fcurves:
if 'rotation_euler' in fcurve.data_path:
for keyframe in fcurve.keyframe_points:
keyframe.interpolation = 'LINEAR'
def animate_material_property(mat, property_path, values, frames):
"""Animate material node values."""
if not mat.node_tree:
return
# Example: animate emission strength
nodes = mat.node_tree.nodes
emission = nodes.get('Emission')
if emission:
for frame, value in zip(frames, values):
emission.inputs['Strength'].default_value = value
emission.inputs['Strength'].keyframe_insert(
data_path="default_value",
frame=frame
)
def create_driver(obj, property_path, expression):
"""Create driver for automated animation."""
driver = obj.driver_add(property_path)
driver.driver.type = 'SCRIPTED'
driver.driver.expression = expression
# Example: link rotation to frame number
# expression = "frame / 10"
Got: Keyframes inserted, animation plays back correct
If fail: Check property paths, verify data_path syntax, ensure objects keyable
3. Batch Processing Operations
Process multiple objects or files in batch.
import os
from pathlib import Path
def batch_import_and_render(input_dir, output_dir, file_pattern="*.obj"):
"""Import multiple files and render each."""
input_path = Path(input_dir)
output_path = Path(output_dir)
output_path.mkdir(exist_ok=True)
scene = bpy.context.scene
for obj_file in input_path.glob(file_pattern):
# Clear existing objects
bpy.ops.object.select_all(action='SELECT')
bpy.ops.object.delete()
# Import model
bpy.ops.import_scene.obj(filepath=str(obj_file))
# Setup camera and lighting (reuse setup functions)
setup_camera()
setup_lighting()
# Render
output_file = output_path / f"{obj_file.stem}.png"
scene.render.filepath = str(output_file)
bpy.ops.render.render(write_still=True)
print(f"Rendered: {output_file}")
def batch_material_variation(base_object, colors, output_prefix):
"""Render object with multiple material colors."""
mat = base_object.data.materials[0]
bsdf = mat.node_tree.nodes.get('Principled BSDF')
if not bsdf:
return
for i, color in enumerate(colors):
# Update material color
bsdf.inputs['Base Color'].default_value = color + (1.0,)
# Render
bpy.context.scene.render.filepath = f"{output_prefix}_{i:03d}.png"
bpy.ops.render.render(write_still=True)
Got: Multiple files processed, renders made for each variant
If fail: Check file paths exist, verify import operators, handle missing materials
4. Custom Operator Development
Make custom operators for reusable tools.
import bpy
from bpy.props import FloatProperty, IntProperty
class OBJECT_OT_generate_spiral(bpy.types.Operator):
"""Generate a spiral curve"""
bl_idname = "object.generate_spiral"
bl_label = "Generate Spiral"
bl_options = {'REGISTER', 'UNDO'}
# Operator properties
radius: FloatProperty(
name="Radius",
description="Spiral radius",
default=2.0,
min=0.1,
max=10.0
)
turns: IntProperty(
name="Turns",
description="Number of spiral turns",
default=5,
min=1,
max=20
)
resolution: IntProperty(
name="Resolution",
description="Points per turn",
default=32,
min=8,
max=128
)
def execute(self, context):
# Create curve
curve = bpy.data.curves.new('Spiral', 'CURVE')
curve.dimensions = '3D'
spline = curve.splines.new('NURBS')
num_points = self.turns * self.resolution
spline.points.add(num_points - 1) # -1 because one point exists
for i in range(num_points):
t = i / self.resolution
angle = t * 2 * math.pi
x = self.radius * math.cos(angle)
y = self.radius * math.sin(angle)
z = t * 0.5
spline.points[i].co = (x, y, z, 1.0)
# Create object
obj = bpy.data.objects.new('Spiral', curve)
context.collection.objects.link(obj)
obj.select_set(True)
context.view_layer.objects.active = obj
self.report({'INFO'}, f"Generated spiral with {num_points} points")
return {'FINISHED'}
def register():
bpy.utils.register_class(OBJECT_OT_generate_spiral)
def unregister():
bpy.utils.unregister_class(OBJECT_OT_generate_spiral)
if __name__ == "__main__":
register()
Got: Operator appears in search, executes with proper undo support
If fail: Check bl_idname format (lowercase with underscores), verify property types
5. Modal Operator for Interactive Tools
Make interactive modal operators.
class OBJECT_OT_modal_scale(bpy.types.Operator):
"""Interactive scaling with mouse"""
bl_idname = "object.modal_scale"
bl_label = "Modal Scale"
bl_options = {'REGISTER', 'UNDO'}
def __init__(self):
self.initial_mouse_x = 0
self.initial_scale = 1.0
def modal(self, context, event):
if event.type == 'MOUSEMOVE':
# Calculate scale based on mouse movement
delta = event.mouse_x - self.initial_mouse_x
scale = self.initial_scale + (delta / 100.0)
scale = max(0.1, scale) # Minimum scale
# Apply to active object
context.active_object.scale = (scale, scale, scale)
elif event.type == 'LEFTMOUSE':
return {'FINISHED'}
elif event.type in {'RIGHTMOUSE', 'ESC'}:
# Cancel - restore initial scale
context.active_object.scale = (
self.initial_scale,
self.initial_scale,
self.initial_scale
)
return {'CANCELLED'}
return {'RUNNING_MODAL'}
def invoke(self, context, event):
if context.active_object:
self.initial_mouse_x = event.mouse_x
self.initial_scale = context.active_object.scale[0]
context.window_manager.modal_handler_add(self)
return {'RUNNING_MODAL'}
else:
self.report({'WARNING'}, "No active object")
return {'CANCELLED'}
Got: Interactive operator responds to mouse, left-click confirms, ESC cancels
If fail: Check event types, ensure modal handler added, handle no active object
6. Add-on Packaging
Structure code as installable add-on.
bl_info = {
"name": "Custom Tools",
"author": "Your Name",
"version": (1, 0, 0),
"blender": (3, 0, 0),
"location": "View3D > Add > Mesh",
"description": "Collection of custom modeling tools",
"category": "Add Mesh",
}
import bpy
# Import operator classes
from .operators import OBJECT_OT_generate_spiral
classes = (
OBJECT_OT_generate_spiral,
# Add other classes
)
def menu_func(self, context):
"""Add to menu."""
self.layout.operator(OBJECT_OT_generate_spiral.bl_idname)
def register():
for cls in classes:
bpy.utils.register_class(cls)
bpy.types.VIEW3D_MT_mesh_add.append(menu_func)
def unregister():
bpy.types.VIEW3D_MT_mesh_add.remove(menu_func)
for cls in reversed(classes):
bpy.utils.unregister_class(cls)
if __name__ == "__main__":
register()
Got: Add-on installs via Preferences, operators appear in menus
If fail: Check bl_info format, verify Blender version requirement, ensure all classes listed
7. Data-Driven Procedural Generation
Generate geometry from external data.
import csv
import json
def create_from_csv(filepath):
"""Generate objects from CSV data."""
with open(filepath, 'r') as f:
reader = csv.DictReader(f)
for row in reader:
# Parse data
name = row['name']
x, y, z = float(row['x']), float(row['y']), float(row['z'])
scale = float(row.get('scale', 1.0))
# Create object
bpy.ops.mesh.primitive_uv_sphere_add(location=(x, y, z))
obj = bpy.context.active_object
obj.name = name
obj.scale = (scale, scale, scale)
def create_from_json(filepath):
"""Generate scene from JSON configuration."""
with open(filepath, 'r') as f:
config = json.load(f)
# Process objects
for obj_config in config.get('objects', []):
obj_type = obj_config['type']
location = obj_config['location']
if obj_type == 'cube':
bpy.ops.mesh.primitive_cube_add(location=location)
elif obj_type == 'sphere':
bpy.ops.mesh.primitive_uv_sphere_add(location=location)
obj = bpy.context.active_object
obj.name = obj_config.get('name', 'Object')
# Apply material if specified
if 'material' in obj_config:
mat_name = obj_config['material']
mat = bpy.data.materials.get(mat_name)
if mat:
obj.data.materials.append(mat)
Got: Objects made based on external data files
If fail: Validate file format, handle missing fields, provide defaults
Checks
- Scripts run without errors in Blender Python env
- Procedural geometry generates as expected
- Animation keyframes inserted at correct frames
- Batch ops process all files successfully
- Custom operators appear in search, execute correct
- Modal operators respond to mouse/keyboard events
- Add-ons install + uninstall cleanly
- External data files parsed correct
- Error handling covers edge cases
- Code follows PEP 8 style
Pitfalls
- Circular imports in add-ons: Use relative imports, structure modules carefully
- Operator naming: bl_idname must be lowercase with single underscore (category.name)
- Property types: Use correct bpy.props types (FloatProperty, IntProperty, etc.)
- Context access: Not all operators work in all contexts (viewport vs render)
- BMesh cleanup: Always call
bm.free()afterbm.to_mesh()to prevent memory leaks - Animation keyframe timing: Frame numbers start at 1, not 0
- Driver expression errors: Validate expressions, use safe namespace
- Modal operator blocking: Do not block in modal(), use non-blocking ops
- Add-on installation paths: Place in Blender's scripts/addons directory
- Version compatibility: API changes between Blender versions, document requirements
See Also
- create-3d-scene: Basic scene setup + object creation
- render-blender-output: Rendering workflows for automated output
- create-r-package: Similar packaging patterns for code distribution
Dépôt GitHub
Compétences associées
content-collections
MétaCette compétence propose une configuration éprouvée en production pour Content Collections, un outil axé sur TypeScript qui transforme des fichiers Markdown/MDX en collections de données typées de manière sûre avec une validation Zod. Utilisez-la lors de la création de blogs, de sites de documentation ou d'applications Vite + React riches en contenu pour garantir la sécurité de typage et la validation automatique du contenu. Elle couvre tout, de la configuration du plugin Vite et de la compilation MDX à l'optimisation des déploiements et la validation des schémas.
polymarket
MétaCette compétence permet aux développeurs de créer des applications avec la plateforme de marchés prédictifs Polymarket, incluant l'intégration d'API pour le trading et les données de marché. Elle fournit également une diffusion de données en temps réel via WebSocket pour surveiller les transactions en direct et l'activité du marché. Utilisez-la pour mettre en œuvre des stratégies de trading ou pour créer des outils traitant les mises à jour de marché en direct.
creating-opencode-plugins
MétaCette compétence aide les développeurs à créer des plugins OpenCode qui s'interconnectent avec plus de 25 types d'événements tels que les commandes, les fichiers et les opérations LSP. Elle fournit la structure du plugin, les spécifications de l'API événementielle et les modèles d'implémentation pour les modules JavaScript/TypeScript. Utilisez-la lorsque vous avez besoin d'intercepter, de surveiller ou d'étendre le cycle de vie de l'assistant IA OpenCode avec une logique personnalisée pilotée par les événements.
sglang
MétaSGLang est un framework de service LLM haute performance spécialisé dans la génération rapide et structurée pour les workflows JSON, regex et agentiques grâce à son cache de préfixe RadixAttention. Il offre une inférence nettement plus rapide, particulièrement pour les tâches avec des préfixes répétés, ce qui le rend idéal pour les sorties complexes et structurées ainsi que les conversations multi-tours. Choisissez SGLang plutôt que des alternatives comme vLLM lorsque vous avez besoin d'un décodage contraint ou que vous construisez des applications avec un partage étendu de préfixes.
