Subcollections may be created automatically for you when you create an override. Maya automatically recognizes the node type that is being overridden, and creates a subcollection for that node type. Alternatively, you can also manually create a subcollection for a specific node type such as shaders, shapes or sets.
Layers are populated via collections. When you add objects to a collection, only their transform node is included. This determines the objects you see in the viewport when the layer is visible.
In this example, a render layer Minion_squid is populated with the collection Killamari. The Mesh_Killamari body, eyes, and eyes glass transform nodes are added to the collection, and therefore the character's body, eyes, and eyes glass are visible in the viewport.
When you create an override on an attribute on the shader; for example, Ambient Color, Maya automatically creates a collection that includes all the shaders assigned to the Mesh_Killamari nodes, as well as the corresponding override. In other words, it is not necessary to manually add the shaders of Mesh_Killamari to the Killamari collection, nor is it necessary to manually create a shaders collection.
Similarly, when you create an override on the shape node, for example, Template, Maya automatically creates a collection that includes all the corresponding shape nodes of Mesh_Killamari, as well as the corresponding override.
The type of nodes that each collection contains is denoted by an icon; for example for shaders, and for shapes.
For more information about creating overrides, see Create overrides for a collection in your render layer.
The parent collection determines the objects that belong in the layer, and a child collection (subcollection) should only contain a subset of the members of its parent collection.
For example, the following scenario is valid:
The following scenario, however, is not valid:
In the latter case, the floor will not appear in your layer when it is set as visible.
An example use of subcollections may be to add a castle to your parent collection, then create a subcollection for only the castle door. This way, your entire castle is visible in the layer, and you can add a rotate override to the subcollection that applies only to the door. This allows for finer control over which nodes should receive overrides.
If you want to add members to a layer after a subcollection has been created, the new members should be added to the parent collection and not the child collection, for the same reason as stated above: because the parent collection determines membership, and a child collection should only contain a subset of the parent collection's members.
Using subcollections, you can create a parent collection to control the membership of objects in your layer (and thus the objects that are rendered when the layer is rendered), then create a subcollection to apply overrides to only a subset of nodes. Some examples include: