/* Copyright (C) 2013 Paul Davis This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ #ifndef __CANVAS_INTERPOLATED_CURVE_H__ #define __CANVAS_INTERPOLATED_CURVE_H__ #include "canvas/visibility.h" #include "canvas/types.h" namespace ArdourCanvas { class LIBCANVAS_API InterpolatedCurve { public: enum SplineType { CatmullRomUniform, CatmullRomCentripetal, }; protected: /** * This method will calculate the Catmull-Rom interpolation curve, returning * it as a list of Coord coordinate objects. This method in particular * adds the first and last control points which are not visible, but required * for calculating the spline. * * @param coordinates The list of original straight line points to calculate * an interpolation from. * @param points_per_segment The integer number of equally spaced points to * return along each curve. The actual distance between each * point will depend on the spacing between the control points. * @return The list of interpolated coordinates. * @param curve_type Chordal (stiff), Uniform(floppy), or Centripetal(medium) * @throws gov.ca.water.shapelite.analysis.CatmullRomException if * points_per_segment is less than 2. */ static void interpolate (const Points& coordinates, uint32_t points_per_segment, SplineType curve_type, bool closed, Points& results) { if (points_per_segment < 2) { return; } // Cannot interpolate curves given only two points. Two points // is best represented as a simple line segment. if (coordinates.size() < 3) { results = coordinates; return; } // Copy the incoming coordinates. We need to modify it during interpolation Points vertices = coordinates; // Test whether the shape is open or closed by checking to see if // the first point intersects with the last point. M and Z are ignored. if (closed) { // Use the second and second from last points as control points. // get the second point. Duple p2 = vertices[1]; // get the point before the last point Duple pn1 = vertices[vertices.size() - 2]; // insert the second from the last point as the first point in the list // because when the shape is closed it keeps wrapping around to // the second point. vertices.insert(vertices.begin(), pn1); // add the second point to the end. vertices.push_back(p2); } else { // The shape is open, so use control points that simply extend // the first and last segments // Get the change in x and y between the first and second coordinates. double dx = vertices[1].x - vertices[0].x; double dy = vertices[1].y - vertices[0].y; // Then using the change, extrapolate backwards to find a control point. double x1 = vertices[0].x - dx; double y1 = vertices[0].y - dy; // Actaully create the start point from the extrapolated values. Duple start (x1, y1); // Repeat for the end control point. int n = vertices.size() - 1; dx = vertices[n].x - vertices[n - 1].x; dy = vertices[n].y - vertices[n - 1].y; double xn = vertices[n].x + dx; double yn = vertices[n].y + dy; Duple end (xn, yn); // insert the start control point at the start of the vertices list. vertices.insert (vertices.begin(), start); // append the end control ponit to the end of the vertices list. vertices.push_back (end); } // When looping, remember that each cycle requires 4 points, starting // with i and ending with i+3. So we don't loop through all the points. for (Points::size_type i = 0; i < vertices.size() - 3; i++) { // Actually calculate the Catmull-Rom curve for one segment. Points r; _interpolate (vertices, i, points_per_segment, curve_type, r); // Since the middle points are added twice, once for each bordering // segment, we only add the 0 index result point for the first // segment. Otherwise we will have duplicate points. if (results.size() > 0) { r.erase (r.begin()); } // Add the coordinates for the segment to the result list. results.insert (results.end(), r.begin(), r.end()); } } private: /** * Calculate the same values but introduces the ability to "parameterize" the t * values used in the calculation. This is based on Figure 3 from * http://www.cemyuksel.com/research/catmullrom_param/catmullrom.pdf * * @param p An array of double values of length 4, where interpolation * occurs from p1 to p2. * @param time An array of time measures of length 4, corresponding to each * p value. * @param t the actual interpolation ratio from 0 to 1 representing the * position between p1 and p2 to interpolate the value. */ static double __interpolate (double p[4], double time[4], double t) { const double L01 = p[0] * (time[1] - t) / (time[1] - time[0]) + p[1] * (t - time[0]) / (time[1] - time[0]); const double L12 = p[1] * (time[2] - t) / (time[2] - time[1]) + p[2] * (t - time[1]) / (time[2] - time[1]); const double L23 = p[2] * (time[3] - t) / (time[3] - time[2]) + p[3] * (t - time[2]) / (time[3] - time[2]); const double L012 = L01 * (time[2] - t) / (time[2] - time[0]) + L12 * (t - time[0]) / (time[2] - time[0]); const double L123 = L12 * (time[3] - t) / (time[3] - time[1]) + L23 * (t - time[1]) / (time[3] - time[1]); const double C12 = L012 * (time[2] - t) / (time[2] - time[1]) + L123 * (t - time[1]) / (time[2] - time[1]); return C12; } /** * Given a list of control points, this will create a list of points_per_segment * points spaced uniformly along the resulting Catmull-Rom curve. * * @param points The list of control points, leading and ending with a * coordinate that is only used for controling the spline and is not visualized. * @param index The index of control point p0, where p0, p1, p2, and p3 are * used in order to create a curve between p1 and p2. * @param points_per_segment The total number of uniformly spaced interpolated * points to calculate for each segment. The larger this number, the * smoother the resulting curve. * @param curve_type Clarifies whether the curve should use uniform, chordal * or centripetal curve types. Uniform can produce loops, chordal can * produce large distortions from the original lines, and centripetal is an * optimal balance without spaces. * @return the list of coordinates that define the CatmullRom curve * between the points defined by index+1 and index+2. */ static void _interpolate (const Points& points, Points::size_type index, int points_per_segment, SplineType curve_type, Points& results) { double x[4]; double y[4]; double time[4]; for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++) { x[i] = points[index + i].x; y[i] = points[index + i].y; time[i] = i; } double tstart = 1; double tend = 2; if (curve_type != CatmullRomUniform) { double total = 0; for (int i = 1; i < 4; i++) { double dx = x[i] - x[i - 1]; double dy = y[i] - y[i - 1]; if (curve_type == CatmullRomCentripetal) { total += pow (dx * dx + dy * dy, .25); } else { total += pow (dx * dx + dy * dy, .5); } time[i] = total; } tstart = time[1]; tend = time[2]; } int segments = points_per_segment - 1; results.push_back (points[index + 1]); for (int i = 1; i < segments; i++) { double xi = __interpolate (x, time, tstart + (i * (tend - tstart)) / segments); double yi = __interpolate (y, time, tstart + (i * (tend - tstart)) / segments); results.push_back (Duple (xi, yi)); } results.push_back (points[index + 2]); } }; } #endif