Polygonal Line Offset
Given a list of polygonal lines, compute the offset region (guard region, buffer region, morphological dilation) formed by shifting the boundary outwards by a specified distance.
polylineoffset(A, delta, ..., eps, x0, y0, miterlim=2, arctol=abs(delta)/100, jointype=c("square", "round", "miter"), endtype = c("closedpolygon", "closedline", "openbutt", "opensquare", "openround", "closed", "butt", "square", "round"))
A |
Data specifying polygons. See Details. |
delta |
Distance over which the boundary should be shifted. |
... |
Ignored. |
eps |
Spatial resolution for coordinates. |
x0,y0 |
Spatial origin for coordinates. |
miterlim,arctol |
Tolerance parameters: see Details. |
jointype |
Type of join operation to be performed at each vertex. See Details. |
endtype |
Type of geometrical operation to be performed at the start and end of each line. See Details. |
This is part of an interface to the polygon-clipping library
Clipper
written by Angus Johnson.
Given a list of polygonal lines A
,
the function polylineoffset
computes the offset region
(also known as the morphological dilation, guard region,
buffer region, etc) obtained by shifting the boundary of A
outward by the distance delta
.
The argument A
represents a polygonal line (broken line)
or a list of broken lines. The format is either
a list containing two components x
and y
giving the coordinates of successive vertices of the broken line.
a list
of list(x,y)
structures giving
the coordinates of the vertices of several broken lines.
Lines may be self-intersecting and different lines may intersect each other. Note that calculations are performed in integer arithmetic: see below.
The argument jointype
determines what happens at the vertices
of each line. See the Examples for illustrations.
jointype="round"
: a circular arc is generated.
jointype="square"
: the circular arc is
replaced by a single straight line.
jointype="miter"
: the circular arc is
omitted entirely, or replaced by a single straight line.
The argument endtype
determines what happens at the beginning
and end of each line. See the Examples for illustrations.
endtype="closedpolygon"
: ends are joined together (using the
jointype
value) and the path filled as a polygon.
endtype="closedline"
: ends are joined together (using the
jointype
value) and the path is filled as a polyline.
endtype="openbutt"
: ends are squared off abruptly.
endtype="opensquare"
:
ends are squared off at distance delta
.
endtype="openround"
: ends are replaced by a semicircular arc.
The values endtype="closed"
, "butt"
, "square"
and "round"
are deprecated; they are
equivalent to endtype="closedpolygon"
,
"openbutt"
, "opensquare"
and "openround"
respectively.
The arguments miterlim
and arctol
are tolerances.
if jointype="round"
, then arctol
is the maximum
permissible distance between the true circular arc and its
discretised approximation.
if jointype="miter"
, then miterlimit * delta
is the maximum permissible displacement between the original vertex and the
corresponding offset vertex if the circular arc were to be
omitted entirely. The default is miterlimit=2
which is also the minimum value.
Calculations are performed in integer arithmetic
after subtracting x0,y0
from the coordinates,
dividing by eps
, and rounding to the nearest integer.
Thus, eps
is the effective spatial resolution.
The default values ensure reasonable accuracy.
Data specifying polygons, in the same format as A
.
Angus Johnson. Ported to R by Adrian Baddeley Adrian.Baddeley@curtin.edu.au.
Clipper Website: http://www.angusj.com
Vatti, B. (1992) A generic solution to polygon clipping. Communications of the ACM 35 (7) 56–63. http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=129906
Agoston, M.K. (2005) Computer graphics and geometric modeling: implementation and algorithms. Springer-Verlag. http://books.google.com/books?q=vatti+clipping+agoston
Chen, X. and McMains, S. (2005) Polygon Offsetting by Computing Winding Numbers. Paper no. DETC2005-85513 in Proceedings of IDETC/CIE 2005 (ASME 2005 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference), pp. 565–575 http://www.me.berkeley.edu/~mcmains/pubs/DAC05OffsetPolygon.pdf
A <- list(list(x=c(4,8,8,2,6), y=c(3,3,8,8,6))) plot(c(0,10),c(0,10), type="n", main="jointype=square, endtype=opensquare", axes=FALSE, xlab="", ylab="") lines(A[[1]], col="grey", lwd=3) C <- polylineoffset(A, 0.5, jointype="square", endtype="opensquare") polygon(C[[1]], lwd=3, border="blue") plot(c(0,10),c(0,10), type="n", main="jointype=round, endtype=openround", axes=FALSE, xlab="", ylab="") lines(A[[1]], col="grey", lwd=3) C <- polylineoffset(A, 0.5, jointype="round", endtype="openround") polygon(C[[1]], lwd=3, border="blue")
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