Unfinished classify_overlap (trying to fix non-manifold)
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@ -9,6 +9,11 @@
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not sufficient that the subdivided edges both lie incident on some
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other edge and cover it completely. You must subdivide that larger
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edge, and thus the triangle it lies on.)
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- See line 97 of cage.py, and then 169.
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- CageFork may need to supply some 'opening' cage that I use as
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a basis for how I subdivide a 'closing' cage. If I subdivide
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the closing cage, then I must triangulate *after*, not before.
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- I just need a point-to-line-segment check for classify_overlap
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- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygon_triangulation - do this to
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fix my wave example!
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- http://www.polygontriangulation.com/2018/07/triangulation-algorithm.html
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48
cage.py
48
cage.py
@ -67,6 +67,49 @@ class Cage(object):
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def transform(self, xform):
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"""Apply a Transform to all vertices, returning a new Cage."""
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return Cage(xform.apply_to(self.verts), self.splits)
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def classify_overlap(self, cage):
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"""Classifies each vertex in a second cage according to some rules.
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Returns v, an array of equal length to cage.verts, for which v[i] will
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equal 0, 1, 2, or 3 based on how cage.verts[i] was classified.
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(This is mostly used in order to verify that certain rules are
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followed when a mesh is undergoing forking/branching.)
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The meaning of v[i] is as follows:
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0 -- None of the below apply to cage.verts[i].
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1 -- cage.verts[i] lies on an edge in this Cage (i.e. self).
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2 -- cage.verts[i] equals another (different) vertex in cage.verts,
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and case 1 does not apply.
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3 -- cage.verts[i] equals a vertex in self.verts.
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"""
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v = numpy.array((cage.shape[0],) dtype=numpy.uint8)
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for i,vert in enumerate(cage.verts):
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# Check against every vert in self.verts:
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for j,vert2 in enumerate(self.verts):
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if numpy.allclose(vert, vert2):
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v[i] = 3
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break
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if v[i] > 0:
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continue
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# Check against every edge in self.verts:
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for poly in self.polys():
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# TODO:
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# Check if 'vert' lies within some threshold of each edge
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# in 'poly'.
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# Note that 'poly' is cyclic - index (N-1) to 0 is an edge.
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raise Exception("Not implemented")
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if v[i] > 0:
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continue
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# Check against every *other* vert in cage.verts:
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for j,vert2 in enumerate(cage.verts):
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if i == j:
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continue
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if numpy.allclose(vert, vert2):
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v[i] = 2
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break
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if v[i] > 0:
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continue
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return v
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class CageFork(object):
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"""A series of generators that all split off in such a way that their
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@ -122,8 +165,11 @@ class CageGen(object):
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m = gen.to_mesh(count=count - i, flip_order=flip_order, loop=loop,
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close_first=False, close_last=close_last,
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join_fn=join_fn)
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# TODO: How do I handle closing with CageFork?
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meshes.append(m)
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# TODO: This has bugs that produce non-manifold geometry.
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# Whatever the next generator *starts* with, I may need
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# to subdivide where I *end*: all of their edges must be
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# shared (not just incident).
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# A fork can be only the final element, so disregard anything
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# after one and just quit:
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break
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