flatten-js is a javascript library for manipulating abstract geometrical shapes like point, vector, line, ray, segment, circle, arc and polygon. Shapes may be organized into Planar Set - searchable container which support spatial queries.
flatten-js provides a lot of useful methods and algorithms like finding intersections, checking inclusion, calculating distance, applying affine transformations, performing boolean operations and more.
Packages are distributed in 3 formats: commonjs, umd and es6 modules. Package.json file provides various entry points suitable for different targets.
TypeScript users may take advantage of static type checking with typescript definition file index.d.ts included into the package.
flatten-js does not concern too much about visualization. Anyway, all classes implement svg() method, that returns a string which may be inserted into SVG container. It works pretty well together with d3js library, but it is definitely possible to create bridges to other graphic libraries.
The best way to start working with FlattenJS is to use awesome Observable javascript interactive notebooks. Check out collection of Tutorials published in Observable Notebooks.
Full documentation may be found here: https://alexbol99.github.io/flatten-js/index.html
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npm install --save @flatten-js/core
import {Point, Vector, Circle, Line, Ray, Segment, Arc, Box, Polygon, Matrix, PlanarSet} from '@flatten-js/core';
It is possible to import Flatten namespace as default import, and then destruct all classes from it.
import Flatten from '@flatten-js/core'
const {Point, Vector, Circle, Line, Ray, Segment, Arc, Box, Polygon, Matrix, PlanarSet} = Flatten;
Some classes have shortcuts to avoid annoying new constructor:
import {point, vector, circle, line, ray, segment, arc, polygon, matrix} from '@flatten-js/core';
After module imported, it is possible to create some construction:
// extract object creators
import {point, circle, segment} from '@flatten-js/core';
// make some construction
let s1 = segment(10,10,200,200);
let s2 = segment(10,160,200,30);
let c = circle(point(200, 110), 50);
let ip = s1.intersect(s2);
You may test the code above also in NPM RunKit
You may also check out examples section in the code which illustrate different use cases:
<script>
tag with unpkg.com loaderflatten-js library implements following basic shapes:
Polygon in flatten-js library is actually a multi-polygon. Polygon is a collection of faces - closed oriented chains of edges, which may be of type Segment or Arc. The most external face called island, a face included into it is called hole. Holes in turn may have inner islands, number of inclusion levels is unlimited.
Orientation of islands and holes is matter for calculation
of relationships and boolean operations, holes should have orientation opposite to islands.
It means that for proper results faces in a polygon should be orientable: they should not have self-intersections.
Faces also should not overlap each other. Method isValid()
checks if polygon fit these rules.
Constructor of the polygon object accept various inputs:
Polygon provides various useful methods:
area
- calculate area of a polygonaddFace
- add a new face to polygondeleteFace
- removes face from polygonaddVertex
- split an edge of polygon adn create new vertexcut
- cut polygon with multiline into sub-polygonsfindEdgeByPoint
- find edge in polygoncontains
- test if polygon contains shape (point, segment or arc)transform
- transform polygon using affine transformation matrixreverse
- revert orientation of facessplitToIslands
- split to array of islands with holesMultiline represent an unclosed chain of edges of type Segment or Arc
Planar Set is a container of shapes that enables spatial seach by rectangular query.
All the classes have methods translate
, rotate
and scale
which may be chained.
Example:
// Rotate segment by 45 deg around its center
let {point,segment,matrix} = Flatten;
let s = segment(point(20,30), point(60,70));
let center = s.box.center;
let angle = 45.*Math.PI/180.;
let rotated_segment = s.rotate(angle, center)
All classes have method intersect(otherShape)
that return array of intersection points,
if two shapes intersect each other, or empty array otherwise. The is no predefined order
of intersection points in the array.
Please don't be confused, there are another two methods BooleanOperations.intersect()
that performs boolean intersection of polygons and logical predicate Relations.intersect()
that check if two shapes intersected or not.
All basic classes and polygon have method distanceTo(othershape)
that calculate distance to other shape. Together with the distance function returns the shortest segment
between two shapes - segment between two closest point, where the first point lays
on this
shape, and the second - on the other shape, see example:
let s = segment(point(10,30), point(150, 40));
let c = circle(point(75,75),10);
let [dist,shortest_segment] = s.distanceTo(c);
The Dimensionally Extended nine-Intersection Model (DE-9IM) is a topological model and a standard used to describe the spatial relations of two geometries in 2-dimensional plane.
First, for every shape we define:
An exterior
For polygons, the interior, boundary and exterior are obvious, other types have some exclusions:
Line has no boundary
The DE-9IM model based on a 3×3 intersection matrix with the form:
[ I(a) ^ I(b) B(a) ^ I(b) E(a) ^ I(b)
de9im = I(a) ^ B(b) B(a) ^ B(b) E(a) ^ B(b)
I(a) ^ E(b) B(a) ^ E(b) E(a) ^ E(b) ]
where a
and b
are two shapes (geometries),
I(), B(), E()
denotes interior, boundary and exterior operator and
^
denotes operation of intersection.
Dimension of intersection result depends on the dimension of shapes, for example,
DE-9IM matrix describes any possible relationships between two shapes on the plane.
DE-9IM matrix is available via method relate
under namespace Relations
.
Each element of DE-9IM matrix is an array of the objects representing corresponding intersection. Empty array represents case of no intersection. If intersection is not applicable (i.e. intersection with a boundary for a line which has no boundary), correspondent cell left undefined.
Intersection between two exteriors not calculated because usually it is meaningless.
let {relate} = Flatten.Relations;
//
// define two shapes: polygon1, polygon2
//
let de9im = relate(polygon1, polygon2);
//
// explore 8 of 9 fields of the de9im matrix:
// de9im.I2I de9im.B2I de9im.E2I
// de9im.I2B de9im.B2B de9im.E2B
// de9im.I2E de9im.B2E N/A
Another common way to represent DE-9IM matrix is a string where
T
represent intersection where array is not imptyF
represent intersection where array is empty.
means not relevant or not applicableString may be obtained with de9im.toString()
method.
The spatial relationships between two shapes exposed via namespace Relations
.
The spatial predicates return true
if relationship match and false
otherwise.
let {intersect, disjoint, equal, touch, inside, contain, covered, cover} = Flatten.Relations;
// define shape a and shape b
let p = intersect(a, b);
console.log(p) // true / false
intersect
- shapes a and b have at least one common pointdisjoint
- opposite to intersect
equal
- shapes a and b are topologically equaltouch
- shapes a and b have at least one point in common but their interiors not intersectinside
- shape a lies in the interior of shape bcontain
- shape b lies in the interior of shape acovered
- every point of a lies or in the interior or on the boundary of shape bcovered
- every point of b lies or in the interior or on the boundary of shape aBoolean operations on polygons available via namespace BooleanOperations. Polygons in boolean operation should be valid: both operands should have same meaning of face orientation, faces should not overlap each other and should not have self-intersections.
User is responsible to provide valid polygons, boolean operation methods do not check validity.
let {unify, subtract, intersect, innerClip, outerClip} = BooleanOperations;
unify
- unify two polygons and return resulted polygonsubtract
- subtract second polygon from the first and return resulted polygonintersect
- intersect two polygons and return resulted polygoninnerClip
- intersect two polygons and return boundary of intersection as 2 arrays.
The first aray contains edges of the first polygon, the second - the edges of the secondouterClip
- clip boundary of the first polygon with the interior of the second polygonImplementation based on Weiler-Atherton clipping algorithm, described in the article Hidden Surface Removal Using Polygon Area Sorting
All flatten-js shape objects may be serialized using JSON.stringify()
method.
JSON.stringify
transforms object to string using .toJSON()
formatter implemented in the class.
JSON.parse
restore object from a string, and then constructor can use this object to create Flatten object.
let {lint, point} = Flatten;
let l = line(point(4, 0), point(0, 4));
// Serialize
let str = JSON.stringify(l);
// Parse and reconstruct
let l_json = JSON.parse(str);
let l_parsed = line(l_json);
All classes provide svg()
method, that create svg string that may be inserted into svg container element
in a very straightforward way:
<body>
<svg id="stage" width="500" height="500"></svg>
<script>
const Flatten = window["@flatten-js/core"];
const {point, circle, segment} = Flatten;
// make some construction
let s1 = segment(10,10,200,200);
let s2 = segment(10,160,200,30);
let c = circle(point(200, 110), 50);
let ip = s1.intersect(s2);
document.getElementById("stage").innerHTML = s1.svg() + s2.svg() + c.svg() + ip[0].svg();
</script>
</body>
Method svg()
may accept as a parameter an object that enables to define
several basic attributes of svg element:
stroke
, strokeWidth
, fill
, fillRule
, fillOpacity
, id
and className
.
If attributes not provided, method svg()
use default values.
Other packages, published under scope @flatten-js/:
Name | Description |
---|---|
@flatten-js/interval-tree | Interval binary search tree |
@flatten-js/boolean-op | Boolean operations (deprecated, use this functionality from the core package) |
@flatten-js/polygon-offset | Polygon offset |