A very simple script to compute all self-intersections in a GeoJSON polygon.
According to the Simple Features standard, polygons may not self-intersect. GeoJSON, however, doesn't care about this. You can use this tool to check for self-intersections, list them or use them in some way.
This tool uses the rbush spatial index by default to speed up the detection of intersections. This is especially useful when are many edges but only few intersections. If you prefer, you can opt-out using an input parameter (see below) and it will perform a brute-force search for intersections instead. This might be preferable in case of few edges, as it allows you to avoid some overhead.
Get Node.js, then
npm install geojson-polygon-self-intersections
and use it like so:
var gpsi = require('geojson-polygon-self-intersections');
// poly = {type: "Feature", geometry: {type: "Polygon", coordinates: [[[1, 10], [11, 13], ...]]}}
var isects = gpsi(poly);
// isects = {type: "Feature", geometry: {type: "MultiPoint", coordinates: [[5, 8], [7, 3], ...]}}
Where poly
is a GeoJSON Polygon, and isects
is a GeoJSON MultiPoint.
Alternatively, you can use a filter function to specify the output. You have access to the following data per point:
isect
ring0
edge0
start0
end0
frac0
ring1
, edge1
, start1
, end1
, frac1
unique
Finally, you can pass an option object to control the behaviour of the algorithm. The following options are supported:
Option | Description |
---|---|
useSpatialIndex |
Whether a spatial index should be used to filter for possible intersections. Default: true |
reportVertexOnVertex |
If the same vertex (or almost the same vertex) appears more than once in the input, should this be reported as an intersection? Default: false |
reportVertexOnEdge |
If a vertex lies (almost) exactly on an edge segment, should this be reported as an intersection? Default: false |
epsilon |
It is almost never a good idea to compare floating point numbers for identity. Therefor, if we say "the same vertex" or "exactly on an edge segment", we need to define how "close" is "close enough". Note that the value is not used as an euclidian distance but always relative to the length of some edge segment. Default: 0 |
Together, this may look like so:
var options = {
useSpatialIndex:false
};
var isects = gpsi(poly, function filterFn(isect, ring0, edge0, start0, end0, frac0, ring1, edge1, start1, end1, frac1, unique){return [isect, frac0, frac1];}, options);
// isects = [[[5, 8], 0.4856, 0.1865]], [[[7, 3], 0.3985, 0.9658]], ...]
For backwards compatibility, if you pass anything other than an object, it will be interpreted as the value of the
useSpatialIndex
-option.