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GD::Polyline(3pm)     User Contributed Perl Documentation    GD::Polyline(3pm)

NAME
       GD::Polyline - Polyline object and Polygon utilities (including
       splines) for use with GD

SYNOPSIS
               use GD;
               use GD::Polyline;

               # create an image
               $image = GD::Image->new (500,300);
               $white  = $image->colorAllocate(255,255,255);
               $black  = $image->colorAllocate(  0,  0,  0);
               $red    = $image->colorAllocate(255,  0,  0);

               # create a new polyline
               $polyline = GD::Polyline->new;

               # add some points
               $polyline->addPt(  0,  0);
               $polyline->addPt(  0,100);
               $polyline->addPt( 50,125);
               $polyline->addPt(100,  0);

               # polylines can use polygon methods (and vice versa)
               $polyline->offset(200,100);

               # rotate 60 degrees, about the centroid
               $polyline->rotate(3.14159/3, $polyline->centroid());

               # scale about the centroid
               $polyline->scale(1.5, 2, $polyline->centroid());

               # draw the polyline
               $image->polydraw($polyline,$black);

               # create a spline, which is also a polyine
               $spline = $polyline->addControlPoints->toSpline;
               $image->polydraw($spline,$red);

               # output the png
               binmode STDOUT;
               print $image->png;

DESCRIPTION
       Polyline.pm extends the GD module by allowing you to create polylines.
       Think of a polyline as "an open polygon", that is, the last vertex is
       not connected to the first vertex (unless you expressly add the same
       value as both points).

       For the remainder of this doc, "polyline" will refer to a GD::Polyline,
       "polygon" will refer to a GD::Polygon that is not a polyline, and
       "polything" and "$poly" may be either.

       The big feature added to GD by this module is the means to create
       splines, which are approximations to curves.

The Polyline Object
       GD::Polyline defines the following class:

       "GD::Polyline"
            A polyline object, used for storing lists of vertices prior to
            rendering a polyline into an image.

       "new"
            "GD::Polyline->new" class method

            Create an empty polyline with no vertices.

                    $polyline = GD::Polyline->new;

                    $polyline->addPt(  0,  0);
                    $polyline->addPt(  0,100);
                    $polyline->addPt( 50,100);
                    $polyline->addPt(100,  0);

                    $image->polydraw($polyline,$black);

            In fact GD::Polyline is a subclass of GD::Polygon, so all polygon
            methods (such as offset and transform) may be used on polylines.
            Some new methods have thus been added to GD::Polygon (such as
            rotate) and a few updated/modified/enhanced (such as scale) in
            this module.  See section "New or Updated GD::Polygon Methods" for
            more info.

       Note that this module is very "young" and should be considered subject
       to change in future releases, and/or possibly folded in to the existing
       polygon object and/or GD module.

Updated Polygon Methods
       The following methods (defined in GD.pm) are OVERRIDDEN if you use this
       module.

       All effort has been made to provide 100% backward compatibility, but if
       you can confirm that has not been achieved, please consider that a bug
       and let the the author of Polyline.pm know.

       "scale"
            "$poly->scale($sx, $sy, $cx, $cy)" object method -- UPDATE to
            GD::Polygon::scale

            Scale a polything in along x-axis by $sx and along the y-axis by
            $sy, about centery point ($cx, $cy).

            Center point ($cx, $cy) is optional -- if these are omitted, the
            function will scale about the origin.

            To flip a polything, use a scale factor of -1.  For example, to
            flip the polything top to bottom about line y = 100, use:

                    $poly->scale(1, -1, 0, 100);

New Polygon Methods
       The following methods are added to GD::Polygon, and thus can be used by
       polygons and polylines.

       Don't forget: a polyline is a GD::Polygon, so GD::Polygon methods like
       offset() can be used, and they can be used in GD::Image methods like
       filledPolygon().

       "rotate"
            "$poly->rotate($angle, $cx, $cy)" object method

            Rotate a polything through $angle (clockwise, in radians) about
            center point ($cx, $cy).

            Center point ($cx, $cy) is optional -- if these are omitted, the
            function will rotate about the origin

            In this function and other angle-oriented functions in
            GD::Polyline, positive $angle corresponds to clockwise rotation.
            This is opposite of the usual Cartesian sense, but that is because
            the raster is opposite of the usual Cartesian sense in that the
            y-axis goes "down".

       "centroid"
            "($cx, $cy) = $poly->centroid($scale)" object method

            Calculate and return ($cx, $cy), the centroid of the vertices of
            the polything.  For example, to rotate something 180 degrees about
            it's centroid:

                    $poly->rotate(3.14159, $poly->centroid());

            $scale is optional; if supplied, $cx and $cy are multiplied by
            $scale before returning.  The main use of this is to shift an
            polything to the origin like this:

                    $poly->offset($poly->centroid(-1));

       "segLength"
            "@segLengths = $poly->segLength()" object method

            In array context, returns an array the lengths of the segments in
            the polything.  Segment n is the segment from vertex n to vertex
            n+1.  Polygons have as many segments as vertices; polylines have
            one fewer.

            In a scalar context, returns the sum of the array that would have
            been returned in the array context.

       "segAngle"
            "@segAngles = $poly->segAngle()" object method

            Returns an array the angles of each segment from the x-axis.
            Segment n is the segment from vertex n to vertex n+1.  Polygons
            have as many segments as vertices; polylines have one fewer.

            Returned angles will be on the interval 0 <= $angle < 2 * pi and
            angles increase in a clockwise direction.

       "vertexAngle"
            "@vertexAngles = $poly->vertexAngle()" object method

            Returns an array of the angles between the segment into and out of
            each vertex.  For polylines, the vertex angle at vertex 0 and the
            last vertex are not defined; however $vertexAngle[0] will be undef
            so that $vertexAngle[1] will correspond to vertex 1.

            Returned angles will be on the interval 0 <= $angle < 2 * pi and
            angles increase in a clockwise direction.

            Note that this calculation does not attempt to figure out the
            "interior" angle with respect to "inside" or "outside" the
            polygon, but rather, just the angle between the adjacent segments
            in a clockwise sense.  Thus a polygon with all right angles will
            have vertex angles of either pi/2 or 3*pi/2, depending on the way
            the polygon was "wound".

       "toSpline"
            "$poly->toSpline()" object method & factory method

            Create a new polything which is a reasonably smooth curve using
            cubic spline algorithms, often referred to as Bezier curves.  The
            "source" polything is called the "control polything".  If it is a
            polyline, the control polyline must have 4, 7, 10, or some number
            of vertices of equal to 3n+1.  If it is a polygon, the control
            polygon must have 3, 6, 9, or some number of vertices of equal to
            3n.

                    $spline = $poly->toSpline();
                    $image->polydraw($spline,$red);

            In brief, groups of four points from the control polyline are
            considered "control points" for a given portion of the spline: the
            first and fourth are "anchor points", and the spline passes
            through them; the second and third are "director points".  The
            spline does not pass through director points, however the spline
            is tangent to the line segment from anchor point to adjacent
            director point.

            The next portion of the spline reuses the previous portion's last
            anchor point.  The spline will have a cusp (non-continuous slope)
            at an anchor point, unless the anchor points and its adjacent
            director point are colinear.

            In the current implementation, toSpline() return a fixed number of
            segments in the returned polyline per set-of-four control points.
            In the future, this and other parameters of the algorithm may be
            configurable.

       "addControlPoints"
            "$polyline->addControlPoints()" object method & factory method

            So you say: "OK.  Splines sound cool.  But how can I get my anchor
            points and its adjacent director point to be colinear so that I
            have a nice smooth curves from my polyline?"  Relax!  For The
            Lazy: addControlPoints() to the rescue.

            addControlPoints() returns a polyline that can serve as the
            control polyline for toSpline(), which returns another polyline
            which is the spline.  Is your head spinning yet?  Think of it this
            way:

            +    If you have a polyline, and you have already put your control
                 points where you want them, call toSpline() directly.
                 Remember, only every third vertex will be "on" the spline.

                 You get something that looks like the spline "inscribed"
                 inside the control polyline.

            +    If you have a polyline, and you want all of its vertices on
                 the resulting spline, call addControlPoints() and then
                 toSpline():

                         $control = $polyline->addControlPoints();
                         $spline  = $control->toSpline();
                         $image->polyline($spline,$red);

                 You get something that looks like the control polyline
                 "inscribed" inside the spline.

            Adding "good" control points is subjective; this particular
            algorithm reveals its author's tastes.  In the future, you may be
            able to alter the taste slightly via parameters to the algorithm.
            For The Hubristic: please build a better one!

            And for The Impatient: note that addControlPoints() returns a
            polyline, so you can pile up the call like this, if you'd like:

                    $image->polyline($polyline->addControlPoints()->toSpline(),$mauve);

New GD::Image Methods
       "polyline"
            "$image->polyline(polyline,color)" object method

                    $image->polyline($polyline,$black)

            This draws a polyline with the specified color.  Both real color
            indexes and the special colors gdBrushed, gdStyled and
            gdStyledBrushed can be specified.

            Neither the polyline() method or the polygon() method are very
            picky: you can call either method with either a GD::Polygon or a
            GD::Polyline.  The method determines if the shape is "closed" or
            "open" as drawn, not the object type.

       "polydraw"
            "$image->polydraw(polything,color)" object method

                    $image->polydraw($poly,$black)

            This method draws the polything as expected (polygons are closed,
            polylines are open) by simply checking the object type and calling
            either $image->polygon() or $image->polyline().

Examples
       Please see file "polyline-examples.pl" that is included with the
       distribution.

See Also
       For more info on Bezier splines, see
       http://www.webreference.com/dlab/9902/bezier.html.

Future Features
       On the drawing board are additional features such as:

               - polygon winding algorithms (to determine if a point is "inside" or "outside" the polygon)

               - new polygon from bounding box

               - find bounding polygon (tightest fitting simple convex polygon for a given set of vertices)

               - addPts() method to add many points at once

               - clone() method for polygon

               - functions to interwork GD with SVG

       Please provide input on other possible features you'd like to see.

Author
       This module has been written by Daniel J. Harasty.  Please send
       questions, comments, complaints, and kudos to him at harasty@cpan.org.

       Thanks to Lincoln Stein for input and patience with me and this, my
       first CPAN contribution.

Copyright Information
       The Polyline.pm module is copyright 2002, Daniel J. Harasty.  It is
       distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.  See the "Artistic
       License" in the Perl source code distribution for licensing terms.

       The latest version of Polyline.pm is available at your favorite CPAN
       repository and/or along with GD.pm by Lincoln D. Stein at
       http://stein.cshl.org/WWW/software/GD.

perl v5.36.0                      2022-10-19                 GD::Polyline(3pm)

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