Is anyone able to remove the display part of this function?

2 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
The Merchant
The Merchant el 4 de Dic. de 2019
Comentada: Rena Berman el 16 de En. de 2020
Can someone please please please remove the display part of this function?
It would be appreciated so so much!
clear;
close all;
clc;
xy = [
3 12
10 8
11 14
13 16
9 19
1 15
2 4
6 1
11 3
16 5
14 17
19 18
]
xy = xy'
yeet = convexhull(xy,0);
function k=convexhull(xy,display) ;
%CONVEXHULL Calculate convex hull
% CMP Vision Algorithms http://visionbook.felk.cvut.cz
%
% Find the convex hull of a set of N points in 2D
% : we implement
% Graham's classic scan algorithm
% which
% has optimal (N log N) complexity. The main data structure of
% Graham's scan is a stack, which can be emulated with reasonable
% efficiency in Matlab
% using arrays.
% Melkman's algorithm uses a double
% ended queue (deque) which is more difficult to implement
% efficiently.
%
% Convex hull construction is one of the fundamental computational geometry
% algorithms and we present it here for pedagogical reasons. The
% function convhull will work just as well.
%
% Usage: k = convexhull(xy,display)
% Inputs:
% xy [2 x N] Array with x,y coordinates of the N input
% points. Each column corresponds to one point.
% display (default 0) If set to 1, each iteration of the algorithm is
% illustrated graphically.
% Outputs:
% k [N x 1] A vector of indices to xy of the points
% on the convex hull.
% The first point is the point with the smallest x coordinate and we
% proceed clockwise. The last point is equal to the first point.
%
% We choose to keep collinear points on the resulting convex hull
% boundary, since it permits a slightly simpler implementation. Changes
% required to do otherwise are minor.
%
if nargin<2
display = 0;
end
% We find a pivot point first with the minimum x coordinate
% which is guaranteed
% to be part of the convex hull. (Note that this is only true if collinear
% points are included.)
[m,n] = size(xy);
if m~=2
error('convexhull: xy must have 2 columns');
end
[xmin,first] = min( xy(1,:) );
% We take the remaining points and sort them according to the direction (azimuth)
% from the pivot, creating an index array ind. This takes
% (Nlog N) time. We use function
% atan2 for convenience to calculate the angles. All angles are
% between -/2 and /2, so phase
% wraparound is not a problem. We add the pivot as
% the last point.
ind = [1:(first-1) (first+1):n];
angle = atan2( xy(1,ind)-xy(1,first), xy(2,ind)-xy(2,first) );
[junk,order] = sort(angle);
ind = [ind(order) first];
% A stack is emulated using an array stack and an index
% stacktop of the top stack element. Since we know the maximum
% stack size to be N, we initialize the stack array to avoid
% time consuming reallocations.
%
% The stack will contain indices of points that so far are considered to
% be part of the convex hull. The initial stack contains the pivot.
stack = zeros( n, 1, 'uint32' );
stack(1) = first;
stacktop = 1;
% Here is the main while-loop of the algorithm. The current
% point from the input set xy is indexed by ind(i).
% The loop terminates when all points have been considered.
%
% A current point p2=xy(:,ind(i)) is pushed to the stack if it
% contains less than two points, or if the point p2 lies on or to the right of the
% line connecting the two top points of the stack (p0, p1).
% This is determined by calculating the vector product of (p1-p0)
% x (p2-p0).
% Otherwise, the top
% point from the stack is discarded, because it cannot belong to the
% convex hull. In other words, the
% hull boundary must go straight or turn right, it may never turn to the left.
i = 1;
while i<=n
if display==1,
figure(1) ;
plot(xy(first,1),xy(first,2),'rx',[xy(first,1) ; xy(ind,1)],[xy(first,2) ...
; xy(ind,2)],'o--',xy(stack(1:stacktop),1),xy(stack(1:stacktop),2),'g-',xy(ind(i),1),xy(ind(i),2),'md','LineWidth',2,'MarkerSize',7) ;
disp([ 'Stack = ' num2str(stack(1:stacktop)') ]) ;
disp('Press any key') ;
pause
end ;
if stacktop<2
stacktop = stacktop+1;
stack(stacktop) = ind(i);
i = i+1;
else
p0 = xy(:,stack(stacktop));
p1 = xy(:,stack(stacktop-1));
p2 = xy(:,ind(i));
if (p1(1)-p0(1))*(p2(2)-p0(2))-(p2(1)-p0(1))*(p1(2)-p0(2)) >= 0
if display==1,
disp('push') ;
end ;
stacktop = stacktop+1;
stack(stacktop) = ind(i);
i = i+1;
else
if display==1,
disp('pop') ;
end ;
% pop
stacktop = stacktop-1;
end
end
end % while loop
if display,
figure(1) ;
plot([xy(1,first) xy(1,ind)],[xy(2,first) xy(2,ind)],'bo-',...
xy(1,first), xy(2,first),'ro','LineWidth',2,'MarkerSize',7) ;
if display>1,
exportfig(gcf,'output_images/convexhull_fan.eps') ;
end ;
figure(2) ;
plot(xy(1,:),xy(2,:),'bo',xy(1,stack(1:stacktop)),xy(2,stack(1:stacktop)),...
'g-',xy(1,first), xy(2,first),'ro','LineWidth',2,'MarkerSize',7) ;
if display>1,
exportfig(gcf,'output_images/convexhull_small.eps') ;
else
disp('Algorithm has converged.') ; disp('Press any key') ;
pause
end ;
end ;
% The stack now contains the completed convex hull. Because each input point
% is pushed to the stack and discarded at most once, the computational
% complexity of the while-loop is linear.
k = stack(1:stacktop);
end
  4 comentarios
Rena Berman
Rena Berman el 12 de Dic. de 2019
(Answers Dev) Restored edit
Rena Berman
Rena Berman el 16 de En. de 2020
(Answers Dev) Restored edit

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Respuestas (1)

JESUS DAVID ARIZA ROYETH
JESUS DAVID ARIZA ROYETH el 4 de Dic. de 2019
clear;
close all;
clc;
xy = [
3 12
10 8
11 14
13 16
9 19
1 15
2 4
6 1
11 3
16 5
14 17
19 18
];
xy = xy';
yeet = convexhull(xy)
function k=convexhull(xy)
%CONVEXHULL Calculate convex hull
% CMP Vision Algorithms http://visionbook.felk.cvut.cz
%
% Find the convex hull of a set of N points in 2D
% : we implement
% Graham's classic scan algorithm
% which
% has optimal (N log N) complexity. The main data structure of
% Graham's scan is a stack, which can be emulated with reasonable
% efficiency in Matlab
% using arrays.
% Melkman's algorithm uses a double
% ended queue (deque) which is more difficult to implement
% efficiently.
%
% Convex hull construction is one of the fundamental computational geometry
% algorithms and we present it here for pedagogical reasons. The
% function convhull will work just as well.
%
% Usage: k = convexhull(xy,display)
% Inputs:
% xy [2 x N] Array with x,y coordinates of the N input
% points. Each column corresponds to one point.
% display (default 0) If set to 1, each iteration of the algorithm is
% illustrated graphically.
% Outputs:
% k [N x 1] A vector of indices to xy of the points
% on the convex hull.
% The first point is the point with the smallest x coordinate and we
% proceed clockwise. The last point is equal to the first point.
%
% We choose to keep collinear points on the resulting convex hull
% boundary, since it permits a slightly simpler implementation. Changes
% required to do otherwise are minor.
%
% We find a pivot point first with the minimum x coordinate
% which is guaranteed
% to be part of the convex hull. (Note that this is only true if collinear
% points are included.)
[m,n] = size(xy);
if m~=2
error('convexhull: xy must have 2 columns');
end
[xmin,first] = min( xy(1,:) );
% We take the remaining points and sort them according to the direction (azimuth)
% from the pivot, creating an index array ind. This takes
% (Nlog N) time. We use function
% atan2 for convenience to calculate the angles. All angles are
% between -/2 and /2, so phase
% wraparound is not a problem. We add the pivot as
% the last point.
ind = [1:(first-1) (first+1):n];
angle = atan2( xy(1,ind)-xy(1,first), xy(2,ind)-xy(2,first) );
[junk,order] = sort(angle);
ind = [ind(order) first];
% A stack is emulated using an array stack and an index
% stacktop of the top stack element. Since we know the maximum
% stack size to be N, we initialize the stack array to avoid
% time consuming reallocations.
%
% The stack will contain indices of points that so far are considered to
% be part of the convex hull. The initial stack contains the pivot.
stack = zeros( n, 1, 'uint32' );
stack(1) = first;
stacktop = 1;
% Here is the main while-loop of the algorithm. The current
% point from the input set xy is indexed by ind(i).
% The loop terminates when all points have been considered.
%
% A current point p2=xy(:,ind(i)) is pushed to the stack if it
% contains less than two points, or if the point p2 lies on or to the right of the
% line connecting the two top points of the stack (p0, p1).
% This is determined by calculating the vector product of (p1-p0)
% x (p2-p0).
% Otherwise, the top
% point from the stack is discarded, because it cannot belong to the
% convex hull. In other words, the
% hull boundary must go straight or turn right, it may never turn to the left.
i = 1;
while i<=n
if stacktop<2
stacktop = stacktop+1;
stack(stacktop) = ind(i);
i = i+1;
else
p0 = xy(:,stack(stacktop));
p1 = xy(:,stack(stacktop-1));
p2 = xy(:,ind(i));
if (p1(1)-p0(1))*(p2(2)-p0(2))-(p2(1)-p0(1))*(p1(2)-p0(2)) >= 0
stacktop = stacktop+1;
stack(stacktop) = ind(i);
i = i+1;
else
% pop
stacktop = stacktop-1;
end
end
end % while loop
% The stack now contains the completed convex hull. Because each input point
% is pushed to the stack and discarded at most once, the computational
% complexity of the while-loop is linear.
k = stack(1:stacktop);
end

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