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B é zier Curves & Surfaces

B é zier Curves & Surfaces. Glenn G. Chappell CHAPPELLG@member.ams.org U. of Alaska Fairbanks CS 481/681 Lecture Notes Monday, March 1, 2004. Review: Object Descriptions. Speed in the right-hand step is generally more important than speed in the left-hand step. (Why?)

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B é zier Curves & Surfaces

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  1. Bézier Curves & Surfaces Glenn G. ChappellCHAPPELLG@member.ams.org U. of Alaska Fairbanks CS 481/681 Lecture Notes Monday, March 1, 2004

  2. Review:Object Descriptions • Speed in the right-hand step is generally more important than speed in the left-hand step. (Why?) • Thus, we typically use explicit descriptions. • We put lots of work into making these easy to create & modify. • This is what splines are all about. Idea SurfaceDescription Polygon List&Rendered Image This part can be tricky when using explicit descriptions. This part can be tricky when using implicit descriptions. CS 481/681

  3. Review:Curves/Concepts for Splines [1/4] • Drawing curves is an important topic in CG. • Remember: Think of a curve as a curve, not as a list of points (even though it is drawn that way). • We looked at how to draw circles, but circles are not general enough for our needs. • For the next few class meetings, we will be looking at curves called splines. • Last time, we discussed some background issues, which we will now briefly review. • Parametric curves. • Curves in pieces. • Polynomials. • Curve-design user interface (and control points). CS 481/681

  4. Review:Concepts for Splines [2/4] • A (2-D) parametric curve is expressed as: • A pair of (mathematical) functions: P(t) = ( x(t), y(t) ). • In 3-D, we add a third function for z. • And an interval of legal values for t: [a,b]. • t is called the parameter. • Example: x(t) = t2–2t, y(t) = t–1, t in [0,3]. y t = 3 (end) (t2–2t, t–1) x t = 0 (start) CS 481/681

  5. Review:Concepts for Splines [3/4] • We like parametric curves because: • Every curve can be described as a parametric curve. • A parameterization converts naturally into code to draw the curve. • A parameterization is also a useful description of a motion. • In this case, the parameter usually represents time (thus, “t”). • We want to be able to describe a curve in pieces. • This avoids complex formulas, speeds computation, reduces error. • But smoothness becomes an issue: pieces must fit together nicely. • We like our formulas to involve only polynomials. • They can be stored compactly. • Values can be calculated quickly & accurately. • Other computations (e.g., derivatives) are simple.    CS 481/681

  6. Review:Concepts for Splines [4/4] • A good user interface for curve design involves control points. • Example control points. • Curves can be interpolating or approximating. • Using control points allows convenient editing of curves, as well as specification of motions (camera paths, etc.). P1 P3 P0 P2 P1 P1 P1 P3 P3 P0 P0 P2 P2 CS 481/681

  7. Bézier Curves & Surfaces:Introduction • The first type of spline used in CAD/CAM was the Bézier curve. • Say “BAY-zee-AY”. The “r” is not pronounced. • Bézier curves were developed in the 1960’s, independently, by Pierre Bézier and Paul de Casteljau. • The first application was automobile design. Bézier was at Renault, and de Casteljau was at Citroën. • Bézier curves and Bézier surfaces are still widely used today. • PostScript and TrueType both describe characters with Bézier curves. • Bézier curves & surfaces are built into OpenGL (as “evaluators”). • A Bézier curve is a parametric curve described by polynomials based on control points. • Any number of control points may be used. 3 & 4 are common. • Degree of polynomials = number of points – 1. • Several Bézier curves can easily be glued together in a way that makes the curve as a whole smooth. • Bézier curves are approximating curves. A Bézier curve passes through its first and last control points, but, in general, no others. CS 481/681

  8. Bézier Curves & Surfaces:Overview • We will cover the following topics. • What is a Bézier curve? • What is a Bézier surface? • How are Bézier curves/surfaces drawn in OpenGL? • Evaluators. • Drawing Bézier curves/surfaces. • Bernstein polynomials. • The de Casteljau Algorithm. • Properties of Bézier curves. • Both good & not-so-good. CS 481/681

  9. Bézier Curves & Surfaces:Curves [1/3] • We are given n control points: P0, P1, …, Pn–1. • The Bézier curve defined by these control points is a parametric curve described by polynomials of degree n–1. • The interval for the parameter is [0,1]. • We will think of the curve as a single function f: given a number, it returns a point. • First case: 2 control points (P0, P1). • f(0) = P0; f(1) = P1. • To find other function values, lirp. • The resulting Bézier curve is a line segment. P1 P0 CS 481/681

  10. Bézier Curves & Surfaces:Curves [2/3] • Next case: 3 control points (P0, P1, P2). • f(0) = P0 (first control pt.); f(1) = P2 (last control pt.). • To find other function values (for a given value of t): • Lirp between P0 & P1. • Lirp between P1 & P2 (same t). • Lirp between above two values (same t) to get point on curve. • The resulting Bézier curve is part of a parabola. P2 P2 P0 P0 P1 P1 CS 481/681

  11. Bézier Curves & Surfaces:Curves [3/3] • Next case: 4 control points (P0, P1, P2, P3). • f(0) = P0 (first control pt.); f(1) = P3 (last control pt.). • To find other function values (for a given value of t): • Lirp between P0 & P1, P1 & P2, and P2 & P3. • Lirp between 1st & 2nd point above and between 2nd & 3rd. • Lirp between the above two values to get the point on the curve. • For more control points, continue this procedure. • This is not a terribly efficient way to draw a Bézier curve. • More on this later. P2 P0 P1 P3 CS 481/681

  12. Bézier Curves & Surfaces:Surfaces • To define a Bézier surface: • Think of a rectangular grid of control points. • Draw Bézier curves horizontally. Use each row as the control points for its own Bézier curve. • Then draw Bézier curves vertically. Corresponding points on the existing curves are the control points. • The last curves drawn form the Bézier surface. • Good time for a blackboard picture. • Such a picture was, indeed, drawn. CS 481/681

  13. OpenGL Evaluators:Introduction • OpenGL includes Bézier-curve computation and drawing, in the form of evaluators. • When you use an evaluator, you specify the control points and the usual drawing state (color, points or lines, etc.), but OpenGL does the glVertex… commands for you. • Some example code using evaluators can be found in simpleevaluator.cpp and evaluator.cpp, on the web page. Also see bezcurve.c, in the Example Programs directory. • We now look at how to use an evaluator. • Most of our code comes from simpleevaluator.cpp. CS 481/681

  14. OpenGL Evaluators:Usage [1/3] • Control points are specified in an array. const int numcontrolpts = 4; // No. of control pts // Below are coord's of control pts. GLfloat controlpts[numcontrolpts][3] = { {-0.9, -0.9, 0.0}, {-0.5, 0.2, 0.0}, { 0.9, -0.9, 0.0}, { 0.9, 0.9, 0.0} }; • 2-D points are not an option; z-coordinates are required. CS 481/681

  15. OpenGL Evaluators:Usage [2/3] • We initialize an evaluator using glMap1…. glMap1f(GL_MAP1_VERTEX_3, // target: 1-d [curve], // 3 coord's per pt 0.0, 1.0, // start & end param value 3, // "stride": pts stored // 3 GLfloat's apart numcontrolpts, // no. of control points &controlpts[0][0]); // control pt data • We enable an evaluator using glEnable (like textures). glEnable(GL_MAP1_VERTEX_3); // Enable this evaluator CS 481/681

  16. OpenGL Evaluators:Usage [3/3] • To do a “glVertex…” for a point on a Bézier curve, use glEvalCoord1…. • One argument: the parameter of the Bézier curve (“t”). • Thus, we can draw the whole curve as follows. • Assume numdrawsegs is the number of line segments to use. glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP); for (int i=0; i<=numdrawsegs; ++i) { GLdouble t = GLdouble(i)/numdrawsegs; glEvalCoord1d(t); } glEnd(); CS 481/681

  17. OpenGL Evaluators:Evaluator Grids [1/2] • To simplify things even further, OpenGL allows you to specify a grid of parameter values. • Use function glMapGrid1…. This has 3 arguments: • The number of line segments to draw. • Starting parameter value. • Ending parameter value. • For example, to draw the same curve using an evaluator grid, we would do the following. glMapGrid1d(numdrawsegs, 0.0, 1.0); • Note: If the number of segments changes, just call glMapGrid1… again. You need not reinitialize the evaluator. CS 481/681

  18. OpenGL Evaluators:Evaluator Grids [2/2] • To draw using an evaluator grid, use glEvalMesh1. This has 3 arguments: • What to draw: GL_LINE or GL_POINT. • Starting point in the mesh (usually 0). • How many segments (usually same as 1st argument to glMapGrid1…). • Thus, the for-loop used earlier can be replaced by a single function call: glEvalMesh1(GL_LINE, 0, numdrawsegs); CS 481/681

  19. OpenGL Evaluators:Surfaces • Each evaluator command with a “1” in its name has a corresponding command with a “2”, for Bézier surfaces. • The number of parameters changes in various appropriate ways. • See the OpenGL doc’s. • When you use evaluators to draw Bézier surfaces, OpenGL can compute vertex normals for you.  • Do “glEnable(GL_AUTO_NORMAL);” • This only works with evaluator-generated Bézier surfaces, for some reason. CS 481/681

  20. OpenGL Evaluators:Notes • If you write your code in the form I have presented, then modifications are both rare and easy. In particular: • Keep the number of control points in a variable. • Keep the number of segments to draw in a variable. • Store the number of segments to draw, not the number of points (even if you are drawing points!), or you’ll get zillions of one-off errors. • Always start your parameter at 0 and end at 1, and you’ll never wonder where it starts and ends. CS 481/681

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