8

Does anyone have a good algorithm for calculating the end point of ArcSegment? This is not a circular arc - it's an elliptical one.

For example, I have these initial values:

  • Start Point X = 0.251
  • Start Point Y = 0.928
  • Width Radius = 0.436
  • Height Radius = 0.593
  • Start Angle = 169.51
  • Sweep Angle = 123.78

I know the location that my arc should end up at is right around X=0.92 and Y=0.33 (through another program), but I need to do this in an ArcSegment with specifying the end point. I just need to know how to calculate the end point so it would look like this:

<ArcSegment Size="0.436,0.593" Point="0.92,0.33" IsLargeArc="False" SweepDirection="Clockwise" />

Does anyone know of a good way to calculate this? (I don't suppose it matters that this is WPF or any other language as the math should be the same).

Here is an image. All values are known in it, except for end point (the orange point). image depicting arc


EDIT: I've found that there is a routine called DrawArc with an overload in .NET GDI+ that pretty much does what I need (more on the "pretty much" in a sec).

To simplify viewing it, take the following as an example:

Public Sub MyDrawArc(e As PaintEventArgs)

    Dim blackPen As New Pen(Color.Black, 2)
    Dim x As Single = 0.0F
    Dim y As Single = 0.0F
    Dim width As Single = 100.0F
    Dim height As Single = 200.0F

    Dim startAngle As Single = 180.0F
    Dim sweepAngle As Single = 135.0F

    e.Graphics.DrawArc(blackPen, x, y, width, height, startAngle, sweepAngle)

    Dim redPen As New Pen(Color.Red, 2)
    e.Graphics.DrawLine(redPen, New Point(0, 55), New Point(95, 55))
End Sub

Private Sub ImageBox_Paint(sender As Object, e As System.Windows.Forms.PaintEventArgs) Handles ImageBox.Paint
    MyDrawArc(e)
End Sub

This routine squarely puts the end point at X=95, Y=55. Other routines mentioned for circular ellipses would result in X=85, Y=29. If there was a way to 1) Not have to draw anything and 2) have e.Graphics.DrawArc return the end-point coordinates, this is what I would need.

So now the question gains some clarity - does anyone know how e.Graphics.DrawArc is implemented?

7
  • are you referring to StreamGeometryContext.ArcTo? as I cant really find a Sweep Angle there... Mar 26, 2011 at 10:51
  • @Markus Hütter: Sorry, I had been told that the initial values were an ArcTo, but upon looking up that and ArcAngle in the GDI+ documentation, it doesn't look like that is exactly what it is. I've significantly modified the question to reflect the real ask.
    – Stan
    Mar 26, 2011 at 19:06
  • @Stan would you be so kind to tell us what exactly the start and sweep angle depict? Mar 26, 2011 at 21:50
  • @Markus Hütter: I've updated with an image - hopefully that will help in the visualization of what I'm trying to do given the current values I have.
    – Stan
    Mar 26, 2011 at 22:49
  • @Stan: What is this "other program" that is calculating the end-point? Mar 28, 2011 at 17:57

4 Answers 4

11
+100

Does anyone know how e.Graphics.DrawArc is implemented?

Graphics.DrawArc calls the native function GdipDrawArcI in gdiplus.dll. This function calls the arc2polybezier function in the same dll. It appears to use a bezier curve to approximate an elliptical arc. In order to get the exact same end-point you're looking for, we'd have to reverse-engineer that function and figure out exactly how it works.

Fortunately, the good people at Wine have already done that for us.

Here is the arc2polybezier method, roughly translated from C to C# (note that because this was translated from Wine, this code is licensed under LGPL):

internal class GdiPlus
{
    public const int MAX_ARC_PTS = 13;

    public static int arc2polybezier(Point[] points, double x1, double y1, double x2, double y2,
                              double startAngle, double sweepAngle)
    {
        int i;
        double end_angle, start_angle, endAngle;

        endAngle = startAngle + sweepAngle;
        unstretch_angle(ref startAngle, x2/2.0, y2/2.0);
        unstretch_angle(ref endAngle, x2/2.0, y2/2.0);

        /* start_angle and end_angle are the iterative variables */
        start_angle = startAngle;

        for(i = 0; i < MAX_ARC_PTS - 1; i += 3)
        {
            /* check if we've overshot the end angle */
            if(sweepAngle > 0.0)
            {
                if(start_angle >= endAngle) break;
                end_angle = Math.Min(start_angle + Math.PI/2, endAngle);
            }
            else
            {
                if(start_angle <= endAngle) break;
                end_angle = Math.Max(start_angle - Math.PI/2, endAngle);
            }

            if(points != null)
            {
                Point[] returnedPoints = add_arc_part(x1, y1, x2, y2, start_angle, end_angle, i == 0);
                //add_arc_part returns a Point[] of size 4
                for(int j = 0; j < 4; j++)
                    points[i + j] = returnedPoints[j];
            }
            start_angle += Math.PI/2*(sweepAngle < 0.0 ? -1.0 : 1.0);
        }

        if(i == 0)
            return 0;
        return i + 1;
    }

    public static void unstretch_angle(ref double angle, double rad_x, double rad_y)
    {
        angle = deg2rad(angle);

        if(Math.Abs(Math.Cos(angle)) < 0.00001 || Math.Abs(Math.Sin(angle)) < 0.00001)
            return;

        double stretched = Math.Atan2(Math.Sin(angle)/Math.Abs(rad_y), Math.Cos(angle)/Math.Abs(rad_x));
        int revs_off = (int)Math.Round(angle/(2.0*Math.PI), MidpointRounding.AwayFromZero) -
                       (int)Math.Round(stretched/(2.0*Math.PI), MidpointRounding.AwayFromZero);
        stretched += revs_off*Math.PI*2.0;
        angle = stretched;
    }

    public static double deg2rad(double degrees)
    {
        return Math.PI*degrees/180.0;
    }

    private static Point[] add_arc_part(double x1, double y1, double x2, double y2,
                                     double start, double end, bool write_first)
    {
        double center_x,
               center_y,
               rad_x,
               rad_y,
               cos_start,
               cos_end,
               sin_start,
               sin_end,
               a,
               half;
        int i;

        rad_x = x2/2.0;
        rad_y = y2/2.0;
        center_x = x1 + rad_x;
        center_y = y1 + rad_y;

        cos_start = Math.Cos(start);
        cos_end = Math.Cos(end);
        sin_start = Math.Sin(start);
        sin_end = Math.Sin(end);

        half = (end - start)/2.0;
        a = 4.0/3.0*(1 - Math.Cos(half))/Math.Sin(half);

        Point[] pt = new Point[4];
        if(write_first)
        {
            pt[0].X = cos_start;
            pt[0].Y = sin_start;
        }
        pt[1].X = cos_start - a*sin_start;
        pt[1].Y = sin_start + a*cos_start;

        pt[3].X = cos_end;
        pt[3].Y = sin_end;
        pt[2].X = cos_end + a*sin_end;
        pt[2].Y = sin_end - a*cos_end;

        /* expand the points back from the unit circle to the ellipse */
        for(i = (write_first ? 0 : 1); i < 4; i ++)
        {
            pt[i].X = pt[i].X*rad_x + center_x;
            pt[i].Y = pt[i].Y*rad_y + center_y;
        }
        return pt;
    }
}

Using this code as a guide, along with a bit of math, I wrote this endpoint calculator class (not LGPL):

using System;
using System.Windows;

internal class DrawArcEndPointCalculator
{
    public Point GetFinalPoint(Point startPoint, double width, double height, 
                               double startAngle, double sweepAngle)
    {
        Point radius = new Point(width / 2.0, height / 2.0);
        double endAngle = startAngle + sweepAngle;
        int sweepDirection = (sweepAngle < 0 ? -1 : 1);

        //Adjust the angles for the radius width/height
        startAngle = UnstretchAngle(startAngle, radius);
        endAngle = UnstretchAngle(endAngle, radius);

        //Determine how many times to add the sweep-angle to the start-angle
        int angleMultiplier = (int)Math.Floor(2*sweepDirection*(endAngle - startAngle)/Math.PI) + 1;
        angleMultiplier = Math.Min(angleMultiplier, 4);

        //Calculate the final resulting angle after sweeping
        double calculatedEndAngle = startAngle + angleMultiplier*Math.PI/2*sweepDirection;
        calculatedEndAngle = sweepDirection*Math.Min(sweepDirection * calculatedEndAngle, sweepDirection * endAngle);

        //Calculate the final point
        return new Point
        {
            X = (Math.Cos(calculatedEndAngle) + 1)*radius.X + startPoint.X,
            Y = (Math.Sin(calculatedEndAngle) + 1)*radius.Y + startPoint.Y,
        };
    }

    private double UnstretchAngle(double angle, Point radius)
    {
        double radians = Math.PI * angle / 180.0;

        if(Math.Abs(Math.Cos(radians)) < 0.00001 || Math.Abs(Math.Sin(radians)) < 0.00001)
            return radians;

        double stretchedAngle = Math.Atan2(Math.Sin(radians) / Math.Abs(radius.Y), Math.Cos(radians) / Math.Abs(radius.X));
        int rotationOffset = (int)Math.Round(radians / (2.0 * Math.PI), MidpointRounding.AwayFromZero) -
                             (int)Math.Round(stretchedAngle / (2.0 * Math.PI), MidpointRounding.AwayFromZero);
        return stretchedAngle + rotationOffset * Math.PI * 2.0;
    }
}

Here are some examples. Note that the first example you gave is incorrect - for those initial values, DrawArc() will have an endpoint of (0.58, 0.97), not (0.92, 0.33).

Point startPoint = new Point(0, 0);
double width = 100;
double height = 200;
double startAngle = 180;
double sweepAngle = 135;
DrawArcEndPointCalculator _endPointCalculator = new DrawArcEndPointCalculator();
Point lastPoint = _endPointCalculator.GetFinalPoint(startPoint, width, height, startAngle, sweepAngle);
Console.WriteLine("X = {0}, Y = {1}", lastPoint.X, lastPoint.Y);
//Output: X = 94.7213595499958, Y = 55.2786404500042

startPoint = new Point(0.251, 0.928);
width = 0.436;
height = 0.593;
startAngle = 169.51;
sweepAngle = 123.78;
_endPointCalculator.GetFinalPoint(startPoint, width, height, startAngle, sweepAngle);
//Returns X = 0.579143189905416, Y = 0.968627455618129

Point startPoint = new Point(0, 0);
double width = 20;
double height = 30;
double startAngle = 90;
double sweepAngle = 90;
_endPointCalculator.GetFinalPoint(startPoint, width, height, startAngle, sweepAngle);
//Returns X = 0, Y = 15
1
2
1) Given this:
xStart = .25
yStart = .92
startAngle = 169.51
sweepAngle = 123.78
Rx = .436  // this is radius width
Ry = .593  // this is radius height

2) Calculations:
centerX = xStart - Rx * cos(startAngle)
centerY = yStart - Ry * sin(startAngle)
endAngle = startAngle + sweepAngle
xEnd = centerX + Rx * cos(endAngle)
yEnd = centerY + Ry * sin(endAngle)

So, your coordinate is (xEnd, yEnd).

3
  • 2
    Thanks for trying Loki, unfortunately, that is the calculation for a circular arc, not an elliptical one. The results are xEnd=0.851 and yEnd=0.267, which is not the correct coordinates (if Rx and Ry were the same, it would be this calculation).
    – Stan
    Mar 28, 2011 at 17:21
  • 1
    That is calculation for elliptical arc. You can examine that by runnig this simple program that generates a bitmap with an ellipse which is calculated based on above formulas: pastebin.com/kV0vWB5q . What program did you use to calculate expected position? I think that it may be wrong. Mar 28, 2011 at 18:29
  • It certainly returns an arc on an ellipse path, but unfortunately it is not for an elliptical arc. See further edit above.
    – Stan
    Mar 29, 2011 at 0:11
2

the answer of "BlueRaja - Danny Pflughoeft" is correct but ... it rounds the radius point, a PointF has to be used instead a Point:

PointF radius = new PointF((float)width / 2, (float)height / 2);

I've extended a bit the class in order to have starting points as well, and another signature per method:

  public static class ChartHelper
{
    public static PointF GetStartingPoint(float x, float y, double width, double height, double startAngle, double sweepAngle)
    {
        return GetStartingPoint(new PointF(x, y), width, height, startAngle, sweepAngle);
    }

    public static PointF GetStartingPoint(PointF startPoint, double width, double height, double startAngle, double sweepAngle)
    {
        PointF radius = new PointF((float)width / 2, (float)height / 2);

        //Adjust the angles for the radius width/height
        startAngle = UnstretchAngle(startAngle, radius);

        //Calculate the starting point
        return new PointF
        {
            X = (float)(Math.Cos(startAngle) + 1) * radius.X + startPoint.X,
            Y = (float)(Math.Sin(startAngle) + 1) * radius.Y + startPoint.Y,
        };
    }

    public static PointF GetFinalPoint(float x, float y, double width, double height, double startAngle, double sweepAngle)
    {
        return GetFinalPoint(new PointF(x, y), width, height, startAngle, sweepAngle);
    }

    public static PointF GetFinalPoint(PointF startPoint, double width, double height, double startAngle, double sweepAngle)
    {
        PointF radius = new PointF((float)width / 2, (float)height / 2);
        double endAngle = startAngle + sweepAngle;
        double sweepDirection = (sweepAngle < 0 ? -1 : 1);

        //Adjust the angles for the radius width/height
        startAngle = UnstretchAngle(startAngle, radius);
        endAngle = UnstretchAngle(endAngle, radius);

        //Determine how many times to add the sweep-angle to the start-angle
        double angleMultiplier = (double)Math.Floor(2 * sweepDirection * (endAngle - startAngle) / Math.PI) + 1;
        angleMultiplier = Math.Min(angleMultiplier, 4);

        //Calculate the final resulting angle after sweeping
        double calculatedEndAngle = startAngle + angleMultiplier * Math.PI / 2 * sweepDirection;
        calculatedEndAngle = sweepDirection * Math.Min(sweepDirection * calculatedEndAngle, sweepDirection * endAngle);

        //Calculate the final point
        return new PointF
        {
            X = (float)(Math.Cos(calculatedEndAngle) + 1) * radius.X + startPoint.X,
            Y = (float)(Math.Sin(calculatedEndAngle) + 1) * radius.Y + startPoint.Y,
        };
    }

    private static double UnstretchAngle(double angle, PointF radius)
    {
        double radians = Math.PI * angle / 180.0;

        if (Math.Abs(Math.Cos(radians)) < 0.00001 || Math.Abs(Math.Sin(radians)) < 0.00001)
            return radians;

        double stretchedAngle = Math.Atan2(Math.Sin(radians) / Math.Abs(radius.Y), Math.Cos(radians) / Math.Abs(radius.X));
        double rotationOffset = (double)Math.Round(radians / (2.0 * Math.PI), MidpointRounding.AwayFromZero) -
                             (double)Math.Round(stretchedAngle / (2.0 * Math.PI), MidpointRounding.AwayFromZero);
        return stretchedAngle + rotationOffset * Math.PI * 2.0;
    }
}
1

Is this of help:
The Mathematics of ArcSegment

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.