What you need is to be able to determine intersections and distances between bounding boxes. Assuming you have axis-aligned bounding boxes (AABB, i.e. the box rectangle edges being parallel to the axes), you can reduce the 2D computations to 1D interval relations -- computed the relations between the x and y intervals separately and combine them. This divide-and-conquer strategy should simplify the logic greatly.
Here is a class that you could use as starting point. It is quite untested and should not be used for production code -- I know it does not work for special cases such as empty intervals (min > max) or singleton interval (min == max) --, but it should help you get on your way.
package stackoverflow;
public enum IntervalRelation
{
LEFT,
LEFT_TOUCHING,
OVERLAP_LEFT,
CONTAINING,
CONTAINED,
OVERLAP_RIGHT,
RIGHT_TOUCHING,
RIGHT;
public static double getIntervalDistance(
double min1, double max1,
double min2, double max2) {
double maxOfMin = Math.max(min1, min2);
double minOfMax = Math.min(max1, max2);
return maxOfMin - minOfMax;
}
public static IntervalRelation between(
double min1, double max1,
double min2, double max2) {
double dist = getIntervalDistance(min1, max1, min2, max2);
if (dist > 0) {
// not touching or intersecting
return min1 < min2? LEFT : RIGHT;
} else if (dist == 0) {
// touching
return min1 < min2? LEFT_TOUCHING : RIGHT_TOUCHING;
} else {
// overlapping or containment
if (min1 < min2) {
// overlap left or containing
return max1 < max2? OVERLAP_LEFT : CONTAINING;
} else {
return max1 < max2? CONTAINED : OVERLAP_RIGHT;
}
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println(between( 0.0,+1.0, -2.0,-1.0));
System.out.println(between( 0.0,+1.0, +2.0,+3.0));
System.out.println(between( 0.0,+1.0, -2.0,+0.0));
System.out.println(between( 0.0,+1.0, +1.0,+3.0));
System.out.println(between( 0.0,+1.0, +0.5,+1.5));
System.out.println(between( 0.0,+1.0, -0.5,+0.5));
System.out.println(between( 0.0,+1.0, -0.5,+1.5));
System.out.println(between( 0.0,+1.0, +0.5,+0.6));
}
}
In general, I found it very helpful to provide Interval
classes instead of always having to provide min/max argument pairs and having to check for emptiness or singletonness.