7

I have a 3D object with the position(x,y,z). How can I calculate the screen position(x,y) of that object?

I have search for it and one solution is that I have to find out the projection matrix then multiply 3D position point by this matrix to project it onto some 2D viewing surface (computer screen). But I have no idea how to find this matrix in Three.js.

I try a convert function like this but it give incorrect result

function Point3DToScreen2D(point3D){
            var screenX = 0;
            var screenY = 0;
            var inputX = point3D.x - camera.position.x;
            var inputY = point3D.y - camera.position.y;
            var inputZ = point3D.z - camera.position.z;
            var aspectRatio = renderer.domElement.width / renderer.domElement.height;
            screenX = inputX / (-inputZ * Math.tan(camera.fov/2));
            screenY = (inputY * aspectRatio) / (-inputZ * Math.tan(camera.fov / 2));
            screenX = screenX * renderer.domElement.width;
            screenY = renderer.domElement.height * (1-screenY);
            return {x: screenX, y: screenY};
        }

Thank in advance.

0

3 Answers 3

12

For me this function works (Three.js version 69):

function createVector(x, y, z, camera, width, height) {
        var p = new THREE.Vector3(x, y, z);
        var vector = p.project(camera);

        vector.x = (vector.x + 1) / 2 * width;
        vector.y = -(vector.y - 1) / 2 * height;

        return vector;
    }

3
  • 2
    This is perfect ! Just remember that project is a mutable method, so if you use it on an existing Vector3, call clone before.
    – Mistic
    Dec 10, 2015 at 20:41
  • it fails when z is 0 Nov 16, 2016 at 8:18
  • Should not fails. Please provide some jsbin/jsfiddle example. Dec 2, 2016 at 10:16
5

I make it done by this code at last:

Note: div parameter = canvas dom element.

function toScreenXY( position, camera, div ) {
            var pos = position.clone();
            projScreenMat = new THREE.Matrix4();
            projScreenMat.multiply( camera.projectionMatrix, camera.matrixWorldInverse );
            projScreenMat.multiplyVector3( pos );

            var offset = findOffset(div);

            return { x: ( pos.x + 1 ) * div.width / 2 + offset.left,
                 y: ( - pos.y + 1) * div.height / 2 + offset.top };

        }
function findOffset(element) { 
          var pos = new Object();
          pos.left = pos.top = 0;        
          if (element.offsetParent)  
          { 
            do  
            { 
              pos.left += element.offsetLeft; 
              pos.top += element.offsetTop; 
            } while (element = element.offsetParent); 
          } 
          return pos;
        } 
4
  • I appreciate the attempt as this is a problem that does not seem to have any documented solution, but I was not able to get this to provide accurate coordinates.
    – BishopZ
    Jul 20, 2012 at 19:30
  • Could you give more detail about your case? Jul 24, 2012 at 7:32
  • Thank you and here is my write-up: stackoverflow.com/questions/11586527/…
    – BishopZ
    Jul 24, 2012 at 13:53
  • I believe your inaccurate coordinates problem come from incorrect div (3rd parameter) input. Anyway, seem that you found your answer. Congratulation! Jul 25, 2012 at 3:09
-1

Check out the source at the demo: http://stemkoski.github.com/Three.js/Mouse-Over.html

The object that I believe you are interested in is THREE.Projector(); you can use this, for example, for automating calculations that create rays from the location of mouse cursor on the screen and project it into the scene.

1
  • Thank for replying, Lee. Assume that I had a Ray that its origin is the object's position, and its direction is to the screen. Then which object the ray will intersect to return to me the (x,y) of the object on the screen? Thanks. Jul 19, 2012 at 8:44

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