Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I need to draw a fill square, that square must be painted with lines from center. we can't use java shapes

We have a center point and the pen must draw a line from center to the square edge in each angle.

The problem here is the Maths, what can i use to calculate the distance needed to paint. Because if i use always same distance it will draw a circle.

Thanks

share|improve this question
Show what you use at the moment and people can help you much quicker. The lines should go from the center to the edge. All you need to vary is the angle. – mercutio Nov 14 '12 at 1:21

3 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

When drawing the square you can think of the length you need to draw at any angle as being the length of the hypoteneuse of a right-angled triangle. You can solve this with trigonometric ratios easily enough. The tricky part is that the base of the triangle moves around.

Taking the example of a line at 45 degrees shown in the left half of the diagram below:

You need to work out the length of the red line (hyp). You can use trigonometry to work out the length of hyp based on its angle to adj and the length of the adj. The length of the adj side is half the height of the square.

The formula to use is:

cos(angle) = adj/hyp

rearranged:

hyp = adj/cos(angle)

The code would look something like this:

public static double calculateLengthToPaint(double angle, double heightOfSquare){
      return  (heightOfSquare/2.0) / Math.cos(Math.toRadians(angle));
}

Unfortunately that's not all though. This works perfectly for the first 45 degrees, but when angle > 45 degrees then the adjacent side of the triangle changes place (as can be seen in the right half of the diagram below). It keeps flipping over every 45 degrees.

To handle this flipping you need to use the angle that's passed into the method (the angle around the square from the 12 o'clock position) to work out the angle of the triangle we are imagining. I've modified the method above to add logic to work out the corrected angle.

public static double calculateLengthToPaint(double angle, double heightOfSquare){
    double flippy = angle % 90;
    if (flippy > 45.0){
        flippy -= 90;
        flippy = Math.abs(flippy);
    }
      return  (heightOfSquare/2.0) / Math.cos(Math.toRadians(flippy));
}

Notes: This code takes it's angle in degrees and only works for positive angles. Also, if you want to have the lines meet the square at even increments around the perimiter then you need to come up with a solution that uses the pythagorean theorem to work out the length of the hypoteneuse and then use trigonometry to work out the angle to draw it at.

Hope that helps.

Showing the triangle flipping over it's hypoteneuse at 45 degrees.

share|improve this answer
it solve my problem! :D Thanks for your explanation, very usefull :) – Tiago Conceição Nov 14 '12 at 15:10

I would say something like this

for(int i = sideLength * -1; i < sideLength; i++) {
for(int j = sideLength * -1; j < sideLength; j++) {
   graphics.drawLine(centerX + i, centerY + j);
}
}

That way, it will paint a line to every point in your square that you're trying to make. I'm not sure if this is what you wanted, but it will work.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

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