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I need to find the Line coordinates(x1,y1,x2,y2) after the object has been modified. (moved, scaled, rotated)

I thought to use the oCoords information and based on angle and flip information to decide which corners are the line ends, but it seems that it will not be too accurate…

Any help?

Example:

x1: 164,

y1: 295.78334045410156,

x2: 451,

y2: 162.78334045410156

x: 163, y: 161.78334045410156 - top left corner

x: 452, y: 161.78334045410156 - top right corner

x: 163, y: 296.78334045410156 - bottom left corner

x: 452, y: 296.78334045410156 - bottom right corner

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  • 1
    Are you calling setCoords() method on your line object before retrieving oCoords values ?
    – BKR
    May 24, 2016 at 21:14
  • I have not used it, but even with it remains the difference of 1 pixel. I have all objects with origin - "center". Do you know if the corners have this property, and that to be the reason(if it is not set), or maybe they are moved slightly out of the real ends by default? May 25, 2016 at 4:14
  • The fabric Line Object has the proprties: x1,y1,x2,y2. After performing that transform aren't the values updated to the real ones ?
    – BKR
    May 25, 2016 at 6:25
  • No they remain the same as originalState May 25, 2016 at 9:28
  • Anyway thanks for the help I decided to ignore the discripancy and to use them. May 25, 2016 at 9:51

1 Answer 1

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When Fabric.js calculates oCoords - i.e. object's corners' coordinates - it takes into account the object's strokeWidth:

// fabric.Object.prototype
_getNonTransformedDimensions: function() {
  var strokeWidth = this.strokeWidth,
      w = this.width + strokeWidth,
      h = this.height + strokeWidth;
  return { x: w, y: h };
},

For most objects, stroke is kind of a border that outlines the outer edges, so it makes perfect sense to account for strokeWidth it when calculating corner coordinates.

In fabric.Line, though, stroke is used to draw the body of the line. There is no example in the question but I assume this is the reason behind discrepancies between the real end-point coordinates and those in oCoords.

So, if you really want to use oCoords to detect the coordinates of the end points, you'll have to adjust for strokeWidth / 2, e.g.

const realx1 = line.oCoords.tl.x + line.strokeWidth / 2
const realy1 = line.oCoords.tl.y + line.strokeWidth / 2

Keep in mind that fabric.Line's own _getNonTransformedDimensions() does adjust for strokeWidth, but only when the line's width or height equal 0:

// fabric.Line.prototype
_getNonTransformedDimensions: function() {
  var dim = this.callSuper('_getNonTransformedDimensions');
  if (this.strokeLineCap === 'butt') {
    if (this.width === 0) {
      dim.y -= this.strokeWidth;
    }
    if (this.height === 0) {
      dim.x -= this.strokeWidth;
    }
  }
  return dim;
},

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