how to get one shape out of multiple shapes
5 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Asliddin Komilov
on 13 Dec 2023
Commented: Asliddin Komilov
on 22 Dec 2023
Hi,
I have multiple shapes I need to merge into a single shape, because I have sets of shapes those I have to merge and compare with each other (put into a one plot).
the set of data is attached and I can plot it like this:
plot(X(:, [1:end 1])', Y(:, [1:end 1])')
let me know, if you know how to do it, thanks.
I got this shape using patch, but it generated a Patch file that I cannot use.
Ideally, I would like my data was interpolated so the final shape will not have sharp edges but be smooth and go down to Y=0.
Help me handle that too if you can. thanks
1 Comment
Dyuman Joshi
on 13 Dec 2023
"I got this shape using patch, but it generated a Patch file that I cannot use."
You can't use the patch object or you can't use the output generated?
What is the expected output? It will be helpful if you can show an illustration.
Accepted Answer
DGM
on 13 Dec 2023
patch() doesn't create a file. If you created a file somehow, nobody knows how you did it.
I'm not sure where this is going, but here's a guess.
% loads X,Y
load data.mat
% get rid of NaNs
xhasnans = any(isnan(X),2);
yhasnans = any(isnan(Y),2);
goodrows = ~(xhasnans | yhasnans);
X = X(goodrows,:);
Y = Y(goodrows,:);
% find convex hull
K = convhull(double(X),double(Y));
Xh = X(K);
Yh = Y(K);
% plot the convex hull, show the curve endpoint
plot(Xh,Yh); hold on
plot(X(1),Yh(1),'o')
% get rid of the base of the curve
Xh = Xh(3:end-1);
Yh = Yh(3:end-1);
% extrapolate to Y=0 from last 10 datapoints
Np = 10; % number of points to use
% the right-hand part of the curve
Yhr = Yh(1:Np);
Xhr = Xh(1:Np);
Yexr = [0;Yhr];
Xexr = interp1(Yhr,Xhr,Yexr,'linear','extrap');
% the left-hand part of the curve
Yhl = Yh(end-Np+1:end);
Xhl = Xh(end-Np+1:end);
Yexl = [Yhl;0];
Xexl = interp1(Yhl,Xhl,Yexl,'linear','extrap');
% put them back together
Xex = [Xexr; Xh(Np+1:end-Np); Xexl];
Yex = [Yexr; Yh(Np+1:end-Np); Yexl];
% close the curve (if needed
Xex = Xex([1:end 1]);
Yex = Yex([1:end 1]);
% plot the extraploated curve, show the endpoint
plot(Xex,Yex,'--')
plot(Xex(1),Yex(1),'*')
3 Comments
DGM
on 14 Dec 2023
I wouldn't call it a guess. I picked it manually based on the given hull. For a different set of polygons, I don't know that it would be consistently correct.
More Answers (2)
Mathieu NOE
on 13 Dec 2023
hello
try this
x = double(X(:));
y = double(Y(:));
% remove nan
id = isnan(x) & isnan(y);
x(id) = [];
y(id) = [];
% k = boundary(___,s) specifies shrink factor s using any of the previous syntaxes.
% s is a scalar between 0 and 1. Setting s to 0 gives the convex hull,
% and setting s to 1 gives a compact boundary that envelops the points.
% The default shrink factor is 0.5.
s = 0.1;
k = boundary(x,y,s);
x_out = x(k);
y_out = y(k);
% find lower left "corner" point to make extrapolation towards Y = 0
[mx,ix1] = min(x_out);
my = y_out(ix1);
ind = find(x_out<(mx+1));
slope = mean(diff(y_out(ind))./diff(x_out(ind)));
x_lower_left = mx - my/slope;
% find lower right "corner" point to make extrapolation towards Y = 0
[mx,ix2] = max(x_out);
my = y_out(ix2);
ind = find(x_out>(mx-1));
slope = mean(diff(y_out(ind))./diff(x_out(ind)));
x_lower_right = mx - my/slope;
% add those two new points to x_out and y_out
x_out2 = [x_out(1:ix2-1); x_lower_right; x_out(ix2:ix1); x_lower_left; x_out(ix1+1:end) ] ;
y_out2 = [y_out(1:ix2-1); 0 ; y_out(ix2:ix1); 0 ; y_out(ix1+1:end) ] ;
plot(x,y, '*', x_out, y_out, '-*r', x_out2, y_out2, '-g')
0 Comments
See Also
Categories
Find more on Graphics Performance in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!