geode
Geode
Mathematics library for Crystal supporting vectors, matrices, quaternions, and more.
The goal of Geode is to be an expressive and performant mathematics library. Geode attempts to distill concepts down to their basic components. Types, such as vectors and matrices, can be used with any numeric primitive (int or float) and any dimensionality. Whenever possible, Geode will produce a compilation error for invalid operations instead of raising a runtime error. E.g. multiplying matrices with mismatched side lengths.
Installation
Add this to your application's shard.yml
:
dependencies:
geode:
gitlab: arctic-fox/geode
version: ~> 0.2.1
Usage
This README explains the design of Geode and basic usage. For detailed information on usage and available function, please check the documentation.
It may be useful to include Geode
in your code to avoid name-spacing. Examples here and in the documentation omit the Geode::
prefix for brevity.
Common Types
Most types have a "base" type and a collection of modules that implement functionality. The base type defines the underlying data structure and fundamental access patterns. Any specifics of the type are also defined in the base. The base types include a "common" module. The common module then includes all other modules as mix-ins. This pattern allows any "common" type to be used as an argument instead of relying on a base type.
Take for example a 2D vector that has two components.
struct Vector2D(T)
include CommonVector2D
getter x : T, y : T
end
struct Vector2DArray(T)
include CommonVector2D
@array : StaticArray(T, 2)
def x
@array[0]
end
def y
@array[1]
end
end
NOTE: The types listed above are fictitious and not actually in Geode.
Vector2D
and Vector2DArray
are base types. They both include the CommonVector2D
module. The functions in CommonVector2D
and all other mix-ins will work, regardless of the base type used. This allows fundamental properties and rules to be reused across types without duplicating code. It also allows the base type to decide the optimal design for storing and accessing data.
Immutable
All types are immutable unless otherwise specified.
Extension Methods
Methods add to types defined outside this shard are called extensions. These methods are optional and not included by default. To enable them, do:
require "geode/extensions"
Most of these methods provide syntactic sugar. See each "extensions" section below for details regarding methods exposed for each type.
#inv
The #inv
method returns the inverse of a number.
2.inv # => 0.5
0.2.inv # => 5.0
Vectors
Vectors types come in two groups: fixed-size and generic. Both use the common type CommonVector
. Vector types include Indexable
.
Vector size is a compile-time constant. A compilation error will be raised for any operations where the sizes between vectors don't match. For instance, adding two vectors with different sizes.
Fixed-size
Fixed-size vectors are named VectorN
where N
is the dimensionality of the vector. There are 4 vectors of this type: Vector1
through Vector4
. Each takes a type parameter which is the scalar value stored for each component. Additionally, there are aliases for the common numerical types.
VectorNI
-I
for integer, 32-bit integersVectorNL
-L
for long, 64-bit integersVectorNF
-F
for float, 32-bit floating pointsVectorND
-D
for double, 64-bit floating points
To create a fixed-size vector, one of the initializer methods can be used, the simplest being:
Vector3.new(x, y, z)
The short-hand bracket-notation []
can also be used.
Vector3[x, y, z]
Fixed-size vectors also have convenience methods specific to their size. The #x
, #y
, #z
, and #w
getters are available for their corresponding sized vectors.
Vector2
has angle methods #angle
, #signed_angle
, and #rotate
. Vector3
has angle methods #alpha
, #beta
, #gamma
, #rotate_x
, #rotate_y
, #rotate_z
, and #cross
(cross-product). These methods are not available on the generic vector type (even if their dimensionality is 2 or 3).
All fixed-size vector use the base type VectorBase
.
Generic
Generic vectors are defined by the Vector
type. They can have an arbitrarily large size, however, the size must be known at compile-time. Generic vectors take two type arguments: the component type and size. This is similar to StaticArray
.
Vector(Float64, 7).new({1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, 7.0})
The short-hand bracket-notation []
can also be used.
Vector[1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, 7.0]
Functions
Some common vector functions are listed below.
- Standard operations:
+
,-
,*
,/
- Geometric operations:
#dot
,#mag
,#mag2
,#normalize
,#project
- Matrix operations:
*
,#to_row
,#to_column
Extensions
There is a single extension method for vectors: *
. This allows multiplying a vector by a scalar, where the scalar is in front.
5 * Vector[1, 2, 3] # => (5, 10, 15)
Without this extension, all vector multiplication requires the vector on the left of the *
operator.
Considerations
The fixed-size vectors store their values on the stack. Generic vectors store their values on the heap. For 1-4 dimensions, the fixed-size vectors are recommended. In general, they will be faster and provide more functions since size is explicit. For arbitrarily large dimensions, a generic vector should be used.
Matrices
Like vectors, matrices come in two styles: fixed-size and generic. Both use the common type CommonMatrix
. Matrix types include Indexable
- see 'Indexing' section below for details.
Matrix dimensions are compile-time constants. A compilation error will be raised for any operations where the sizes between matrices don't match. For instance, multiplying matrices with mismatched dimensions.
Matrix types are complex and have a lot of methods.
Fixed-size
Fixed-size matrices are named MatrixMxN
where M
and N
are the rows and columns respectively. There are 16 matrices of this type: Matrix1x1
through Matrix4x4
. Each takes a type parameter which is the scalar value stored for each entry. Additionally, there are aliases for the common square types.
Matrix1
- Short forMatrix1x1
Matrix2
- Short forMatrix2x2
Matrix3
- Short forMatrix3x3
Matrix4
- Short forMatrix4x4
To create a fixed-size matrix, one of the initializer methods can be used, the simplest being:
Matrix3x2.new({{1, 2, 3}, {4, 5, 6}})
The short-hand bracket-notation []
can also be used.
Matrix3x2[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]
The initializers use nested collections, where each element of the outer collection is a row. These could also be written like so for readability:
Matrix3x3[
[1, 2, 3],
[4, 5, 6],
[7, 8, 9]
]
Fixed-size matrices Matrix1x1
, Matrix2x2
, Matrix3x3
, and Matrix4x4
include SquareMatrix
. This provides extra methods specifically for square matrix types. These also have an .identity
constructor that create an identity matrix.
Generic
Generic matrices are defined by the Matrix
type. They can have an arbitrarily large size, however, the size must be known at compile-time. Generic vectors take three type arguments: the component type, the rows, and columns. Rows and columns are represented as integers M
and N
respectively. This is similar to StaticArray
.
Matrix(Float64, 2, 7).new({
{1.1, 2.1, 3.1, 4.1, 5.1, 6.1, 7.1},
{1.2, 2.2, 3.2, 4.2, 5.2, 6.2, 7.2}
})
The short-hand bracket-notation []
can also be used.
Matrix[
[1.1, 2.1, 3.1, 4.1, 5.1, 6.1, 7.1],
[1.2, 2.2, 3.2, 4.2, 5.2, 6.2, 7.2]
]
The initializers use nested collections, where each element of the outer collection is a row.
The Matrix
generic type includes SquareMatrix
for convenience, but will generate a compilation error if they're called on non-square matrices.
Functions
Some common matrix functions are listed below.
- Size:
#rows
,#columns
,#size
#square?
- Indexers:
#row
,#column
,#each_row
,#each_column
- Standard operations:
+
,-
,*
,/
#transpose
#sub
- Square matrices:
#diagonal
,#trace
,#determinant
- Vector operations:
*
,#row?
,#column?
,#to_vector
- Transforms (2D):
.reflect_x
,.reflect_y
,.rotate
,.scale
,.translate
#reflect_x
,#reflect_y
,#rotate
,#scale
,#translate
- Transforms (3D):
.reflect_x
,.reflect_y
,.reflect_z
,.rotate
,.rotate_x
,.rotate_y
,.rotate_z
,.scale
,.translate
,.look_at
,#reflect_x
,#reflect_y
,#reflect_z
,#rotate
,#rotate_x
,#rotate_y
,#rotate_z
,#scale
,#translate
- Projections:
.ortho
,.perspective
Multiplication
Matrices of any size can be multiplied together, provided their dimensions match. Geode will know at compile-time the resulting matrix size. Recall that MxN x NxP = MxP.
m1 = Matrix[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]
m2 = Matrix[[1], [10], [100]]
m1 * m2 # => [[321], [654]]
Matrices and vectors can be multiplied together. Order matters in this case. When multiplying a matrix by a vector (M x v), the vector is treated as a column vector (matrix with one column). Conversely, multiplying a vector by a matrix (v x M), the vector is treated as a row vector (matrix with one row).
mat = Matrix[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]]
vec = Vector[1, 10, 100]
mat * vec # => (321, 654, 987)
vec * mat # => (741, 852, 963)
Transforms
2D and 3D transforms methods are available on 2x2, 3x3, and 4x4 matrices. 2D transforms can be performed with 2x2 matrices and 3x3 matrices if there is a translation. Likewise, 3D transforms can be performed with 3x3 matrices and 4x4 matrices if there is a translation. There are two categories for each of these transforms.
The first are exposed as class methods on their respective, fixed-size matrix type. These create a matrix as-if the transformation was applied to an identity matrix. They're useful for starting a chain of transformations.
vector = Vector2[1.0, 1.0].normalize
matrix = Matrix2(Float64).rotate(45.degrees)
vector * matrix # => (0.0, 1.0)
The second category are instance methods. These apply the transform and return it as a new matrix.
vector = Vector2[1.0, 1.0].normalize
matrix = Matrix2(Float64).scale(2).rotate(45.degrees) # Scale then rotate.
vector * matrix # => (0.0, 2.0)
Transforms can be chained together.
Matrix2(Float64).identity.scale(5).rotate(180.degrees)
2D translations on a 2x2 matrix will return a 3x3 matrix. Similarly, 3D translations on a 3x3 matrix will returns a 4x4 matrix. When applying to a vector (or other primitive), it must use the expanded size. Typically, 1 or 0 is used for the "extra" dimension.
vector = Vector3[1, 2, 1]
matrix = Matrix2(Float64).rotate(45.degrees).translate(2, 3)
vector * matrix # => (1.292893219, 5.121320343, 1.0)
vector = Vector4[1, 2, 3, 1]
matrix = Matrix3(Float64).rotate_y(45.degrees).translate(2, 3, 4)
vector * matrix # => (4.828427124, 5.0, 5.414213562, 1.0)
Note: The transform matrices are constructed so that the matrix is on the right-hand-side of the multiplication operation. If it is desired to have them on the left, transpose the matrix before multiplying.
vector = Vector3[1, 2, 1]
matrix = Matrix2(Float64).rotate(45.degrees).translate(2, 3)
vector * matrix # => (1.292893219, 5.121320343, 1.0)
matrix.transpose * vector # => (1.292893219, 5.121320343, 1.0)
Projection
The following projection methods are available:
Orthographic
The Matrix4x4.ortho
method can be used to generate an orthographic projection. There is also a 2D variant by the same name. These methods take the bounds of the region to project (clipping planes).
Perspective
The Matrix4x4.perspective
constructs a perspective projection matrix. This method takes a field-of-view, aspect ratio, and near and far clipping planes. The field-of-view is the vertical angle, not horizontal.
Handedness and Z-normalization
By default, the 3D projection methods produce matrices for right-handed coordinate systems with z normalized between -1 and 1. This is typical for OpenGL. If a different layout is needed, there are variants of these methods. Add one of the following suffixes to change the behavior (e.g. perspective_lh_zo
):
_lh_zo
- left-handed, z from 0 to 1._lh_no
- left-handed, z from -1 to 1._rh_zo
- right-handed, z from 0 to 1._rh_no
- right-handed, z from -1 to 1 (the default).
The method used by the methods without a suffix is controlled by compiler flags. This is an ideal way to change the layout method globally. -Dleft_handed
will use a left-handed coordinate system. -Dz_zero_one
will normalize z between 0 and 1.
Indexing
Matrices use two indexing modes: row-column and flat.
Row-column indexing is the common way of referencing entries in a matrix. It uses i
and j
to represent the row and column indices respectively. i
ranges from 0 to M - 1 and j
ranges from 0 to N - 1. Entries can be accessed by using the #[]
method with two arguments: i
and j
.
Flat indexing uses a single index from 0 to M x N - 1. It counts in row-major order. This indexing method is primarily used when dealing with Indexable
methods provided by the Crystal standard library.
Methods and their documentation use the following conventions to distinguish between indexing modes:
- The word "indices" refers to row-column indexing, while "index" refers to flat indexing.
- The variables
i
andj
are used for row-column indexing, whileindex
is used for flat indexing.
matrix.each_indices do |i, j|
# ...
end
matrix.each_index do |index|
# ...
end
Extensions
There is a single extension method for matrices: *
. This allows multiplying a matrix by a scalar, where the scalar is in front.
5 * Matrix[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]] # => [[5, 10, 15], [20, 25, 30]]
Without this extension, all matrix multiplication requires the matrix on the left of the *
operator.
Considerations
The fixed-size matrices store their values on the stack. Generic matrices store their values on the heap. For side lengths 1-4, the fixed-size matrices are recommended. In general, they will be faster and provide more functions since size is explicit. For arbitrarily large matrices, a generic matrix should be used.
All matrices have their elements laid out in row-major order.
Angles
Geode provides types for some angle units. The currently supported units are: Degrees
, Radians
, Turns
, Gradians
As a refresher, degrees are measured from 0 to 360; radians from 0 to 2π or τ; and gradians from 0 to 400. Turns is an angle from 0 to 1, like a revolution.
Angles are created by passing their numerical value to an initializer.
Degrees.new(90)
Radians.new(Math::PI / 2)
Turns.new(0.25)
Gradians.new(100)
The following common angles are available as constructors on all types: .zero
, .quarter
, .third
, .half
, .full
Radians(Float64).third
Angle types have a type parameter, which is the underlying numerical type. Keep this in mind when performing calculations.
Degrees.new(30) * 2 # 60 degrees (represented as Int32)
Usually you will want to use a floating point number.
Degrees.new(30.0) * 2 # 60.0 degrees (represented as Float64)
Angles can be converted by using a #to_x
method, where x
is the type to convert to (e.g. #to_radians
). An angle can be converted to a numerical type in radians by calling #to_f
. Anywhere in Geode where an angle is accepted, one of these unit types can be used, for instance Vector2#rotate
.
All angle types have a base type of Angle
. Angles can have basic math operations performed on them (+
, -
, *
, /
) even with different units. The #normalize
method will correct an angle so that it is between 0 and 1 revolution.
Degrees.new(540).normalize # 180 degrees
Angles can be stepped with an iterator (see Steppable
).
0.degrees.step to: 180, by: 5.degrees
Extensions
The angle extension methods provide syntax sugar for creating angles. Similar to how the Crystal's standard library exposes time span methods, such as #hours
, the same can be done with angles. There are two groups of extensions.
The first simply creates an angle of the specified unit from the numerical value.
90.degrees
Math::PI.radians
is effectively the same as:
Degrees.new(90)
Radians.new(Math::PI)
There is a method for each unit type: #degrees
, #radians
, #turns
, #gradians
Additionally, there are extension methods that convert their numerical value from radians to the desired unit.
(Math::PI / 2).to_degrees # 90 degrees
Math::PI.to_turns # 0.5 turns
is effectively the same as:
(Math::PI / 2).radians.to_degrees
Math::PI.radians.to_turns
There is a method for each unit type: #to_degrees
, #to_radians
, #to_turns
, #to_gradians
Considerations
At a low-level, angle types provide a wrapper around a numerical value. The methods in these wrappers are aware of their unit (radians, degrees, etc.). The numerical value is stored as-is and not converted. For instance, specifying 45.degrees
will not convert to radians and will store the value 45
in memory. Units are converted only when necessary.
Development
This shard is still in active development. New features are being added and existing functionality improved.
Feature Progress
In no particular order, features that have been implemented and are planned. Items not marked as completed may have partial implementations.
- Vectors
- Vector1
- Vector2
- Vector3
- Vector4
- Vector
- Common
- Operations
- Geometry
- Matrices
- Comparison
- Unit optimizations
- Matrices
- Matrix1xN (1x1, 1x2, 1x3, 1x4)
- Matrix2xN (2x1, 2x2, 2x3, 2x4)
- Matrix3xN (3x1, 3x2, 3x3, 3x4)
- Matrix4xN (4x1, 4x2, 4x3, 4x4)
- Matrix
- Common
- Operations
- Square
- Diagonal
- Trace
- Determinant for generic matrices
- Inverse
- Vectors
- Transforms
- 2D
- 3D
- Projection
- Iterators
- Comparison
- Quaternions
- Polar
- 2D
- Spherical 3D
- Cylindrical 3D
- Angles
- Radians
- Degrees
- Turns
- Gradians
- Byte degrees
- Extensions & conversions
- Primitives
- Shapes
- Lines
- Points
- Planes
- Curves
- Polynomial
- Bézier
- Splines
- Functions
- Lerp
- Slerp
- Edge
- Min/max
- Extensions
- Angles
- Vector scalar
- Matrix scalar
Contributing
- Fork it (GitHub https://github.com/icy-arctic-fox/geode/fork or GitLab https://gitlab.com/arctic-fox/geode/fork/new)
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull/Merge Request
Please make sure to run crystal tool format
before submitting. The CI build checks for properly formatted code. Ameba is run to check for code style.
Documentation is automatically generated and published to GitLab pages. It can be found here: https://arctic-fox.gitlab.io/geode
This project's home is (and primarily developed) on GitLab. A mirror is maintained to GitHub. Issues, pull requests (merge requests), and discussion are welcome on both. Maintainers will ensure your contributions make it in.
Testing
Tests must be written for any new functionality.
The spec/
directory contains feature tests as well as unit tests. These demonstrate small bits of functionality. The feature tests are grouped into sub directories based on their type.
Spectator is used for testing. The test suite is broken apart for CI builds to reduce compilation time.
geode
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- December 11, 2021
Thu, 21 Nov 2024 01:03:31 GMT