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Sam
Sam
08:25
Good morning
08:39
morning
Sam
Sam
good weekends?
just an average one
quite alright, thanks
Sam
Sam
Great
08:41
now back to my old poo; I have two algorithms for a Radon transform, one written by me, which is accurate, but slow and I haven't gotten the backwards transform correct yet, one not written by me, which is lightning fast, but rather inaccurate...
I vote for slow and accurate
maybe the reason its fast is because its inaccurate
My Radon transforms (normal ones, not your wiggly doodly bendy lines) can only be accelerated if an approximation of them is taken
@AnderBiguri my idea as well; I just need to figure out how to do the backwards transform
@Andras wrote me some 3D matrix-magic to pre-calculate the exponential factor, so it doesn't need to be calculated each run, this will speed it up for sure in the CG scheme. But permuting stuff the other way is difficult :p
try to check someliterature, backprojections are often a bit more dodgy than just a permutation/transpose
basically I need the same exponential factor, based on frequency, x-location and slowness (p-value/rayparameter), but with the inverse sign if I understand this integral correctly.
09:10
Can anybody who knows python tell me if this answer that I wrote based purely on the documentation (and without any testing) is correct?
09:21
@Dev-iL you got downvoted :/
but the error seems to be the brakets
() is function call in python
oh, as the other answer poitsn out, in fact
^
Error says as much
Well, you know errors, they are not always 100% obvious if its the first time you see them
It could have been easily
> TypeError: 'numpy.ndarray' object is not callable. Do you mean to use square brakets instead? ([])
I'm pretty sure round() delegates to ndarray.__round__, same as arr.round
@AnderBiguri to be fair: MATLAB throws errors amongst the clearest I have encountered in various programming languages
@AnderBiguri no, because it could be a lot of different solutions.
09:25
@Adriaan absolutely right, but there is nothing impeding other programming languages (specially interpreted ones) from doing the same
@AndrasDeak for a ndarray?
Python has very clear errors
Also, its a suggestion. Latex does this (at least miktex does) and its <3
@AnderBiguri you want cpython to throw typeerrors based on third-party guesswork?
Also "In the face of ambiguity refuse the temptation to guess"
If it is helpful... yes?
09:27
So.... If it is helpful...fuck the noob?
it's not that simple
I know its not
you can't just start writing (crappy!) heuristics for every module ever
still, this is one of the few things that definitely MATLAB does way better, so its doable
In general, informing you about the errors
matlab has no third-party modules :P
09:30
It does have TIGRE! I just wrote my own error throws :P
Python errors are more than informative if you read them and your own code
The only thing missing is which part of the line raised
It is however fair to see how a noob will be very confused by the error TypeError: 'numpy.ndarray' object is not callable
bah,im just nagging, python is still very good at this
@AnderBiguri then the noob will start reading and understanding errors. It's not cryptic at all.
comparing to most languages
Are you talkign about Devil :P
just kidding :P. You are in right in that, its good so they can learn
It's not about being educational. But the error is sufficient.
It's just people have forgotten trivial things, like learning a language before using it, and that errors and warnings are meant to be read
09:35
learning a language before using it WHO DOES THIS ANYMORE
:P im kidding
Nowadays a kid thinks he'll be a dev rockstar ninja, starts cargo-culting an overwatch clone, stops to ask at step 1 because "I got an error"
You are right, the problem was an very very basic problem
If you can read the error but can't make sense of it, google -> SO
There are a few "NoneType object..." errors which can be confusing at first, but explanations are as prolific as for NullPointerException
Changing topic, I love the last xkcd:
-2
Q: Triangle-like shape detection

FKeßlerI am currently working on a project for my university: detection of pollen in an RGB-image. the orange stuff is what I want to have marked. I managed to detect the circular-shaped ones using imfindcircles() but for the triangular shapes I did not find a function. Im = imread('pollen10.jpg'...

I'm considering commenting:

Thank you for adding the code. What have you tried to detect triangular shapes? Mentioning you did a simple Google/SO search and could not find anything is hardly any info. Did you try to write a function? Did you try to modify `imfindcircles()`? The problem in especially image processing is that the line between "easy, use a built-in" and "I need a full PhD to figure this out" is thin. If no searches turned up anything (which'd surprise me), it's most likely the latter category and thus unfortunately too broad for SO.
Is this too harsh/unfriendly?
09:44
just leave it as is
at least they edited after my comment. I hope they respond well
@AnderBiguri that's usable in the question I just linked xD
@beaker spam I got which may interest you: "The Second International Conference on Materials Chemistry and Environmental Protection (MEEP 2018) will be held during November 23-25 in Sanya City, China"
meep meep
10:05
@AnderBiguri I learned my lesson...
hehe I was not mocking you in fact
No worries, lesson learned anyway... I'll just stick to retagging when it comes to python
but you did have a good point about exporting, OP could just put all that data in an array and call numpy.savetxt or something
That could be a comment, if I cared enough
yeah, I guess
10:47
It's high time that this was closed:
> Matlab R2016b comes with a̶ ̶n̶e̶w̶ ̶f̶e̶a̶t̶u̶r̶e̶ a monster that will kill us all: Operator implicit expansion.
lol :D
thanks!
@Dev-iL I am not sure if they would appreciate that request .... no recent activity
Well, the reason for this request is that the old dupe votes aged away
Hammered
I also had an expired vote on that
10:51
@Dev-iL I like your last comment there, as well as @excaza's "relying on errors to input parse your data is a bad idea"
speaking of the latter: I should probably make input checks for my functions before I hand the programs in...
@Adriaan 👍
@Adriaan inputParser class is neato
On the one hand I understand the desire to not have implicit expansion, because in prototyping it shows you sooner where your error is, instead of later on something crashes because it suddenly became a matrix
On the other hand, implicit expansion is a cool programming trick and saves lots and lots of typing in weird other functions which are hard to understand like bsxfun
it's easier in numpy because there you have proper 1d arrays, while in matlab everything has to choose between being a column or a row vector and occasionally this is down to a coin toss
I've been trying to fft something all day, and my check whether it went correct is basically imagesc(ifft(fft(data))). Bit more involved than that, but the gist is: if I cocked up, the image will say "can't display complex values"
10:56
in numpy you only get a column vector if you ask for one
I prefer column vectors since they're easier to view in the variable editor :)
In MATLAB as well init?
I can't remember honestly. How about slicing rows columns of a matrix?
I always use column vectors, so all my colon and linspace declarations have a .' attached
>> M = rand(3); M(:,1)

ans =

    0.8147
    0.9058
    0.1270
10:58
@AndrasDeak this frustrates me a lot
@Adriaan or you can sometimes add a ,1 to the initialization
@AndrasDeak as in A=magic(3); B = A(:,2)? gives a row, B=A(2,:) gives a column (i.e. original representation is kept). Column vectors would be better imo, as then you index "rows", which is the first index of an Nd matrix anyway
and I don't want to guess what A(1,2,:,3,4) is
@Dev-iL not for 0:0.1:1
Because when I pass stuff to mex, I need to explicitly take a size in a direction. sometimes I add a small matlab function to preprocessing and it fucking transposes the 1D array.
10:59
ah, it always keeps the leading singleton dimensions
@AndrasDeak yeah, but why the fuck does a=1:10 have the first dimensions size "1"
:/
@AndrasDeak yes; you could have a 1D vector as A(1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,:) = 1:10;
if you could chain indexing and function calls you could just append (:) and coerce a column vector
Just annoys me when I need to pass it to C
@AnderBiguri which is additionally weird since MATLAB is faster column wise, as that's contiguous in memory
11:01
In that case, its equally fast
its a 1D array
@AndrasDeak Alas, 'tis not Octave
@Adriaan hmm? Either I misunderstand or you're confusing leading singletons with trailing ones
@Dev-iL yup...
@AndrasDeak no, size(A) -> 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 10
those are "leading", no?
@Adriaan I bet they thought about it, but changing it now would be catastrophic to many
In this case its not very relevant because the memory access are neighbouring in any case
11:03
@AnderBiguri I thought Adriaan was saying that indexing like that will give you a regular row or column vector which would not be the case (that would work with trailing singletons)
Kinda like deciding that the charge of an electron should be +
@AndrasDeak oh, no, it's not a regular row vector, but it is a mathematically speaking 1D vector
And my point was that if A is of size [2,3,4,5,6] then A(1,2,:,3,4) is size [1,1,3], because only trailing ones get squeezed out. This is consistent with the 2d behaviour. I think
ah yea, trailing dimensions are squeezed off automatically
but leading ones aren't, which explains why M(1,:) has size [1,n]
11:31
I think I have found the solution for that Euler Math Toolbox guy
Should we create that tag for him and remove MATLAB from the tags in his question?
@Dev-iL ^
11:48
@SardarUsama depends; is it programming, or GUI-click stuff?
for the former I'd say go for it
@Adriaan Reading the documentation, I think it is the former.
Any suggestion for the tag name? emt? or full euler-math-toolbox
Latter
3-letter tags are imo better reserved for very well known acronyms like fft
No point creating a tag nobody will find and understand
I agree but they call it EMT in the doc, so I suggested that
11:54
problem is: what else to tag the question with? [syntax-error]?
there is no error
more of a format related issue
my point was: this is the kind of question I'd normally be OK with having only the language tag. That's not happening if there's no language tag for it
@SardarUsama just [tag:formatting] will already create a clickable tag link
oops :D
12:00
@SardarUsama might be; looks like one that will be on a burnination request in the near future
4
Q: Point of the format tag?

ScimonsterCan anyone explain the point of the format tag? The description contains 9 possible uses, basically copied from Wikipedia. The questions are on a wide variety of subjects, as would be expected, from string formatting, visual formatting, file formats, and even a question on formatting USB drives. ...

and are two different tags
I'm impressed with myself. I made a Radon transform which is approx 1 degree rotated wrt the generally used implementation
@SardarUsama both big and horrible I'd say
12:24
I think I got working what I have been trying to accomplish for the last months
May 25 '17 at 13:05, by Ander Biguri
that is awesome. Good job Ander.
12:38
I created the tag and added some description
Never heard of that, what is it?
@AnderBiguri See this question (and its edit history )
I just found out that the only other questions ( #1 , #2, #3 ) that this tag has on SO were asked by its developer
12:55
I just spend a whole day proving my single fft and then multiplying with an exponential matrix method of doing the Radon Transform is slower and more noisy than the already implemented dual-fft domain one with interpolation. Great day at work :p
(@SardarUsama I'm not responding because I agree with what you're doing)
@SardarUsama @AnderBiguri You missed the typo
You have a typo: else if should be elseif. — Adriaan 19 secs ago
@Adriaan irrelevant, it only opens up more space for errors
@Adriaan That explains the missing end
13:07
Not the missing variables, nor the index must be positive, etc
Vtmax= Vmin:0.1:Vmax -> Vstar(Vtmax)=Vtmax-Vmin;
There are way more errors than an undefined variable
Ah, the first double-loop iteration starts in the if, where DPiI is not defined yet
and we have an answer
13:23
Ugh that question and answer are baaaad... annoys me when people rip off comments (which don't answer the question) and post them as answers
13:39
I agree
13:56
Does anyone here know about 2D weighting/norm types? I have a list of norms with their associated functions, but only in 2D, and am struggling how to implement these in 2D. e.g. the l2 (quadratic) norm is 0.5*x^2, does that become 0.5*(x+y)^2, or 0.5*(x^2+y^2) or another deviation?
dimensions mismatch?
> In the special case of p = 2 {\displaystyle p=2} p=2 (the Euclidean norm or ℓ 2 {\displaystyle \ell _{2}} \ell _{2}-norm for vectors), the induced matrix norm is the spectral norm. The spectral norm of a matrix A {\displaystyle A} A is the largest singular value of A {\displaystyle A} A i.e. the square root of the largest eigenvalue of the positive-semidefinite matrix A ∗ A {\displaystyle A^{}A} {\displaystyle A^{}A}:
@Dev-iL looks useful, thanks!
Do you have to implement it though? MATLAB's norm should be useful... Also, you're welcome
(I wonder who CV'd that new question first)
14:03
@Dev-iL not sure yet tbh
@Adriaan carefull though, sometimes in papers they just mean norm(A(:),2)
otherwise the matrix norm, as Devil said
@AnderBiguri it's for some form of weighting
2 mins close, must almost be a record
Thats not enough info to know which one it is
This dissertation gives a list of formulae for the 1D case, along with plots for the 1D, and strangely enough, 2D case, without showing me the formulae for the 2D cases
14:05
Its possible then they unroll the vector, but I can't tell you 100%
I'll go ask the dude's supervisor (who happens to be mine as well :P)
@Wolfie the voting mob strikes again :)
14:26
@AnderBiguri \o/
I just came to know that the names of the room owners in chat are written in italic characters
@SardarUsama hehe, yea, almost every regular here is a RO :P
we don't do much with the power; basically only kicking out help vampires
Speaking about ROs: isn't it about time Cris became one?
I guess so
14:34
Does any of you answer questions on researchgate? I find this feature odd
I never do, but I also never found any question worth answering
I always find questions that are very general
I barely use researchgate in fact, I think its quite shitty as a webpage
@AnderBiguri "Dear Dr Biguri, I love your awesome beard. What lotion do you use to make it so beautiful?"
:D
Hummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
@AnderBiguri You still haven't found him?
yes, its not that. Its just funny that its a suggestion
14:39
I don't use it either.. Nor linkedin... though people try to convince me I should
And I got some pesky CEOs that want to be my LI friends....
@Dev-iL I do use LI only because my internship supervisor wanted to give me a recommendation only on there
I have a very tidy linkeding account, but I use it as a CV. You don't "use" a CV, you just have one.
@Adriaan Is that acceptable anywhere...? (really asking)
I also do not add random recuiters
@AnderBiguri same for me, as well as the CV part
14:41
@AnderBiguri It's not a random guy.. He used to be a lecturer in a course I was a TA in, now he's the CEO of the company that happens to be the Israeli representative of TMW (among other companies)... I am not impressed though ;)
@Dev-iL yes; on my letter to Uppsala uni I mentioned they could find his recommendation there (including a link to it), and his e-mail
@Dev-iL RG is like the spammy science facebook. So basically science facebook
@SardarUsama I tagged those three questions with your new tag. Not sure it's relevant, but at least the tag gets used. I understand tags will be auto-deleted if they are under-used.
Should we make Cris owner then?
Will that make my name be in italics? I kind of like standing out as the only non-owner. :p
14:55
WE ARE ALL EQUAL IN HERE
Damn, there goes my flashy upright name... :(
There ya go. And if anyone disagrees.... well you have the power to remove him xD
What do I need to know about my new-found powers?
Not much. You can kick out people
14:57
Oh! I can remove @Ander as room owner... :D
and pin messages
D: yes you can
Thanks
@CrisLuengo Click on "room▼", and you'll see your new powers
@CrisLuengo you can edit the room message, title and tags (see top right) under the info button; you can pin messages (right click on the star), you can move messages (under "room"), which we usually use to move help vampire Qs to the bin (called "trash can" for them Mericans), and you can kick people.
The latter is normally used only by me, because the others are more forgiving :P
Forgetting someone?
15:00
@AndrasDeak I guess I'll continue not-using it then :)
@Dev-iL I never log in so they send me clickbait. "Your paper reached a milestone", "a person you cited is working on a project" with no info
@Cris for trashing I suggest the room actually named trash can because I'm RO there so I can move back if needed
@Feeds We should probably remove Dustin and add Wolfie....
yeah go for it
I don't mind them at all but Wolfie's a bit sporadic anyway chat.stackoverflow.com/users/3978545/wolfie?tab=recent
15:05
@AndrasDeak I think a silver badge qualifies you...
I meant in chat. But as I said this is not to say I object
@AndrasDeak I thought you were referring to his avatar
Strange, I don't see this pop-up window when trying to move messages: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/155954/…
15:09
@CrisLuengo did you select some messages first?
@SardarUsama Good point. Yes, that fixed it. Thanks!
16:02
posted on August 20, 2018 by Cleve Moler

I probably first saw this matrix in 1960 in John Todd's class at Caltech. But I forgot about it until Tahar Loulou jogged my memory with a comment following my blog post in late May. It deserves a place in our gallery of interesting matrices.... read more >>

interesting trivia time ^
Since the determinant is one, the inverse must also have integer entries.

Winv = round(inv(W));
of course it's integers if you round it;. at least tell that you're doing it for machine errors
maybe it was someone else :/
@Adriaan well math says they have to be integers, so might as well round the double version
Why does he use diag(diag(R))?
16:10
strip away the off-diagonal?
one diag wouldn't give a matrix
@AndrasDeak oh, that might make sense. Weird way of doing it
makes a diagonal matrix out of the diagonal elements of a matrix
16:22
@AndrasDeak Hungarian "freedom" of press made the Dutch headlines. Apparently this month the last critical news channel was bought by one of Orban's friends
I hope not
Survey: on a scale of 1-10 where 10 is "That's a REALLY bad idea", how likely is it that this implementation bites me in the a** sometime in the future:
function varargout = subsref(obj,s)
   if strcmp(s(1).type, '()')
     % CAUTION: THIS IS INCONSISTENT WITH HOW FUNCTION HANDLES WORK!
     if numel(obj) == 1
       % If we have a scalar input object, we "evaluate" the
       % transmission-at-wavelength (TAWL) function:
       varargout{1} = obj.getTAWL(s(1).subs{1});
     else
       % Otherwise we "select" a subset:
       varargout{1} = builtin('subsref', obj, s);
     end
   else % redirect to default implementation
     [varargout{1:numel(obj)}] = builtin('subsref', obj, s);
I have no idea what this is
in such a scenario 10 should be "kill it with fire" ;)
@AndrasDeak HirTV was bought 1st August is what they're saying here. Internet has freedom, but isn't accessed by a lot of people in rural areas
16:29
there's also a commercial child of RTL here which gets oddly critical
Short explanation: I have a "function-handle-like" class, which can be stored in "regular" (i.e. non-cell) arrays. I have a custom implementation of () for this class that either evaluates or selects a subset, depending on the input
@Dev-iL Are you trying to implement obj(x) as either indexing into obj OR "calling" obj depending on whether obj is a scalar or a matrix?
That is a REALLY bad idea, I'd rate it 11. :)
@AndrasDeak yea, that's what they said. Owned by a German company
but yeah, what "the masses" see is 100% government propaganda
I have overloaded {} indexing in the past to implement array indexing, leaving () over for something else. You can do obj{3}(x).
16:31
ew :D
posted on August 20, 2018 by Loren Shure

Today's guest blogger is Mary Fenelon, who is the product marketing manager for Optimization and Math here at MathWorks. In today's post she describes how she uses optimization to try to best the rest of the product marketing team.... read more >>

@CrisLuengo Maybe I'll adopt this...
It is fairly intuitive, because it looks like a cell array of objects (even though it's not). And MATLAB allows catenating {}() indexing, also {}{}{}(), but not (){}.
i didn't know about {}{}
of course two cell array accesses signal the end of the world
If you do 3 your MATLAB license expires inmediately
16:34
@AndrasDeak subsref allows for any number of {} and ., in any order, but only one (), and that has to be at the end. I have no idea why this [redacted] restriction, but it's there.
I know about the part concerning ()
@AndrasDeak LOL!
There was something about ()() being syntactically ambiguous which is funny because octave can make it work
@AnderBiguri First the world ends, then your MATLAB license expires.
Thus the legend tells
16:35
@AndrasDeak That is interesting, I had not heard of any reasoning. Would love to read up on their thoughts regarding this.
I only remember handwaving, perhaps just gossip
I always wanted to be able to do obj(x,y){ii} with my objects, the code is there to do it, but MATLAB will just not parse it.
@AndrasDeak i++ + ++i ?
These objects are images. I use () for spatial indexing and {} for indexing into the pixel values (each pixel can be a matrix).
@Dev-iL last time I checked that wasn't a problem in MATLAB :P
16:38
@AndrasDeak Does MATLAB parse i++?
don't remember
but either it's a no-op or an error, so no ambiguity
No it does not
>> i++
 i++
    ↑
Error: Expression or statement is incomplete or incorrect.

Did you mean:
>> i = i + 1
Great error message!
oh, just i++, of course not
I had ++i or i+++++i in mind
So i++ + ++i is not ambiguous, it is just bad syntax.
16:41
i+++++i returns i
not 2i?
K>> i++
 i++
    ↑
Error: Invalid expression. Check for missing or extra characters.

K>> ++i
ans =
   0.0000 + 1.0000i
Didn't see that one coming, did you?? That's just MATLAB teaching you to lose your C habits using unexpected imaginary numbers....
only if i is not defined though
16:46
Makes sense, though. It is parsed as +(+i).
Octave:
>> i+++++i
error: invalid lvalue function called in expression
>> ++i
error: in x++ or ++x, x must be defined first
@CrisLuengo Here's v2:
function varargout = subsref(obj,s)
  switch s(1).type
    case '()'
      % Make sure that we have a scalar input object:
      assert(numel(obj) == 1,"Please don't use () referencing with" + ...
        " nonscalar objects. Instead, `arrayfun(@(x)x(in))` should be used. ");
      % Now we "evaluate" the transmission-at-wavelength (TAWL) function:
      varargout{1} = obj.getTAWL(s(1).subs{1});
    case '{}'
      % "select" a subset:
      s(1).type = '()';
      varargout{1} = subsref(builtin('subsref', obj, s(1)), s(2:end));
@Dev-iL 👍
To allow obj{index}(argument) you need to also parse s(2). Subsref is only called once.
And annoying: if you use end, it will evaluate the indexing subexpression until end, then call end, then evaluate the full indexing subexpression:
obj{a}{end}{2}
is the same as
@CrisLuengo hence I call it recursively
obj{a}{end(obj{a},'{}',1)}{2} % (or whatever the syntax is to end)
@Dev-iL True, did not notice that.
my understanding is "end is magic"
16:52
end is annoying... :)
end is nigh
It would be more useful if it was passed to the subsref function
Although now I don't know how to make it evaluate a a vector of those.... @Cris
@Dev-iL Do you mean that arrayfun no longer works?
How about cellfun?
yeah, due to the assert
not a cell so it fails
I think I'll just lose the assert somehow...
16:55
case '()'
  for ii=1:numel(obj)
     varargout{ii} = obj.getTAWL(s(1).subs{1});
    end
room topic changed to CHATLAB and Talktave: Room to discuss MATLAB and Octave related topics - Welcome Cris and Wolfie, our newest room owners. Also... i.imgur.com/EHAPP7J.gif [matlab] [octave]
This question reminded me of a pain point:
0
Q: MATLAB OpenMP/CUDA mex function Crashing Matlab

Kit_SolentI am trying to figure out why my mex file containing CUDA code using OpenMP for multiple GPUs is crashing matlab. From what I can tell the function fails on the second iteration of the following loop: for(int i = 1; i != w.size(); i++) { // Copy frequency value to kernel fl...

Mine was without CUDA, just OpenMP. Totally mysterious crash. I hate those...
"mex function crashing matlab" sounds like mex as usual
"here, let me help you with that problem: it was a segmentation fault"
haha
I fucking hate that really
needint to restart the entire matlab for the segfault
often I have heavy code for initialization
@AnderBiguri I guess that is why you recommend writing the code as a stand-alone executable first, before hooking it into MATLAB? :)
17:02
yes
@AnderBiguri save to .mat?
@AndrasDeak yes of course thats what I do now, after being an idiot for some long period
but still, its silly needing to reboot MATLAB because a segfault
Click "Attempt to continue", and ignore the annoying prompt for as long as you can...
Never does in my case
17:06
same here
Must be a CUDA thing :p
attempt to continue -> 3 screenfuls of java errors, end
I never cuda :P
then again I've only mexed once or twice, so I'm not entirely representative
I have been doing ot for 4 years and never recovers
I have a math problem, just see of you guys can help me barinstorm it.
17:07
I suggested my new office mate to take the CUDA course today
he cuda chosen a better career path [yes, still funny to me]
I have a STL file which represent a closed, non-convex object, and a quite big set of points that are either inside or outside. I am triying to figure out where they are. Right now my approach is to take the point and trow a ray outside the mesh, and count intersections. If even->outside, odd->inside
this works fine
but its fucking slow
my code is now just a slightly improved version of this: stackoverflow.com/questions/51158078/…
anyone work with similar things that can have any idea how to improve it?
if no, its cool, not trying to slave you :D
@AndrasDeak D:
@AnderBiguri I have code for that in 2D. If you find good 3D code, let me know. :)
My approach to this has been to draw the triangles of the mesh, hopefully producing a closed surface, then using the equivalent of imfill(BW,'holes') to fill it up.
Yeah I need 3D. I have "working code" in the linked Q&A, but not efficient one. Im triying to get some biggish models and damn its slow
I just need a smart approach, the current one needs to check so many triangles
I was even thinking on GPU-ing it
In 2D you can use a very fast (quite simple) algorithm: cs.rit.edu/~icss571/filling/how_to.html -- I don't think it extends to 3D.
The core idea is to sort all vertices. You might be able to sort in 3D also, which would make it somewhat cheaper to find intersections.
Also, I'm sure you are doing this, but just to make sure -- you can determine inside/outside for all points along a line though the 3D volume at once.
17:23
@CrisLuengo they are however centroids of my volume mesh
so they are not really ordered
Oh, so you're not trying to rasterize the volume? Disregard all of that then. :)
No, I am triyong to get a volumetric triangle mesh, and I need the inside/outside info
anyway
its late already
gonnago
see ya fellas
17:41
\o
06:00 - 18:0018:00 - 21:00

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