content/blog/2016/03/recursive-midpoint-displacement.markdown @ 2a1c58e03bc2
Fucking backwards-incompatible changes in Hugo
author |
Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com> |
date |
Sun, 12 Aug 2018 22:49:28 +0000 |
parents |
ceb68ee2312a |
children |
f5556130bda1 |
+++
title = "Recursive Midpoint Displacement"
snip = "A cleaner version."
date = 2016-03-07T13:45:00Z
draft = false
+++
<script defer src="/media/js/jquery.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
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In the [last post][mpd] we looked at implementing the Midpoint Displacement
algorithm. I ended up doing the last step iteratively, which works, but isn't
the cleanest way to do it. Before moving on to other algorithms I wanted to
clean things up by using a handy library.
The full series of posts so far:
* [Midpoint Displacement](/blog/2016/02/midpoint-displacement/)
* [Recursive Midpoint Displacement](/blog/2016/03/recursive-midpoint-displacement/)
* [Diamond Square](/blog/2016/06/diamond-square/)
[mpd]: /blog/2016/02/midpoint-displacement/
<div id="toc"></div>
## Multi-Dimensional Arrays
Last week when looking at something unrelated I came across the [ndarray][]
library ("nd" stands for "n-dimensional"). This is a little wrapper around
standard Javascript arrays to add easy multi-dimensional indexing. We're going
to to use `Float64Array` objects as the underlying storage because they're much
more efficient than the vanilla Javascript arrays and they're fairly well
supported.
It also adds [slicing][], which is a lot like Common Lisp's [displaced
arrays][disp-arr]. It lets you create a new "array" object with a different
"shape" that doesn't have any actual storage of its own, but instead refers back
to the original array's data. This is perfect for implementing Midpoint
Displacement with recursion.
[ndarray]: https://github.com/scijs/ndarray
[slicing]: https://github.com/scijs/ndarray#slicing
[disp-arr]: http://clhs.lisp.se/Body/26_glo_d.htm#displaced_array
## Iteration
We're still going to need to iterate over ndarrays at certain points (e.g. when
normalizing them) so let's make some helpful macros to do the annoying busywork
for us:
```clojure
(defmacro do-ndarray [vars array-form & body]
(let [array-var (gensym "array")
build
(fn build [vars n]
(if (empty? vars)
`(do ~@body)
`(do-times ~(first vars) (aget (.-shape ~array-var) ~n)
~(build (rest vars) (inc n)))))]
`(let [~array-var ~array-form]
~(build vars 0))))
(defmacro do-ndarray-el [element array-form & body]
(let [index (gensym "index")
array (gensym "array")]
`(let [~array ~array-form]
(do-times ~index (.-length (.-data ~array))
(let [~element (aget (.-data ~array) ~index)]
~@body)))))
```
Now we can easily iterate over the indices:
```clojure
(do-ndarray [x y] my-ndarray
(console.log "Array[" x "][" y "] is: "
(.get my-ndarray x y)))
```
Or just over the items if we don't need their indices:
```clojure
(do-ndarray-el item my-ndarray
(console.log item))
```
These macros should work for ndarrays of any number of dimensions, and will
compile into ugly but fast Javascript `for` loops.
## Updating the Heightmaps
To start we'll need to update the heightmap functions to work with ndarrays
instead of the normal JS arrays.
Start with a few functions to calculate sizes/incides:
```clojure
(defn heightmap-resolution [heightmap]
(aget heightmap.shape 0))
(defn heightmap-last-index [heightmap]
(dec (heightmap-resolution heightmap)))
(defn heightmap-center-index [heightmap]
(midpoint 0 (heightmap-last-index heightmap)))
```
Support for reading/writing:
```clojure
(defn heightmap-get [heightmap x y]
(.get heightmap x y))
(defn heightmap-get-safe [heightmap x y]
(let [last (heightmap-last-index heightmap)]
(when (and (<= 0 x last)
(<= 0 y last))
(heightmap-get heightmap x y))))
(defn heightmap-set! [heightmap x y val]
(.set heightmap x y val))
(defn heightmap-set-if-unset! [heightmap x y val]
(when (== 0 (heightmap-get heightmap x y))
(heightmap-set! heightmap x y val)))
```
Normalization:
```clojure
(defn normalize [heightmap]
(let [max (- Infinity)
min Infinity]
(do-ndarray-el el heightmap
(when (< max el) (set! max el))
(when (> min el) (set! min el)))
(let [span (- max min)]
(do-ndarray [x y] heightmap
(heightmap-set! heightmap x y
(/ (- (heightmap-get heightmap x y) min)
span))))))
```
Creation:
```clojure
(defn make-heightmap [exponent]
(let [resolution (+ (Math.pow 2 exponent) 1)]
(let [heightmap (ndarray (new Float64Array (* resolution resolution))
[resolution resolution])]
(set! heightmap.exponent exponent)
(set! heightmap.resolution resolution)
(set! heightmap.last (dec resolution))
heightmap)))
```
I'm not going to go through all the code here line-by-line because it's mostly
just a simple update of the last post.
## Slicing Heightmaps
Part of the Midpoint Displacement is "repeat the process on the four corner
squares of this one", and with ndarray we can make getting those corners much
simpler:
```clojure
(defn top-left-corner [heightmap]
(let [center (heightmap-center-index heightmap)]
(-> heightmap
(.lo 0 0)
(.hi (inc center) (inc center)))))
(defn top-right-corner [heightmap]
(let [center (heightmap-center-index heightmap)]
(-> heightmap
(.lo center 0)
(.hi (inc center) (inc center)))))
(defn bottom-left-corner [heightmap]
(let [center (heightmap-center-index heightmap)]
(-> heightmap
(.lo 0 center)
(.hi (inc center) (inc center)))))
(defn bottom-right-corner [heightmap]
(let [center (heightmap-center-index heightmap)]
(-> heightmap
(.lo center center)
(.hi (inc center) (inc center)))))
```
Each of these will return a "slice" of the underlying ndarray that looks and
acts like a fresh array (e.g. its indices start at `0`, `0`), but that uses the
appropriate part of the original array as the data storage.
## Updating the Algorithm
Now we can turn the algorithm into a recursive version. With the slicing
functions it's pretty simple. Initializing the corners is still trivial:
```clojure
(defn mpd-init-corners [heightmap]
(let [last (heightmap-last-index heightmap)]
(heightmap-set! heightmap 0 0 (rand))
(heightmap-set! heightmap 0 last (rand))
(heightmap-set! heightmap last 0 (rand))
(heightmap-set! heightmap last last (rand))))
```
The meat of the algorithm looks long, but is mostly just calculating all the
appropriate numbers with readable names:
```clojure
(defn mpd-displace [heightmap spread spread-reduction]
(let [last (heightmap-last-index heightmap)
c (midpoint 0 last)
; Get the values of the corners
bottom-left (heightmap-get heightmap 0 0)
bottom-right (heightmap-get heightmap last 0)
top-left (heightmap-get heightmap 0 last)
top-right (heightmap-get heightmap last last)
; Calculate the averages for the points we're going to fill
top (average2 top-left top-right)
left (average2 bottom-left top-left)
bottom (average2 bottom-left bottom-right)
right (average2 bottom-right top-right)
center (average4 top left bottom right)
next-spread (* spread spread-reduction)]
; Set the four edge midpoint values
(heightmap-set-if-unset! heightmap c 0 (jitter bottom spread))
(heightmap-set-if-unset! heightmap c last (jitter top spread))
(heightmap-set-if-unset! heightmap 0 c (jitter left spread))
(heightmap-set-if-unset! heightmap last c (jitter right spread))
; Set the center value
(heightmap-set-if-unset! heightmap c c (jitter center spread))
; Recurse on the four corners if necessary (3x3 is the base case)
(when-not (== 3 (heightmap-resolution heightmap))
(mpd-displace (top-left-corner heightmap) next-spread spread-reduction)
(mpd-displace (top-right-corner heightmap) next-spread spread-reduction)
(mpd-displace (bottom-left-corner heightmap) next-spread spread-reduction)
(mpd-displace (bottom-right-corner heightmap) next-spread spread-reduction))))
```
The main wrapper function is simple:
```clojure
(defn midpoint-displacement [heightmap]
(let [initial-spread 0.3
spread-reduction 0.55]
(mpd-init-corners heightmap)
(mpd-displace heightmap initial-spread spread-reduction)
(normalize heightmap)))
```
## Result
The result looks the same as before, but will generate the heightmaps a lot
faster because it's operating on a `Float64Array` instead of a vanilla JS array.
<div id="demo-final" class="threejs"></div>
The code for these blog posts is a bit of a mess because I've been copy/pasting
to show the partially-completed demos. To fix that I've created a little
[single-page demo][ymir] with completed versions of the various algorithms you
can play with. [The code for that][ymir-code] should be a lot more readable
than the hacky code for these posts.
[ymir]: http://ymir.stevelosh.com/
[ymir-code]: http://bitbucket.org/sjl/ymir/