Work on the documentation.

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Dimitri Sabadie 2018-08-05 14:47:24 +02:00
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@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
//! Spline interpolation made easy.
//! # Spline interpolation made easy.
//!
//! This crate exposes splines for which each sections can be interpolated independently of each
//! other i.e. its possible to interpolate with a linear interpolator on one section and then
//! switch to a cube Hermite interpolatior for the next section.
//! switch to a cubic Hermite interpolator for the next section.
//!
//! Most of the library consists of three types:
//! Most of the crate consists of three types:
//!
//! - [`Key`], which represents the control points by which the spline must pass.
//! - [`Interpolation`], the type of possible interpolation for each segment.
@ -15,15 +15,38 @@
//! new control point, a new section is created. Each section is assigned an interpolation mode that
//! is picked from its lower control point.
//!
//! # Quickly create splines
//!
//! ```
//! use splines::{Interpolation, Key, Spline};
//!
//! let start = Key::new(0., 0., Interpolation::Linear);
//! let end = Key::new(1., 10., Interpolation::Linear);
//! let spline = Spline::from_keys(vec![start, end]);
//! ```
//!
//! You will notice that we used `Interpolation::Linear` for both the keys. The first key `start`s
//! interpolation will be used for the whole segment defined by those two keys. The `end`s
//! interpolation wont be used. You can in theory use any [`Interpolation`] you want for the last
//! key.
//!
//! # Interpolate values
//!
//! The whole purpose of splines is to interpolate discrete values to yield continuous ones. This is
//! usually done with the `Spline::sample` method. This method expects the interpolation parameter
//! (often, this will be the time of your simulation) as argument and will yield an interpolated
//! value.
//!
//! If you try to sample in out-of-bounds interpolation parameter, youll get no value.
//!
//! ```
//! # use splines::{Interpolation, Key, Spline};
//! # let start = Key::new(0., 0., Interpolation::Linear);
//! # let end = Key::new(1., 10., Interpolation::Linear);
//! # let spline = Spline::from_keys(vec![start, end]);
//! assert_eq!(spline.sample(0.), Some(0.));
//! assert_eq!(spline.sample(1.), Some(10.));
//! assert_eq!(spline.sample(1.1), None);
//! ```
use std::cmp::Ordering;
@ -109,15 +132,6 @@ impl<T> Spline<T> {
/// near the beginning of the spline or its end, ensure you have enough keys around to make the
/// sampling.
pub fn sample(&self, t: f32) -> Option<T> where T: Interpolate {
let first = self.0.first().unwrap();
let last = self.0.last().unwrap();
if t <= first.t {
return Some(first.value);
} else if t >= last.t {
return Some(last.value);
}
let keys = &self.0;
let i = keys.binary_search_by(|key| key.t.partial_cmp(&t).unwrap_or(Ordering::Less)).ok()?;
@ -158,6 +172,29 @@ impl<T> Spline<T> {
}
}
}
/// Sample a spline at a given time with clamping.
///
/// # Return
///
/// If you sample before the first key or after the last one, return the first key or the last
/// one, respectively. Otherwise, behave the same way as `Spline::sample`.
///
/// # Panic
///
/// This function panics if you have no key.
pub fn clamped_sample(&self, t: f32) -> T where T: Interpolate {
let first = self.0.first().unwrap();
let last = self.0.last().unwrap();
if t <= first.t {
return first.value;
} else if t >= last.t {
return last.value;
}
self.sample(t).unwrap()
}
}
/// Iterator over spline keys.
@ -234,7 +271,7 @@ pub(crate) fn cubic_hermite<T>(x: (T, f32), a: (T, f32), b: (T, f32), y: (T, f32
// Normalize a time ([0;1]) given two control points.
#[inline(always)]
pub(crate) fn normalize_time<T>(t: f32, cp: &Key<T>, cp1: &Key<T>) -> f32 {
assert!(cp1.t != cp.t);
assert!(cp1.t != cp.t, "overlapping keys");
(t - cp.t) / (cp1.t - cp.t)
}