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A C++ implementation of Douglas-Peucker Line Approximation Algorithm

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3 Mar 2003 2  
DP Line approximation algorithm is a well-known method to approximate 2D lines. It is quite fast, O(nlog_2(n)) for a n-points line and can drastically compress a data curve. Here, a fully OOP implementation is given.

Sample Image - dphull.jpg

Introduction

When working with mathematical simulations or engineering problems, it is not unusual to handle curves that contains thousands of points. Usually, displaying all the points is not useful, a number of them will be rendered on the same pixel since the screen precision is finite. Hence, you use a lot of resource for nothing!

This article presents a fast 2D-line approximation algorithm based on the Douglas-Peucker algorithm (see [1]), well-known in the cartography community. It computes a hull, scaled by a tolerance factor, around the curve by choosing a minimum of key points. This algorithm has several advantages:

  • It is fast!: For a n point curve, computation time of the approximation is proportional to nlog_2(n),
  • You don't need a priori knowledge on the curve,
  • The compression ratio can be easily tuned using the tolerance parameter.

The class has been integrated to a plotting library: Plot Graphic Library.

Douglas-Peucker (DP) Line Simplification Algorithm

The DP line simplification algorithm was originally proposed in [1]. John Hershberger and Jack Snoeyink have implemented it in C in [2] as a package named DPSimp:

DPsimp is a Douglas-Peucker line simplification algorithm implementation by John Hershberger and Jack Snoeyink. They analyze the line simplification algorithm reported by Douglas and Peucker and show that its worst case is quadratic in n, the number of input points. The algorithm is based on path hulls, that uses the geometric structure of the problem to attain a worst-case running time proportional to nlog_2(n), which is the best case of the Douglas algorithm.

The algorithm is based on a recursive construction of path hull, as depicted in the picture below. They did all the hard work (writing the base code in C), I ported it to C++ templates.

Modifications to DPSimp

DPSimp was using a recursive call in the DP method. This could lead to a stack overflow when the algorithm would go deep in recursion. To avoid this problem an internal stack has been added to the class to mimic the recursive function call without stack overflow.

Concepts and class design

Let the points denote all the points of the original curve and the keys the points from the original curve that are kept for the approximation.

The idea is that the user provides a container for the points, denoted PointContainer, and for the keys, denoted KeyContainer, and the link between those containers will be the line simplification class, denoted LineApproximator.

How do we build a class hierarchy without restricting ourselves to particular container? In fact, one user might store it's points in vector< pair<T,T>> and another one in 2 separate vector<T>. Of course, the same argument applies to the KeyContainer.

A possible answer is templating. Passing the PointContainer and KeyContainer as template arguments for LineApproximator allows to build the approximation class without specifying the containers, since the class is built at compilation time (We could write interface for those containers but in fact, I'm too lazy for that :) ).

With this idea in mind, here are the specifications of the container:

PointContainer

Let

  • Point a structure, template or class that has x,y of type T as member,
  • PointRef a structure, template or class that has x,y of type T& as member,

PointContainer behaves like a vector of Point:

  • has clear(), size() and resize() methods,
  • has random access iterator,
  • const_iterator points to a structure similar to Point,
  • iterator points to a structure similar to PointRef
  • operator[] const returns a Point,
  • operator[] returns a PointRef

A simple example of valid PointContainer is

vector<Point>

However, a hybrid container has been developed to handle the case where x and y are in separate containers (See below).

KeyContainer

KeyContainer behaves like a list of PointContainer::const_iterator:

  • has size(), clear() methods,
  • support push_back method

A simple example of valid KeyContainer is

vector<PointContainer::const_iterator>

Again, a hydrid container to handle the case where the keys must be outputted in separate containers is provided.

Templates

All the classes are templated to support float and double version of the algorithm.

The template TDPHull is the user interface to the DP algorithm. However, it relies on a series of subclasses detailed below:

Name Description Use
TLine<T, TPointContainer, TKeyContainer> 2D Line template Points and keys
TLineApproximator<T, TPointContainer, TKeyContainer> 2D Line approximator base class Default interface to approximation algorithms
TDPHull<T, TPointContainer, TKeyContainer> Implementing Douglas-Peukler algorithm User front end
TPathHull<T, TPointContainer, TKeyContainer> Path hull Internal in TDPHull<T>
TPoint<T> A pair of T: x, y Template for 2D point TLineApproximator<T>
TPointRef<T> A pair of T&: x, y Template for 2D point TLineApproximator<T>
SHomog 2D Homogenous point, T x,y,w Internal structure to TLineApproximator<T>

How to use TDPHull?

In the following examples, we adopt the following notations

using namespace hull; // all classes are in the hull namespace,

using namespace std; // using some STL containers


// defining the point container

typedef vector<TPoint<float>> VectorPointContainer; 
// defining the key container

typedef vector<MyPointContainer::const_iterator> ListKeyContainer; 
// defining the line approximation class

typedef TDPHull<float, VectorPointContainer, ListKeyContainer> CDPHullF; 
CDPHullF dp; // a DPHull object, note that you can also work with doubles

The approximation methods throw exception, so you should always enclose them in a try-catch statement.

Normalization

The data points are, by default, normalized before approximation. This is in order to reduce numerical errors in the gradients computations. This happens when the data is badly scaled: using big numbers close together will lead to disastrous loss of significant numbers.

However, if you feel confident about your data, you can disable it by using SetNormalization.

Handling points and keys

Get a reference to the point container and modify it:

// getting reference to container,

TDPHull<float>::PointContainer& pc = dp.GetPoints(); 
for (UINT i=0;i<pc.size();i++)
{
    pc[i].x=...;
    pc[i].y=...;
}

If you are using normalization (default behavior), do not forget to re-compute the data bounding box after your changes:

dp.ComputeBoundingBox();

Approximation tuning

You can control the compression ratio by different ways:

  • Setting the tolerance
    // Setting tolerance of approximation
    
    dp.SetTol(0.5);
  • Setting a compression ratio, an acceptable compression threshold:
    // dp will find the tolerance corresponding to 10 % of
    
    // the original points, with 5% of possible error.
    
    try
    {
        dp.ShrinkNorm(0.1,0.05);
    }
    catch(TCHAR* str)
    {
        // catch and process errors throw by dp
    
        // example: output to cerr
    
        cerr<<str<<endl;
    }
    

    The method uses dichotomy to accelerate convergence.

  • Setting the desired number of points, an acceptable number of points threshold:
    // dp will find the tolerance corresponding to 100
    
    // in the approximated curve, with 5 points of possible error.
    
    try
    {
        dp.Shrink(100,5);
    }
    catch(TCHAR* str)
    {
        // catch and process errors throw by dp
    
        ...
    }

Simplifaction

The easiest part of the job:

try
{
    dp.Simplify();
}
catch(TCHAR* str)
{
    // catch and process errors throw by dp

    ...
}

or by using ShrinkNorm, Shrink methods.

Accessing the approximated curve

The keys are stored as PointContainer::const_iterator. You can access the key container by using GetKeys:

// getting conts reference to keys

const TDPHull<float>::KeyContainer& kc = dp.GetKeys(); 
TDPHull<float>::KeyContainer::const_iterator it; // iterator for keys

for (it = kc.begin(); it != kc.end(); it++)
{
    // it is an const_iterator pointing to a PointContainer::const_iterator

    xi=(*it)->x; 
    yi=(*it)->y;
}

Implementing your own algorithm

All you have to do is inherit a class from TLineApproximator and override the function ComputeKeys.

Hydrid containers

You can implement your own containers for points and keys as long as they meet the requirements.

Separate containers for x,y

It is not unusual to have x,y stored in separate containers and moreover these containers are not of the same type. To tackle this problem, two wrapper templates have been written: TPointDoubleContainer and TKeyDoubleContainer which serve as an interface between the approximation algorithms and the containers:

CVectorX vX;    // the vector of x coordinates

CVectorY vY;    // the vector of y coordinates


// defining the hydrid container

typedef TPointDoubleContainer<float, CVectorX, 
                   CVectorY> HybridPointContainer; 

// a list of key x coordinates

CListX lKeyX;    
// a vector of key y coordinates, any container

// that has push_back will do the job :)

CVectorY vKeyY;    
// defining the hydrid container

typedef TKeyDoubleContainer<float, CListX, CVectorY> HybridKeyContainer; 

// creating approximator

TDPHull< float, HybridPointContainer, HydridKeyContainer> dp; 
// attaching point containers

dp.GetPoints().SetContainers( &vX, &vY);    
// attaching key containers

dp.GetKeys().SetContainers( &lKeyX, &vKeyY);    
// dp is now ready to work

Using the demo

The demo shows a real time approximation of a curve by different algorithms.

  • You can stop/start the animation using the toolbar buttons,
  • You can modify the shrinking ration with the scroll bar,
  • You can load your own data with the menu, File->Load Data Set. The file must be formatted with a pair x,y per line.

Using it in your project

Insert the following files in your project and you're done.

LineApproximator.h,DPHull.h, PathHull.h

Known issues

  • The original curve must not self-intersect. This means also that the start and end points must be different, no closed curve !
  • Sick dataset and stack overflow: solved. The problem was due to recursion leading to stack overflow. It is solved now.

Update history

  • 04-03-2003
    • Got rid of DP recursion by adding an internal function call stack. Hence, the stack overflow problem is solved!!!
    • Applied stuff I learned in Effective STL to the classes: using algorithms, functors, etc...
    • Changed class T to typename T
    • Better floating point comparison using boost::close_at_tolerance
  • 15-11-2002
    • More and more templating,
    • Detecting when curve is closed
    • Hybrid containers
    • Fixed bug in compute limits
    • Added LOTS of ASSERT, so Debug version is significantly slower than release build
  • 7-11-2002
    • Fixed a bug in the SLimits structure (GetCenterY)
    • TPathHull working with iterators rather that SPoint*
    • Added exception to handle errors
    • Fixed a bug in TDPHull::ComputeKeys. Was using pc.end() rather that pc.end()--
  • 6-11-2002
    • Added base class TLineApproximator
    • Added proposed algorithm by S.Rog: see TKeyFramer, TGlobalKeyFramer, TDispKeyFramer, TVectKeyFramer
    • Updated demo
  • 3-11-2002
    • Added data normalization for better numerical behavior. Avoids the algorithm to crash when using badly conditioned data. Problem submitted by Corey W.
    • Templated version
    • Got rid of macro and rewrote in more OOP style

References

  1. D. H. Douglas and T. K. Peucker. Algorithms for the reduction of the number of points required to represent a line or its caricature. The Canadian Cartographer, 10(2):112--122, 1973.
  2. J. Hershberger and J. Snoeyink. Speeding up the Douglas-Peucker line simplification algorithm. In Proc. 5th Intl. Symp. Spatial Data Handling. IGU Commission on GIS, pages 134--143, 1992. (home page).

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