From: Michael Orlitzky Date: Thu, 4 Mar 2010 19:34:30 +0000 (-0500) Subject: Added the wkt_n-gon script. X-Git-Url: https://gitweb.michael.orlitzky.com/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=c62d089df5a523ff0cd87b2a71e5be3e9ab337bf;p=dead%2Fcensus-tools.git Added the wkt_n-gon script. --- diff --git a/bin/wkt_n-gon b/bin/wkt_n-gon new file mode 100755 index 0000000..947b03a --- /dev/null +++ b/bin/wkt_n-gon @@ -0,0 +1,74 @@ +#!/usr/bin/python + +""" +Output the Well-Known-Text[1] representation of an n-gon, centered at +(0,0). + +The parameter n is passed as a required command-line option. The +radius of the n-gon is an optional argument. + +[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Well-known_text +""" + +import math +import site +import sys +from optparse import OptionParser +import os + +# Basically, add '../src' to our path. +# Needed for the imports that follow. +site.addsitedir(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(sys.argv[0])) + '/../src') + +import CLI +import ExitCodes +import Geometry +import StringUtils + +usage = '%prog [options] ' +fmtr = CLI.VerbatimHelpFormatter() +parser = OptionParser(usage, formatter=fmtr) + +# Use this module's docstring as the description. +parser.description = __doc__ + + +parser.add_option('-r', + '--radius', + type="float", + help="The radius of the n-gon. Defaults to 1.0.", + default=1.0) + + +(options, args) = parser.parse_args() + +if (len(args) < 1) or (not StringUtils.is_integer(args[0])): + print "\nERROR: You must supply the number of sides, n.\n" + parser.print_help() + print '' # Print a newline. + raise SystemExit(ExitCodes.NOT_ENOUGH_ARGS) + +# The conversion of n to int is safe, since it passed is_integer +# above. +n = int(args[0]) +r = options.radius + +# Each new coordinate is going to be separated from the previous by +# angle_delta radians. +angle_delta = 2*math.pi / float(n) + +# The set of coordinates, as two-tuples. We already know the first +# one--it's just cos/sin of 0. +coords = [(r, 0)] + +for coord_idx in range(1, n): + angle = coord_idx * angle_delta + x = r * math.cos(angle) + y = r * math.sin(angle) + coords.append((x, y)) + +# A well-known-text polygon must be closed, i.e. the last coordinate +# must equal the first. So, we're missing a coordinate, but the +# Polygon class will handle it for us. +p = Geometry.Polygon(coords) +print p.wkt()