This fixes the last bug discovered by iterating through the 800K
skp corpus representing the top 1M websites. For every clip on the
stack, the paths are replaced with the pathop intersection. The
resulting draw is compared with the original draw for pixel errors.
At least two prominent bugs remain. In one, the winding value is
confused by a cubic with an inflection. In the other, a quad/cubic
pair, nearly coincident, fails to find an intersection.
These minor changes include ignoring very tiny self-intersections
of cubics, and processing degenerate edges that don't connect to
anything else.
R=reed@android.com
TBR=reed
Author: caryclark@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/340103002
This fixes all but one of those failures.
Major changes include:
- Replace angle indices with angle pointers. This was motivated by the need to add angles later but not renumber existing angles.
- Aggressive segment chase. When the winding is known on a segment, more aggressively passing that winding to adjacent segments allows fragmented data sets to succeed.
- Line segments with ends nearly the same are treated as coincident first.
- Transfer partial coincidence by observing that if segment A is partially coincident to B and C then B and C may be partially coincident.
TBR=reed
Author: caryclark@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/272153002
The cubic line intersection math empirically works 99.99% of the time (fails 3100 out of 1B random tests) but when it fails, an intersection may be missed altogether.
The binary search is may not find a solution if the cubic line failed to find any solutions at all, but so far that case hasn't arisen.
BUG=skia:2504
TBR=reed@google.com
Author: caryclark@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/266063003
git-svn-id: http://skia.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@14614 2bbb7eff-a529-9590-31e7-b0007b416f81
Mike K: please sanity check Test.cpp and skia_test.cpp
Feel free to look at the rest, but I don't expect any in depth review of path ops innards.
Path Ops first iteration used QuickSort to order segments radiating from an intersection to compute the winding rule.
This revision uses a circular sort instead. Breaking out the circular sort into its own long-lived structure (SkOpAngle) allows doing less work and provides a home for caching additional sorting data.
The circle sort is more stable than the former sort, has a robust ordering and fewer exceptions. It finds unsortable ordering less often. It is less reliant on the initial curve tangent, using convex hulls instead whenever it can.
Additional debug validation makes sure that the computed structures are self-consistent. A new visualization tool helps verify that the angle ordering is correct.
The 70+M tests pass with this change on Windows, Mac, Linux 32 and Linux 64 in debug and release.
R=mtklein@google.com, reed@google.com
Author: caryclark@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/131103009
git-svn-id: http://skia.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@14183 2bbb7eff-a529-9590-31e7-b0007b416f81