The vertices which are produced by stage 5 of the
tesselator are copied into the Polys and MonotonePolys it
produces. This is necessary because each vertex may have an
arbitrary valence, since it may participate in an arbitrary
number of Polys, so we can't use the vertex's prev/next
pointers to represent all the Monotones of which this
vertex may be a member.
However, each Edge can only be a member of two Polys (one
on each side of the edge). So by adding two prev/next
pointer pairs to each Edge, we can represent each Monotone
as a list of edges instead. Then we no longer need to copy
the vertices.
One wrinkle is that the ear-clipping stage (6) of the
tessellator does require prev/next pointers, in order to
remove vertices as their ears are clipped. So we convert
the edge list into a vertex list during Monotone::emit(),
using the prev/next pointers temporarily for that monotone.
This change improves performance by 7-20% on a non-caching
version of the tessellator, and reduces memory use.
Other notes:
1) Polys are initially constructed empty (no edges), but
with the top vertex, which is needed for splitting
Polys. Edges are added to Polys only after their bottom
vertex is seen.
2) MonotonePolys are always constructed with one edge, so
we always know their handedness (left/right).
MonotonePoly::addEdge() no longer detects when a monotone
is "done" (edge of opposite handedness); this is handled
by Poly::addEdge(), so MonotonePoly::addEdge() has no
return value.
GOLD_TRYBOT_URL= https://gold.skia.org/search?issue=2029243002
Review-Url: https://codereview.chromium.org/2029243002
This path renderer converts paths to linear contours, resolves intersections via Bentley-Ottman, implements a trapezoidal decomposition a la Fournier and Montuno to produce triangles, and renders those with a single draw call. It does not currently do antialiasing, so it must be used in conjunction with multisampling.
A fair amount of the code is to handle floating point edge cases in intersections. Rather than perform exact computations (which would require arbitrary precision arithmetic), we reconnect the mesh to reflect the intersection points. For example, intersections can occur above the current vertex, and force edges to be merged into the current vertex, requiring a restart of the intersections. Splitting edges for intersections can also force them to merge with formerly-distinct edges in the same polygon, or to violate the ordering of the active edge list, or the active edge state of split edges.
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/855513004