tables from SolveSpace to their own class. This is intended to
simplify use of the constraint solver in a library.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1942]
cubics, so add routines to approximate a rational Bezier of any
degree in that form. And use those for EPS and SVG when applicable,
so now even stuff like ellipses gets exported smooth.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1938]
our specified section plane; we then split them according to the
start and endpoints of each STrimBy, using de Castejau's algorithm.
These sections get projected (possibly in perspective, which I do
correctly) into 2d and exported.
Except, for now they just get pwl'd in the export files. That's the
fallback, since it works for any file format. But that's the place
to add special cases for circles etc., or to export them exactly.
DXF supports the latter, but very painfully since I would need to
write a later-versioned file, which requires thousands of lines of
baggage. I'll probably stick with arcs.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1936]
and curve.cpp and surface.cpp contain the rest.
Also get rid of the meshError stuff; will just use the nakedEdges
mechanism for that. And I won't run the interference test
continuously, have added a menu item for that.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1934]
triangle join. And add controls to show and hide the solid model
edges (independently of the shaded mesh), and to suppress the
shaded triangles from SVG/EPS output.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1932]
export. So I calculate lighting for each triangle in the mesh, make
a BSP, and then traverse it in-order and output those as SVG or
EPS. And I test edges against the mesh, removing those portions of
the edge that overlap a triangle in front of them (using the
kd-tree to accelerate).
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1931]
fix convergence tolerance so that points projected into a rational
polynomial surface end up much closer than LENGTH_EPS.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1906]
the same precedence as sqrt. Add the code to find naked edges, and
draw them highlighted on the model. And make the direction of trim
curves consistent, always ccw with normal toward viewer; so there's
no need to fix the directions before triangulating.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1903]
Add stubs for functions to perform Booleans, and get rid of mesh
stuff, including the kd tree accelerated snap to vertex (which
should not be required if the shell triangulation performs as it
should).
Also check that a sketch is not self-intersecting before extruding
it or whatever. This is dead slow, needs n*log(n) implementation.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1902]
just applies an offset to the DXF before exporting. Useful enough
to be worth the ugliness, though.
This is the stupid routines from SketchFlat, slightly reworked.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1866]
lets us export open curves, if the user drew them that way.
Also increase the limits on how many pwls we will generate for a
single curve.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1854]
some magic numbers. This would be trivial to break, but still more
difficult than patching the binary to skip the check...
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1853]
where it was, move the export (DXF, PNG, STL) stuff to export.cpp,
and move the regen/solve stuff to generate.cpp.
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/solvespace/": change = 1825]