Question

I'm integrating Shapely into my code, and I have to deal with several different kinds of geometric objects. Most of my needs are satisfied with Lines, Polygons and LineStrings, but I need to use ellipses. Is there a way to create an ellipse in Shapely by a bounding box or by semi axis, without having to discretize the ellipse into lines?

Was it helpful?

Solution

There isn't any way to represent a polygon in Shapely without discretizing it.

At the base level Shapely deals with points. Everything from a LineString to a Polygon is just a list of points. A good example of this is what happens when you take a Point and buffer it out:

>>> import shapely
>>> from shapely.geometry.point import Point
>>> p = Point(0, 0)
>>> circle = p.buffer(1.0)
>>> list(circle.exterior.coords)
[(1.0, 0.0), (0.99518472667219693, -0.098017140329560506), (0.98078528040323054, -0.19509032201612808), (0.95694033573220894, -0.29028467725446211), (0.92387953251128696, -0.38268343236508939), (0.88192126434835527, -0.4713967368259972), (0.83146961230254557, -0.55557023301960173), (0.77301045336273744, -0.63439328416364493), (0.70710678118654813, -0.70710678118654691), (0.63439328416364626, -0.77301045336273633), (0.55557023301960307, -0.83146961230254468), (0.47139673682599859, -0.88192126434835449), (0.38268343236509084, -0.92387953251128629), (0.29028467725446361, -0.95694033573220849), (0.19509032201612964, -0.98078528040323021), (0.098017140329562089, -0.99518472667219671), (1.615542552166338e-15, -1.0), (-0.098017140329558883, -0.99518472667219704), (-0.19509032201612647, -0.98078528040323076), (-0.2902846772544605, -0.95694033573220938), (-0.38268343236508784, -0.92387953251128752), (-0.4713967368259957, -0.88192126434835605), (-0.55557023301960051, -0.83146961230254635), (-0.63439328416364393, -0.77301045336273821), (-0.70710678118654624, -0.70710678118654879), (-0.77301045336273588, -0.63439328416364682), (-0.83146961230254435, -0.55557023301960362), (-0.88192126434835427, -0.47139673682599903), (-0.92387953251128618, -0.38268343236509111), (-0.95694033573220849, -0.29028467725446366), (-0.98078528040323021, -0.19509032201612947), (-0.99518472667219682, -0.098017140329561714), (-1.0, -1.010639055082363e-15), (-0.99518472667219693, 0.098017140329559702), (-0.98078528040323065, 0.1950903220161275), (-0.95694033573220905, 0.29028467725446172), (-0.92387953251128696, 0.38268343236508923), (-0.88192126434835527, 0.47139673682599725), (-0.83146961230254546, 0.55557023301960196), (-0.7730104533627371, 0.63439328416364527), (-0.70710678118654768, 0.70710678118654746), (-0.63439328416364593, 0.77301045336273666), (-0.55557023301960295, 0.83146961230254479), (-0.4713967368259987, 0.88192126434835449), (-0.38268343236509117, 0.92387953251128618), (-0.29028467725446411, 0.95694033573220838), (-0.19509032201613041, 0.98078528040322999), (-0.098017140329563102, 0.9951847266721966), (-2.8482262121737323e-15, 1.0), (0.098017140329557426, 0.99518472667219715), (0.19509032201612481, 0.9807852804032311), (0.29028467725445867, 0.95694033573220993), (0.3826834323650859, 0.9238795325112884), (0.47139673682599365, 0.88192126434835716), (0.55557023301959818, 0.8314696123025479), (0.63439328416364149, 0.77301045336274021), (0.70710678118654358, 0.70710678118655146), (0.77301045336273322, 0.63439328416365004), (0.83146961230254179, 0.5555702330196074), (0.88192126434835194, 0.47139673682600342), (0.92387953251128407, 0.38268343236509617), (0.95694033573220671, 0.29028467725446927), (0.98078528040322899, 0.19509032201613569), (0.99518472667219615, 0.098017140329568472), (1.0, 8.2385270480656025e-15), (1.0, 0.0)]

As you can see, the circle is made up of 65 points that are spaced 0.0966 units from each other.

OTHER TIPS

For those who are interested, here is an example to create an ellipse with axis length of 15 and 20.

import shapely.affinity
from shapely.geometry import Point

circle = Point(0, 0).buffer(1)  # type(circle)=polygon
ellipse = shapely.affinity.scale(circle, 15, 20)  # type(ellipse)=polygon
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top