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Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Point in Polygon 2: Walking the line

Credit: SpikedMath.com
This post is a follow-up to my original article on testing if a point is inside a polygon.  Reader Sebastian V. pointed out the ray-casting alogrithm I used does not test to see if the point is on the edge of the polygon or one of the verticies.  He was even nice enough to send a PHP script he found which uses an indentical ray-casting method and includes a vertex and edge test as well.

These two checks are relatively simple however whether they are necessary is up to you and how you apply this test.  There are some cases where a boundary point would not be considered for inclusion.  Either way now you have an option.  This function could even be modified to optionally check for boundary points.

# Improved point in polygon test which includes edge
# and vertex points

def point_in_poly(x,y,poly):

   # check if point is a vertex
   if (x,y) in poly: return "IN"

   # check if point is on a boundary
   for i in range(len(poly)):
      p1 = None
      p2 = None
      if i==0:
         p1 = poly[0]
         p2 = poly[1]
      else:
         p1 = poly[i-1]
         p2 = poly[i]
      if p1[1] == p2[1] and p1[1] == y and x > min(p1[0], p2[0]) and x < max(p1[0], p2[0]):
         return "IN"
      
   n = len(poly)
   inside = False

   p1x,p1y = poly[0]
   for i in range(n+1):
      p2x,p2y = poly[i % n]
      if y > min(p1y,p2y):
         if y <= max(p1y,p2y):
            if x <= max(p1x,p2x):
               if p1y != p2y:
                  xints = (y-p1y)*(p2x-p1x)/(p2y-p1y)+p1x
               if p1x == p2x or x <= xints:
                  inside = not inside
      p1x,p1y = p2x,p2y

   if inside: return "IN"
   else: return "OUT"

# Test a vertex for inclusion
poligono = [(-33.416032,-70.593016), (-33.415370,-70.589604),
(-33.417340,-70.589046), (-33.417949,-70.592351),
(-33.416032,-70.593016)]
lat= -33.416032
lon= -70.593016

print point_in_poly(lat, lon, poligono)

# test a boundary point for inclusion
poly2 = [(1,1), (5,1), (5,5), (1,5), (1,1)]
x = 3
y = 1
print point_in_poly(x, y, poly2)
You can download this script here.

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