gotosocial/vendor/github.com/golang/geo/s1/angle.go
kim 94e87610c4
[chore] add back exif-terminator and use only for jpeg,png,webp ()
* add back exif-terminator and use only for jpeg,png,webp

* fix arguments passed to terminateExif()

* pull in latest exif-terminator

* fix test

* update processed img

---------

Co-authored-by: tobi <tobi.smethurst@protonmail.com>
2024-08-02 12:46:41 +01:00

121 lines
3.6 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2014 Google Inc. All rights reserved.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package s1
import (
"math"
"strconv"
)
// Angle represents a 1D angle. The internal representation is a double precision
// value in radians, so conversion to and from radians is exact.
// Conversions between E5, E6, E7, and Degrees are not always
// exact. For example, Degrees(3.1) is different from E6(3100000) or E7(31000000).
//
// The following conversions between degrees and radians are exact:
//
// Degree*180 == Radian*math.Pi
// Degree*(180/n) == Radian*(math.Pi/n) for n == 0..8
//
// These identities hold when the arguments are scaled up or down by any power
// of 2. Some similar identities are also true, for example,
//
// Degree*60 == Radian*(math.Pi/3)
//
// But be aware that this type of identity does not hold in general. For example,
//
// Degree*3 != Radian*(math.Pi/60)
//
// Similarly, the conversion to radians means that (Angle(x)*Degree).Degrees()
// does not always equal x. For example,
//
// (Angle(45*n)*Degree).Degrees() == 45*n for n == 0..8
//
// but
//
// (60*Degree).Degrees() != 60
//
// When testing for equality, you should allow for numerical errors (ApproxEqual)
// or convert to discrete E5/E6/E7 values first.
type Angle float64
// Angle units.
const (
Radian Angle = 1
Degree = (math.Pi / 180) * Radian
E5 = 1e-5 * Degree
E6 = 1e-6 * Degree
E7 = 1e-7 * Degree
)
// Radians returns the angle in radians.
func (a Angle) Radians() float64 { return float64(a) }
// Degrees returns the angle in degrees.
func (a Angle) Degrees() float64 { return float64(a / Degree) }
// round returns the value rounded to nearest as an int32.
// This does not match C++ exactly for the case of x.5.
func round(val float64) int32 {
if val < 0 {
return int32(val - 0.5)
}
return int32(val + 0.5)
}
// InfAngle returns an angle larger than any finite angle.
func InfAngle() Angle {
return Angle(math.Inf(1))
}
// isInf reports whether this Angle is infinite.
func (a Angle) isInf() bool {
return math.IsInf(float64(a), 0)
}
// E5 returns the angle in hundred thousandths of degrees.
func (a Angle) E5() int32 { return round(a.Degrees() * 1e5) }
// E6 returns the angle in millionths of degrees.
func (a Angle) E6() int32 { return round(a.Degrees() * 1e6) }
// E7 returns the angle in ten millionths of degrees.
func (a Angle) E7() int32 { return round(a.Degrees() * 1e7) }
// Abs returns the absolute value of the angle.
func (a Angle) Abs() Angle { return Angle(math.Abs(float64(a))) }
// Normalized returns an equivalent angle in (-π, π].
func (a Angle) Normalized() Angle {
rad := math.Remainder(float64(a), 2*math.Pi)
if rad <= -math.Pi {
rad = math.Pi
}
return Angle(rad)
}
func (a Angle) String() string {
return strconv.FormatFloat(a.Degrees(), 'f', 7, 64) // like "%.7f"
}
// ApproxEqual reports whether the two angles are the same up to a small tolerance.
func (a Angle) ApproxEqual(other Angle) bool {
return math.Abs(float64(a)-float64(other)) <= epsilon
}
// BUG(dsymonds): The major differences from the C++ version are:
// - no unsigned E5/E6/E7 methods