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/*
* Copyright 2019 Google LLC
*
* Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
* found in the LICENSE file.
*/
#ifndef SkCurve_DEFINED
#define SkCurve_DEFINED
#include "include/core/SkColor.h"
#include "include/core/SkScalar.h"
#include "include/private/SkTArray.h"
#include "modules/particles/include/SkParticleData.h"
class SkFieldVisitor;
/**
* SkCurve implements a keyframed 1D function, useful for animating values over time. This pattern
* is common in digital content creation tools. An SkCurve might represent rotation, scale, opacity,
* or any other scalar quantity.
*
* An SkCurve has a logical domain of [0, 1], and is made of one or more SkCurveSegments.
* Each segment describes the behavior of the curve in some sub-domain. For an SkCurve with N
* segments, there are (N - 1) intermediate x-values that subdivide the domain. The first and last
* x-values are implicitly 0 and 1:
*
* 0 ... x[0] ... x[1] ... ... 1
* Segment_0 Segment_1 ... Segment_N-1
*
* Each segment describes a function over [0, 1] - x-values are re-normalized to the segment's
* domain when being evaluated. The segments are cubic polynomials, defined by four values (fMin).
* These are the values at x=0 and x=1, as well as control points at x=1/3 and x=2/3.
*
* For segments with fConstant == true, only the first value is used (fMin[0]).
*
* Each segment has two additional features for creating interesting (and varied) animation:
* - A segment can be ranged. Ranged segments have two sets of coefficients, and a random value
* taken from the particle's SkRandom is used to lerp betwen them. Typically, the SkRandom is
* in the same state at each call, so this value is stable. That causes a ranged SkCurve to
* produce a single smooth cubic function somewhere within the range defined by fMin and fMax.
* - A segment can be bidirectional. In that case, after a value is computed, it will be negated
* 50% of the time.
*/
enum SkCurveSegmentType {
kConstant_SegmentType,
kLinear_SegmentType,
kCubic_SegmentType,
};
struct SkCurveSegment {
SkScalar eval(SkScalar x, SkScalar t, bool negate) const;
void visitFields(SkFieldVisitor* v);
void setConstant(SkScalar c) {
fType = kConstant_SegmentType;
fRanged = false;
fMin[0] = c;
}
SkScalar fMin[4] = { 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f };
SkScalar fMax[4] = { 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f };
int fType = kConstant_SegmentType;
bool fRanged = false;
bool fBidirectional = false;
};
struct SkCurve {
SkCurve(SkScalar c = 0.0f) {
fSegments.push_back().setConstant(c);
}
SkScalar eval(const SkParticleUpdateParams& params, SkParticleState& ps) const;
void visitFields(SkFieldVisitor* v);
// Parameters that determine our x-value during evaluation
SkParticleValue fInput;
// It should always be true that (fXValues.count() + 1) == fSegments.count()
SkTArray<SkScalar, true> fXValues;
SkTArray<SkCurveSegment, true> fSegments;
};
/**
* SkColorCurve is similar to SkCurve, but keyframes 4D values - specifically colors. Because
* negative colors rarely make sense, SkColorCurves do not support bidirectional segments, but
* support all other features (including cubic interpolation).
*/
struct SkColorCurveSegment {
SkColorCurveSegment() {
for (int i = 0; i < 4; ++i) {
fMin[i] = { 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f };
fMax[i] = { 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f };
}
}
SkColor4f eval(SkScalar x, SkScalar t) const;
void visitFields(SkFieldVisitor* v);
void setConstant(SkColor4f c) {
fType = kConstant_SegmentType;
fRanged = false;
fMin[0] = c;
}
SkColor4f fMin[4];
SkColor4f fMax[4];
int fType = kConstant_SegmentType;
bool fRanged = false;
};
struct SkColorCurve {
SkColorCurve(SkColor4f c = { 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f }) {
fSegments.push_back().setConstant(c);
}
SkColor4f eval(const SkParticleUpdateParams& params, SkParticleState& ps) const;
void visitFields(SkFieldVisitor* v);
SkParticleValue fInput;
SkTArray<SkScalar, true> fXValues;
SkTArray<SkColorCurveSegment, true> fSegments;
};
#endif // SkCurve_DEFINED