#
##
## This file is part of pyFormex 1.0.7 (Mon Jun 17 12:20:39 CEST 2019)
## pyFormex is a tool for generating, manipulating and transforming 3D
## geometrical models by sequences of mathematical operations.
## Home page: http://pyformex.org
## Project page: http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/pyformex/
## Copyright 2004-2019 (C) Benedict Verhegghe (benedict.verhegghe@ugent.be)
## Distributed under the GNU General Public License version 3 or later.
##
## This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
## it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
## the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
## (at your option) any later version.
##
## This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
## but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
## GNU General Public License for more details.
##
## You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
## along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
##
"""Tools for handling collections of elements belonging to multiple parts.
This module defines the Collection class.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
import pyformex as pf
import numpy as np
################# Collection of Actors or Actor Elements ###############
[docs]class Collection(object):
"""A collection is a set of (int,int) tuples.
The first part of the tuple has a limited number of values and are used
as the keys in a dict.
The second part can have a lot of different values and is implemented
as an integer array with unique values.
This is e.g. used to identify a set of individual parts of one or more
OpenGL actors.
Examples:
>>> a = Collection()
>>> a.add(range(7),3)
>>> a.add(range(4))
>>> a.remove([2,4],3)
>>> print(a)
-1 [0 1 2 3]; 3 [0 1 3 5 6];
>>> a.add([[2,0],[2,3],[-1,7],[3,88]])
>>> print(a)
-1 [0 1 2 3 7]; 2 [0 3]; 3 [ 0 1 3 5 6 88];
>>> a[2] = [1,2,3]
>>> print(a)
-1 [0 1 2 3 7]; 2 [1 2 3]; 3 [ 0 1 3 5 6 88];
>>> a[2] = []
>>> print(a)
-1 [0 1 2 3 7]; 3 [ 0 1 3 5 6 88];
>>> a.set([[2,0],[2,3],[-1,7],[3,88]])
>>> print(a)
-1 [7]; 2 [0 3]; 3 [88];
>>> print(a.keys())
[-1 2 3]
>>> print([k for k in a])
[-1, 2, 3]
>>> 2 in a
True
"""
def __init__(self, object_type=None):
self.d = {}
self.obj_type = object_type
def __len__(self):
return len(self.d)
def setType(self, obj_type):
self.obj_type = obj_type
def clear(self, keys=[]):
if keys:
for k in keys:
k = int(k)
if k in self.d:
del self.d[k]
else:
self.d = {}
[docs] def add(self, data, key=-1):
"""Add new data to the collection.
data can be a 2d array with (key,val) tuples or a 1-d array
of values. In the latter case, the key has to be specified
separately, or a default value will be used.
data can also be another Collection, if it has the same object
type.
"""
if isinstance(data, Collection):
if data.obj_type == self.obj_type:
for k in data.d:
self.add(data.d[k], k)
return
return
else:
raise ValueError(
"Cannot add Collections with different object type"
)
if len(data) == 0:
return
data = np.asarray(data)
if data.ndim == 2:
for key in np.unique(data[:, 0]):
self.add(data[data[:, 0] == key, 1], key)
else:
key = int(key)
data = np.unique(data)
if key in self.d:
self.d[key] = np.union1d(self.d[key], data)
elif data.size > 0:
self.d[key] = data
[docs] def set(self, data, key=-1):
"""Set the collection to the specified data.
This is equivalent to clearing the corresponding keys
before adding.
"""
self.clear()
self.add(data, key)
[docs] def remove(self, data, key=-1):
"""Remove data from the collection."""
if isinstance(data, Collection):
if data.obj_type == self.obj_type:
for k in data.d:
self.remove(data.d[k], k)
return
else:
raise ValueError(
"Cannot remove Collections with different object type"
)
data = np.asarray(data)
if data.ndim == 2:
for key in np.unique(data[:, 0]):
self.remove(data[data[:, 0] == key, 1], key)
else:
key = int(key)
if key in self.d:
data = np.setdiff1d(self.d[key], np.unique(data))
if data.size > 0:
self.d[key] = data
else:
del self.d[key]
else:
pf.debug(
"Not removing from non-existing selection for actor %s" %
key, pf.DEBUG.DRAW
)
def __contains__(self, key):
"""Check whether the collection has an entry for the key.
This inplements the 'in' operator for a Collection.
"""
return key in self.d
def __setitem__(self, key, data):
"""Set new values for the given key."""
key = int(key)
data = np.unique(data)
if data.size > 0:
self.d[key] = data
else:
del self.d[key]
def __iter__(self):
"""Return an iterator for the Collection
The iterator loops over the sorted keys.
"""
return iter(self.keys())
def __getitem__(self, key):
"""Return item with given key."""
return self.d[key]
[docs] def get(self, key, default=[]):
"""Return item with given key or default."""
key = int(key)
return self.d.get(key, default)
[docs] def keys(self):
"""Return a sorted array with the keys"""
keys = sorted(self.d.keys())
return np.asarray(keys)
[docs] def items(self):
"""Return an iterator over (key,value) pairs."""
return self.d.items()
def __str__(self):
if len(self) == 0:
s = 'Empty Collection'
else:
s = ''
for k in self.keys():
s += "%s %s; " % (k, self.d[k])
s = s.rstrip()
return s
# End