Difference between revisions of "Asymptote: Crash Course"

(Created page with "== Current projection == Suppose you are floating in a three-dimensional universe that extends infinitely in each direction. A bright source of light illuminates the scene. You ...")
 
m (Current projection)
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At this point, there is a giant grid with a sphere on it. From your point of view, it looks like this:
 
At this point, there is a giant grid with a sphere on it. From your point of view, it looks like this:
  
<asy2>size(300);
+
<asy>size(300);
  
 
import three;
 
import three;
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draw(scale(2,2,2)*unitsphere, red);
 
draw(scale(2,2,2)*unitsphere, red);
</asy2>
+
</asy>
  
 
This is what perspective projection is like. Basically, it is as if you were floating in this universe looking at the object with your own eyes. Closer objects are larger than farther objects, parallel lines converge, and, most importantly, I don't get dizzy.  
 
This is what perspective projection is like. Basically, it is as if you were floating in this universe looking at the object with your own eyes. Closer objects are larger than farther objects, parallel lines converge, and, most importantly, I don't get dizzy.  
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Now, suppose you wore glasses that nuked your sense of perspective and replaced it with a different world, a world where parallel lines stay parallel and closer objects are of the same size as farther objects. This is what you'd see:
 
Now, suppose you wore glasses that nuked your sense of perspective and replaced it with a different world, a world where parallel lines stay parallel and closer objects are of the same size as farther objects. This is what you'd see:
  
<asy2>size(300);
+
<asy>size(300);
  
 
import three;
 
import three;
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draw(scale(2,2,2)*unitsphere, red);
 
draw(scale(2,2,2)*unitsphere, red);
</asy2>
+
</asy>
  
 
This, my friends, is orthographic projection. It's not natural, but it's very useful when you want everything to be at the same scale, regardless of distance.  
 
This, my friends, is orthographic projection. It's not natural, but it's very useful when you want everything to be at the same scale, regardless of distance.  

Revision as of 14:05, 23 July 2015

Current projection

Suppose you are floating in a three-dimensional universe that extends infinitely in each direction. A bright source of light illuminates the scene. You can move freely around this universe, enabling you to see everything in different perspectives.

At this point, there is a giant grid with a sphere on it. From your point of view, it looks like this:

[asy]size(300);  import three;  currentprojection = perspective(1.7,0.5,0.6); currentlight = Viewport;  for (int i=-20; i<=10; i+=1)     draw((i,-20,0)--(i,10,0)); for (int j=-20; j<=10; j+=1)     draw((-20,j,0)--(10,j,0));  draw(scale(2,2,2)*unitsphere, red); [/asy]

This is what perspective projection is like. Basically, it is as if you were floating in this universe looking at the object with your own eyes. Closer objects are larger than farther objects, parallel lines converge, and, most importantly, I don't get dizzy.

Now, suppose you wore glasses that nuked your sense of perspective and replaced it with a different world, a world where parallel lines stay parallel and closer objects are of the same size as farther objects. This is what you'd see:

[asy]size(300);  import three;  currentprojection = orthographic(1.7,0.5,0.6); currentlight = Viewport;  for (int i=-20; i<=10; i+=1)     draw((i,-20,0)--(i,10,0)); for (int j=-20; j<=10; j+=1)     draw((-20,j,0)--(10,j,0));  draw(scale(2,2,2)*unitsphere, red); [/asy]

This, my friends, is orthographic projection. It's not natural, but it's very useful when you want everything to be at the same scale, regardless of distance.

So now that we've figured out exactly what the heck are perspective and orthogonal projection, let's find out how to do it in Asymptote.

Declaring projection is easy:

   // Perspective
   currentprojection = perspective(camera=(x,y,z));
   // Orthographic
   currentprojection = orthographic(camera=(x,y,z));

Here, camera=(x,y,z) states the position of the camera, whose viewpoint the reader sees the drawing from. In our hypothetical universe, this would be the exact same thing as defining your position. Asymptote dictates that the $z$-axis faces up, which, needless to say, is interesting:

[asy]import three;  currentprojection = orthographic(-1,-2,1);  draw((0,0,0)--X, EndArrow3); draw((0,0,0)--Y, EndArrow3); draw((0,0,0)--Z, EndArrow3); label("$x$", X, X); label("$y$", Y, Y); label("$z$", Z, Z); [/asy]

In any case, use currentprojection lightly. Asymptote will try to find the best projection for you, so only use it if you want to see your drawing from a different angle, or if you want to change the mode (e.g. perspective to orthographic).