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Fast 2d and 3d coordinate-aligned grids supporting array-like operations (map, reduce, slice, and other fun stuff).

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JSVolume 0.0.2

A JSVolume is a 3d of grid elements represented internally by a single-dimensional array. This provides superior performance to a multi-dimensional array, which isn't a real thing in javascript anyway (if you want multidimensional arrays of arbitrary dimensions, try an NDArray library).

JSVolumes can do functional array-ish things like map, reduce and slice, and boolean operations like merge and intersect. Someday it might also support matrix tranformations natively, but for now you can do that (and filters, and other neat things) using JSVolume.map. I'd also like it to natively support efficient conversion to and from a Sparse Voxel Octree, but that requires an SVO object which I haven't finished yet.

JSVolumes provide convenient accessors that internally handle lookups on the array based on absolute (global) or relative (internal) coordinates. A volume's basic methods operate in absolute coordinate. The offsets are applied internally. It also exposes relative versions of the methods to work with the relative values used internally, which are always relative to [0,0,0].

JSVolume works equally well in the browser or on the server as a nodejs module. Support for requirejs may be in the future.

Dependencies

Typed Arrays: JSVolume assumes the presence of typed arrays, so use a polyfill if you need to.

Examples

See the doc folder for full documentation.

Constructor

Create a basic 10x10x10 volume:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,10,10]});
volume.width; // 10
volume.height; // 10
volume.depth; // 10

Create a 2-dimensional horizontal grid:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,1,10]});
volume.width; // 10
volume.height; // 1
volume.depth; // 10

Later on there will be more convenient ways to work in 2d space.

If your volume is a cube, you can use a shortcut:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:10});
volume.width; // 10
volume.height; // 10
volume.depth; // 10

Dimensions must be at least 1x1x1 - JSVolume will refuse to create a volume with zero elements:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[0,0,1]}); // throws an error

Create a 10x10x10 volume and offset 2 units from the center on each axis:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,10,10], offsets:[2,2,2]});

Offsets let you operate transparently on a volume that contains only part of a larger grid. You don't have to worry about the internal representation, only its position in global space.

You can use negative offsets too:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,10,10], offsets:[-2,10,-30]});

Create a volume of Int8s (stored as an Int8Arry) with dimensions 10x10x10 ranging from [-5,0,20] to [4,9,29]:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,10,10], offsets:[-5,0,20], type:Int8Array});

Use the types map on the JSVolume.prototype if you want extra safety:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,10,10], offsets:[-5,0,20], type:JSVolume.prototype.FLOAT32ARRAY});
JSVolume.prototype.types; // {ARRAY:Array, INT8ARRAY:Int8Array, INT32ARRAY:Int32Array, UINT8ARRAY:Uint8Array, UINT8CLAMPEDARRAY:Uint8ClampedArray, UINT16ARRAY:Uint16Array, UINT32ARRAY:Uint32Array, FLOAT32ARRAY:Float32Array, FLOAT64ARRAY:Float64Array}

You can supply vectors in place of coordinates if you're using a vector library:

var offsetVec = new Vec3([-5,0,20]);
var dimensionVec = new Vec3([10,10,10]);
var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:dimensionVec, offsets:offsetVec});

Properties

Find the bottom, west, south corner of a volume by looking at its offsets:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,10,10]});
volume.offsets; // [0,0,0]

Find the top, east, north corner of a volume by looking at its extents:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,10,10], offsets:[5,5,5]});
volume.extents; // [14,14,14]

Find the outer bounds of a volume in its boundaries:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[10,10,10], offsets:[5,10,15]});
volume.boundaries; // {west:5, east:14, bottom:10, top:19, south:15, north:24}

Find the dimensions of the volume:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[4,5,6]});
volume.dimensions; // [4,5,6]

Height width and depth are available for convenience:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[4,5,6]});
volume.width; // 4
volume.height; // 5
volume.depth; // 6

Access the volume's elements directly:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3]});
volume.elements[26]; // the topmost, northmost, eastmost element

It's safe to set and get elements this way, and even do some kinds of array operations, but don't do anything that will change the length or order of the array if you're using a generic array. That would corrupt the volume. In general, stick to JSVolume's methods for altering properties.

Note: the current implementation relies on a hack to prevent modification of the offsets, extents, and dimensions by creating a copy of the value in the getter. Avoid accessing them within large loops for best performance.

Methods

Querying Methods

Find out stuff about the volume's elements.

JSVolume#getElement

Get an element by its coordinates, accounting for offsets:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[12,3,2]}).fill(3);
volume.getElement([13,5,5]); // 3

You can use vectors here too (this is the last time we'll mention it):

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[12,3,2]}).fill(3);
var coord = new Vec3([13,5,5]);
volume.getElement(coord); // 3

JSVolume#getElementIndex

Find the index of an element at a given coordinate:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[3,3,3]});
volume.getElementIndex([3,4,5]); // 21

JSVolume#getElementIndexRelative

Find the index of an element given coordinates disregarding the offsets (i.e. relative to internal [0,0,0])

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[3,3,3]});
volume.getElementIndexRelative([0,1,2]); // 21

Note: Don't worry too much about how the indices map to the coordinates - it "just works" - but here's the implementation if you're interested:

index = x + width * (y + height * z); // relative to internal origin [0,0,0] 

JSVolume#hasCoord

Find out whether a volume contains a coordinate:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[3,3,3]});
volume.hasCoord([3,3,3]); // true
volume.hasCoord([5,5,5]); // true
volume.hasCoord([3,7,3]); // false

JSVolume#getElementCoords

Find the coordinates of an element by index:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[3,3,3]});
volume.getElementCoords(26); // [5,5,5]

JSVolume#getElementCoordsRelative

Find the internal coordinates of an element by index:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[3,3,3]});
volume.getElementCoordsRelative(26); // [2,2,2]

JSVolume#canContain

Find out whether your volume can fully contain another volume:

var volume1 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3]});
var volume2 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[2,2,2]});
var volume3 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[2,2,2], offsets:[3,3,3]});
volume1.canContain(volume2); // true
volume2.canContain(volume1); // false
volume3.canContain(volume1); // false
volume1.canContain(volume3); // false

JSVolume#isContainedBy

Find out if your volume is fully containable by another volume:

var volume1 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3]});
var volume2 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[2,2,2]});
var volume3 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[2,2,2], offsets:[3,3,3]});
volume1.isContainedBy(volume2); // false 
volume2.isContainedBy(volume1); // true
volume3.isContainedBy(volume1); // false
volume1.isContainedBy(volume3); // false

JSVolume.getExtents

Recalculate the extents of your volume:

var volume1 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3]});
volume1.getExtents(); // [2,2,2]

This is mainly used internally to calculate extents during construction.

Mutating Methods

Change the contents of your volume.

JSVolume#setElement

Set the value of an element, given its coordinates in global space:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[12,3,2]}).fill(3);
var coord = new Vec3([13,5,5]);
volume.getElement(coord); // 3
volume.setElement(coord, 7);
volume.getElement(coord); // 7

JSVolume#fill

Fill a volume's elements with a uniform value, just like Array#fill:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3]});
volume.fill(2);

Fill returns the JSVolume, so you can chain it:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3]});
volume.fill(2).getElement([2,2,2]); // 2

JSVolume#each

Each isn't inherently mutating, but a typical use would make it so.

Fill a volume with random numbers:

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3]});
volume.each(function(index) {
	this.elements[index] = Math.round(Math.rand()*10);
});
volume.getElement([0,0,0]); // a randomish number between 0 and 10

The callback is applied to the volume (so the context of 'this' is the volume), and passes the current index as the only argument to the callback.

Pure Methods

Create a modified copy of your volume without changing the original.

JSVolume#slice

Take a slice of your volume. Similar to Array#slice, but not identical. The first argument is a vector of the origin of the slice, and the second argument is a vector of the width, height, and depth of the slice. The slice can be out of bounds of the original volume; any out-of-bounds objects will be initialized to undefined.

var slice;
var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[3,3,3]}).fill(3);
slice = volume.slice([4,3,4], [1,3,1]); // the central vertical column of the volume
slice = volume.slice([3,3,3], [3,3,1]); // the western side of the volume
slice = volume.slice([3,3,3], [1,1,1]); // the bottom, west, south corner
slice = volume.slice([0,0,0], [9,9,9]); // now you have a 9x9x9 volume with the original 3x3x3 volume in the center surrounded by undefined elements
slice = volume.slice([3,3,3], [0,1000,0]); // throws an error! a 0x1000x0 volume contains no elements

JSVolume#map

Map works identically to Array#map, which lets you do all kinds of awesome things.

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[3,3,3]}).fill(3);
var mappedVolume = volume.map(function(value, index, arr) {
	var coords = arr.getElementCoords(index);
	return "x:"+coords[0]+",y:"+coords[1]+",z:"+coords[2];
});
mappedVolume.getElement([3,4,5]); // "x:3,y:4,z:5"

JSVolume#reduce

Reduce works just like Array#reduce.

var volume = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[3,3,3]}).fill(3);
var initialVal = 0; // optional
var volumeSum = volume.reduce(function(prev, cur, index, arr) {
	return prev+cur;
}, initialVal); // 81

JSVolume#merge / JSVolume#or

Merge takes one or more volumes and merges them with the original volume to produce a new volume that contains the contents of each, like a boolean OR operation. The order of precedence is right to left; that is, the contents of the rightmost volume overwrite the volume to the left, and so on.

// three overlapping volumes
var volume1 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[0,0,0]}).fill(1);
var volume2 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[1,1,1]}).fill(2);
var volume3 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[2,2,2]}).fill(3);
var volumeOut = volume1.merge(volume2, volume3);
volumeOut.getElement([2,2,2]); // 3, since an element of volume 3 occupied this position
volumeOut.getElement([1,2,2]); // 2, since volume 2 filled this position
volumeOut.getElement([0,1,1]); // 1, since only volume 1 encompassed this position

JSVolume#intersect / JSVolume#and

Produces an intersection of two or more volumes, such that the returned volume contains only the parts that overlap between all three volumes. As with JSVolume#merge, order of precedent is right to left (so the intersection will contain values from the rightmost volume only).

// three overlapping volumes
var volume1 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[0,0,0]}).fill(1);
var volume2 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[1,1,1]}).fill(2);
var volume3 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[2,2,2]}).fill(3);
var volumeOut = volume1.intersect(volume2, volume3);
volumeOut.boundaries; // { west: 2, bottom: 2, north: 2, east: 2, top: 2, south: 2 }, because only the element at 2,2,2 was within every element

Merge and intersect both chain, and can be used as part of more complex operations:

// three overlapping volumes
var volume1 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[0,0,0]}).fill(1);
var volume2 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[1,1,1]}).fill(2);
var volume3 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[2,2,2]}).fill(3);
var volumeOut = volume1.intersect(volume2).merge(volume3);
volumeOut.boundaries; // { west: 1, bottom: 1, north: 1, east: 4, top: 4, south: 4 } // parts of volume1 and volume 2 that overlapped, plus the full contents of volume3

You can chain with reduce:

// three overlapping volumes
var volume1 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[0,0,0]}).fill(1);
var volume2 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[1,1,1]}).fill(2);
var volume3 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[2,2,2]}).fill(3);
var sum = volume1.intersect(volume2).merge(volume3).reduce(function(prev, cur, index) {
	if(typeof(cur) !== "undefined") return prev+cur;
	else return prev;
}); // 95, the sum of all defined values that are in the intersection of volume1 and volume2, plus the contents of volume3

Map works too:

// three overlapping volumes
var volume1 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[0,0,0]}).fill(10);
var volume2 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[1,1,1]}).fill(20);
var volume3 = new JSVolume({dimensions:[3,3,3], offsets:[2,2,2]}).fill(30);
var volumeOut = volume1.intersect(volume2).merge(volume3).map(function(cur, index, arr) {
	var coord = this.getElementCoords(index);
	var volumeList = [volume1, volume2, volume3];
	var product = 10; // base of 10
	for(var i = 0; i < volumeList.length; volume++) {
		if(volumeList[i].hasCoord(coord)) product *= volumeList[i].getElement(coord);
	}
	return product;
});
volumeOut.getElement([2,2,2]); // 10*10*20*30 = 60000
volumeOut.getElement([1,1,1]); // 10*10*20 = 2000
volumeOut.getElement([3,3,3]); // 10*20*60 = 6000

And so on.

Usage Notes

Vector Compatibility

JSVolume is compatible with 3-dimensional vectors and coordinates that behave like arrays of [x,y,z], but floating point vectors will be coerced to integer vectors. (note: this is not currently 100% true, but it will be soon so treat it that way).

Internal Array Types

The internal (flattened) array supports standard JS arrays, typed arrays, or anything with an array-like interface, which can be specified with the params.type parameter as of the JSVolume.types constants or directly with the constructor for an array.

Internal Coordinate Types

JSVolume coordinates are represented internally as Int32s, so the maximum size of a JSVolume is -2,147,483,647 to +2,147,483,647 inclusive on each axis. Be careful about memory usage when using non-mutating methods. For example, a full-sized JSVolume of type Int32Array is 2^34 bits and change, or a little over 2GB, meaning performing a JSVolume.map on a volume that size requires over 4GB of memory. Same goes for any other non-mutating methods that return a copy of the volume.

Best Practices

Don't Use Non-Scalar Values in Large Volumes

Chances are your volume contains a lot of duplicate data. For example, you might have cubes that are one of 12 different materials which have uniform values like color(RGBA), which is 32 bits worth of data on its own.

A naive implementation would be to save a copy of the material to each position in the grid:

var volume = new Volume({dimensions:[128,128,128]});

volume.each(function(index) {
	if(/* some conditions */) this.elements[index] = new Vec4(1,1,0,1); // cube is yellow
	else if (/* other condition */) this.elements[index] = /* other color */
	...
});

Your grid is (size of material description in bytes)widthheightdepth. That gets very big very fast! In this example, our grid is a minimum of 32128128128 ~= 67mbits, and larger in practice thanks to the additional weight of the Vec4 object.

A much better approach is to put the 12 different materials in an indexed array and store only the indices in the grid - so each grid position stores an int varying from 1-12, corresponding to an element in a 12-element array.

var colors = [
	  new Vec4(1,1,0,1) // yellow
	, new Vec4(0,0,1,1) // blue
	, new Vec4(0,1,0,.5) // 50% opaque green
	....
];
var volume = new Volume({dimensions:[128,128,128], type:JSVolume.types.UINT8ARRAY});
volume.each(function(index) {
	if(/* some conditions */) this.elements[index] = 0; // index of yellow color in colors array 
	else if (/* other condition */) this.elements[index] = /* other color */
	...
});

Your new volume is 8128128*128 ~= 16mbits. Much better!

This becomes increasingly important as the amount of data attached to each element in the volume grows. As long as you can store indices as UInt8 (giving you a range of 256 values) your volume has the same memory footprint even if individual elements contain megabits of of immutable data.

Repeat this mantra: the elements of my JSVolume are indexes for an array of values, not the values themselves.

Hierarchical Volumes

You can use JSVolumes as indexes corresponding to arrays of other JSVolumes! So you could break your 256x256x256 volume into chunks of 16x16x16, then index those in an 8x8x8 volume, letting you perform much more memory efficient operations on subsets of your full dataset. This also means if you need truly massive volumes that extend beyond the range of an Int32 coordinate system you can do that. You can even defer initialization of sub-volumes until you need them using this technique! Conversely, you probably don't want to make a directly hierarchical JSVolume.

Development

JSVolume is fully unit tested. It depends on Mocha, Chai, Should, and Sinon for unit testing (Sinon currently not in use since the demos are not in). It's configured to support JSHint for syntax checking, and supports JSDoc for automatic documentation.

Install JSVolume:

$ git clone https://github.com/nphyx/jsvolume

Or from NPM:

$ npm install @nphyx/jsvolume

Install dev dependencies:

$ npm install .

Run tests:

$ npm run test

Regenerate documentation:

# npm run doc

Contributing

Bug reports,fixes and optimizations are welcome! As for feature additions, I want to keep this library lightweight. As a rule of thumb if the feature is generalized and can't be easily done with a JSVolume#map call, I'm probably interested. Please keep in mind the license permits commercial use, so if me or someone else getting paid for content that includes your contributions might result in butthurt you might not want to submit your pull request.

License (MIT)

Copyright 2015 Justen Robertson nphyxx@gmail.com / https://github.com/nphyx.

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

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Fast 2d and 3d coordinate-aligned grids supporting array-like operations (map, reduce, slice, and other fun stuff).

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