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#Copyright ReportLab Europe Ltd. 2000-2017
#see license.txt for license details
#history https://hg.reportlab.com/hg-public/reportlab/log/tip/src/reportlab/pdfgen/pathobject.py
__version__='3.3.0'
__doc__="""
PDFPathObject is an efficient way to draw paths on a Canvas. Do not
instantiate directly, obtain one from the Canvas instead.
Progress Reports:
8.83, 2000-01-13, gmcm: created from pdfgen.py
"""
from reportlab.pdfgen import pdfgeom
from reportlab.lib.rl_accel import fp_str
class PDFPathObject:
"""Represents a graphic path. There are certain 'modes' to PDF
drawing, and making a separate object to expose Path operations
ensures they are completed with no run-time overhead. Ask
the Canvas for a PDFPath with getNewPathObject(); moveto/lineto/
curveto wherever you want; add whole shapes; and then add it back
into the canvas with one of the relevant operators.
Path objects are probably not long, so we pack onto one line
the code argument allows a canvas to get the operatiosn appended directly so
avoiding the final getCode
"""
def __init__(self,code=None):
self._code = (code,[])[code is None]
self._code_append = self._init_code_append
def _init_code_append(self,c):
assert c.endswith(' m') or c.endswith(' re'), 'path must start with a moveto or rect'
code_append = self._code.append
code_append('n')
code_append(c)
self._code_append = code_append
def getCode(self):
"pack onto one line; used internally"
return ' '.join(self._code)
def moveTo(self, x, y):
self._code_append('%s m' % fp_str(x,y))
def lineTo(self, x, y):
self._code_append('%s l' % fp_str(x,y))
def curveTo(self, x1, y1, x2, y2, x3, y3):
self._code_append('%s c' % fp_str(x1, y1, x2, y2, x3, y3))
def arc(self, x1,y1, x2,y2, startAng=0, extent=90):
"""Contributed to piddlePDF by Robert Kern, 28/7/99.
Draw a partial ellipse inscribed within the rectangle x1,y1,x2,y2,
starting at startAng degrees and covering extent degrees. Angles
start with 0 to the right (+x) and increase counter-clockwise.
These should have x1<x2 and y1<y2.
The algorithm is an elliptical generalization of the formulae in
Jim Fitzsimmon's TeX tutorial <URL: http://www.tinaja.com/bezarc1.pdf>."""
self._curves(pdfgeom.bezierArc(x1,y1, x2,y2, startAng, extent))
def arcTo(self, x1,y1, x2,y2, startAng=0, extent=90):
"""Like arc, but draws a line from the current point to
the start if the start is not the current point."""
self._curves(pdfgeom.bezierArc(x1,y1, x2,y2, startAng, extent),'lineTo')
def rect(self, x, y, width, height):
"""Adds a rectangle to the path"""
self._code_append('%s re' % fp_str((x, y, width, height)))
def ellipse(self, x, y, width, height):
"""adds an ellipse to the path"""
self._curves(pdfgeom.bezierArc(x, y, x + width,y + height, 0, 360))
def _curves(self,curves,initial='moveTo'):
getattr(self,initial)(*curves[0][:2])
for curve in curves:
self.curveTo(*curve[2:])
def circle(self, x_cen, y_cen, r):
"""adds a circle to the path"""
x1 = x_cen - r
y1 = y_cen - r
width = height = 2*r
self.ellipse(x1, y1, width, height)
def roundRect(self, x, y, width, height, radius):
"""Draws a rectangle with rounded corners. The corners are
approximately quadrants of a circle, with the given radius."""
#use a precomputed set of factors for the bezier approximation
#to a circle. There are six relevant points on the x axis and y axis.
#sketch them and it should all make sense!
t = 0.4472 * radius
x0 = x
x1 = x0 + t
x2 = x0 + radius
x3 = x0 + width - radius
x4 = x0 + width - t
x5 = x0 + width
y0 = y
y1 = y0 + t
y2 = y0 + radius
y3 = y0 + height - radius
y4 = y0 + height - t
y5 = y0 + height
self.moveTo(x2, y0)
self.lineTo(x3, y0) #bottom row
self.curveTo(x4, y0, x5, y1, x5, y2) #bottom right
self.lineTo(x5, y3) #right edge
self.curveTo(x5, y4, x4, y5, x3, y5) #top right
self.lineTo(x2, y5) #top row
self.curveTo(x1, y5, x0, y4, x0, y3) #top left
self.lineTo(x0, y2) #left edge
self.curveTo(x0, y1, x1, y0, x2, y0) #bottom left
self.close()
def close(self):
"draws a line back to where it started"
self._code_append('h')