Convex hull and intersection
Introduction
These examples illustrate common operations on polyhedra using Polyhedra.jl:
- The convex hull of the union of polytopes
- The intersection of polytopes
We start by choosing a polyhedral library that will be used for computing the H-representation from the V-representation and vice-versa as well as removing redundant points. In these example, we use the default library available in Polyhedra but it can be replaced by any other library listed here, e.g. by changing the last two lines below by import CDDLib
and lib = CDDLib.Library()
to use CDDLib.
using Polyhedra
import GLPK
lib = DefaultLibrary{Float64}(GLPK.Optimizer)
DefaultLibrary{Float64}(GLPK.Optimizer)
Convex hull
The binary convex hull operation between two polyhedra is obtained with the convexhull
function.
Below we compute the convex hull of the union of two polygons from their V-representation.
P1 = polyhedron(vrep([
-1.9 -1.7
-1.8 0.5
1.7 0.7
1.9 -0.3
0.9 -1.1
]), lib)
P2 = polyhedron(vrep([
-2.5 -1.1
-0.8 0.8
0.1 0.9
1.8 -1.2
1.3 0.1
]), lib)
Pch = convexhull(P1, P2)
Polyhedron DefaultPolyhedron{Float64, MixedMatHRep{Float64, Matrix{Float64}}, MixedMatVRep{Float64, Matrix{Float64}}}: 10-element iterator of Vector{Float64}: [-1.9, -1.7] [-1.8, 0.5] [1.7, 0.7] [1.9, -0.3] [0.9, -1.1] [-2.5, -1.1] [-0.8, 0.8] [0.1, 0.9] [1.8, -1.2] [1.3, 0.1]
Note that the convex hull operation is done in the V-representation so no representation conversion is needed for this operation since P1
and P2
where constructed from their V-representation:
hrepiscomputed(P1), hrepiscomputed(P2), hrepiscomputed(Pch)
(false, false, false)
Let us note that the convexhull
of a V-representation contains points and rays and represents the convex hull of the points together with the conic hull of the rays. So, convexhull(P1, P2)
does the union of the vertices:
npoints(Pch)
10
However, if we want to remove the redundant points we can use removevredundancy!
:
removevredundancy!(Pch)
npoints(Pch)
8
We can plot the polygons and the convex hull of their union using the plot
function. For further plotting options see the Plots.jl documentation. We can see below the 8 redundant points highlighted with green dots, the two points that are not highlighted are the redundant ones.
using Plots
plot(P1, color="blue", alpha=0.2)
plot!(P2, color="red", alpha=0.2)
plot!(Pch, color="green", alpha=0.1)
scatter!(Pch, color="green")
Intersection
Intersection of polyhedra is obtained with the intersect
function.
Below we compute the intersection of the two polygons from the previous example.
Pint = intersect(P1, P2)
Polyhedron DefaultPolyhedron{Float64, MixedMatHRep{Float64, Matrix{Float64}}, MixedMatVRep{Float64, Matrix{Float64}}}: 10-element iterator of HalfSpace{Float64, Vector{Float64}}: HalfSpace([0.8000000000000002, -1.0], 1.8200000000000003) HalfSpace([0.10769992572418913, -0.5025996533795494], 0.6497895518692747) HalfSpace([0.8620689655172415, 0.17241379310344826], 1.5862068965517244) HalfSpace([-0.020661157024793403, 0.36157024793388426], 0.21797520661157022) HalfSpace([-0.10505862205243051, 0.004775391911474149], 0.19149321565011204) HalfSpace([0.6666666666666667, 1.0], 0.9666666666666668) HalfSpace([0.2977099236641222, 0.11450381679389314], 0.39847328244274816) HalfSpace([-0.11904761904761907, 1.0714285714285714], 0.9523809523809523) HalfSpace([-0.293965961835998, 0.26302217637957714], 0.44559051057246) HalfSpace([-0.004026150808106009, -0.17312448474855732], 0.20050231024367796)
While P1
and P2
have been constructed from their V-representation, their H-representation has been computed to build the intersection Pint
.
hrepiscomputed(P1), vrepiscomputed(P1), hrepiscomputed(P2), vrepiscomputed(P2)
(true, true, true, true)
On the other hand, Pint
is constructed from its H-representation hence its V-representation has not been computed yet.
hrepiscomputed(Pint), vrepiscomputed(Pint)
(true, false)
We can obtain the number of points in the intersection with npoints
as follows:
npoints(Pint)
8
Note that this triggers the computation of the V-representation:
hrepiscomputed(Pint), vrepiscomputed(Pint)
(true, true)
We can plot the polygons and their intersection using the plot
function.
using Plots
plot(P1, color="blue", alpha=0.2)
plot!(P2, color="red", alpha=0.2)
plot!(Pint, color="yellow", alpha=0.6)
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