A storage-efficient reconstruction framework for cartographic planar contours is developed.With a smaller number of control points,we aim to calculate the area and perimeter as well as to reconstruct a smooth curve.Th...A storage-efficient reconstruction framework for cartographic planar contours is developed.With a smaller number of control points,we aim to calculate the area and perimeter as well as to reconstruct a smooth curve.The input data forms an oriented contour,each control point of which consists of three values:the Cartesian coordinates(x,y)and tangent angleθ.Two types of interpolation methods are developed,one of which is based on an arc spline while the other one is on a cubic Hermite spline.The arc spline-based method reconstructs a G1 continuous curve,with which the exact area and perimeter can be calculated.The benefit of using the Hermite spline-based method is that it can achieve G2 continuity on most control points and can obtain the exact area,whereas the resulting perimeter is approximate.In a numerical experiment for analytically defined curves,more accurate computation of the area and perimeter was achieved with a smaller number of control points.In another experiment using a digital elevation model data,the reconstructed contours were smoother than those by a conventional method.展开更多
文摘A storage-efficient reconstruction framework for cartographic planar contours is developed.With a smaller number of control points,we aim to calculate the area and perimeter as well as to reconstruct a smooth curve.The input data forms an oriented contour,each control point of which consists of three values:the Cartesian coordinates(x,y)and tangent angleθ.Two types of interpolation methods are developed,one of which is based on an arc spline while the other one is on a cubic Hermite spline.The arc spline-based method reconstructs a G1 continuous curve,with which the exact area and perimeter can be calculated.The benefit of using the Hermite spline-based method is that it can achieve G2 continuity on most control points and can obtain the exact area,whereas the resulting perimeter is approximate.In a numerical experiment for analytically defined curves,more accurate computation of the area and perimeter was achieved with a smaller number of control points.In another experiment using a digital elevation model data,the reconstructed contours were smoother than those by a conventional method.