a port of Angus Johnson's clipper to WebAssembly/Asm.js
Install it with npm install --save js-angusj-clipper
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A library to make polygon clipping (boolean operations) and offsetting fast on Javascript thanks to WebAssembly with a fallback to Asm.js, based on the excellent Polygon Clipping (also known as Clipper) library by Angus Johnson.
Because sometimes performance does matter and I could not find a javascript library as fast or as rock solid as the C++ version of Clipper.
As an example, the results of the benchmarks included on the test suite when running on my machine (node 17.9.0) are:
Note, pureJs is jsclipper, a pure JS port of the same library
500 boolean operations over two circles of 5000 points each
clipType: intersection, subjectFillType: evenOdd
✓ wasm (212 ms)
✓ asmJs (598 ms)
✓ pureJs (573 ms)
clipType: union, subjectFillType: evenOdd
✓ wasm (267 ms)
✓ asmJs (666 ms)
✓ pureJs (663 ms)
clipType: difference, subjectFillType: evenOdd
✓ wasm (232 ms)
✓ asmJs (575 ms)
✓ pureJs (573 ms)
clipType: xor, subjectFillType: evenOdd
✓ wasm (296 ms)
✓ asmJs (681 ms)
✓ pureJs (779 ms)
10000 boolean operations over two circles of 100 points each
clipType: intersection, subjectFillType: evenOdd
✓ wasm (143 ms)
✓ asmJs (347 ms)
✓ pureJs (255 ms)
clipType: union, subjectFillType: evenOdd
✓ wasm (181 ms)
✓ asmJs (417 ms)
✓ pureJs (265 ms)
clipType: difference, subjectFillType: evenOdd
✓ wasm (159 ms)
✓ asmJs (339 ms)
✓ pureJs (239 ms)
clipType: xor, subjectFillType: evenOdd
✓ wasm (186 ms)
✓ asmJs (404 ms)
✓ pureJs (262 ms)
100 offset operations over a circle of 5000 points
joinType: miter, endType: closedPolygon, delta: 5
✓ wasm (129 ms)
✓ asmJs (390 ms)
✓ pureJs (702 ms)
joinType: miter, endType: closedPolygon, delta: 0
✓ wasm (34 ms)
✓ asmJs (140 ms)
✓ pureJs (108 ms)
joinType: miter, endType: closedPolygon, delta: -5
✓ wasm (146 ms)
✓ asmJs (386 ms)
✓ pureJs (770 ms)
5000 offset operations over a circle of 100 points
joinType: miter, endType: closedPolygon, delta: 5
✓ wasm (74 ms)
✓ asmJs (161 ms)
✓ pureJs (278 ms)
joinType: miter, endType: closedPolygon, delta: 0
✓ wasm (61 ms)
✓ asmJs (138 ms)
✓ pureJs (162 ms)
joinType: miter, endType: closedPolygon, delta: -5
✓ wasm (109 ms)
✓ asmJs (271 ms)
✓ pureJs (659 ms)
More or less, the results for boolean operations over moderately big polygons are:
- Pure JS port of the Clipper library: ~1.0s, baseline
- This library (WebAssembly): ~0.4s
- This library (Asm.js): ~1.0s (mostly due to the emulation of 64-bit integer operations)
and for small polygons are:
- Pure JS port of the Clipper library: ~1.0s, baseline
- This library (WebAssembly): ~0.7s (due to the overhead of copying structures to/from JS/C++)
- This library (Asm.js): ~1.4s (mostly due to the emulation of 64-bit integer operations + the overhead of copying structures to/from JS/C++)
As for offsetting, the results for a moderately big polygon are:
- Pure JS port of the Clipper library: ~1s, baseline
- This library (WebAssembly): ~0.2s
- This library (Asm.js): ~0.5s
and for small polygons are:
- Pure JS port of the Clipper library: ~1s, baseline
- This library (WebAssembly): ~0.2s
- This library (Asm.js): ~0.5s
// universal version
// import it with
import * as clipperLib from "js-angusj-clipper"; // es6 / typescript
// or
const clipperLib = require("js-angusj-clipper"); // nodejs style require
// web-only version (for example for angular 6+)
// import it with
import * as clipperLib from "js-angusj-clipper/web"; // es6 / typescript
// or
const clipperLib = require("js-angusj-clipper/web"); // nodejs style require
async function mainAsync() {
// create an instance of the library (usually only do this once in your app)
const clipper = await clipperLib.loadNativeClipperLibInstanceAsync(
// let it autodetect which one to use, but also available WasmOnly and AsmJsOnly
clipperLib.NativeClipperLibRequestedFormat.WasmWithAsmJsFallback
);
// create some polygons (note that they MUST be integer coordinates)
const poly1 = [{ x: 0, y: 0 }, { x: 10, y: 0 }, { x: 10, y: 10 }, { x: 0, y: 10 }];
const poly2 = [{ x: 10, y: 0 }, { x: 20, y: 0 }, { x: 20, y: 10 }, { x: 10, y: 10 }];
// get their union
const polyResult = clipper.clipToPaths({
clipType: clipperLib.ClipType.Union,
subjectInputs: [{ data: poly1, closed: true }],
clipInputs: [{ data: poly2 }],
subjectFillType: clipperLib.PolyFillType.EvenOdd
});
/* polyResult will be:
[
[
{ x: 0, y: 0 },
{ x: 20, y: 0 },
{ x: 20, y: 10 },
{ x: 0, y: 10 }
]
]
*/
}
mainAsync();
For an in-depth description of the library see: