Small patch that adds some documentation for the area() function.

Specifically, point out that intersecting points in a path will yield
(most likely), unexpected results.  Visually these are identical paths,
but mathematically they're not the same.  Ex:

  area |                                           plan
------
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------
    -0 | ((0,0),(0,1),(2,1),(2,2),(1,2),(1,0),(0,0))
     2 | ((0,0),(0,1),(1,1),(1,2),(2,2),(2,1),(1,1),(1,0),(0,0))

The current algorithm for area(PATH) is very quick, but only handles
non-intersecting paths.  I'm going to work on two other functions for
the PATH data type that determines if a PATH is intersecting or not,
and a function that returns the area() for an intersecting PATH.  The
intersecting area() function will be considerably slower (I think it's
going to be O(n!) or worse instead of the current O(n), but that comes
with the territory).

Sean Chittenden
This commit is contained in:
Bruce Momjian 2004-06-02 21:34:49 +00:00
parent e8d9d68ca4
commit 70f5a87ecc

View file

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
<!--
$PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml,v 1.205 2004/05/26 18:35:31 momjian Exp $
$PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml,v 1.206 2004/06/02 21:34:49 momjian Exp $
PostgreSQL documentation
-->
@ -5971,6 +5971,22 @@ SELECT TIMESTAMP 'now';
as an array of two <type>point</> values.
</para>
<para>
The <function>area</function> function works for the types
<type>box</type>, <type>circle</type>, and <type>path</type>.
The <function>area</function> function only works on the
<type>path</type> data type if the points in the
<type>path</type> are non-intersecting. For example, the
<type>path</type>
<literal>'((0,0),(0,1),(2,1),(2,2),(1,2),(1,0),(0,0))'::PATH</literal>
won't work, however, the following visually identical
<type>path</type>
<literal>'((0,0),(0,1),(1,1),(1,2),(2,2),(2,1),(1,1),(1,0),(0,0))'::PATH</literal>
will work. If the concept of an intersecting versus
non-intersecting <type>path</type> is confusing, draw both of the
above <type>path</type>s side by side on a piece of graph paper.
</para>
</sect1>