Reputation: 764
I am trying to reset the green arc inside drawValueArc()
so that each time you click the change button, the green arc is removed and redrawn. How can I remove it without removing the entire canvas? Also, as an aside, I have noticed that Math.random() * 405 * Math.PI / 180
doesn't actually always result in an arc that fits inside the gray arc, sometimes it is larger than the gray arc, why is this?
var canvas = document.getElementById("canvas");
var ctx = canvas.getContext("2d");
var cx = 150;
var cy = 150;
var startRadians = 135 * Math.PI / 180;
var endRadians = 405 * Math.PI / 180;
//main arc
ctx.beginPath();
ctx.arc(cx, cy, 58, startRadians, endRadians, false);
ctx.strokeStyle="rgb(220,220,220)";
ctx.lineWidth = 38;
ctx.stroke();
$('#setRandomValue').click(function(){
drawValueArc(Math.random() * 405 * Math.PI / 180);
});
function drawValueArc(val){
//ctx.clearRect(0, 0, W, H);
ctx.beginPath();
ctx.arc(cx, cy, 58, startRadians, val, false);
ctx.strokeStyle = "green";
ctx.lineWidth = 38;
ctx.stroke();
}
Upvotes: 3
Views: 2183
Reputation:
The problem you are facing is in first instance the fact you are drawing before and after a 0-degree on the circle. This can be complicated to handle as you need to split in two draws: one for the part up to 0 (360) and one 0 to the remaining part.
There is a simple trick you can use to make this easier to deal with and that is to deal with all angles from 0 and use an offset when you draw.
Demo using redraw base (I moved it to jsfiddle as jsbin did not work for me):
Demo using off-screen canvas
http://jsfiddle.net/AbdiasSoftware/Dg9Jj/
First, some optimizations and settings for the offset:
var startRadians = 0; //just deal with angles
var endRadians = 300;
var deg2rad = Math.PI / 180; //pre-calculate this to save some cpu cycles
var offset = 122; //adjust this to modify rotation
We will now let the main function, drawArc()
do all calculations for us so we can focus on the numbers - here we also offset the values:
function drawArc(color, start, end) {
ctx.beginPath();
ctx.arc(cx, cy, 58,
(startRadians + offset) * deg2rad,
(end + offset) * deg2rad, false);
ctx.strokeStyle = color;
ctx.lineWidth = 38;
ctx.stroke();
}
There are several techniques to clear the previous drawn arc:
drawImage()
to erase the old.fillRect
or clearRect
.1 and 3 are the fastest, while 4 is the slowest.
With out re-factored function (drawArc
) it's as easy as this:
function drawValueArc(val) {
drawArc("rgb(220,220,220)", startRadians, endRadians);
drawArc("green", startRadians, val);
}
As everything now is 0-based concerning start we really don't need to give any other argument than 0 to the drawArc
instead of startRadians
. Use the new offset to offset the start position and adjust the endRadians
to where you want it to stop.
As you can see in the demo, using this technique keeps everything in check without the need to draw in split.
Tip: if you notice green artifacts on the edges: this is due to anti-alias. Simply reduce the line width for the green color by 2 pixels (see demo 2, off-screen canvas).
Upvotes: 2