Reputation: 6037
I'm trying to rotate one point around a central point by an angle - standard problem. I've seen lots of posts about this but I can't get my implementation to work:
void Point::Rotate(const Point Pivot, const float Angle)
{
if (Angle == 0)
return;
float s = sin(Angle);
float c = cos(Angle);
x -= Pivot.x;
y -= Pivot.y;
x = (x * c) - (y * s) + Pivot.x;
y = (x * s) + (y * c) + Pivot.y;
}
This is my code, the logic of which I've gleaned from numerous source, for example here, and here.
As far as I'm aware, it should work. However, when I apply it to rotating for example, the point (0, 100) by 90 degrees (Pi/2 is given to the function) around (0, 0), the rotated point is apparently at (-100, -100); 100px below where it should be.
When trying to draw a circle (36 points) - it creates a vague heart shape. It looks like a graph I saw that I think was in polar coordinates - do I need to convert my point to Cartesian or something?
Can anyone spot anything wrong with my code?
Edit: Sorry, this function is a member function to a Point class - x
and y
are the member variables :/
Upvotes: 0
Views: 2480
Reputation: 339786
You're almost there, but you're modifying x
in the next-to-last line, meaning that the value of that coordinate fed into the y
calculation is incorrect!
Instead, use temporary variables for the new x
and y
and then add the Pivot
coordinates on afterwards:
double nx = (x * c) - (y * s);
double ny = (x * s) + (y * c);
x = nx + Pivot.x;
y = ny + Pivot.y;
Upvotes: 3