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Polyanya - Compromise-free Pathfinding on a Navigation Mesh

MIT/Apache 2.0 Release Doc Crate

Implementation of Polyanya in Rust! Polyanya is a any-angle path planning algorithm.

A WASM demo made with Bevy is available here.

Usage

use glam::Vec2;
use polyanya::*;

fn main() {
    // Build a mesh from a list of vertices and polygons
    let mesh = Mesh::new(
        vec![
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(0., 6.), vec![0, -1]),           // 0
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(2., 5.), vec![0, -1, 2]),        // 1
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(5., 7.), vec![0, 2, -1]),        // 2
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(5., 8.), vec![0, -1]),           // 3
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(0., 8.), vec![0, -1]),           // 4
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(1., 4.), vec![1, -1]),           // 5
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(2., 1.), vec![1, -1]),           // 6
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(4., 1.), vec![1, -1]),           // 7
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(4., 2.), vec![1, -1, 2]),        // 8
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(2., 4.), vec![1, 2, -1]),        // 9
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(7., 4.), vec![2, -1, 4]),        // 10
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(10., 7.), vec![2, 4, 6, -1, 3]), // 11
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(7., 7.), vec![2, 3, -1]),        // 12
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(11., 8.), vec![3, -1]),          // 13
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(7., 8.), vec![3, -1]),           // 14
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(7., 0.), vec![5, 4, -1]),        // 15
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(11., 3.), vec![4, 5, -1]),       // 16
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(11., 5.), vec![4, -1, 6]),       // 17
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(12., 0.), vec![5, -1]),          // 18
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(12., 3.), vec![5, -1]),          // 19
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(13., 5.), vec![6, -1]),          // 20
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(13., 7.), vec![6, -1]),          // 21
            Vertex::new(Vec2::new(1., 3.), vec![1, -1]),           // 22
        ],
        vec![
            Polygon::new(vec![0, 1, 2, 3, 4], true),           // 0
            Polygon::new(vec![5, 22, 6, 7, 8, 9], true),       // 1
            Polygon::new(vec![1, 9, 8, 10, 11, 12, 2], false), // 2
            Polygon::new(vec![12, 11, 13, 14], true),          // 3
            Polygon::new(vec![10, 15, 16, 17, 11], false),     // 4
            Polygon::new(vec![15, 18, 19, 16], true),          // 5
            Polygon::new(vec![11, 17, 20, 21], true),          // 6
        ],
    );

    // Get the path between two points
    let from = Vec2::new(12.0, 0.0);
    let to = Vec2::new(3.0, 1.0);
    let path = mesh.path(from, to);

    assert_eq!(
        path.unwrap().path,
        vec![
            Vec2::new(7.0, 4.0),
            Vec2::new(4.0, 2.0),
            Vec2::new(3.0, 1.0)
        ]
    );
}

The code above will build the following mesh, with polygons marked in green, and vertices in red:

example mesh

Original Work

Check the cpp implementation.

index;micro;successor_calls;generated;pushed;popped;pruned_post_pop;length;gridcost
0;4960.92;6974;4368;4313;3823;21;1123.222637572437;1199.73

This crate seems to generate a few more nodes, but tends to be faster than the cpp implementation. There are a few known cases to still improve it:

  • collinear optimisation, when a search node root and interval are all on a same line
  • triangle optimisation, when searching in a triangle polygon
  • when an intersection is very close to a vertex, it sometimes generates an extra slim search node
  • searching start and end nodes is costlier

Compiling this crate with feature stats will output almost the same level of information as the default cpp implementation output.

index;micros;successor_calls;generated;pushed;popped;pruned_post_pop;length
0;2990.083;6983;7748;4314;3828;21;1123.2228

The verbose feature will give the same output as setting verbose to 1.

        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(989, 303); right=(1001, 288); f=1020.21, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(984, 301); right=(988, 303); f=1016.98, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(982, 300); right=(984, 301); f=1016.06, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(994, 285); right=(981, 299); f=1014.84, g=0.00
popped off: root=(993, 290); left=(994, 285); right=(981, 299); f=1014.84, g=0.00
        intermediate: root=(993, 290); left=(988, 282); right=(981, 299); f=1014.84, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(977, 299); right=(980, 299); f=1015.14, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(984, 280); right=(976, 297); f=1014.84, g=0.00
popped off: root=(993, 290); left=(984, 280); right=(976, 297); f=1014.84, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(973, 296); right=(976, 297); f=1014.84, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(970, 295); right=(973, 296); f=1014.86, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(967, 294); right=(970, 295); f=1015.01, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(965, 293); right=(967, 294); f=1015.28, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(977, 276); right=(965, 293); f=1015.58, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(983, 279); right=(979, 277); f=1023.95, g=0.00
popped off: root=(993, 290); left=(973, 296); right=(976, 297); f=1014.84, g=0.00
popped off: root=(993, 290); left=(970, 295); right=(973, 296); f=1014.86, g=0.00
popped off: root=(993, 290); left=(967, 294); right=(970, 295); f=1015.01, g=0.00
popped off: root=(993, 290); left=(977, 299); right=(980, 299); f=1015.14, g=0.00
popped off: root=(993, 290); left=(965, 293); right=(967, 294); f=1015.28, g=0.00
popped off: root=(993, 290); left=(977, 276); right=(965, 293); f=1015.58, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(963, 292); right=(965, 293); f=1015.58, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(961, 291); right=(963, 292); f=1015.94, g=0.00
        pushing: root=(993, 290); left=(971, 273); right=(959, 289); f=1017.13, g=0.00
...

The mesh files used in tests are coming from the cpp implementation and are available under MIT license.