Provided by: libmath-planepath-perl_113-1_all bug

NAME

       Math::PlanePath::GrayCode -- Gray code coordinates

SYNOPSIS

        use Math::PlanePath::GrayCode;

        my $path = Math::PlanePath::GrayCode->new;
        my ($x, $y) = $path->n_to_xy (123);

DESCRIPTION

       This is a mapping of N to X,Y using Gray codes.  The default is the form by Christos
       Faloutsos which is an X,Y split in binary reflected Gray code.

             7  |  63-62 57-56 39-38 33-32
                |      |  |        |  |
             6  |  60-61 58-59 36-37 34-35
                |
             5  |  51-50 53-52 43-42 45-44
                |      |  |        |  |
             4  |  48-49 54-55 40-41 46-47
                |
             3  |  15-14  9--8 23-22 17-16
                |      |  |        |  |
             2  |  12-13 10-11 20-21 18-19
                |
             1  |   3--2  5--4 27-26 29-28
                |      |  |        |  |
            Y=0 |   0--1  6--7 24-25 30-31
                |
                +-------------------------
                  X=0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7

       N is converted to a Gray code, then split by bits to X,Y, and those X,Y converted back
       from Gray to integer indices.  Stepping from N to N+1 changes just one bit of the Gray
       code and therefore changes just one of X or Y each time.

       Y axis N=0,3,12,15,48,etc are values with only digits 0,3 in base 4.  X axis
       N=0,1,6,7,24,25,etc are values 2k and 2k+1 where k uses only digits 0,3 in base 4.

   Radix
       The default is binary.  The "radix => $r" option can select another radix.  This is used
       for both the Gray code and the digit splitting.  For example "radix => 4",

           radix => 4

             |
           127-126-125-124  99--98--97--96--95--94--93--92  67--66--65--64
                         |   |                           |   |
           120-121-122-123 100-101-102-103  88--89--90--91  68--69--70--71
             |                           |   |                           |
           119-118-117-116 107-106-105-104  87--86--85--84  75--74--73--72
                         |   |                           |   |
           112-113-114-115 108-109-110-111  80--81--82--83  76--77--78--79

            15--14--13--12  19--18--17--16  47--46--45--44  51--50--49--48
                         |   |                           |   |
             8-- 9--10--11  20--21--22--23  40--41--42--43  52--53--54--55
             |                           |   |                           |
             7-- 6-- 5-- 4  27--26--25--24  39--38--37--36  59--58--57--56
                         |   |                           |   |
             0-- 1-- 2-- 3  28--29--30--31--32--33--34--35  60--61--62--63

   Apply Type
       Option "apply_type => $str" controls how Gray codes are applied to N and X,Y.  It can be
       one of

           "TsF"    to Gray, split, from Gray  (default)
           "Ts"     to Gray, split
           "Fs"     from Gray, split
           "FsT"    from Gray, split, to Gray
            "sT"    split, to Gray
            "sF"    split, from Gray

       "T" means integer-to-Gray, "F" means integer-from-Gray, and omitted means no
       transformation.  For example the following is "Ts" which means N to Gray then split,
       leaving Gray coded values for X,Y.

           apply_type => "Ts"

            7  |  51--50  52--53  44--45  43--42
               |       |       |       |       |
            6  |  48--49  55--54  47--46  40--41
               |
            5  |  60--61  59--58  35--34  36--37  ...-66
               |       |       |       |       |       |
            4  |  63--62  56--57  32--33  39--38  64--65
               |
            3  |  12--13  11--10  19--18  20--21
               |       |       |       |       |
            2  |  15--14   8-- 9  16--17  23--22
               |
            1  |   3-- 2   4-- 5  28--29  27--26
               |       |       |       |       |
           Y=0 |   0-- 1   7-- 6  31--30  24--25
               |
               +---------------------------------
                 X=0   1   2   3   4   5   6   7

       This "Ts" is quite attractive because a step from N to N+1 changes just one bit in X or Y
       alternately, giving 2-D single-bit changes.  For example N=19 at X=4 followed by N=20 at
       X=6 is a single bit change in X.

       N=0,2,8,10,etc on the leading diagonal X=Y is numbers using only digits 0,2 in base 4.
       N=0,3,15,12,etc on the Y axis is numbers using only digits 0,3 in base 4, but in a Gray
       code order.

       The "Fs", "FsT" and "sF" forms effectively treat the input N as a Gray code and convert
       from it to integers, either before or after split.  For "Fs" the effect is little Z parts
       in various orientations.

           apply_type => "sF"

            7  |  32--33  37--36  52--53  49--48
               |    /       \       /       \
            6  |  34--35  39--38  54--55  51--50
               |
            5  |  42--43  47--46  62--63  59--58
               |    \       /       \       /
            4  |  40--41  45--44  60--61  57--56
               |
            3  |   8-- 9  13--12  28--29  25--24
               |    /       \       /       \
            2  |  10--11  15--14  30--31  27--26
               |
            1  |   2-- 3   7-- 6  22--23  19--18
               |    \       /       \       /
           Y=0 |   0-- 1   5-- 4  20--21  17--16
               |
               +---------------------------------
                 X=0   1   2   3   4   5   6   7

   Gray Type
       The "gray_type" option selects what type of Gray code is used.  The choices are

           "reflected"     increment to radix-1 then decrement (default)
           "modular"       cycle from radix-1 back to 0

       For example in decimal,

           integer       Gray         Gray
                      "reflected"   "modular"
           -------    -----------   ---------
              0            0            0
              1            1            1
              2            2            2
            ...          ...          ...
              8            8            8
              9            9            9
             10           19           19
             11           18           10
             12           17           11
             13           16           12
             14           15           13
            ...          ...          ...
             17           12           16
             18           11           17
             19           10           18

       Notice on reaching "19" the reflected type runs the least significant digit downwards from
       9 to 0, which is a reverse or reflection of the preceding 0 to 9 upwards.  The modular
       form instead continues to increment that least significant digit, wrapping around from 9
       to 0.

       In binary the modular and reflected forms are the same (see "Equivalent Combinations"
       below).

       There's various other systematic ways to make a Gray code changing a single digit
       successively.  But many ways are implicitly based on a pre-determined fixed number of bits
       or digits, which doesn't suit an unlimited path as given here.

   Equivalent Combinations
       Some option combinations are equivalent,

           condition                  equivalent
           ---------                  ----------
           radix=2                    modular==reflected
                                      and TsF==Fs, Ts==FsT

           radix>2 odd reflected      TsF==FsT, Ts==Fs, sT==sF
                                      because T==F

           radix>2 even reflected     TsF==Fs, Ts==FsT

       In radix=2 binary the "modular" and "reflected" Gray codes are the same because there's
       only digits 0 and 1 so going forward or backward is the same.

       For odd radix and reflected Gray code, the "to Gray" and "from Gray" operations are the
       same.  For example the following table is ternary radix=3.  Notice how integer value 012
       maps to Gray code 010, and in turn integer 010 maps to Gray code 012.  All values are
       either pairs like that or unchanged like 021.

           integer      Gray
                     "reflected"       (written in ternary)
             000       000
             001       001
             002       002
             010       012
             011       011
             012       010
             020       020
             021       021
             022       022

       For even radix and reflected Gray code, "TsF" is equivalent to "Fs", and also "Ts"
       equivalent to "FsT".  This arises from the way the reversing behaves when split across
       digits of two X,Y values.  (In higher dimensions such as a split to 3-D X,Y,Z it's not the
       same.)

       The net effect for distinct paths is

           condition         distinct combinations
           ---------         ---------------------
           radix=2           four TsF==Fs, Ts==FsT, sT, sF
           radix>2 odd       / three reflected TsF==FsT, Ts==Fs, sT==sF
                             \ six modular TsF, Ts, Fs, FsT, sT, sF
           radix>2 even      / four reflected TsF==Fs, Ts==FsT, sT, sF
                             \ six modular TsF, Ts, Fs, FsT, sT, sF

   Peano Curve
       In "radix => 3" and other odd radices the "reflected" Gray type gives the Peano curve (see
       Math::PlanePath::PeanoCurve).  The "reflected" encoding is equivalent to Peano's "xk" and
       "yk" complementing.

           radix => 3, gray_type => "reflected"

            |
           53--52--51  38--37--36--35--34--33
                    |   |                   |
           48--49--50  39--40--41  30--31--32
            |                   |   |
           47--46--45--44--43--42  29--28--27
                                            |
            6-- 7-- 8-- 9--10--11  24--25--26
            |                   |   |
            5-- 4-- 3  14--13--12  23--22--21
                    |   |                   |
            0-- 1-- 2  15--16--17--18--19--20

FUNCTIONS

       See "FUNCTIONS" in Math::PlanePath for the behaviour common to all path classes.

       "$path = Math::PlanePath::GrayCode->new ()"
       "$path = Math::PlanePath::GrayCode->new (radix => $r, apply_type => $str, gray_type =>
       $str)"
           Create and return a new path object.

       "($x,$y) = $path->n_to_xy ($n)"
           Return the X,Y coordinates of point number $n on the path.  Points begin at 0 and if
           "$n < 0" then the return is an empty list.

       "$n = $path->n_start ()"
           Return the first N on the path, which is 0.

FORMULAS

   Turn
       The turns in the default binary TsF curve are either to the left +90 or a reverse 180.
       For example at N=2 the curve turns left, then at N=3 it reverses back 180 to go to N=4.
       The turn is given by the low zero bits of (N+1)/2,

           count_low_0_bits(floor((N+1)/2))
             if even then turn 90 left
             if odd  then turn 180 reverse

       Or equivalently

           floor((N+1)/2) lowest non-zero digit in base 4,
             1 or 3 = turn 90 left
             2      = turn 180 reverse

       The 180 degree reversals are all horizontal.  They occur because at those N the three
       N-1,N,N+1 converted to Gray code have the same bits at odd positions and therefore the
       same Y coordinate.

       See "N to Turn" in Math::PlanePath::KochCurve for similar turns based on low zero bits
       (but by +60 and -120 degrees).

OEIS

       This path is in Sloane's Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences in a few forms,

           <http://oeis.org/A163233> (etc)

           apply_type="TsF", radix=2  (the defaults)
             A039963    turn sequence, 1=+90 left, 0=180 reverse
             A035263    turn undoubled, at N=2n and N=2n+1
             A065882    base4 lowest non-zero,
                          turn undoubled 1,3=left 2=180rev at N=2n,2n+1
             A003159    (N+1)/2 of positions of Left turns,
                          being n with even number of low 0 bits
             A036554    (N+1)/2 of positions of Right turns
                          being n with odd number of low 0 bits

       The turn sequence goes in pairs, so N=1 and N=2 left then N=3 and N=4 reverse.  A039963
       includes that repetition, A035263 is just one copy of each and so is the turn at each pair
       N=2k and N=2k+1.  There's many sequences like A065882 which when taken mod2 equal the
       "count low 0-bits odd/even" which is the same undoubled turn sequence.

           apply_type="sF", radix=2
             A163233    N values by diagonals, same axis start
             A163234     inverse permutation
             A163235    N values by diagonals, opp axis start
             A163236     inverse permutation
             A163242    N sums along diagonals
             A163478     those sums divided by 3

             A163237    N values by diagonals, same axis, flip digits 2,3
             A163238     inverse permutation
             A163239    N values by diagonals, opp axis, flip digits 2,3
             A163240     inverse permutation

             A099896    N values by PeanoCurve radix=2 order
             A100280     inverse permutation

       Gray code conversions themselves (not directly offered by the PlanePath code here) are
       variously

           A003188  binary
           A014550  binary with values written in binary
           A006068    inverse, Gray->integer
           A128173  ternary reflected (its own inverse)
           A105530  ternary modular
           A105529    inverse, Gray->integer
           A003100  decimal reflected
           A174025    inverse, Gray->integer
           A098488  decimal modular

SEE ALSO

       Math::PlanePath, Math::PlanePath::ZOrderCurve, Math::PlanePath::PeanoCurve,
       Math::PlanePath::CornerReplicate

HOME PAGE

       <http://user42.tuxfamily.org/math-planepath/index.html>

LICENSE

       Copyright 2011, 2012, 2013 Kevin Ryde

       This file is part of Math-PlanePath.

       Math-PlanePath is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms
       of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
       version 3, or (at your option) any later version.

       Math-PlanePath is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
       WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
       PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Math-
       PlanePath.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.