vpSetVoxelField (3) - Linux Manuals

vpSetVoxelField: define the size and location of a

NAME

vpSetVoxelField, vpFieldOffset - define the size and location of a voxel field

SYNOPSIS

#include <volpack.h>

vpResult

vpSetVoxelField(vpc, field_num, field_size, field_offset,
field_max)
vpContext *vpc;
int field_num;
int field_size;
int field_offset;
int field_max;

int

vpFieldOffset(voxel_ptr, field_name)
vpContext *vpc;
LITERAL field_name;

ARGUMENTS

vpc
VolPack context from vpCreateContext.
field_num
Field number for the field to define (first field is 0).
field_size
Size of the field in bytes.
field_offset
Number of bytes from the beginning of the voxel to the beginning of the field.
field_max
Maximum possible value of the field.
voxel_ptr
Pointer to a C structure defining the fields in the voxel.
field_name
Literal name of the voxel field in the C structure.

DESCRIPTION

vpSetVoxelField is used to define the size and location of each field in a voxel. Once you have chosen the sizes and order for the voxel fields, call vpSetVoxelSize once and then call vpSetVoxelField once for each field. Each field has a unique field number (the field_num argument); the first field is 0, the next is 1, and so on, up to one less than the total number of fields defined with VpSetVoxelSize. The field_max argument is used to determine the required size for lookup tables indexed by the value in a particular field; the maximum field value may be any number from 0 to the maximum unsigned integer representable by the field size.

If you have declared the layout of a voxel using a C structure then you can use the sizeof operator and the vpFieldOffset macro to compute the field sizes and offsets. vpFieldOffset returns the number of bytes from the beginning of a C structure to the beginning of a particular field in the structure. For example, the following code shows how to declare the size and offset for one voxel field:

struct voxel {
    char field0;
    char field1;
    short field2;
} *dummy_voxel;

#define SIZE_0    sizeof(char)
#define OFFSET_0  vpFieldOffset(dummy_voxel, field0)
#define MAX_0     127

vpSetVoxelField(vpc, 0, SIZE_0, OFFSET_0, MAX_0);

The size of each field must be 1, 2 or 4 bytes. You must also obey any byte-alignment restrictions required by your hardware. On many machines, two-byte fields must begin on a two-byte boundary and four-byte fields must begin on a four-byte boundary. The total size of a voxel may also need to be padded so that voxels packed one after the other still obey the alignment restrictions. If you declare your voxel as a C structure and use the sizeof operator and the vpFieldOffset macro then you should always get correct results. However, if you do not consider alignment restrictions when choosing the voxel field ordering the compiler may have to insert padding for you, resulting in wasted memory. Some of the VolPack routines require you to declare fields of a particular size in order to store their results. The functions to precompute surface normals and gradient magnitudes (see vpVolumeNormals(3), vpScanlineNormals(3), vpClassifyVolume(3), vpClassifyScalars(3) and vpClassifyScanline(3)) can optionally store a one-byte scalar value, a one-byte gradient magnitude, and a two-byte surface normal value in each voxel. The following constants defined in volpack.h give the corresponding maximum field values: VP_SCALAR_MAX, VP_GRAD_MAX, and VP_NORM_MAX. If you choose not to use these functions then there is no need to declare these fields. It is usually not necessary to declare a field for the voxel opacity if the opacity can be computed from the other voxel fields. See vpSetClassifierTable(3) for further discussion. If the call to vpSetVoxelSize succeeds, any existing precomputed volume data structures in the context are destroyed.

STATE VARIABLES

The current voxel field parameters can be retrieved with the following state variable codes (see vpGeti(3)): VP_FIELD_SIZES, VP_FIELD_OFFSETS, VP_FIELD_MAXES.

ERRORS

The normal return value is VP_OK. The following error return value is possible:
VPERROR_BAD_VALUE
The field number, size or offset is out of range.