This code is the implementation deriving from those papers:
[1] S. Valette,J.-M. Chassery and R. Prost, Generic remeshing of 3D triangular meshes with metric-dependent discrete Voronoi Diagrams, IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, Volume 14, no. 2, pages 369-381, 2008.
[2] Sebastien Valette and Jean-Marc Chassery, Approximated Centroidal Voronoi Diagrams for Uniform Polygonal Mesh Coarsening, Computer Graphics Forum (Eurographics 2004 proceedings), Vol. 23, No. 3, September 2004, pp. 381-389.
[3] M. Audette, D. Rivière, M. Ewend, A. Enquobahrie, and S. Valette, "Approach-guided controlled resolution brain meshing for FE-based interactive neurosurgery simulation", Workshop on Mesh Processing in Medical Image Analysis, in conjunction with MICCAI 2011., Toronto, Canada, pp. 176--186, 09/2011.
This code is cross-platform and should compile under Linux, MacOS and Windows.
This code is distributed under the CeCILL-B license (BSD-compatible) (copyright CNRS, INSA-Lyon, UCBL, INSERM.)
- VTK www.vtk.org
- CMAKE www.cmake.org
git clone https://github.com/valette/ACVD.git
cd ACVD
cmake . -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
make
the executables (ACVD, ACVDQ, AnisotropicRemeshingQ and others should be found under the "bin" subdirectory)
execute ACVD and ACVDQ without arguments to see the available options.
when using graphical display, the 'e' key allows to continue to the next step during interaction
for ACVD, the output is written in the file simplification.ply
additionnally, when running ACVD, a file output_1.ply is also written. It is the output mesh before post-processing using quadrics.
note that to enforce a manifold output mesh, such as explained in [3], you need to use the -m 1 option.
comments, suggestions : https://github.com/valette/ACVD/issues
For each program ACVD, ACVDQ and AnisotropicRemeshingQ, there is a parallel implementation, called ACVDP, ACVDQP and AnisotropicRemeshingQP. In the examples bellow, just add a trailing "P" to the executable to use all your processor cores. Note that the parallel versions are not deterministic, so running the programm twice with the same parameters will yield different remeshings. The parallel versions run much faster when quadrics are used (i.e. with ACVDQ or AnisotropcRemeshigQ), but the speedup is small with linear ACVD. For all programs, the number of threads can be set using the "-p numberOfThreads" option.
wget https://github.com/alecjacobson/common-3d-test-models/raw/master/data/stanford-bunny.obj
bin/ACVD stanford-bunny.obj 3000 0
taking into account curvature:
bin/ACVD stanford-bunny.obj 3000 1.5
wget https://github.com/alecjacobson/common-3d-test-models/raw/master/data/fandisk.obj
bin/ACVDQ fandisk.obj 3000 0
wget https://github.com/alecjacobson/common-3d-test-models/raw/master/data/horse.obj
bin/AnisotropicRemeshingQ horse.obj 1000 1.5
wget http://graphics.stanford.edu/data/3Dscanrep/xyzrgb/xyzrgb_statuette.ply.gz
gunzip xyzrgb_statuette.ply.gz
bin/ACVDQ xyzrgb_statuette.ply 100000 1.5
parallel version:
bin/ACVDQP xyzrgb_statuette.ply 100000 1.5
parallel version restricted to 3 threads:
bin/ACVDQP xyzrgb_statuette.ply 100000 1.5 -np 3
for all the examples above, interactive visualization of the processing can be triggered by adding "-d 2" to the command lines
A part of ACVD has been ported to python here: https://github.com/pyvista/pyacvd