@allmaps/transform
This module serves to transform points, lines, polygons and other spatial features from a cartesian (x, y)
source plane to a destination plane. It does this using a set of control points, who's coordinates are known in both planes, and a specific transformation algorithm.
It is used in @allmaps/render and @allmaps/tileserver, two packages where we produce a georeferenced image by triangulating a IIIF image and drawing these triangles on a map in a specific new location, with the triangle's new vertex location computed by the transformer of this package. The transformer is constructed from control points in the annotation and transforms points from the resource coordinate space of a IIIF Resource to the geo coordinate space of an interactive map.
Care was taken to make this module usable and useful outside of the Allmaps context as well! Feel free to incorporate it in your project.
How it works
This package exports the GcpTransformer
class. Its instances (called transformers
) are built from a set of Ground Control Points (GCPs) and a specified transformation type. Using these, a forward and backward transformation can be built that maps arbitrary points in one plane to the corresponding points in the other plane. The transformer has dedicated functions that use this transformation to transform points and more complex geometries like line strings and polygons.
Transform vs. GDAL
The transformation algorithms of this package correspond to those of GDAL and the results are (nearly) identical. See the tests for details.
For a little history: this library started out as a JavaScript port of gdaltransform (as described in this notebook) and initially only implemented polynomial transformations of order 1. Later Thin Plate Spline transformations were added (see this notebook) amongst other transformations, which lead to a refactoring using the ml-matrix
library. This library is used for creating and solving the linear systems of equations that are at the heart of each of each of these transformations.
Defining Ground Control Points
GCPs can be supplied as an array of objects containing source
and destination
coordinates:
type TransformGcp = {
source: [number, number]
destination: [number, number]
}
Or you can supply an array of objects containing resource
and geo
coordinates. This is the format used in Georeference Annotations:
type Gcp = {
resource: [number, number],
geo: [number, number]
}
Supported transformation types
Type | Options | Description | Properties | Minimum number of GCPs |
---|
helmert | | Helmert transformation or 'similarity transformation' | Preserves shape and angle | 2 |
polynomial (default) | order: 1 | First order polynomial transformation | Preserves lines and parallelism | 3 |
polynomial | order: 2 | Second order polynomial transformation | Some bending flexibility | 6 |
polynomial | order: 3 | Third order polynomial transformation | More bending flexibility | 10 |
thinPlateSpline | | Thin Plate Spline transformation or 'rubber sheeting' (with affine part) | Exact, smooth (see this notebook) | 3 |
projective | | Projective or 'perspective' transformation, used for aerial images | Preserves lines and cross-ratios | 4 |
Transformation methods
A transformer is build from a set of GCPs and a transformation type. It contains the forward and backward transformation, and has specific methods to apply it to transform geometries forward and backward.
All transformer methods accepts points, line strings as well as polygons, both as simple geometries or GeoJSON geometries. There are, however, separate methods for transforming to simple geometries or to GeoJSON geometries. There are also separate methods for transforming forward or backward.
Hence, the main methods are: transformForward()
, transformForwardAsGeojson()
, transformBackward()
and transformBackwardAsGeojson()
Alternatively the same four methods are available with more expressive term for the Allmaps use case: replacing Forward
by ToGeo
and Backward
by ToResource
. E.g.: transformToGeoAsGeojson()
.
The simple geometries are:
type Point = [number, number]
type LineString = Point[]
type Polygon = Point[][]
type Geometry = Point | LineString | Polygon
Refined transfromation of LineStrings and Polygons
When transforming a line or polygon, it can happen that simply transforming every point is not sufficient. Two factors are at play which may require a more granular transformation: the transformation (which can be non-shape preserving, as is the case with all transformation in this package except for Helmert and 1st degree polynomial) or the geographic nature of the coordinates (where lines are generally meant as 'great arcs' but could be interpreted as lon-lat cartesian lines). An algorithm will therefore recursively add midpoints in each segment (i.e. between two points) to make the line more granular. A midpoint is added at the transformed middle point of the original segment on the condition that the ratio of (the distance between the middle point of the transformed segment and the transformed middle point of the original segment) to the length of the transformed segment, is larger then a given ratio. The following options specify if and with what degree of detail such extra points should be added.
Option | Description | Default |
---|
maxOffsetRatio | Maximum offset ratio (smaller means more midpoints) | 0 |
maxDepth | Maximum recursion depth (higher means more midpoints) | 0 |
sourceIsGeographic | Use geographic distances and midpoints for lon-lat source points | false (true when source is GeoJSON) |
destinationIsGeographic | Use geographic distances and midpoints for lon-lat destination points | false (true when destination is GeoJSON) |
Installation
This is an ESM-only module that works in browsers and in Node.js.
Install with npm:
npm install @allmaps/transform
Usage
Point
import { GcpTransformer } from '@allmaps/transform'
const transformGcps3 = [
{
source: [518, 991],
destination: [4.9516614, 52.4633102]
},
{
source: [4345, 2357],
destination: [5.0480391, 52.5123762]
},
{
source: [2647, 475],
destination: [4.9702906, 52.5035815]
}
]
const transformer = new GcpTransformer(transformGcps3, 'helmert')
const transformedPoint = transformer.transformForward([100, 100])
const transformedPoint = transformer.transformBackward([
4.9385700843392435, 52.46580484503631
])
LineString
In this example we transform backward, and from a GeoJSON Geometry.
export const transformGcps7 = [
{
source: [0, 0],
destination: [0, 0]
},
{
source: [100, 0],
destination: [20, 0]
},
{
source: [200, 100],
destination: [40, 20]
},
{
source: [200, 200],
destination: [40, 40]
},
{
source: [150, 250],
destination: [40, 100]
},
{
source: [100, 200],
destination: [20, 40]
},
{
source: [0, 100],
destination: [0, 20]
}
]
const transformOptions = {
maxOffsetRatio: 0.001,
maxDepth: 2
}
const transformer = new GcpTransformer(transformGcps7, 'polynomial')
const lineStringGeoJSON = {
type: 'LineString',
coordinates: [
[10, 50],
[50, 50]
]
}
const transformedLineString = transformer.transformBackward(
lineStringGeoJSON,
transformOptions
)
Polygon
In this example we transform to a GeoJSON Geometry.
export const transformGcps6 = [
{
source: [1344, 4098],
destination: [4.4091165, 51.9017125]
},
{
source: [4440, 3441],
destination: [4.5029222, 51.9164451]
},
{
source: [3549, 4403],
destination: [4.4764224, 51.897309]
},
{
source: [1794, 2130],
destination: [4.4199066, 51.9391509]
},
{
source: [3656, 2558],
destination: [4.4775683, 51.9324358]
},
{
source: [2656, 3558],
destination: [4.4572643, 51.9143043]
}
]
const transformOptions = {
maxOffsetRatio: 0.00001,
maxDepth: 1
}
const transformer = new GcpTransformer(transformGcps6, 'thinPlateSpline')
const polygon = [
[
[1000, 1000],
[1000, 2000],
[2000, 2000],
[2000, 1000]
]
]
const transformedPolygonGeoJSON = transformer.transformForwardAsGeojson(
polygon,
transformOptions
)
API
Table of Contents
allmaps/transform
GcpTransformer
A Ground Control Point Transformer, containing a forward and backward transformation and
specifying functions to transform geometries using these transformations.
Parameters
gcps
(Array<TransformGcp> | Array<Gcp>) An array of Ground Control Points (GCPs)type
TransformationType The transformation type (optional, default 'polynomial'
)
transformForward
Transforms a Geometry or a GeoJSON geometry forward to a Geometry
Parameters
input
(Geometry | GeojsonGeometry) Geometry or GeoJSON geometry to transformoptions
PartialTransformOptions? Transform options
Returns Geometry Forward transform of input as Geometry
transformForwardAsGeojson
Transforms a Geometry or a GeoJSON geometry forward to a GeoJSON geometry
Parameters
input
(Geometry | GeojsonGeometry) Geometry or GeoJSON geometry to transformoptions
PartialTransformOptions? Transform options
Returns GeojsonGeometry Forward transform of input, as GeoJSON geometry
transformBackward
Transforms a geometry or a GeoJSON geometry backward to a Geometry
Parameters
input
(Geometry | GeojsonGeometry) Geometry or GeoJSON geometry to transformoptions
PartialTransformOptions? Transform options
Returns Geometry backward transform of input, as geometry
transformBackwardAsGeojson
Transforms a Geometry or a GeoJSON geometry backward to a GeoJSON geometry
Parameters
input
(Geometry | GeojsonGeometry) Geometry or GeoJSON geometry to transformoptions
PartialTransformOptions? Transform options
Returns GeojsonGeometry backward transform of input, as GeoJSON geometry
transformToGeo
Transforms Geometry or GeoJSON geometry forward, as Geometry
Parameters
input
(Geometry | GeojsonGeometry) Input to transformoptions
Returns Geometry Forward transform of input, as Geometry
transformToGeoAsGeojson
Transforms a Geometry or a GeoJSON geometry forward, to a GeoJSON geometry
Parameters
input
(Geometry | GeojsonGeometry) Input to transformoptions
Returns Geometry Forward transform of input, as GeoJSON geometry
transformToResource
Transforms a Geometry or a GeoJSON geometry backward, to a Geometry
Parameters
input
(Geometry | GeojsonGeometry) Input to transformoptions
Returns Geometry Backward transform of input, as a Geometry
transformToResourceAsGeojson
Transforms a Geometry or a GeoJSON geometry backward, to a GeoJSON geometry
Parameters
input
(Geometry | GeojsonGeometry) Input to transformoptions
Returns GeojsonGeometry Backward transform of input, as a GeoJSON geometry
transformSvgToGeojson
Transforms a SVG geometry forward to a GeoJSON geometry
Parameters
geometry
SvgGeometry SVG geometry to transformtransformOptions
Returns GeojsonGeometry Forward transform of input, as a GeoJSON geometry
transformGeojsonToSvg
Transforms a GeoJSON geometry backward to a SVG geometry
Parameters
geometry
GeojsonGeometry GeoJSON geometry to transformtransformOptions
Returns SvgGeometry Backward transform of input, as SVG geometry
Notes
- Only linearly independent control points should be considered when checking if the criterion for the minimum number of control points is met. For example, three control points that are collinear (one the same line) only count as two linearly independent points. The current implementation doesn't check such linear (in)dependance, but building a transformer with insufficient linearly independent control points will result in a badly conditioned matrix (no error but diverging results) or non-invertible matrix (error when inverting matrix).
- The transform functions are map-projection agnostic: they describe a transformation for one cartesian
(x, y)
plane to another. Using control points with (longitude, latitude)
coordinates will produce a transformation from or to the cartesian plane of an equirectangular projection. (The only semi-exception to this is when using the destinationIsGeographic
and sourceIsGeographic
parameters - although these consider coordinates as lying on a sphere more than as projection coordinates.)
CLI
The @allmaps/cli package creates and interface for four specific use cases:
- Transforming points to points.
- Transforming SVG geometries from the resource coordinates space of a IIIF resource to GeoJSON objects in the geo coordinate space of an interactive map.
- Transforming GeoJSON objects from the geo coordinate space of an interactive map to SVG objects in the resource coordinates space of a IIIF resource, given (the GCPs and transformation type from) a Georeference Annotation
- Vice versa: transforming SVG objects from the resource coordinates to GeoJSON objects in the geo coordinate space.
- Transforming the SVG resource mask included in a Georeference Annotation to a GeoJSON Polygon.
Benchmark
Here are some benchmarks on building and using a transformer, as computed on a 2023 MacBook Air M2.
Creating a transformer (with 10 points) (and transform 1 point)
Type | Options | Ops/s |
---|
helmert | | 71338 |
polynomial | order: 1 | 163419 |
polynomial | order: 2 | 86815 |
polynomial | order: 3 | 33662 |
thinPlateSpline | | 27905 |
projective | | 36202 |
Using a transformer (with 10 points) to transform 1 point
Type | Options | Ops/s |
---|
helmert | | 27398212 |
polynomial | order: 1 | 22364872 |
polynomial | order: 2 | 19126410 |
polynomial | order: 3 | 3925102 |
thinPlateSpline | | 484141 |
projective | | 22657850 |
See ./bench/index.js
.
The benchmark can be run with pnpm run bench
.