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XCreateGC(3X)

XDrawLine(3X)

XDrawPoint(3X)

XDrawRectangle(3X)




XDrawArc(3X) XDrawArc(3X)
NAME XDrawArc, XDrawArcs - draw arcs and manipulate the XArc structure SYNOPSIS XDrawArc (display, d, gc, x, y, width, height, angle1, angle2) Display* display; Drawable d; GC gc; int x,y; unsigned int width, height; int angle1, angle2; XDrawArcs (display, d, gc, arcs, narcs) Display* display; Drawable d; GC gc; XArc* arcs; int narcs DESCRIPTION XDrawArc draws a single circular or elliptical arc, and XDrawArcs draws multiple circular or elliptical arcs. Each arc is specified by a rectangle and two angles. The center of the circle or ellipse is the center of the rectangle, and the major and minor axes are specified by width and height. Positive angles indicate counterclockwise motion, and nega- tive angles indicate clockwise motion. If the magnitude of angle2 is greater than 360 degrees, XDrawArc or XDrawArcs truncates it to 360 degrees. For an arc specified as [ x, y, width, height, angle1, angle2], the origin of the
width height
major and minor axes is at [x+ , y+ ], and the in-
2 2
finitely thin path describing the entire circle or ellipse
height
intersects the horizontal axis at [x, y+ ] and
height 2
[x+width, y+ ] and intersects the vertical axis at
width 2 width
[x+ , y] and [x+ , y+height]. These coordinates can
2 2
be fractional and so are not truncated to discrete coordi-
nates. The path should be defined by the ideal mathematical path. For a wide line with line width lw, the bounding out- lines for filling are given by the two infinitely thin paths consisting of all points whose perpendicular distance from the path of the circle/ellipse is equal to lw/2 (which may be a fractional value). The cap style and join style are applied the same as for a line corresponding to the tangent of the circle/ellipse at the endpoint. For an arc specified as [ x, y, width, height, angle1, angle2], the angles must be specified in the effectively skewed coordinate system of the November, 1990 1



XDrawArc(3X) XDrawArc(3X)
ellipse (for a circle, the angles and coordinate systems are identical). The relationship between these angles and an- gles expressed in the normal coordinate system of the screen (as measured with a protractor) is as follows:
( _width)
skewed-angle = atan tan(normal-angle)* +adjust
( height)
The skewed-angle and normal-angle are expressed in radians (rather than in degrees scaled by 64) in the range [0, 2π]
π π
and where atan returns a value in the range [- , ] and ad-
2 2
just is:
π
0 for normal-angle in the range [0, ]
π 2
3
π
π for normal-angle in the range [ , ]
2
3
π
2
2πfor normal-angle in the range [ , 2π]
2
For any given arc, XDrawArc and XDrawArcs do not draw a pix- el more than once. If two arcs join correctly and if the line-width is greater than 0 and the arcs intersect, XDrawArc and XDrawArcs do not draw a pixel more than once. Otherwise, the intersecting pixels of intersecting arcs are drawn multiple times. Specifying an arc with one endpoint and a clockwise extent draws the same pixels as specifying the other endpoint and an equivalent counterclockwise ex- tent, except as it affects joins. If the last point in one arc coincides with the first point in the following arc, the two arcs will join correctly. If the first point in the first arc coincides with the last point in the last arc, the two arcs will join correctly. By specifying one axis to be 0, a horizontal or vertical line can be drawn. Angles are computed based solely on the coor- dinate system and ignore the aspect ratio. Both functions use these graphic context components: func- tion, plane-mask, line-width, line-style, cap-style, join- style, fill-style, subwindow-mode, clip-x-origin, clip-y- origin, and clip-mask. They also use these mode-dependent graphic contents components: foreground, background, tile, stipple, tile-stipple-x-origin, tile-stipple-y-origin, dash-offset, and dash list. Arguments These functions accept the following arguments: angle1 Specifies the start of the arc relative to the three o'clock position from the center, in units of de- grees * 64. angle2 Specifies the path and extent of the arc relative to the start of the arc, in units of degrees * 64. 2 November, 1990



XDrawArc(3X) XDrawArc(3X)
arcs Specifies a pointer to an array of arcs. d Specifies the drawable. display Specifies the connection to the X server. gc Specifies the graphic context. narcs Specifies the number of arcs in the array. width, height Specify the width and height. x, y Specify the x and y coordinates. Structures The XArc structure contains: typedef struct { short x, y; unsigned short width, height; short angle1, angle2; /* Degrees * 64 */ } XArc; All x and y members are signed integers. The width and height members are 16-bit unsigned integers. You should be careful not to generate coordinates and sizes out of the 16-bit ranges, because the protocol only has 16-bit fields for these values. ERRORS BadDrawable A value for a Drawable argument does not name a de- fined window or pixel map. BadGC A value for a GC argument does not name a defined graphic context. BadMatch An InputOnly window is used as a drawable; or, an argument or pair of arguments has the correct type and range but fails to match in some other required way. XDrawArc and XDrawArcs can generate BadDrawable, BadGC, and BadMatch errors. SEE ALSO XCreateGC(3X), XDrawLine(3X), XDrawPoint(3X), XDrawRectangle(3X)
Xlib - C Language Interface
November, 1990 3

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