Rotate the all center positions in the certain angle

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Laura
Laura el 4 de Sept. de 2013
I have 4 data points with x and y coordinates and I want to rotate them at certain angle in counterclockwise or clockwise.
Assume (x1,y1), (x2,y2), (x3,y3) and (x4,y4).
Is there a way to rotate them and find the new positions after rotating?
Thanks

Respuesta aceptada

Anand
Anand el 4 de Sept. de 2013
If you have the Image Processing Toolbox, you can use the affine2d object to help you with this. Here's an example of how:
Let's say you're points are (1,1),(100,1),(1,100) and (100,100) and you want to rotate them by 45 degrees.
%these are the points to rotate
X = [ 1 1;...
100 1;...
1 100;...
100 100];
%define a transformation matrix for 45 degree rotation
theta = 45;
T = [cosd(theta) sind(theta) 0;sind(theta) -cosd(theta) 0;0 0 1];
%construct an affine2d object using this transformation matrix
tform = affine2d(T);
%transform the points in X to new co-ordinates U using the affine2d object
U = transformPointsForward(tform,X)
U =
1.4142 0
71.4178 70.0036
71.4178 -70.0036
141.4214 0
Hope this helps!
  3 comentarios
Anand
Anand el 20 de Sept. de 2013
Editada: Anand el 20 de Sept. de 2013
Yes there is a way to do it without an affine2d object:
%pad X with a column of 1's for z.
X = [X ones(size(X,1),1)];
%transform points in X to new co-ordinates
U = X*T;
%remove the z
U = U(:,1:2)
Laura
Laura el 20 de Sept. de 2013
It makes sense that (1,1) will go to (1.4 , 0) after 45 degree of rotating.
But if you replace (1,1) by (1,0), now the new position is (0.7, 0.7). It does not rotate in the same direction. One is clockwise and other is counterclockwise.

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Matt J
Matt J el 20 de Sept. de 2013

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