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@rossant
Last active December 24, 2023 12:50
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Very simple ray tracing engine in (almost) pure Python. Depends on NumPy and Matplotlib. Diffuse and specular lighting, simple shadows, reflections, no refraction. Purely sequential algorithm, slow execution.
"""
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2017 Cyrille Rossant
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
SOFTWARE.
"""
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
w = 400
h = 300
def normalize(x):
x /= np.linalg.norm(x)
return x
def intersect_plane(O, D, P, N):
# Return the distance from O to the intersection of the ray (O, D) with the
# plane (P, N), or +inf if there is no intersection.
# O and P are 3D points, D and N (normal) are normalized vectors.
denom = np.dot(D, N)
if np.abs(denom) < 1e-6:
return np.inf
d = np.dot(P - O, N) / denom
if d < 0:
return np.inf
return d
def intersect_sphere(O, D, S, R):
# Return the distance from O to the intersection of the ray (O, D) with the
# sphere (S, R), or +inf if there is no intersection.
# O and S are 3D points, D (direction) is a normalized vector, R is a scalar.
a = np.dot(D, D)
OS = O - S
b = 2 * np.dot(D, OS)
c = np.dot(OS, OS) - R * R
disc = b * b - 4 * a * c
if disc > 0:
distSqrt = np.sqrt(disc)
q = (-b - distSqrt) / 2.0 if b < 0 else (-b + distSqrt) / 2.0
t0 = q / a
t1 = c / q
t0, t1 = min(t0, t1), max(t0, t1)
if t1 >= 0:
return t1 if t0 < 0 else t0
return np.inf
def intersect(O, D, obj):
if obj['type'] == 'plane':
return intersect_plane(O, D, obj['position'], obj['normal'])
elif obj['type'] == 'sphere':
return intersect_sphere(O, D, obj['position'], obj['radius'])
def get_normal(obj, M):
# Find normal.
if obj['type'] == 'sphere':
N = normalize(M - obj['position'])
elif obj['type'] == 'plane':
N = obj['normal']
return N
def get_color(obj, M):
color = obj['color']
if not hasattr(color, '__len__'):
color = color(M)
return color
def trace_ray(rayO, rayD):
# Find first point of intersection with the scene.
t = np.inf
for i, obj in enumerate(scene):
t_obj = intersect(rayO, rayD, obj)
if t_obj < t:
t, obj_idx = t_obj, i
# Return None if the ray does not intersect any object.
if t == np.inf:
return
# Find the object.
obj = scene[obj_idx]
# Find the point of intersection on the object.
M = rayO + rayD * t
# Find properties of the object.
N = get_normal(obj, M)
color = get_color(obj, M)
toL = normalize(L - M)
toO = normalize(O - M)
# Shadow: find if the point is shadowed or not.
l = [intersect(M + N * .0001, toL, obj_sh)
for k, obj_sh in enumerate(scene) if k != obj_idx]
if l and min(l) < np.inf:
return
# Start computing the color.
col_ray = ambient
# Lambert shading (diffuse).
col_ray += obj.get('diffuse_c', diffuse_c) * max(np.dot(N, toL), 0) * color
# Blinn-Phong shading (specular).
col_ray += obj.get('specular_c', specular_c) * max(np.dot(N, normalize(toL + toO)), 0) ** specular_k * color_light
return obj, M, N, col_ray
def add_sphere(position, radius, color):
return dict(type='sphere', position=np.array(position),
radius=np.array(radius), color=np.array(color), reflection=.5)
def add_plane(position, normal):
return dict(type='plane', position=np.array(position),
normal=np.array(normal),
color=lambda M: (color_plane0
if (int(M[0] * 2) % 2) == (int(M[2] * 2) % 2) else color_plane1),
diffuse_c=.75, specular_c=.5, reflection=.25)
# List of objects.
color_plane0 = 1. * np.ones(3)
color_plane1 = 0. * np.ones(3)
scene = [add_sphere([.75, .1, 1.], .6, [0., 0., 1.]),
add_sphere([-.75, .1, 2.25], .6, [.5, .223, .5]),
add_sphere([-2.75, .1, 3.5], .6, [1., .572, .184]),
add_plane([0., -.5, 0.], [0., 1., 0.]),
]
# Light position and color.
L = np.array([5., 5., -10.])
color_light = np.ones(3)
# Default light and material parameters.
ambient = .05
diffuse_c = 1.
specular_c = 1.
specular_k = 50
depth_max = 5 # Maximum number of light reflections.
col = np.zeros(3) # Current color.
O = np.array([0., 0.35, -1.]) # Camera.
Q = np.array([0., 0., 0.]) # Camera pointing to.
img = np.zeros((h, w, 3))
r = float(w) / h
# Screen coordinates: x0, y0, x1, y1.
S = (-1., -1. / r + .25, 1., 1. / r + .25)
# Loop through all pixels.
for i, x in enumerate(np.linspace(S[0], S[2], w)):
if i % 10 == 0:
print i / float(w) * 100, "%"
for j, y in enumerate(np.linspace(S[1], S[3], h)):
col[:] = 0
Q[:2] = (x, y)
D = normalize(Q - O)
depth = 0
rayO, rayD = O, D
reflection = 1.
# Loop through initial and secondary rays.
while depth < depth_max:
traced = trace_ray(rayO, rayD)
if not traced:
break
obj, M, N, col_ray = traced
# Reflection: create a new ray.
rayO, rayD = M + N * .0001, normalize(rayD - 2 * np.dot(rayD, N) * N)
depth += 1
col += reflection * col_ray
reflection *= obj.get('reflection', 1.)
img[h - j - 1, i, :] = np.clip(col, 0, 1)
plt.imsave('fig.png', img)
@cryptid11
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is there a similar compact version in C?

@lc0305
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lc0305 commented Jul 27, 2020

is there a similar compact version in C?

In case you are still interested I took this as inspiration and ported it to Rust and its much faster.
https://github.com/lc0305/rust_tracer

@alkylon
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alkylon commented Aug 3, 2020

Hi, Can anyone tell me how to change the radius of the sphere?

@lc0305
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lc0305 commented Aug 4, 2020

Hi, Can anyone tell me how to change the radius of the sphere?

The radius is the second argument in the add_sphere function.
def add_sphere(position, radius, color):

@Trashmuncher
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What does it do does it just print 10 800 20 800 30 800 etc...

@rossant
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Author

rossant commented Jan 17, 2021

It saves an image fig.png

@CEXT-Dan
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CEXT-Dan commented Sep 2, 2023

this is so cool!

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