# Python wrappers for libigl ## Work in progress Everything in this folder is currently being developed and it is likely to be changed radically in the next couple of months, breaking compatibility between different version. We plan to stabilize the python API by the end of 2016. ## Introduction libigl functions can be called natively from python by compiling the wrappers in this folder. The wrappers supports both python 2.7 and python 3.5 and are generated using [pybind11](https://github.com/wjakob/pybind11). The generated library will statically link against all dependencies producing a single, self-contained binary. ## Installation The python bindings can be compiled with the following instructions, assuming that your terminal is pointing to the root of libigl: ```bash cd python mkdir build cd build; cmake ..; make; cd .. ``` The cmake script will complain if it is not able to find python. In that case you can specify the location of the interpreter by specifying the following cmake variables. MacOSX/Linux: ```cmake SET(PYTHON_LIBRARIES "/usr/local/Cellar/python3/3.5.0/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.5/lib/libpython3.5m.dylib") SET(PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIR "/usr/local/Cellar/python3/3.5.0/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.5/include/python3.5m") ``` Windows: ```cmake SET(PYTHON_LIBRARIES "C:/Python35/libs/python35.lib") SET(PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIR "C:/Python35/include") ``` ## Tutorial All libigl tutorials will be ported to python and will use the same naming scheme. You can find the tutorials in the folder python/tutorials and you can launch them with the following commands: ```bash cd python python 102_DrawMesh.py ``` ## Matrix Representation TODO: describe in detail the wrapped eigen classes and how to convert them to numpy. ## Viewer and callbacks The igl viewer provides a convenient and efficient way of visualizing 3D surfaces in python. It behaves in the same way as the C++ viewer and supports native python functions as callbacks. This is a simple example that loads two meshes and switches between the two when a key is pressed: ```python import pyigl as igl V1 = igl.eigen.MatrixXd() F1 = igl.eigen.MatrixXi() V2 = igl.eigen.MatrixXd() F2 = igl.eigen.MatrixXi() def key_pressed(viewer, key, modifier): print("Key: ", chr(key)) if key == ord('1'): # # Clear should be called before drawing the mesh viewer.data.clear(); # # Draw_mesh creates or updates the vertices and faces of the displayed mesh. # # If a mesh is already displayed, draw_mesh returns an error if the given V and # # F have size different than the current ones viewer.data.set_mesh(V1, F1); viewer.core.align_camera_center(V1,F1); elif key == ord('2'): viewer.data.clear(); viewer.data.set_mesh(V2, F2); viewer.core.align_camera_center(V2,F2); return False # Load two meshes igl.readOFF("../tutorial/shared/bumpy.off", V1, F1); igl.readOFF("../tutorial/shared/fertility.off", V2, F2); print("1 Switch to bump mesh") print("2 Switch to fertility mesh") viewer = igl.viewer.Viewer() # Register a keyboard callback that allows to switch between # the two loaded meshes viewer.callback_key_pressed = key_pressed viewer.data.set_mesh(V1, F1) viewer.launch() ``` ### Remote viewer Whe using the viewer from an interactive python shell (iPython), it is inconvenient to let the viewer take control of the main thread for rendering purposes. We provide a simple wrapper for the viewer that allows to launch a remote process and send meshes to it via a TCP/IP socket. For more informations on how to use it see the documentation in [tcpviewer.py](tcpviewer.py) ## Matlab The python wrappers can be natively being used from MATLAB. We provide a few examples in the folder python/matlab. ## Documentation The python functions have exactly the same prototypes as their C++ counterpart. To get help for a certain function, please check the documentation in the corresponding .h file in libigl/include. We will add a proper docstring documentation in the future. ## Known Issues ## Contact Libigl is a group endeavor led by [Alec Jacobson](http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~jacobson/) and [Daniele Panozzo](http://www.inf.ethz.ch/personal/dpanozzo/). Please [contact us](mailto:alecjacobson@gmail.com,daniele.panozzo@gmail.com) if you have questions or comments. For troubleshooting, please post an [issue](https://github.com/libigl/libigl/issues) on github. If you're using libigl in your projects, quickly [drop us a note](mailto:alecjacobson@gmail.com,daniele.panozzo@gmail.com). Tell us who you are and what you're using it for. This helps us apply for funding and justify spending time maintaining this. If you find bugs or have problems please use our [github issue tracking page](https://github.com/libigl/libigl/issues). ## Copyright 2015 Alec Jacobson, Daniele Panozzo, Christian Schüller, Olga Diamanti, Qingnan Zhou, Sebastian Koch, Nico Pietroni, Stefan Brugger, Kenshi Takayama, Wenzel Jakob, Nikolas De Giorgis, Luigi Rocca, Leonardo Sacht, Olga Sorkine-Hornung, and others. Please see individual files for appropriate copyright notices.