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var p1 = { | |
x: 20, | |
y: 20 | |
}; | |
var p2 = { | |
x: 40, | |
y: 40 | |
}; | |
// angle in radians | |
var angleRadians = Math.atan2(p2.y - p1.y, p2.x - p1.x); | |
// angle in degrees | |
var angleDeg = Math.atan2(p2.y - p1.y, p2.x - p1.x) * 180 / Math.PI; |
thank you very much, simple and efficient
Big thanks
Thanks you for this useful snippet.
Thank u!
was using for a design tool here, if you need the angle adjusted by all quadrants (between 0º and 360º) the correct function is:
const angle = (anchor, point) => Math.atan2(anchor.y - point.y, anchor.x - point.x) * 180 / Math.PI + 180; const a = { x: 20, y: 20 }; const p = { x: 0, y: 0 }; angle(a, p); // 225 // angle in degrees, from example, same data angleDeg = Math.atan2(a.y - p.y, a.x - p.x) * 180 / Math.PI; // 45as pointed on Stack Overflow by jk.
var user = {
x: 13.046136,
y: 80.181772
};
var driver = {
x: 13.045650,
y: 80.182865
};
Math.atan2(user.y - driver.y, user.x - driver.x) * 180 / Math.PI + 180
angle will be -66.02778421483718 somewhere between (270deg - 315deg) if apply some condition i can get to know the exact angle.
in your calculation, the angle will be returned 113.97221578516282
so it was failed on negative values.
+∞
Thanks!
Thanks!
Massive thanks!!!!!
@adius stfu
Thanks
Thank you!
How about the pitch and yaw between 2 3D vectors?
Been trying to figure it out for 3 days now 😕
very useful!
THANK YOU!!!
How about the pitch and yaw between 2 3D vectors? Been trying to figure it out for 3 days now 😕
- think of both as being at origin;
- force them into the plane along 2 axis (set the last dimension to 0, because length is irrelevant) (which one depends on whether you want pitch yaw or roll and your coordinate system);
- solve using 2D trigonometry (just the angle between these)
alternatively you could use a framework that uses these values to store rotation anyway, but beware of gimbal lock
thank you so much <3
Omg thank you!!!
Would love a version of this that has 0 degrees at due north if anyone knows how to do that...
Would love a version of this that has 0 degrees at due north if anyone knows how to do that...
There are probably more elegant solutions to this but I achieved the desired behavior in p5.js using its map
function which maps a value from one number range to another with the following syntax map(value, min1, max1, min2, max2)
My updated getAngle()
function looks like this:
function getAngle(x1, y1, x2, y2){
var a = Math.atan2(y2 - y1, x2 - x1) * (180 / Math.PI) + 90;
a = (a < 0) ? map(a, -90, 0, 270, 360) : a;
return a;
}
The map()
function (always handy to have around) works like this under the hood:
function map(value, min1, max1, min2, max2) {
return min2 + (max2 - min2) * ((value - min1) / (max1 - min1));
}
Thanks @timjuedemann but I actually wrote a function for this eventually that allows you to change where zero is, and even calculates distance from cursor to the element too.
Check it out here: https://github.com/funkhaus/fuxt/blob/master/utils/angleDistanceToCursor.js
Thank you!