Types/NoiseExpression: Difference between revisions

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m (→‎compile-time-log: examples fixes)
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local noise = require("noise")
local noise = require("noise")
local tne = noise.to_noise_expression
local tne = noise.to_noise_expression
local test = noise.compile_time_log(tne(2000), noise.var("y"), tne(100) - noise.var("distance"))


-- see the named noise expression docs linked above the code for how this works
-- see the named noise expression docs linked above the code for how this works
Line 221: Line 219:
   name = "compile-log-test",
   name = "compile-log-test",
   intended_property = "elevation",
   intended_property = "elevation",
   expression = test
   expression = noise.compile_time_log(2000, noise.var("y"), tne(100) - noise.var("distance"))
}}
}}



Revision as of 10:50, 9 September 2020

Basics

A fragment of a functional program used to generate coherent noise, probably for purposes related to terrain generation.

Noise expressions can be provided as table literals or built using functions in the built-in noise library. The built-in noise library allows writing much more concise code, so its usage will be shown in most examples on this page.
noise.define_noise_function allows noise expressions to be defined using a shorthand that's a subset of Lua (see example definition for an example and its literal equivalent).

Mandatory properties

type

Type: Types/string

Name of the type of this expression. Which other properties apply depend on the expression type.

Expression types

variable

Reference to a pre-defined variable, constant, or a named noise expression.

Predefined variables include "x", "y", and "distance".

Properties:

function-application

Apply a function to a list or associative array of arguments. Some functions expect arguments to be named and some expect them not to be.

Function calls are their own class of expression (as opposed to every function just being its own expression type) because function calls all have similar properties -- arguments are themselves expressions, a function call with all-constant arguments can be constant-folded (due to referential transparency), etc.

Properties:

  • function_name (a string; see #Functions, below)
  • arguments (a list or associative array of argument expressions)

literal-boolean

Evaluates to the same boolean value (true or false) every time, given by the literal_value property. May be used as a number value, evaluates to 1 for true and 0 for false.

literal-number

Evaluates to the same number every time, given by the literal_value property. All numbers are treated as Types/floats internally unless otherwise specified. May be used as a boolean value, evaluates to true for numbers > 0, anything else evaluates to false.

Example:

local ten = 
{
  type = "literal-number",
  literal_value = 10
}

-- or with the noise lib, see the "Basics" section above
local noise = require("noise")
local twenty_point_five = noise.to_noise_expression(20.5)

literal-string

Evaluates to the same string every time, given by the literal_value property.

Since the noise generation runtime has no notion of strings or use for them, this is useful only in constant contexts.

literal-object

Evaluates to the same object every time, given by the literal_value property.

e.g.

{
  type = "literal-object",
  literal_value = {
    name = "Bob Hope",
    birth_date = {
      year = 1903,
      month = 5,
      day_of_month = 29
    }
  }
}

Since the noise generation runtime has no notion of objects or use for them, this is useful only in constant contexts, such as the argument of the autoplace-probability function (where the 'literal object' is an AutoplaceSpecitication)

literal-expression

Returns the expression represented by its literal-value property.

Useful mostly for passing expressions (to be evaluated later) to the spot-noise function.

array-construction

value_expressions property should be a list of expressions, each of which will be evaluated to come up with the corresponding value in the resulting array.

Used to construct map positions ({x, y}) and map position lists ({{x0,y0}, {y1,y1}, ...}) for distance-from-nearest-point.

Examples of constructing a map position and map position list:

local noise = require("noise")
local tne = noise.to_noise_expression

local map_pos_1 = -- the map position {x = 100, y = -200} specified directly
{
  type = "array-construction",
  value_expressions = {tne(100), tne(-200)}
}
-- or with make_array from the noise lib required above
local map_pos_2 = noise.make_array({100, 200})

local map_pos_list = -- a map position list: {{x = 100, y = -200}, {x = 100, y = 200}}
{
  type = "array-construction",
  value_expressions = {map_pos_1, map_pos_2}
}
-- or with the noise lib
local also_map_post_list = noise.make_point_list({{100, -200}, {100, 200}})

procedure-delimiter

Evaluates and returns the value of its expression property, which is itself an expression.

This hints to the compiler that it should break the subexpression into its own procedure so that the result can be re-used in multiple places. For instance if you want to re-use the same multioctave noise for determining probability of multiple tiles/entities, wrap the multioctave noise expression in a procedure-delimiter. Alternatively, make the noise its own NamedNoiseExpression and reference it by name, using a variable.

if-else-chain

Has an arguments property that is a list of condition-result expression pairs followed by a default result expression, like so:

{
  type = "if-else-chain",
  arguments = {
    condition1, result1,
    condition2, result2,
    ...
    defaultResult
  }
}

The result of the if-else-chain is the value of the first result expression whose condition expression evaluated to true, or the value of the default result ('else') expression.

Functions

add

Arguments (positional): between 0 and 999 numbers

Takes the positional arguments and adds them.

subtract

Arguments (positional):

  • minuend - number
  • subtrahend - number

Takes 2 positional arguments and subtracts the second from the first.

multiply

Arguments (positional): between 0 and 999 numbers

Takes the positional arguments and multiplies them.

divide

Arguments (positional):

  • dividend - number
  • divisor - number

Takes 2 positional arguments and divides the first by the second.

exponentiate

Arguments (positional):

  • base - number
  • exponent - number

Takes 2 positional arguments, and raises the first to the second power.

absolute-value

Arguments (positional): value to be absoluted

Takes a single positional argument and returns its absolute value. i.e. If the argument is negative, it is inverted.

clamp

Arguments (positional):

  • value - number to be clamped
  • floor - lower limit
  • ceiling - upper limit

First argument is clamped between the second and third. The second is treated as a lower limit and the third the upper limit.

compile-time-log

Arguments: Between 1 and 999 values of any type

Prints all of its arguments to the log file when the expression is compiled. For that it needs to part of another expression that is compiled. The last argument of the compile-time-log is passed returned as the "result" of the compile-time-log.

Example of usage inside a NamedNoiseExpression:

local noise = require("noise")
local tne = noise.to_noise_expression

-- see the named noise expression docs linked above the code for how this works
data:extend{{
  type = "noise-expression",
  name = "compile-log-test",
  intended_property = "elevation",
  expression = noise.compile_time_log(2000, noise.var("y"), tne(100) - noise.var("distance"))
}}

-- When "compile-log-test" is selected as the map type and a map preview or map is generated, this logs:
--  Info data-updates.lua:24: 2000.000000 reference to variable 'y' subtract
-- Furthermore, the elevation noise expression is set to 'tne(100) - noise.var("distance")', producing a circular island with a 100 tile radius

distance-from-nearest-point

Arguments (named):

  • x - number
  • y - number
  • points - list of map positions
  • maximum_distance (constant, default: max double) - number

Computes the euclidean distance of the position {x, y} to all position listed in points and returns the shortest distance. The returned distance can be maximum_distance at most.

See array-construction for how to specify a map position list.

Example:

-- Shortest distance at the current {x, y} from the two given points, but at most 1000

local noise = require("noise")
local tne = noise.to_noise_expression
local positions = noise.make_point_list({{-100, -40}, {-50, -200}})

local shortest_distance = 
{
  type = "function-application",
  function_name = "distance-from-nearest-point",
  arguments = {x = noise.var("x"), y = noise.var("y"), points = positions, maximum_distance = tne(1000)}
}
-- or with the noise lib
local also_shortest_distance = noise.function_application("distance-from-nearest-point", {x = noise.var("x"), y = noise.var("y"), points = positions, maximum_distance = 1000})

ridge

Arguments (positional):

  • value - number to be ridged
  • floor - lower limit
  • ceiling - upper limit

Similar to clamp but the input value is folded back across the upper and lower limits until it lies between them.

Example:

local noise = require("noise")

local ridge_1 = noise.ridge(6, 1, 5) -- this returns 4

local ridge_2 = noise.ridge(-1, 1, 5) -- this returns 3

terrace

Arguments (positional):

  • value - number
  • offset (constant) - number
  • width (constant) - number
  • strength - number

modulo

Arguments (positional):

  • dividend - number
  • divisor - number

Takes 2 positional arguments and divides the first by the second and returns the remainder. This is implemented using fmod(double, double).

floor

Arguments (positional):

  • value - number

Takes one 1 numeric value and returns its floor.

ceil

Arguments (positional):

  • value - number

Takes one 1 numeric value and returns its ceiling.

bitwise-and

Arguments (positional): between 0 and 999 numbers

Casts the positional arguments to signed 32-bit integers and performs bitwise AND on them.

bitwise-or

Arguments (positional): between 0 and 999 numbers

Casts the positional arguments to signed 32-bit integers and performs bitwise OR on them.

bitwise-xor

Arguments (positional): between 0 and 999 numbers

Casts the positional arguments to signed 32-bit integers and performs bitwise EXCLUSIVE OR on them.

bitwise-not

Arguments (positional):

  • value - number to be negated

Casts the positional argument to a signed 32-bit integer and bitwise negates it.

sin

Arguments (positional):

  • value - number

Takes one 1 value and returns its sine.

cos

Arguments (positional):

  • value - number

Takes one 1 value and returns its cosine.

atan2

Arguments (positional):

  • y - number
  • x - number

Returns the arc tangent of y/x using the signs of arguments to determine the correct quadrant.

less-than

Arguments (positional):

  • lhs - number
  • rhs - number

Returns the result of lhs < rhs as literal number that is 0 for false and 1 for true.

less-or-equal

Arguments (positional):

  • lhs - number
  • rhs - number

Returns the result of lhs <= rhs as literal number that is 0 for false and 1 for true.

equals

Arguments (positional):

  • lhs - number
  • rhs - number

Returns the result of lhs == rhs as literal number that is 0 for false and 1 for true.

factorio-basis-noise

Arguments (named):

  • x
  • y
  • seed0 (constant) - integer between 0 and 4294967295 (inclusive) used to populate the backing random noise
  • seed1 (constant) - integer between 0 and 255 (inclusive) used to provide extra randomness when sampling
  • input_scale (constant, default: 1) - x and y will be multiplied by this before sampling
  • output_scale (constant, default: 1) - output will be multiplied by this before being returned

Scaling input and output can be accomplished other ways, but are done so commonly as to be built into this function for performance reasons.

factorio-quick-multioctave-noise

Arguments (named):

  • x - number
  • y - number
  • seed0 (constant) - number
  • seed1 (constant) - number
  • input_scale (constant, default: 1) - number
  • output_scale (constant, default: 1) - number
  • octaves (constant) - number
  • octave_input_scale_multiplier (constant, default: 0.5) - number
  • octave_output_scale_multiplier (constant, default: 2) - number
  • octave_seed0_shift (constant, default: 1) - number

random-penalty

Arguments (named):

  • x - number
  • y - number
  • source - number
  • seed (constant, default: 1) - number
  • amplitude (constant, default: 1) - number

log2

Argument (positional): value (number)

noise-layer-name-to-id

Argument (positional): value (string)

autoplace-probability

Argument (positional): value (object)

autoplace-richness

Argument (positional): value (object)

factorio-multioctave-noise

Arguments (named):

  • x
  • y
  • persistence (constant) - how strong is each layer compared to the next larger one
  • seed0 (constant) - integer between 0 and 4294967295 (inclusive) used to populate the backing random noise
  • seed1 (constant) - integer between 0 and 255 (inclusive) used to provide extra randomness when sampling
  • input_scale (constant, default: 1) - x and y will be multiplied by this before sampling
  • output_scale (constant, default: 1) - output will be multiplied by this before being returned
  • octaves (constant) - how many layers of noise at different scales to sum

spot-noise

Generates random conical spots. The map is divided into square regions, and within each region, candidate points are chosen at random and target density, spot quantity, and radius are calculated for each point (or one of every skip_span candidate points) by configured expressions. Each spot contributes a quantity to a regional target total (which is the average of sampled target densities times the area of the region) until the total has been reached or a maximum spot count is hit. The output value of the function is the maximum height of any spot at a given point.

The parameters that provide expressions to be evaluated for each point (all named something_expression) need to actually return expression objects.

The quantity of the spot is assumed to be the same as its volume. Since the volume of a cone is pi * radius^2 * height / 3, the height ('peak value') of any given spot is calculated as 3 * quantity / (pi * radius^2)

Arguments (named):

  • x (number)
  • y (number)
  • seed0 (constant integer) - random seed, part 1 - usually the map seed is used
  • seed1 (constant integer) - random seed, part 2 - usually chosen to identify the noise layer
  • region_size (constant integer, default: 512) - width/height of each region
  • skip_offset (constant integer, default: 0) - offset of the first candidate point to use
  • skip_span (constant integer, default: 1) - number of candidate points to skip over after each one used as a spot, including the used one
  • candidate_point_count (constant integer, default:256) - how many candidate points to generate
  • candidate_spot_count (constant integer, default depends on skip_span) - an alternative to candidate_point_count - number of spots to generate: candidate_spot_count = X is equivalent to candidate_point_count / skip_span = X
  • suggested_minimum_candidate_point_spacing (constant number, default depends on region size and candidate_point_count) - minimum spacing to *try* to achieve while randomly picking points; spot noise may end up placing spots closer than this in crowded regions
  • hard_region_target_quantity (constant boolean, default: true) - whether to place a hard limit on the total quantity in each region by reducing the size of any spot (which will be the last spot chosen) that would put it over the limit.
  • density_expression (number-returningexpression) - an expression that will be evaluated for each candidate spot to calculate density at that point
  • spot_quantity_expression (number-returningexpression) - an expression that will be evaluated for each candidate spot to calculate the spot's quantity
  • spot_radius_expression (number-returning expression) - an expression that will be evaluated for each candidate spot to calculate the spot's radius (this, together with quantity, will determine the spots peak value)
  • spot_favorability_expression (number-returning expression) - an expression that will be evaluated for each candidate spot to calculate the spot's favorability; spots with higher favorability will be considered first when building the final list of spots for a region
  • basement_value (constant) - number
  • maximum_spot_basement_radius (constant) - number
  • comment (constant) - comment string

The infinite series of candidate points (of which candidate_point_count are actually considered) generated by spot-noise expressions with the same seed0, seed1, region_size, and suggested_minimum_candidate_point_spacing will be identical. This allows multiple spot-noise expressions (e.g. for different ore patches) to avoid overlap by using different points from the same list, determined by skip_span and skip_offset.

Example definition

To override the 'temperature' named noise expression with one that linearly increases to the southeast:

local noise = require("noise");

data:extend{
  {
    type = "noise-expression",
    name = "new-temperature-function",
    intended_property = "temperature", -- Makes this available in the 'temperature generator' drop-down
    expression = noise.define_noise_function( function(x,y,tile,map)
      return (x + y) / 1000
    end)
  }
}

Which is equivalent to:

data:extend{
  {
    type = "noise-expression",
    name = "new-temperature-function",
    intended_property = "temperature",
    expression = {
      type = "function-application",
      function_name = "divide",
      arguments = {
        {
          type = "function-application",
          function_name = "add",
          arguments = {
            {
              type = "variable",
              variable_name = "x"
            },
            {
              type = "variable",
              variable_name = "y"
            }
          }
        },
        {
          type = "literal-number",
          literal_value = 1000
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

See also