Vertices of regular n-gon.

14 views (last 30 days)
Jim Oste
Jim Oste on 13 Feb 2015
Answered: Steven Lord on 8 Nov 2017
I want to find the perimeter of a regular inscribed polygon given N sides. I have a function that will calculate the distance from a set of coordinates. I have the following code to find the coordinates of the vertices for a regular n-gon;
x = cos(n.*(2*pi)./N);
y = sin(n.*(2*pi)./N);
I just don't know to store individual coordinates to pass through my function to find the distance between each vertex.

Accepted Answer

John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 13 Feb 2015
Edited: John D'Errico on 13 Feb 2015
Do it vectorized. Learn to use vectors.
t = linspace(0,1,N);
You can view t as the ratio n/N here, stored as a vector.
x = cos(t.*2*pi);
y = sin(t.*2*pi);
d = sum(sqrt(diff(x).^2 + diff(y).^2));
So, for N = 10, this yields
d =
6.15636257986204
Not too far from 2*pi. Increase N to 1000,
d =
6.28317495105715
2*pi
ans =
6.28318530717959
You can see it does well enough. It should approach 2*pi asymptotically from below as N goes to infinity.
  2 Comments
nanying
nanying on 7 Nov 2017
Just want to mention that d = sum(sqrt(diff(x).^2 + diff(y).^2)) only sum N-1*terms which is 9 in your case.
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 7 Nov 2017
@nanying - what is your point? The first and last vertices in the polygon as created are the same. So if you wanted to point out that to create a true N-gon, thus a regular polygon with N sides, you actually needed to use N+1 in the code above, that would have been a valid comment. The perimeter length of the polygon is correct though.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (1)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 8 Nov 2017
If you're using release R2017b or later, you can use the nsidedpoly function.

Categories

Find more on Elementary Polygons in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!