The x3p file format is specified in ISO standard 25178-72:2017/AMD 1:2020 (based on ISO ISO5436 – 2000) describe 3d surface measurements. This package allows reading, writing and basic modifications to the 3D surface measurements.
x3ptools
is available from CRAN:
The development version is available from Github:
The x3p file format is an xml based file format created to describe digital surface measurements. x3p has been developed by OpenFMC (Open Forensic Metrology Consortium, see https://www.open-fmc.org/) and has been adopted as 25178-72:2017/AMD 1:2020. x3p files are a zip archive of a directory consisting of an xml file of meta information and a matrix of numeric surface measurements.
Internally, x3p objects are stored as a list consisting of the surface matrix (the measurements) and meta information in four records: header info, feature info, general info, and matrix info:
## [1] "header.info" "surface.matrix" "feature.info" "general.info"
## [5] "matrix.info"
The four info objects specify the information for Record1 through Record4 in the xml file. An example for an xml file is provided with the package and can be accessed as system.file("templateXML.xml", package="x3ptools")
.
header.info
contains the information relevant to interpret locations for the surface matrix:
## $sizeY
## [1] 419
##
## $sizeX
## [1] 741
##
## $incrementY
## [1] 6.45e-07
##
## $incrementX
## [1] 6.45e-07
matrix.info
expands on header.info
and provides the link to the surface measurements in binary format.
general.info
consists of information on how the data was captured, i.e. both author and capturing device are specified here.
feature.info
is informed by the header info and provides the structure for storing the information.
While these pieces can be changed and adapted manually, it is more convenient to save information on the capturing device and the creator in a separate template and bind measurements and meta information together in the command x3p_addtemplate
.
x3p_read
and x3p_write
are the two functions allows us to read x3p files and write to x3p files.
## [1] "header.info" "surface.matrix" "feature.info" "general.info"
## [5] "matrix.info"
The function x3p_image
uses rgl
to render a 3d object in a separate window. The user can then interact with the 3d surface (zoom and rotate):
In case a file name is specified in the function call the resulting surface is saved in a file (the extension determines the actual file format of the image).
x3p_image_grid
lays a regularly spaced grid of lines over the surface of the scan. Lines are drawn spaces
apart (50 microns by default in y direction and 100 microns in x direction). Every fifth and tenth lines are colored differently to ease a visual assessment of distance.
logoplus <- x3p_add_grid(logo, spaces=50e-6,
size = c(3,3,5), color=c("grey50", "black", "darkred"))
x3p_image(logoplus, size=c(741,419), zoom=0.5, useNULL=TRUE)
rgl::rglwidget()
The functions x3p_to_df
and df_to_x3p
allow casting between an x3p format and an x-y-z data set:
## x y value
## 1 0.000e+00 0.00026961 4e-07
## 2 6.450e-07 0.00026961 4e-07
## 3 1.290e-06 0.00026961 4e-07
## 4 1.935e-06 0.00026961 4e-07
## 5 2.580e-06 0.00026961 4e-07
## 6 3.225e-06 0.00026961 4e-07
When converting from the x3p format to a data frame, the values from the surface matrix are interpreted as heights (saved as value
) on an x-y grid. The dimension of the matrix sets the number of different x and y levels, the information in header.info
allows us to scale the levels to the measured quantities. Similarly, when moving from a data frame to a surface matrix, the assumption is that measurements are taken on an equi-spaced and complete grid of x-y values. The information on the resolution (i.e. the spacing between consecutive x and y locations) is saved in form of the header info, which is added to the list. General info and feature info can not be extracted from the measurements, but have to be recorded with other means.
Once data is in a regular data frame, we can use our regular means to visualize these raster images, e.g. using ggplot2
:
library(ggplot2)
library(magrittr)
logo_df %>% ggplot(aes( x= x, y=y, fill= value)) +
geom_tile() +
scale_fill_gradient2(midpoint=4e-7)
x3p_rotate
rotates an x3p image counter-clockwise by angle in degrees, x3p_transpose
transposes the surface matrix of an image and updates the corresponding meta information. The function x3p_flip_y
is a combination of transpose and rotation, that allows to flip the direction of the y axis to move easily from legacy ISO x3p scans to ones conforming to the most recent ISO standard.
x3p_sample
allows to sub-sample an x3p object to get a lower resolution image. In x3p_sample
we need to set a sampling factor. A sample factor mX
of 2 means that we only use every 2nd value of the surface matrix, mX
of 5 means, we only use every fifth value:
## [1] 741 419
## [1] 149 84
Parameter mY
can be specified separately from mX
for a different sampling rate in y direction. We can also use different offsets in x and y direction by specifying offsetX
and/or offsetY
.
sample2 <- x3p_sample(logo, m=5, offset=1)
cor(as.vector(logo_sample$surface.matrix[-149,]), as.vector(sample2$surface.matrix))
## [1] 0.8639308
x3p_interpolate
allows, like x3p_sample
, to create a new x3p file at a new resolution, as specified in the parameters resx
and resy
. The new resolution should be lower (i.e. larger values for resx
and resy
) than the resolution specified as IncrementX
and IncrementY
in the header info of the x3p file. x3p_interpolate
can also be used to interpolate missing values (set parameter maxgap
according to specifications in zoo::na.approx
).
The four records of header info, feature info, general info, and matrix info of an x3p object contain meta information relevant to the scan. x3p_show_xml
allows the user to specify a search term and then proceeds to go through all records for a matching term. As a result any matching elements from the meta file are shown:
## $Axes.CX.AxisType
## [1] "I"
##
## $Axes.CY.AxisType
## [1] "I"
##
## $Axes.CZ.AxisType
## [1] "A"
## $Creator
## [1] "Heike Hofmann, CSAFE"
If a search term identifies a single element, x3p_modify_xml
allows the user to update the corresponding meta information:
## x3p object
## Instrument: N/A
## size (width x height): 741 x 419 in pixel
## resolution: 6.4500e-07 x 6.4500e-07
## Creator: I did this
## Comment: image rendered from the CSAFE logo
A mask is used to markup regions of the surface - the mask can then be used to overlay the rendered surface with color.
Below is a 3d surface of a part of a bullet surface is shown. Some regions are marked up: the bronze colored area is an area with strong striae (vertical lines engraved on the bullet as it moves through the barrel of the handgun when fired), areas in dark blue show groove engraved areas, the light blue area shows break off at the bottom of the bullet, and the pink area marks an area without striae:
Any image can serve as a mask, the command x3p_add_mask
allows to add a raster image as a mask for a x3p object:
logo <- x3p_read(system.file("csafe-logo.x3p", package="x3ptools"))
color_logo <- png::readPNG(system.file("csafe-color.png", package="x3ptools"))
logoplus <- x3p_add_mask(logo, mask = as.raster(color_logo))
x3p_image(logoplus, size=c(741, 419), zoom=0.5, multiply = 30)
Some masks are more informative than others, but the only requirement for images is that they are of the right size.
Masks are raster images. Any change to the raster manifests as a change in the surface color of the corresponding scan. We suggest using the magick
package to manipulate masks.
Additionally, vertical and horizontal lines can be added in the masks using the commands x3p_add_vline
and x3p_add_hline
: