
Thanks for the info. With backtracking I actually meant the computation of the exact collision time, and let (part of the simulation) only go that far, so it's not really "back tracking" in the physics engine; does that correspond to your 2nd proposal. I just got this from a physics bookhttp://www.amazon.com/Dynamic-Simulations-Multibody-Systems-Coutinho/dp/0387...that implements it that way (at least that why I got from reading it diagonally, the books contains a lot of advanced math...) But do you mean that with your proposed methods the simulation will advance a full "time step" anyway, so the time interval does not need to broken up into smaller ones, where each sub-interval ends with a collision event? I wander how this could work since most of the time in a game when a collision happens, the game logic decides what forces to apply next, so the simulation can't really advance a full time step anyway (although that could be hacked I guess). Converting the game logic into differential equations with constraints seems very hard. However, I must admit I haven't used any modern physics engines the last 5 years or so... But it's interesting to hear from people that did. On Fri, Mar 6, 2009 at 11:59 AM, jean-christophe mincke < jeanchristophe.mincke@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello Peter,
The backtraking in time to solve the collision problem you mentionned is not, in my opinion, efficient.
From a previous life as an aerospace engineer, I remember that two other solutions exist to handle contact or collision constraints, at least if 2nd order diff. equations are used to describe the motion of a solid with mass.
In any case, you have to use a 'serious' variable time step integration algorithm (I.E Runge-Kutta).
1. The naive one: introduce a (virtual) spring between every 2 objets that may collide. When these objets get closer, the spring is compressed and tries to push them back. If the mass/velocity are high, that leads to a stiff system and the time steps may become very small. However, this solution does not require any modification of the equations of motion.
2. The serious one: modify or augment the equations of motion so that the collision constraints are implicitly taken into account. If I remember well, the magical trick is to use langrangian multipliers. The difficult here (especially in the context of aFRP) is to derive the new equations.
Hope it helps
Regards
Jean-Christophe Mincke
2009/3/6 Peter Verswyvelen
Regarding hpysics, did anybody did some experiments with this? The blog seems to be inactive since december 2008; has development ceased?
Do alternatives exist? Maybe good wrappers (hopefully pure...) around existing engines?
Integrating hpysics with Grapefruit might be a good topic for the Hackaton, trying to make a simple game (e.g. Pong or Breakout) without using recursive signal functions, but with correct collision response and better-than-Euler integration, all handled by the physics engine. Other FRP engines could be tried, but Grapefruit hacking is already a topic on the Hackaton, so it would combine efforts.
It feels as if none of the current FRP engines can handle physics correctly, since a typical physics implementations requires "time backtracking", in the sense that when you want to advance the current simulation time by a timestep, collision events can happen during that time interval, and hence the FRP engine can only advance time until the earliest collision event. So to do physics *with* an FRP engine, the implementation and maybe even semantics of the FRP system might need to be changed. *Using* a physics engine as a blackbox inside an FRP system might make more sense.
Thanks to Wolfgang Jeltsch and Christopher Lane Hinson for having a discussion with me that lead to this. Interestingly a similar discussion was help by other people in the Reactive mailing list at the same time :-)
Cheers, Peter Verswyvelen
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