Abstract

A new differential-recurrence relation for the B-spline functions of the same degree is proved. From this relation, a recursive method of computing the coefficients of B-spline functions of degree m in the Bernstein-Bézier form is derived. Its complexity is proportional to the number of coefficients in the case of coincident boundary knots. This means that, asymptotically, the algorithm is optimal. In other cases, the complexity is increased by at most O ( m 3 ) . When the Bernstein-Bézier coefficients of B-spline basis functions are known, it is possible to compute any B-spline function in linear time with respect to its degree by performing the geometric algorithm proposed recently by the authors. This algorithm scales well when evaluating the B-spline curve at multiple points, e.g., in order to render it, since one only needs to find the coefficients for each knot span once. When evaluating many B-spline curves at multiple points (as is the case when rendering tensor product B-spline surfaces), such approach has lower computational complexity than using the de Boor-Cox algorithm. The numerical tests show that the new method is efficient. The problem of finding the coefficients of the B-spline functions in the power basis can be solved similarly. • A new differential-recurrence relation for the B-spline functions of the same degree is proved. • From this relation, a recursive method of computing the coefficients of B-spline functions of degree m in the Bernstein-Bézier form is derived. • Its complexity is proportional to the number of coefficients in the case of coincident boundary knots. This means that, asymptotically, the algorithm is optimal. • When the Bernstein-Bézier coefficients of B-spline basis functions are known, it is possible to compute any B-spline function in linear time with respect to its degree by performing the geometric algorithm proposed recently by the authors. • This algorithm scales well when evaluating many B-spline curves with the same knot sequences at multiple points, e.g., when rendering tensor product B-spline surfaces. • When evaluating many B-spline curves at multiple points, such approach has lower computational complexity than using the de Boor-Cox algorithm. • The numerical tests show that the new method is efficient. • The problem of finding the coefficients of the B-spline functions in the power basis can be solved similarly.

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