Doo-Sabin subdivision surface

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Doo-Sabin subdivision surface, in the field of computer graphics, is a type of subdivision surface based on a generalization of bi-quadratic uniform B-splines. It was developed in 1978 by Daniel Doo and Malcolm Sabin.

[edit] External links

  • Doo-Sabin surfaces
  • D. Doo: A subdivision algorithm for smoothing down irregularly shaped polyhedrons, Proceedings on Interactive Techniques in Computer Aided Design, pp. 157 - 165, 1978 (pdf).
  • D. Doo and M. Sabin: Behavior of recursive division surfaces near extraordinary points, Computer-Aided Design, 10(6)356-360 (1978), (doi, pdf)