Bresenham’s Line Algorithm Found this from looking at the RRT implementation. Ahh, this is what I was looking for when it came to drawing lines on a grid. def get_line(start, end): """Bresenham's Line Algorithm Produces a list of tuples from start and end >>> points1 = get_line((0, 0), (3, 4)) >>> points2 = get_line((3, 4), (0, 0)) >>> assert(set(points1) == set(points2)) >>> print points1 [(0, 0), (1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4)] >>> print points2 [(3, 4), (2, 3), (1, 2), (1, 1), (0, 0)] """ # Setup initial conditions x1, y1 = start x2, y2 = end dx = x2 - x1 dy = y2 - y1 # Determine how steep the line is is_steep = abs(dy) > abs(dx) # Rotate line if is_steep: x1, y1 = y1, x1 x2, y2 = y2, x2 # Swap start and end points if necessary and store swap state swapped = False if x1 > x2: x1, x2 = x2, x1 y1, y2 = y2, y1 swapped = True # Recalculate differentials dx = x2 - x1 dy = y2 - y1 # Calculate error error = int(dx / 2.0) ystep = 1 if y1 < y2 else -1 # Iterate over bounding box generating points between start and end y = y1 points = [] for x in range(x1, x2 + 1): coord = (y, x) if is_steep else (x, y) points.append(coord) error -= abs(dy) if error < 0: y += ystep error += dx # Reverse the list if the coordinates were swapped if swapped: points.reverse() return points Related