# Simple method for detecting grid intersection with circle

I have a uniform grid of square cells and a point on that grid. I want to calculate the intersection of cells on the grid, with a circular area centered on the point, with a radius R.

Does anyone know of an efficient way of doing this?

Thanks!

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To clarify: are you asking how to find lattice points that cross a circle of arbitrary radius? –  Guess who it is. Nov 29 '10 at 12:44

Provided the number of expected cells you cross is "small", you can compute bounding box for all cells which can touch rectangel bounding the circle; if the circle is at $x_r$ and $y_r$, you get some $i_{\min}$, $j_{\min}$, $i_{\max}$, $j_{max}$. Then walk through all cells with coordinates $(i,j)\in\{i_{\min},\cdots,i_{\max}\}\times\{j_{\min},\cdots,j_{\max}\}$ and see if it its closest point $p_{ij}$ (draw it on paper to see which one it is) satisfies $|p_{ij}|^2<r^2$. Discard those cells of which closest point is further.
The algorithm will find it, provided you compute $p_{ij}$ correctly: it the circle's center is in the same grid row or column as the cell in question, the closest point $p_{ij}$ will be on the cell edge, not in the corner (one coordinate will be the same as the center's coordinate). –  eudoxos Jul 5 '13 at 12:26