Baran, IlyaLehtinen, JaakkoPopovic, Jovan2015-02-232015-02-2320101467-8659https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8659.2009.01635.xClothoid splines are gaining popularity as a curve representation due to their intrinsically pleasing curvature, which varies piecewise linearly over arc length. However, constructing them from hand-drawn strokes remains difficult. Building on recent results, we describe a novel algorithm for approximating a sketched stroke with a fair (i.e., visually pleasing) clothoid spline. Fairness depends on proper segmentation of the stroke into curve primitives - lines, arcs, and clothoids. Our main idea is to cast the segmentation as a shortest path problem on a carefully constructed weighted graph. The nodes in our graph correspond to a vastly overcomplete set of curve primitives that are fit to every subsegment of the sketch, and edges correspond to transitions of a specified degree of continuity between curve primitives. The shortest path in the graph corresponds to a desirable segmentation of the input curve. Once the segmentation is found, the primitives are fit to the curve using non-linear constrained optimization. We demonstrate that the curves produced by our method have good curvature profiles, while staying close to the user sketch.Sketching Clothoid Splines Using Shortest Paths10.1111/j.1467-8659.2009.01635.x655-664