From: Hazen B. <hba...@ma...> - 2008-01-20 16:37:48
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On Jan 20, 2008, at 11:12 AM, Oliver Bandel wrote: > Zitat von Hazen Babcock <hba...@ma...>: >> I usually start from something like example 8 or example 28. Then >> fiddle around, more or less by trial and error until the plot looks >> right. >> >> Basically you need the following commands (in this order): >> >> (1)plvpor() - This sets up how much of the window is to be used for >> drawing the plot (range 0.0 - 1.0), i.e. the viewport. For example >> plvpor(0.1,0.9,0.1,0.9) means the graph will be drawn between 10% of >> the way across the window and 90% of the way across in both x and y. > [...] > > > OK, now I have my 3D-Data Diagram. :-) > > But I had to use pladv(), otherwise plplot-lib gave me a message > that I have to use this function or plenv and created no output. > > > Do you have an idea, how to make the axis "grid-like"? Sorry, I'm not really sure what you mean by more "grid-like". PLplot has a function called plgriddata() that will let you grid irregularly spaced data for the purposes of plotting it. It is documented and there are examples of its use in example 21. > I looked at > http://plplot.sourceforge.net/examples/demo08.php > and possibly I can find the solution there. If you have the PLplot source, the code for all the examples can be found in the examples directory, with sub-directories for each of the different supported languages. > In that example I found the function > plAlloc2dGrid(), which is NOT documented in > http://plplot.sourceforge.net/docbook-manual/plplot-html-5.8.0/ > index.html > > Any idea on where to get a complete documentation? The manual is the only documentation that I know of. -Hazen |