From: Ashish, K. \(IE10\) <Ash...@ho...> - 2006-04-22 06:43:26
|
Hi, =20 I want to call plplot function from my application VC++, to draw some chart and to display I want to use MFC dialogs.=20 =20 Can it be done ? =20 Thanks and regards, Ashish =20 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------- It is better to have enough ideas for some of them to be wrong than to be always right by having no ideas at all. -- Albert Einstein =20 |
From: Arjen M. <arj...@wl...> - 2006-04-24 06:32:46
|
Ashish, Kiratsingh (IE10) wrote: > Hi, > > > > I want to call plplot function from my application VC++, to draw some > chart and to display I want to use > > MFC dialogs. > > > > Can it be done ? > While I have never used MFC dialogs, I can imagine the issues being the same as for any application that wants to specify a particular existing window instead of letting PLplot open a new one: - The win3 driver supports a driver option "hwnd" - the value for that option is the HWND handle for the window that you want to use. You should use the plsetopt() function to set this option. - If you use this option, PLplot will assume that your program takes care of drawing and redrawing (that is, the default message handling function is not used). If this does not work, please let me know, as I am the maintainer of the win3 driver. Regards, Arjen |
From: Curtis C. <cu...@lp...> - 2006-11-16 20:37:58
|
Hi, For my graphs, it is more convenient to have a white rather than black background. However, then my plots don't show up because the axes boxes, tick marks, etc., are all white by default. Is it possible to easily reverse all colors in the primary palette? Thanks, Curtis |
From: Bryan P. <pet...@ma...> - 2006-11-16 21:08:48
|
I have a routine I use all the time in place of plstart which includes two calls before plstart: call plscol0(15,0,0,0) call plscol0(0,255,255,255) after plstart I also call call plcol(15) that swaps the colors. I assume this still works on the latest version (haven't tried it yet). And I'm not sure that all three calls are needed since I have been using this unchanged since late 1997. Bryan Peterson bry...@by... On Thu, 16 Nov 2006, Curtis Cooper wrote: > Hi, > > For my graphs, it is more convenient to have a white rather than black > background. However, then my plots don't show up because the axes boxes, > tick marks, etc., are all white by default. Is it possible to easily > reverse all colors in the primary palette? > > Thanks, > Curtis > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Take Surveys. Earn Cash. Influence the Future of IT > Join SourceForge.net's Techsay panel and you'll get the chance to share your > opinions on IT & business topics through brief surveys - and earn cash > http://www.techsay.com/default.php?page=join.php&p=sourceforge&CID=DEVDEV > _______________________________________________ > Plplot-general mailing list > Plp...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/plplot-general > |
From: Alan W. I. <ir...@be...> - 2006-11-16 22:20:39
|
On 2006-11-16 13:37-0700 Curtis Cooper wrote: > Hi, > > For my graphs, it is more convenient to have a white rather than black > background. However, then my plots don't show up because the axes boxes, > tick marks, etc., are all white by default. Is it possible to easily > reverse all colors in the primary palette? Both postscript colour devices (psc and psttfc) have monochrome black on white counterparts called ps and psttf so you might want to try those device drivers. Also, it is fairly easy to rearrange the discrete colour palette using the colour map0 API discussed in (http://plplot.sourceforge.net/docbook-manual/plplot-html-5.6.1/color.html). In the past, the idea has been discussed on plplot-devel to supply a number of convenient pre-defined colour palettes for the user (including the default colour palette we have now), but that idea has not been implemented yet. Alan __________________________ Alan W. Irwin Astronomical research affiliation with Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Victoria (astrowww.phys.uvic.ca). Programming affiliations with the FreeEOS equation-of-state implementation for stellar interiors (freeeos.sf.net); PLplot scientific plotting software package (plplot.org); the Yorick front-end to PLplot (yplot.sf.net); the Loads of Linux Links project (loll.sf.net); and the Linux Brochure Project (lbproject.sf.net). __________________________ Linux-powered Science __________________________ |
From: Jerry <lan...@qw...> - 2006-11-17 09:58:00
|
On Nov 16, 2006, at 2:23 PM, Alan W. Irwin wrote: > On 2006-11-16 13:37-0700 Curtis Cooper wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> For my graphs, it is more convenient to have a white rather than >> black >> background. However, then my plots don't show up because the axes >> boxes, >> tick marks, etc., are all white by default. Is it possible to easily >> reverse all colors in the primary palette? > > Both postscript colour devices (psc and psttfc) have monochrome > black on > white counterparts called ps and psttf so you might want to try > those device > drivers. > > Also, it is fairly easy to rearrange the discrete colour palette > using the > colour map0 API discussed in > (http://plplot.sourceforge.net/docbook-manual/plplot-html-5.6.1/ > color.html). > > In the past, the idea has been discussed on plplot-devel to supply > a number > of convenient pre-defined colour palettes for the user (including the > default colour palette we have now), but that idea has not been > implemented > yet. > > Alan FWIW, my Ada bindings already have some extra palettes plus the ability to switch black and white. I hope to write Ada versions of the PLplot examples (I assume that's a prerequisite) and see what is involved with getting this work included with the official release. I think there might be a documentation project for the thick binding, but the standard PLplot docs should be good for the thin binding. Jerry |