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John-Silver
Joined: 30 Jul 2013 Posts: 1520 Location: Aerospace Valley
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Posted: Wed Apr 02, 2014 9:57 pm Post subject: Symbols on X-Y Plots ? |
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Is it possible any way to ‘easily’ print symbols (e.g. crosses, triangles, squares … filled or unfilled) at data points on an X-Y graph constructed with DRAW_LINE_BETWEEN or DRAW_POLYLINE , or is it necessary to ‘draw’ such symbols using the primitives (lines, elipses, escaped parotts, etc....) ?
I don't find any options in LINE_STYLE routine, only for the line itself
Cheers
John |
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LitusSaxonicum
Joined: 23 Aug 2005 Posts: 2388 Location: Yateley, Hants, UK
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Posted: Fri Apr 04, 2014 3:30 pm Post subject: |
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Even the line style options only really work for 1 pixel wide lines.
You have three options after you have exhausted filled and outlined squares and circles as markers, and they are:
(1) draw the markers with lines - easy ones are + or x crosses, more difficult shapes are possible, and worth coding a subroutine or two for,
(2) draw a bitmap and import or place that with IMPORT_IMAGE@ (there are other related routines too)
(3) draw characters from a font such as Wingdings
Eddie |
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John-Silver
Joined: 30 Jul 2013 Posts: 1520 Location: Aerospace Valley
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Posted: Sat Apr 05, 2014 2:43 am Post subject: |
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Thanks ! Obvious really when someone else points it out. Intuitively my mind says the Font option is the simplest(quickest/most reliable. I've already sourced a font which has a series of shapes. Just have to work out carefully how best to centre them on a particular point (via offset of text ref. pt. from data point) . Is there a way to include a particular Font in the program itself, maybe as a Resource File ? Is this then directly referenceable in some way by the program or does it have to be installed on the target computer as part of the installation process ? Maybe it's just a question of indicating that the font needs to be installed on the computer, although that depends on end user action/intelligence, which I believe should be relied upon as little as possible !
Cheers John |
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LitusSaxonicum
Joined: 23 Aug 2005 Posts: 2388 Location: Yateley, Hants, UK
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Posted: Sat Apr 05, 2014 8:41 am Post subject: |
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If you use an installation program like Jordan Russell's InnoSetup, you can arrange to have the font installed at the same time as sallflibc.dll and the exe file are installed. You can find the size of the character with GET_TEXT_SIZE@, and then offset it left and down by half that amount, remembering that left is minus and down is plus (always confuses an upper right quadrant enthusiast like myself!). Many fonts have a few symbols anyway.
A long time ago in a computer faraway I decided that labelling contours a, b, c etc caused me fewer spacing and positioning errors than 1, 2, 3 etc, because there are more letters than single numerals, especially if lower and upper cases letters are chosen, and most users recognise the sequence. For that application I made the letters all align on several vertical and horizontal lines through the graphic, as I worked out in my mind that rotating them to align with the contour itself was too much work!
As far as marking nodes with symbols goes, you may or may not need to draw a background-colour rectangle first.
Eddie |
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John-Silver
Joined: 30 Jul 2013 Posts: 1520 Location: Aerospace Valley
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Posted: Sat Apr 05, 2014 6:40 pm Post subject: |
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thanks for the pointers Eddie, although you lost me with the relevance of the use of letters to label contours (?) |
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LitusSaxonicum
Joined: 23 Aug 2005 Posts: 2388 Location: Yateley, Hants, UK
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Posted: Sun Apr 06, 2014 10:28 am Post subject: |
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Ah, just a ramble because it was raining and I couldn't go out!
Your problem, as I understand it is that you want symbols (say) on a graph where the line changes direction, i.e. at salient points. My previous answer to use one character from a symbol font, and to offset it by half the character height and width so that it is centered over the salient point. So far, so good. What I should have done, perhaps, was to discuss the issue of what size to make the symbols, and what one might do if there are too many too close together, so that the marker symbols overlap, and obscure the line itself
But I was distracted, and when I returned to it, I was thinking about a different problem!
Eddie |
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DanRRight
Joined: 10 Mar 2008 Posts: 2815 Location: South Pole, Antarctica
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Posted: Sun Apr 06, 2014 12:17 pm Post subject: |
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Will add that you can also place an icon though that may hiccup and icon sometimes slides to upper left corner and loses ability to be moved with mouse touch and drag (most probably that is due to my own bug somewhere, the simple program doesn't hiccup. Curious if others got the same sometimes)
But in general adding symbols by font manipulation or other ways for 2D graphics in CWP is very powerful and simple. Really increfibly well done.
It is 3D OpenGL where font manipulation and plot marking are the living hell for Fortran users. Very few people so far even touched OpenGL with Fortran. But the trend is that many codes now move to 3D and so the 3D graphics has the future. We need quick and easy solutions here. |
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