plshades - Shade regions on the basis of value
plshades(a, nx, ny, defined,
xmin, xmax, ymin, ymax, clevel,
nlevel, fill_width, cont_color, cont_width,
fill, rectangular, pltr, pltr_data)
Shade regions on the basis of value. This is the high-level
routine for making continuous color shaded plots with cmap1 while
plshade(3plplot) should be used to plot individual shaded regions
using either cmap0 or cmap1. examples/;<language>/x16* shows how to
use plshades(3plplot) for each of our supported languages.
Redacted form: General: plshades(a, defined, xmin, xmax, ymin,
ymax, clevel, fill_width, cont_color, cont_width, fill, rectangular, pltr,
pltr_data)
This function is used in examples 16, 21, and 22.
- a
(PLFLT_MATRIX(3plplot), input)
- A matrix containing function values to plot. Should have dimensions of
nx by ny.
- nx (PLINT(3plplot),
input)
- First dimension of matrix "a".
- ny (PLINT(3plplot),
input)
- Second dimension of matrix "a".
- defined
(PLDEFINED_callback(3plplot), input)
- Callback function specifying the region that should be plotted in the
shade plot. This function accepts x and y coordinates as input arguments
and must return 1 if the point is to be included in the shade plot and 0
otherwise. If you want to plot the entire shade plot (the usual case),
this argument should be set to NULL.
- xmin, xmax, ymin,
ymax (PLFLT(3plplot), input)
- See the discussion of pltr below for how these arguments are used
(only for the special case when the callback function pltr is not
supplied).
- clevel
(PLFLT_VECTOR(3plplot), input)
- A vector containing the data levels corresponding to the edges of each
shaded region that will be plotted by this function. To work properly the
levels should be monotonic.
- nlevel
(PLINT(3plplot), input)
- Number of shades plus 1 (i.e., the number of shade edge values in
clevel).
- fill_width
(PLFLT(3plplot), input)
- Defines the line width used by the fill pattern.
- cont_color
(PLINT(3plplot), input)
- Defines cmap0 pen color used for contours defining edges of shaded
regions. The pen color is only temporary set for the contour drawing. Set
this value to zero or less if no shade edge contours are wanted.
- cont_width
(PLFLT(3plplot), input)
- Defines line width used for contours defining edges of shaded regions.
This value may not be honored by all drivers. The pen width is only
temporary set for the contour drawing. Set this value to zero or less if
no shade edge contours are wanted.
- fill
(PLFILL_callback(3plplot), input)
- Callback routine used to fill the region. Use plfill(3plplot) for
this purpose.
- rectangular
(PLBOOL(3plplot), input)
- Set rectangular to true if rectangles map to rectangles after
coordinate transformation with pltrl. Otherwise, set
rectangular to false. If rectangular is set to true, plshade
tries to save time by filling large rectangles. This optimization fails if
the coordinate transformation distorts the shape of rectangles. For
example a plot in polar coordinates has to have rectangular set to
false.
- pltr
(PLTRANSFORM_callback(3plplot), input)
- A callback function that defines the transformation between the zero-based
indices of the matrix a and world coordinates. If pltr is
not supplied (e.g., is set to NULL in the C case), then the x indices of
a are mapped to the range xmin through xmax and the y
indices of a are mapped to the range ymin through
ymax.For the C case, transformation functions are provided in the
PLplot library: pltr0(3plplot) for the identity mapping, and
pltr1(3plplot) and pltr2(3plplot) for arbitrary mappings
respectively defined by vectors and matrices. In addition, C callback
routines for the transformation can be supplied by the user such as the
mypltr function in examples/c/x09c.c which provides a general linear
transformation between index coordinates and world coordinates.For
languages other than C you should consult the PLplot documentation for the
details concerning how PLTRANSFORM_callback(3plplot) arguments are
interfaced. However, in general, a particular pattern of
callback-associated arguments such as a tr vector with 6 elements; xg and
yg vectors; or xg and yg matrices are respectively interfaced to a
linear-transformation routine similar to the above mypltr function;
pltr1(3plplot); and pltr2(3plplot). Furthermore, some of our
more sophisticated bindings (see, e.g., the PLplot documentation) support
native language callbacks for handling index to world-coordinate
transformations. Examples of these various approaches are given in
examples/<language>x09*, examples/<language>x16*,
examples/<language>x20*, examples/<language>x21*, and
examples/<language>x22*, for all our supported languages.
- pltr_data
(PLPointer(3plplot), input)
- Extra parameter to help pass information to pltr0(3plplot),
pltr1(3plplot), pltr2(3plplot), or whatever routine that is
externally supplied.
Many developers (who are credited at
http://plplot.org/credits.php) have contributed to PLplot over its long
history.
PLplot documentation at http://plplot.org/documentation.php.