Thanks for the fast reply.

Hmm, and why are they NAN values? I'll try to explain the particular
case of the function I am plotting. I have two gaussian charge
distributions, with opposite signs, at a distance of each other, with a
bit of overlap. When I map onto a plane, I see two circles  (blue and
red at the center), the borders of them are yellow, and everything in
between is empty. Why are they NAN when there in that area they are
values close to 0?

On the other hand, I can increase the plotted area -nearly filling the
plane-, if I play with the color range, but I lose resolution in the
center of the gaussians. Is it possible to tune more finely the
resolution of the color gradient?

If not, I will stick to the plane suggestion, the only problem was
finding the right color...

Sergio

On Thu, 2009-09-03 at 10:55 -0500, Robert Hanson wrote:
> There's no way to extend those, because the numbers outside of the
> region you see are "Not-a-Number" values -- they don't exist. BUT you
> can simply overlay a plane just slightly behind that one that is, for
> example, solid blue, and it will fill in the rest of the plane. 



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