I did solve this problem by modifying th WorldMap-projections macro. If I
remember correctly, it did not work to rotate the map around following it's
creation by WolrMap-projections. There was some type of issue with an Include
in the macro which truncated the positions >180.

On Mar 27,  8:30pm, Lloyd A Treinish wrote:
> Subject: Re: [opendx-users] World Map coordinate system
>
> Did you ever solve this problem?  Have you tried adjusting the camera?
>
> FYI, Mark/Compute/Unmark, changes the positions.  Transform is only applied
> at render time.
>
>
> "Sharon Cady" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>@opendx.watson.ibm.com on
> 02/13/2001 09:59:40 AM
>
> Please respond to [email protected]
>
> Sent by:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> To:   [email protected]
> cc:
> Subject:  Re: [opendx-users] World Map coordinate system
>
>
>
> I've already done the repairing of the line connection across the Int'l
> Date
> Line, so that is not a problem. I'm not sure that I see here a suggestion
> about
> what is my main problem - that of having a "view" of -180 - 180, even
> though
> the coordinates of the map points have been converted to 0-360 (i.e, half
> of
> the rectangular frame of the map is blank, since out of range map points
> are
> not plotted). Is Transform instead of Mark/Compute/Unmark the key, or do I
> have
> to modify the macro (or the WDBI data points) ? I've never used Transform -
> what is the difference in its effect vs. Mark/Compute/Unmark of positions ?
>
> On Feb 12, 10:48pm, Lloyd A Treinish wrote:
> > Subject: Re: [opendx-users] World Map coordinate system
> >
> > The file, WDBI.dx, used by that macro has the coordinates as provided in
> > the original World Data Bank I file.  The coordinates are raw lat-lon,
> > cylindrical equidistant, with lon as degrees east (-180 to 180).  A
> simple
> > transformation such as Mark/Compute/Unmark or Transform will only
> partially
> > work.  The problem is lines that cross a nominal Int'l Date Line.  That
> > transformation will force the "pen" to scrawl across the page.  You would
> > have to check for these particular lines after the transformation and
> > repair them.
> >
> > If you want to see ASCII, you can Import and then Export in an ASCII
> flavor
> > .dx file.
> >
> > The package of projections I put together some many years ago is geared
> > around data in [lat degrees north, lon degrees east, +/- 180].  This was
> > fine for my own needs at that time.  Since there was not much user
> interest
> > then, there wasn't much motivation to make them more general-purpose.
> You
> > would have to modify the map file or use a different one and/or modify
> your
> > data.  Some of the projections may have to be changed because of the
> > different coordinates.  At least with everything as macros, you can see
> how
> > the projections work and modify them.
> >
> >
> >
> > "Sharon Cady" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>@opendx.watson.ibm.com on
> > 02/12/2001 02:58:07 PM
> >
> > Please respond to [email protected]
> >
> > Sent by:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >
> > To:   [email protected]
> > cc:
> > Subject:  [opendx-users] World Map coordinate system
> >
> >
> >
> > I'm almost embarrassed to ask, since I'm obviously missing something
> > (probably
> > simple), but how do I shift the coordinate system of the cylindrical
> > equidistant (rectangular) global map so that it goes not from -180 to
> -180
> > degrees longitude but instead ranges 0-360 ?
> >
> > There are inputs into WorldMapProjections which ask for centroid of the
> > projections and also the range, but manipulation of these don't change
> the
> > positions of the points in the map, just the view of what is plotted (it
> > seems). I've tried shifting the positions myself (mark/compute); however,
> > with
> > my new map ranging 0-360 longitude, I can only see the 0-180 part (the
> > 180-360
> > is ignored, apparently). Is there something somewhere which limits the
> view
> > of
> > this plotted object ? I looked in the wdbi.dx file to see if I could find
> > anything, but I didn't really see much in there, except binary data.
> >
> > I can get a map to plot which "looks" like how I want it, but of course
> the
> > positions are incorrect, since they are forced to range -180 - 180. My
> data
> > won't overplot on this, unless I juggle that all around too.
> >
> >
> >
> >-- End of excerpt from Lloyd A Treinish
>
>
>
>
>-- End of excerpt from Lloyd A Treinish

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