Hi Joe,
Joe Bogner writes:
> I was playing around with your demo and ran a little bookmarklet that
> would refresh the stepped version automatically.
>
> I first included jquery through a bookmarklet. Then, I pasted this
> into my javascript console window:
>
> var refresh = function(location) {
From: Alexander Burger
Subject: Re: Great canvas article and demo
Date: Mon, 16 Sep 2013 08:25:25 +0200
> Hi Tomas,
>
> > as a proof of concept, I have implemented your zapper demo using svg and
> > without any javascript, see http://logand.com:2234/
>
> Very nice indeed! SVG is a good alternat
On Mon, Sep 16, 2013 at 10:20:03AM +0200, Klaus Schilling wrote:
> Would it also be feasible to use (encapsulated?) postscript instead of
> SVG?
Probably.
But what surely works well is Gnuplot. We used it in the mentioned
project to draw the final data. Code fragments:
In a library file:
#
On September 16, 2013 at 9:30 AM Tomas Hlavaty wrote:
>
> 3) I guess most of the overhead of the http request is probably
>establishing the connection. My bett is that it doesn't really
>matter if you send 1kB or 5kB of data. For example, if I run this
It might matter, the only way t
Alexander Burger writes:
Hi Alex,
> No, in fact this is the intended behavior of how the PicoLisp I/O
> functions expand the "@".
>
> The value is determined from how it was invoked. If you call it with
>
>$ ../../foo/bar/pil +
>
> then "@" expands to "../../foo/bar/", and if you call it as
Hi Thorsten,
> Ok, but then the question remains how to get (in a program) the absolute
> path to the PicoLisp installation the programs runs in when you assume a
> local installation was invoked - but you have no idea how?
>
> I thought about combining (cmd) and (path ...), but that doesn't help
Hi Jakob,
Jakob Eriksson writes:
> On September 16, 2013 at 9:30 AM Tomas Hlavaty wrote:
>>
>> 3) I guess most of the overhead of the http request is probably
>>establishing the connection. My bett is that it doesn't really
>>matter if you send 1kB or 5kB of data. For example, if I run
Hi Alex,
Alexander Burger writes:
> But what surely works well is Gnuplot. We used it in the mentioned
> project to draw the final data. Code fragments:
the advantage of gnuplot is that you get lots of drawing features for
free.
Btw, it looks like gnuplot can generate svg:
http://www.gnuplot.in
Hi Klaus,
Klaus Schilling writes:
> From: Alexander Burger
>> > as a proof of concept, I have implemented your zapper demo using svg and
>> > without any javascript, see http://logand.com:2234/
>>
>> Very nice indeed! SVG is a good alternative to Canvas, it seems.
>>
> Would it also be feasibl