Hi JP Thanks. Before asking in the forum I did find the grivet.sce file by Google search. To me the xfpoly solution looked like a 2D plot... I'll check your attached code again, maybe I'll have a revelation :-)
Best regards Claus On Jan 31, 2018 12:16, "Jean-Philippe Grivet" < [email protected]> wrote: > Hi Claus, Rafeal and Samuel, > Here is another method for stacked plots, which was suggested to me years > ago by Serge Steer. > I used it succssfully for about 12 individual curves. > > Cheers, > JP Grivet > > > > Le 28/01/2018 20:19, Claus Futtrup a écrit : > > Hi Rafael and Samuel > > Thank you both for great suggestions - and as I thought - I was on the > wrong path. Indeed I looked at plot3d3 and didn't catch that this one is > suitable for what I wish to do. I see clearly with the example by Samuel > that it is quite a smart way. I initially made the mistake to feed vectors > (frequencies + angles), and it complained (and it revealed, it seems, that > plot3d3 is based on param3d1). I see it needs matrices. The example by > Rafael made that clear to me. Thanks Rafael for a very good example to work > with. > > Best regards, > Claus > > On Sun, Jan 28, 2018 at 5:24 PM, Rafael Guerra <[email protected] > > wrote: > >> Hi Samuel, >> >> Absolutely, the two param3d functions should be merged. >> >> The vectorised assignment example should also be included in the helpfile. >> >> Regards, >> Rafael >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: users [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Samuel >> Gougeon >> Sent: Sunday, January 28, 2018 5:17 PM >> To: Users mailing list for Scilab <[email protected]> >> Subject: Re: [Scilab-users] Stacked 2D plot in 3D >> >> Hello Rafael, >> >> About param3d() and param3d1(): >> In 3 days, it will be the 10th birthday of this report: >> http://bugzilla.scilab.org/6155 >> Shall we make a present to other users? :) By the way, beyond their >> pages, don't you think the functions themselves should be merged? >> >> Le 28/01/2018 à 16:39, Rafael Guerra a écrit : >> > .../... >> > for i=1:nf; >> > e.children(i).foreground = color('dark blue'); >> > e.children(i).thickness = 2; >> > end >> >> Or more simply: >> >> e.children.foreground = color('dark blue'); e.children.thickness = 2; >> >> This kind of vectorized assignment (almost always) works. >> >> Cheers >> Samuel >> >> _______________________________________________ >> users mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users >> _______________________________________________ >> users mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users >> > > > > _______________________________________________ > users mailing > [email protected]http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users > > > > > <https://www.avast.com/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=emailclient> > Garanti > sans virus. www.avast.com > <https://www.avast.com/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=emailclient> > <#m_8010707003040316304_DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2> > > _______________________________________________ > users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users > >
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