Hi Christophe ... I figured out that in inkscape one can combine paths...( Ctrl++ )... so that creates just one single area. so i have a solution.
However it might be interesting to know, how Scilab fills the polygon when saving it as an svg. To me it seems something similar to a tessalation...building triangles to fill the area. The lines in the image are the triangle edges. In my example the red surface is a fill of one single polygon. Also the green area is the fill of one single polygon. Thanks, Philipp Am Fr., 1. März 2019 um 09:13 Uhr schrieb Dang Ngoc Chan, Christophe < [email protected]>: > Hello, > > > De : users [mailto:[email protected]] De la part de P M > > Envoyé : jeudi 28 février 2019 20:06 > > > > When I export the plot with xs2svg some thin black lines appear within > the regions. > > This can be seen when I open the svg with inkscape. > > [...] Any idea how to avoid these black lines. > > I don't know for your case but I usually rework a bit the SVG files > created by Scilab. > > I noticed for example that the white background is made of several > rectangles and right triangles, I simplify the paths etc. > > I wonder if the black line is not a seam between two surfaces: > maybe your red surface is made of two objects instead of one and you might > join them. > > HTH > > -- > Christophe Dang Ngoc Chan > Mechanical calculation engineer > > Public > This e-mail may contain confidential and/or privileged information. If you > are not the intended recipient (or have received this e-mail in error), > please notify the sender immediately and destroy this e-mail. Any > unauthorized copying, disclosure or distribution of the material in this > e-mail is strictly forbidden. > _______________________________________________ > users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users >
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