G R E A T T H A T I S I T
WHAT I HAD BEEN LOOKING FOR.... HEINZ > On 19.07.2019, at 13:41, Samuel Gougeon <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello Heinz, > > After histplot(), you can just disable the filling of bars: > > d = rand(1,10000,'normal'); > clf > histplot(-3:0.5:3,d,normalization=%f); > histplot(-3:0.5:3,d(1:5000)+1,normalization=%f,style=color("red")); > gca().children.children.fill_mode = "off"; > > <bjgpmldpmdnlheaj.png> > > Samuel > > Le 19/07/2019 à 13:22, Heinz Nabielek a écrit : >> On 19.07.2019, at 09:42, Antoine Monmayrant <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >>> >>> Le 19/07/2019 à 09:30, Heinz Nabielek a écrit : >>> >>>> Scilab friends: >>>> >>>> I have seen transparently overlapping histograms in R and in Matlab. But >>>> how do I do that in Scilab? >>>> >>> Basically? >>> You can't. >>> >> Primitive, but simple trick to outwit Scilab for my purposes: >> >> first dataset plotted with histplot >> subsequent datasets with histc and plotting squares with same width as >> histogram in differen colours... >> h >> >> d=.25;i=-5:d:5;j=-5+d/2:d:5-d/2; >> >> plot2d(0,0,0,"012", " ",[-5,-.05,5,.5]); >> >> histplot(i,grand(10000,1,'nor',0,1),style=5); >> >> A=histc(i,grand(1000,1,'nor',0,1));plot(j,A,'ks','markersize',9); >> A=histc(i,grand(1000,1,'nor',0,1));plot(j,A,'gs','markersize',9); >> A=histc(i,grand(1000,1,'nor',0,1));plot(j,A,'bs','markersize',9); >> _______________________________________________ >> 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 list [email protected] http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users
