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functions in slice3.i -
getc3
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getc3(i, m3, chunk)
or getc3(i, m3, clist, l, u, fsl, fsu, cells)
return cell values of the Ith function attached to 3D mesh M3
for cells in the specified CHUNK. The CHUNK may be a list of
cell indices, in which case getc3 returns a (dimsof(CHUNK))
list of vertex coordinates. CHUNK may also be a mesh-specific data
structure used in the slice3 routine, in which case getc3 may
return a (ni)x(nj)x(nk) array of vertex values. There is no
savings in the amount of data for such a CHUNK, but the gather
operation is cheaper than a general list of cell indices.
Use getc3 when writing colorng functions for slice3.
If CHUNK is a CLIST, the additional arguments L, U, FSL, and FSU
are vertex index lists which override the CLIST if the Ith attached
function is defined on mesh vertices. L and U are index lists into
the 2x2x2x(dimsof(CLIST)) vertex value array, say vva, and FSL
and FSU are corresponding interpolation coefficients; the zone
centered value is computed as a weighted average of involving these
coefficients. The CELLS argument is required by histogram to do
the averaging. See the source code for details.
By default, this conversion (if necessary) is done by averaging
the eight vertex-centered values.
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SEE ALSO:
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slice3,
mesh3,
getv3,
xyz3
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getv3
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getv3(i, m3, chunk)
return vertex values of the Ith function attached to 3D mesh M3
for cells in the specified CHUNK. The CHUNK may be a list of
cell indices, in which case getv3 returns a 2x2x2x(dimsof(CHUNK))
list of vertex coordinates. CHUNK may also be a mesh-specific data
structure used in the slice3 routine, in which case getv3 may
return a (ni)x(nj)x(nk) array of vertex values. For meshes which
are logically rectangular or consist of several rectangular
patches, this is up to 8 times less data, with a concomitant
performance advantage. Use getv3 when writing slicing functions
for slice3.
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SEE ALSO:
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slice3,
mesh3,
getc3,
xyz3
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mesh3
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mesh3(x,y,z)
or mesh3(x,y,z, f1,f2,...)
or mesh3(xyz, f1,f2,...)
or mesh3(nxnynz, dxdydz, x0y0z0, f1,f2,...)
make mesh3 argument for slice3, xyz3, getv3, etc., functions.
X, Y, and Z are each 3D coordinate arrays. The optional F1, F2,
etc. are 3D arrays of function values (e.g. density, temperature)
which have one less value along each dimension than the coordinate
arrays. The "index" of each zone in the returned mesh3 is
the index in these cell-centered Fi arrays, so every index from
one through the total number of cells indicates one real cell.
The Fi arrays can also have the same dimensions as X, Y, or Z
in order to represent point-centered quantities.
If X has four dimensions and the length of the first is 3, then
it is interpreted as XYZ (which is the quantity actually stored
in the returned cell list).
If X is a vector of 3 integers, it is interpreted as [nx,ny,nz]
of a uniform 3D mesh, and the second and third arguments are
[dx,dy,dz] and [x0,y0,z0] respectively. (DXDYDZ represent the
size of the entire mesh, not the size of one cell, and NXNYNZ are
the number of cells, not the number of points.)
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SEE ALSO:
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slice3,
xyz3,
getv3,
getc3
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pl3surf
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pl3surf, nverts, xyzverts
or pl3surf, nverts, xyzverts, values
Perform simple 3D rendering of an object created by slice3
(possibly followed by slice2). NVERTS and XYZVERTS are polygon
lists as returned by slice3, so XYZVERTS is 3-by-sum(NVERTS),
where NVERTS is a list of the number of vertices in each polygon.
If present, the VALUES should have the same length as NVERTS;
they are used to color the polygon. If VALUES is not specified,
the 3D lighting calculation set up using the light3 function
will be carried out. Keywords cmin= and cmax= as for plf, pli,
or plfp are also accepted. (If you do not supply VALUES, you
probably want to use the ambient= keyword to light3 instead of
cmin= here, but cmax= may still be useful.)
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SEE ALSO:
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pl3tree,
slice3,
slice2,
rot3,
light3
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pl3tree
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pl3tree, nverts, xyzverts
or pl3tree, nverts, xyzverts, values, plane
Add the polygon list specified by NVERTS (number of vertices in
each polygon) and XYZVERTS (3-by-sum(NVERTS) vertex coordinates)
to the currently displayed b-tree. If VALUES is specified, it
must have the same dimension as NVERTS, and represents the color
of each polygon. If VALUES is not specified, the polygons
are assumed to form an isosurface which will be shaded by the
current 3D lighting model; the isosurfaces are at the leaves of
the b-tree, sliced by all of the planes. If PLANE is specified,
the XYZVERTS must all lie in that plane, and that plane becomes
a new slicing plane in the b-tree.
Each leaf of the b-tree consists of a set of sliced isosurfaces.
A node of the b-tree consists of some polygons in one of the
planes, a b-tree or leaf entirely on one side of that plane, and
a b-tree or leaf on the other side. The first plane you add
becomes the root node, slicing any existing leaf in half. When
you add an isosurface, it propagates down the tree, getting
sliced at each node, until its pieces reach the existing leaves,
to which they are added. When you add a plane, it also propagates
down the tree, getting sliced at each node, until its pieces
reach the leaves, which it slices, becoming the nodes closest to
the leaves.
This structure is relatively easy to plot, since from any
viewpoint, a node can always be plotted in the order from one
side, then the plane, then the other side.
This routine assumes a "split palette"; the colors for the
VALUES will be scaled to fit from color 0 to color 99, while
the colors from the shading calculation will be scaled to fit
from color 100 to color 199. (If VALUES is specified as a char
array, however, it will be used without scaling.)
You may specifiy a cmin= or cmax= keyword to affect the
scaling; cmin is ignored if VALUES is not specified (use the
ambient= keyword from light3 for that case).
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SEE ALSO:
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pl3surf,
slice3,
slice2,
rot3,
light3,
split_palette
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plane3
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plane3(normal, point)
or plane3([nx,ny,nz], [px,py,pz])
returns [nx,ny,nz,pp] for the specified plane.
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SEE ALSO:
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slice3,
mesh3
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slice2
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slice2, plane, nverts, xyzverts
or slice2, plane, nverts, xyzverts, values
Slice a polygon list, retaining only those polygons or
parts of polygons on the positive side of PLANE, that is,
the side where xyz(+)*PLANE(+:1:3)-PLANE(4) > 0.0.
The NVERTS, XYZVERTS, and VALUES arrays serve as both
input and output, and have the meanings of the return
values from the slice3 function. It is legal to omit the
VALUES argument (e.g.- if there is no fcolor function).
In order to plot two intersecting slices, one could
slice (for example) the horizontal plane twice (slice2x) -
first with the plane of the vertical slice, then with minus
that same plane. Then, plot first the back part of the
slice, then the vertical slice, then the front part of the
horizontal slice. Of course, the vertical plane could
be the one to be sliced, and "back" and "front" vary
depending on the view point, but the general idea always
works.
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SEE ALSO:
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slice3,
plane3,
slice2x,
slice2_precision
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slice2_precision
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slice2_precision= precision
Controls how slice2 (or slice2x) handles points very close to
the slicing plane. PRECISION should be a positive number or zero.
Zero PRECISION means to clip exactly to the plane, with points
exactly on the plane acting as if they were slightly on the side
the normal points toward. Positive PRECISION means that edges
are clipped to parallel planes a distance PRECISION on either
side of the given plane. (Polygons lying entirely between these
planes are completely discarded.)
Default value is 0.0.
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SEE ALSO:
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slice2,
slice2x
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slice2x
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slice2, plane, nverts, values, xyzverts
Slice a polygon list, retaining only those polygons or
parts of polygons on the positive side of PLANE, that is,
the side where xyz(+)*PLANE(+:1:3)-PLANE(4) > 0.0.
The NVERTS, VALUES, and XYZVERTS arrays serve as both
input and output, and have the meanings of the return
values from the slice3 function.
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SEE ALSO:
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slice2,
slice2_precision
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slice3
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slice3, m3, fslice, nverts, xyzverts
or color_values= slice3(m3, fslice, nverts, xyzverts, fcolor)
or color_values= slice3(m3, fslice, nverts, xyzverts, fcolor, 1)
slice the 3D mesh M3 using the slicing function FSLICE, returning
the lists NVERTS and XYZVERTS. NVERTS is the number of vertices
in each polygon of the slice, and XYZVERTS is the 3-by-sum(NVERTS)
list of polygon vertices. If the FCOLOR argument is present, the
values of that coloring function on the polygons are returned as
the value of the slice3 function (numberof(color_values) ==
numberof(NVERTS) == number of polygons).
If the slice function FSLICE is a function, it should be of the
form:
func fslice(m3, chunk)
returning a list of function values on the specified chunk of the
mesh m3. The format of chunk depends on the type of m3 mesh, so
you should use only the other mesh functions xyz3 and getv3 which
take m3 and chunk as arguments. The return value of fslice should
have the same dimensions as the return value of getv3; the return
value of xyz3 has an additional first dimension of length 3.
If FSLICE is a list of 4 numbers, it is taken as a slicing plane
with the equation FSLICE(+:1:3)*xyz(+)-FSLICE(4), as returned by
plane3.
If FSLICE is a single integer, the slice will be an isosurface for
the FSLICEth variable associated with the mesh M3. In this case,
the keyword value= must also be present, representing the value
of that variable on the isosurface.
If FCOLOR is nil, slice3 returns nil. If you want to color the
polygons in a manner that depends only on their vertex coordinates
(e.g.- by a 3D shading calculation), use this mode.
If FCOLOR is a function, it should be of the form:
func fcolor(m3, cells, l, u, fsl, fsu, ihist)
returning a list of function values on the specified cells of the
mesh m3. The cells argument will be the list of cell indices in
m3 at which values are to be returned. l, u, fsl, fsu, and ihist
are interpolation coefficients which can be used to interpolate
from vertex centered values to the required cell centered values,
ignoring the cells argument. See getc3 source code.
The return values should always have dimsof(cells).
If FCOLOR is a single integer, the slice will be an isosurface for
the FCOLORth variable associated with the mesh M3.
If the optional argument after FCOLOR is non-nil and non-zero,
then the FCOLOR function is called with only two arguments:
func fcolor(m3, cells)
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SEE ALSO:
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mesh3,
plane3,
xyz3,
getv3,
getc3,
slice2,
plfp
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split_bytscl
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split_bytscl(x, 0)
or split_bytscl(x, 1)
as bytscl function, but scale to the lower half of a split
palette (0-99, normally the color scale) if the second parameter
is zero or nil, or the upper half (100-199, normally the gray
scale) if the second parameter is non-zero.
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SEE ALSO:
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split_palette
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split_palette
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split_palette
or split_palette, "palette_name.gp"
split the current palette or the specified palette into two
parts; colors 0 to 99 will be a compressed version of the
original, while colors 100 to 199 will be a gray scale.
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SEE ALSO:
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pl3tree,
split_bytscl
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to_corners3
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to_corners(list, ni, nj)
convert a LIST of cell indices in an (NI-1)-by-(NJ-1)-by-(nk-1)
logically rectangular grid of cells into the list of
2-by-2-by-2-by-numberof(LIST) cell corner indices in the
corresponding NI-by-NJ-by-nk list of vertices.
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xyz3
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xyz3(m3, chunk)
return vertex coordinates for CHUNK of 3D mesh M3. The CHUNK
may be a list of cell indices, in which case xyz3 returns a
3x2x2x2x(dimsof(CHUNK)) list of vertex coordinates. CHUNK may
also be a mesh-specific data structure used in the slice3
routine, in which case xyz3 may return a 3x(ni)x(nj)x(nk)
array of vertex coordinates. For meshes which are logically
rectangular or consist of several rectangular patches, this
is up to 8 times less data, with a concomitant performance
advantage. Use xyz3 when writing slicing functions or coloring
functions for slice3.
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SEE ALSO:
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slice3,
mesh3,
getv3,
getc3
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