On Mon, May 14, 2012 at 4:00 PM, Chris Cunningham cunningham.cb@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, May 14, 2012 at 3:40 PM, Andre Hora andrehoraa@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 12:19 AM, Chris Cunningham cunningham.cb@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, May 8, 2012 at 3:18 PM, Andre Hora andrehoraa@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
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model1 := #(30 29 25 31 28 24 22 26). model2 := #(14 24 21 11 22 13 43 21). model3 := #(0 20 25 14 18 12 12 15).
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diag2 := (ESDiagramRenderer new lineDiagram) y: #yourself; defaultColor: Color green; models: model2; yourself.
diag3 := (ESDiagramRenderer new lineDiagram) y: #yourself; defaultColor: Color blue; models: model3; yourself.
[snip]
Careful with this! the labels only apply to the first data set (the red one) - if you look at the second data set where the max value is 43, you'll notice it corresponds to 35 in the diagram; and if you look at the third data set (blue) with a max value of 25, you'll also not that this corresponds to 35 in the diagram.
So, each data set is scaled to fit on the diagram, but doesn't change the range...
Indeed, and to avoid that one can use the "preferredAxisMaxY:"
lineBarCompositeDiagram2 "self new lineBarCompositeDiagram2"
| diag1 diag2 diag3 compDiag model1 model2 model3 |
model1 := #(30 29 25 31 28 24 22 26). model2 := #(14 24 21 11 22 13 43 21). model3 := #(0 20 25 14 18 12 12 15).
diag1 := (ESDiagramRenderer new lineDiagram) y: #yourself; models: model1; valueAxis; defaultColor: Color red; yourself.
diag2 := (ESDiagramRenderer new lineDiagram) y: #yourself; defaultColor: Color green; models: model2; yourself.
diag3 := (ESDiagramRenderer new lineDiagram) y: #yourself; defaultColor: Color blue; models: model3; yourself.
compDiag := ESDiagramRenderer new. (compDiag compositeDiagram) add: diag1; add: diag2; add: diag3; preferredAxisMaxY: 45. ^ compDiag open
-Chris
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-- Andre Hora
Moose-dev mailing list Moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
Yes, that is nice. However, when I run it (using the latest ConfigurationOfEyeSee loadDefault), I get different labels - one label for every value, which is undesirable. In a different test with a max Y value of 16,000, it is unreadable and incredibly slow.
This is from an Seaside oneclick 3.0.6, based on Pharo 1.3, I believe.
-Chris
Never mind - I had missed that you changed the first axis call from #regularAxis to #valueAxis - with that, the axis numbers are reasonable - and it doesn't cause the image to come to a virtual standstill.
That said, is there a way to force regular axis on this diagram? Could I get a label every every 10 multiple, plus say the 45 as well?
-Chris