[Scilab-users] Understanding the graphic hierarchy. Copy a figure

Jens Simon Strom j.s.strom at hslmg.de
Mon Nov 21 18:10:41 CET 2016


Hallo Samuel,
This is refreshing straightforward. Problem solved!
Thanks
Jens
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Am 21.11.2016 15:21, schrieb sgougeon at free.fr:
> Hello Jens,
>
> The proper way to copy graphics is to use copy(). Example:
>
> f = scf();
> plot2d()
> f.tag = "plot2d() example";
> fc = copy(f); // Creates (and render) the copy
> fc.tag=="plot2d() example"
>
> HTH
> Samuel Gougeon
>
> ----- Mail original -----
> De: "Jens Simon Strom"
> À: users at lists.scilab.org
> Envoyé: Lundi 21 Novembre 2016 14:32:42
> Objet: [Scilab-users] Understanding the graphic hierarchy. Copy a figure
>
>
> Hallo,
> The script below is to make f2 a copy of f1. However f2 is empty although its axes, compound, and polyline data look as expected.
> (Version 5.5.2) xdel ( ) ; xdel ( ) ; f1 = figure ( 1 ) ; plot ( 1 : 3 , 1 : 3 ) ca1 = gca ( ) //axes with one compound child
> // f2 = figure ( 2 ) ; ca2 = gca ( ) //axes without children ca2_ = ca1 //axes with one compound child ca2_c = ca2_ . children //compound with one polyline child ca2_cc = ca2_c . children //polyline, same as in ca1 How can the polyline be made visible?
>
> Regards
> Jens
>
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