.. | ||
example.bmp | ||
jkqtplotter_simpletest_filledgraphs_and_lib.pro | ||
jkqtplotter_simpletest_filledgraphs.cpp | ||
jkqtplotter_simpletest_filledgraphs.pro | ||
jkqtplotter_simpletest_filledgraphs.qrc | ||
README.md |
Example (JKQTPLotter): Filled Curve Plots
This project (see ./examples/simpletest_filledgraphs/
) simply creates a JKQTPLotter widget (as a new window) and adds several filled curve graphs (Histograms). Data is initialized from QVector objects.
The source code of the main application can be found in jkqtplotter_simpletest_filledgraphs.cpp
.
First the data columns for three x-y-curves are generated. One column of x-values with entries 0,1,2,...,254,255 (256 entries).
size_t columnX=ds->addLinearColumn(256, 0, 255, "x");
And three columns with 256 entries each, which will be filled with the R-, G- and B-histograms of an image example.bmp
:
size_t columnR=ds->addColumn(256, "historam_R");
size_t columnG=ds->addColumn(256, "historam_G");
size_t columnB=ds->addColumn(256, "historam_B");
In this example we will access the data in the internal datastore directly. This access is possible through objects of type JKQTPColumn, which is a proxy to the data in one of the columns in a JKQTdatastore
:
JKQTPColumn cG=ds->getColumn(columnG);
JKQTPColumn cR=ds->getColumn(columnR);
JKQTPColumn cB=ds->getColumn(columnB);
In order to calculate the histograms, first all enries in the columns are set to 0:
cR.setAll(0);
cG.setAll(0);
cB.setAll(0);
Finally the histogram is calculated:
QImage image(":/example.bmp");
for (int y=0; y<image.height(); y++) {
for (int x=0; x<image.width(); x++) {
QRgb pix=image.pixel(x,y);
cR.incValue(qRed(pix), 1);
cG.incValue(qGreen(pix), 1);
cB.incValue(qBlue(pix), 1);
}
}
cR.scale(100.0/static_cast<double>(image.width()*image.height()));
cG.scale(100.0/static_cast<double>(image.width()*image.height()));
cB.scale(100.0/static_cast<double>(image.width()*image.height()));
Finally three JKQTPFilledCurveXGraph
objects are generated and added to the plot (here we show the code for the R-channel only):
JKQTPFilledCurveXGraph* graphR=new JKQTPFilledCurveXGraph(&plot);
// set graph titles
graphR->set_title("R-channel");
// set graph colors (lines: non-transparent, fill: semi-transparent
QColor col;
col=QColor("red"); graphR->set_color(col);
col.setAlphaF(0.25); graphR->set_fillColor(col);
// set data
graphR->set_xColumn(columnX); graphR->set_yColumn(columnR);
// add the graphs to the plot, so they are actually displayed
plot.addGraph(graphR);
The curves are fille with a semi-transparent color, which is achieved by setting col.setAlphaF(0.25)
on the graph color col
.
The result looks like this:
If you use JKQTPFilledCurveYGraph
instead of JKQTPFilledCurveXGraph
, the curve will not be filled until the y=0-axis, but until the x=0-axis. Of course you will also have to swap the x- and y-data columns. The result will look like this: