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155 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
155 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
/*!
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\defgroup jkqtplotter_general_usage Usage of JKQTPlotter
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\ingroup jkqtplotter_general
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\defgroup jkqtplotter_general_usage_jkqtbaseplotter Usage of JKQTBasePlotter Non-Visible Class
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\ingroup jkqtplotter_general_usage
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It is also possible to use it in a standalone fashion to generate plots without generating a window.
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Note that the baseplotter class still requires the \c widgets+gui modules of Qt, because it contains code to e.g.
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display pint or export preview dialogs!
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Here is an example of how to do this (it is taken from the command-line tool \ref JKQTPlotterDocImageRenderCmdLineTool):
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First we generate the JKQTBasePlotter object and add some data to the internal JKQTPDatastore
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\code
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JKQTBasePlotter plot(true);
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JKQTPDatastore* ds=plot.getDatastore();
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size_t cx=ds->addCopiedColumn(QVector<double>{-1.5,-0.5,0.5,1.5,2.5},"x");
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size_t cy=ds->addCopiedColumn(QVector<double>{-0.75,-0.3,-0.05,0.2,0.65},"y");
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\endcode
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Now we set the range of x/y plot coordinates ...
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\code
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plot.setXY(-0.8,2.2,-0.5,0.7);
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\endcode
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and the size of the widget, i.e. the size of the plot in the windowing system.
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\code
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plot.setWidgetSize(150,50);
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\endcode
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Now we can add graphs to the plotter, e.g.
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\code
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JKQTPXYLineGraph* g=new JKQTPXYLineGraph(&plot);
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g->setXColumn(cx);
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g->setYColumn(cy);
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plot.addGraph(g);
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\endcode
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Finally we store an image of the plot as PNG-file:
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\code
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plot.saveAsPixelImage("output.png", false, "png");
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\endcode
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Alternatively you can obtain a QImage of the plot using JKQTBasePlotter::grabPixelImage() or copy the
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image to the clipboard using JKQTBasePlotter::copyPixelImage(). Also storages as PDF and SVG is available via
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JKQTBasePlotter::saveAsPDF() and JKQTBasePlotter::saveAsSVG().
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With simlar code you can also integrate JKQTBasePlotter into your own widgets.
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\defgroup jkqtplotter_general_usage_jkqtplotter Usage of JKQTPlotter Widget
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\ingroup jkqtplotter_general_usage
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JKQTPlotter is a plotter widget which wraps around a JKQTBasePlotter instanced that does the actual drawing.
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A basic usage of JKQTPlotter looks like this:
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\code{.cpp}
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// create a new JKQTPlotter instance
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JKQTPlotter* plot = new JKQTPlotter(parentWidget);
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// fill two vectors with dtaa for a graph:
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QVector<double> X, Y;
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fillDataVectors(X, Y);
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// make data available to the internal datastore of the plotter:
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size_t columnX=plot->getDatastore()->addCopiedColumn(X, "x");
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size_t columnY=plot->getDatastore()->addCopiedColumn(Y, "y");
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// create a graph/curve, which displays the data
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JKQTPXYLineGraph* graph1=new JKQTPXYLineGraph(plot);
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graph1->setXColumn(columnX);
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graph1->setYColumn(columnY);
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graph1->setTitle(QObject::tr("graph title"));
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plot->addGraph(graph1);
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// autoscale the plot
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plot->zoomToFit();
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// alternatively set the axis dimension by hand:
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plot->setXY(-10,10,-10,10);
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\endcode
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The result should look something like this:
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\image html simpletest.png
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Starting from this basic example, you can observe several important principles:
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<ol>
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<li> Data is stored in an (internal) instance of JKQTPDatastore, which is accessible through
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JKQTPlotter::getDatastore().
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This datastore can either own its data (which is done here, as we copy the data into the store
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by calling JKQTPDatastore::addCopiedColumn(), or it can merely reference to the data (then
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data needs to be available as array of \c double values).
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<li> Naming conventions (excerpt from \ref jkqtplotter_naming ):
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<ul>
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<li> \b plot is the complete drawn image, including the axes, the graphs, the key and all other visual elements
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<li> <b>plot element</b> any sub element of the plot, e.g. a single coordinate axis, the key, but also any graph/curve
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<li> \b graph is a single curve/image/geometric element in the plot
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<li> <b>geometric element</b> is a special graph that does not represent a curve based on data from the JKQTPDatastore,
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but a single graphic element, like a rectangle/circle/line/..., some text, a single symbol
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<li> \b key is the legend of the plot
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<li> <b>coordinate axis</b> is each of the x- or y-axis (there might be addition axes, e.g. when showing a color-scale)
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</ul>
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<li> Each graph is represented by a class derived from JKQTPPlotElement (in the example we instanciated a JKQTPXYLineGraph,
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which shows data as a scatter of symbols that may (or may not) be connected by a line).
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Creating the graph class does not yet add it to the plotter. To add it, call JKQTPlotter::addGraph(). Only
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after this sep, the graph is displayed. You can modify the apperance of the graph (e.g. colors,
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name in the key ...) by setting properties in the graph class instance.
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<li> You can auto-zoom the axis ranges of the plot by calling JKQTPlotter::zoomToFit(), or set them
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exlicitly by calling JKQTPlotter::setXY(). The user can later zoom in/out by the mouse (and other means).
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You can limit this zoom range by setting an absolute axis range, calling e.g. JKQTPlotter::setAbsoluteXY().
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The the user cannot zoom farther out than the given range(s).
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<li> If you want to style the plot itself, you need to set properties of the underlying JKQTBasePloter instance, which
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is accessible through JKQTPlotter::getPlotter(). If you want to style the coordinate axes, you can acces their
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representing objects by caling JKQTPlotter::getXAxis() or JKQTPlotter::getYAxis().
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</ol>
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\see \ref JKQTPlotterSimpleTest and \see JKQTPlotterQtCreator
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\defgroup jkqtplotter_general_usage_qtcreator How to use JKQTPlotter in the Qt Form Designer
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\ingroup jkqtplotter_general_usage
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As JKQTPlotter is a standard Qt widget, you can also use it in Qt UI-files designed with the Qt From Designer (e.g. from within QTCreator).
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For this to work you have to use the <a href="https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/designer-using-custom-widgets.html">Promote QWidget"-feature</a> of the form designer. The steps you need to take are detailed below:
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<ol>
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<li> add a new UI-file to your project and open it in the Form Editor. Then right-click the form and select `Promote Widgets ...`:
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\image html uidesigner_step1.png
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</li>
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<li> In the dialog that opens, you have to define `JKQTPlotter` as a promotion to `QWidget` as shown below. Finally store the settings by clicking `Add` and closing the dialog with `Close`.
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\image html uidesigner_step2.png
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</li>
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<li> Now you can add a `QWidget`from the side-bar to the form and then promote it to `JKQTPlotter`, by selecting and right-clicking the `QWidget` and then selecting `Promote To | JKQTPlotter`:
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\image html uidesigner_step3.png
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</li>
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</ol>
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\see \ref JKQTPlotterQtCreator <br> Also see \ref JKQTPlotterStyling for another example of using the Qt UI Designer with JKQTPlotter
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*/
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