NOTICE: This version of the NSF Unidata web site (archive.unidata.ucar.edu) is no longer being updated.
Current content can be found at unidata.ucar.edu.
To learn about what's going on, see About the Archive Site.
I've discovered that points of a plot are not being plotted centred around the correct position. Instead they're plotted with the lower left corner at that position. I'm using a DisplayImplJ2D to show a scatterplot of (index->(x,y,z,label)). You can easily verify this by changing the point size of a plot. I'm under pressure right now with some other stuff, so I'm hoping someone else who knows the VisAD code better could fix it more easily. Also, I'm plotting both points and labels. Is it really necessary to force only one renderer to be employed? As it is it seems I have to create a completely separate set of types (index->(textX,textY,textLabel)) to display my text. I'm sharing the same data values for the separate data reference, but I would have thought it common to do something like this, and it seems a shame to be going through all the coordinate transformations multiple times. But that bothers me less than the fact that my app has to manage all the separate maps and controls and axes for such a simple requirement. I'm also concerned about the order that my various data references are rendered. Ugo's tutorial example for showing isocontours over an image works correctly, adding the data_ref first and then the iso_data. But I'm finding that in order to have my text on top of my points I'm having to add the data reference for my text first, and then the data reference for my points. So that must mean that the rendering order is actually defined by some other means that I'm unaware of. How _is_ the rendering order defined? And one last thing. The text control allows me to control justification, but I'd also like to offset the text slightly by a consistent amount and I don't see an easy way to do so. The need for this is clear if I'm drawing both points and text and I don't want them to overlap. Ian Graham
visad
archives: