On Sat, Aug 30, 2008 at 9:56 PM, Ben Abbott <address@hidden> wrote:
On Aug 28, 2008, at 7:54 AM, Shai Ayal wrote:
On Thu, Aug 28, 2008 at 2:30 PM, Ben Abbott <address@hidden>
wrote:
On Aug 28, 2008, at 7:22 AM, Shai Ayal wrote:
On Thu, Aug 28, 2008 at 1:47 PM, Ben Abbott <address@hidden>
wrote:
However, switching to fltk appears to work ... well almost. The
plot
doesn't render properly.
Can you elaborate on how it renders?
Perhaps a picture says it best?
octave:30> close all
octave:31> backend('fltk')
octave:32> x = 0:10;
octave:33> plot(x)
To underlying windows each contribute to the result in a rather
strange
way. The resulting figure includes various sections of my email
client, and
some things I don't recognize. In addition the following line is
displayed
in the terminal.
octave:34> ca=nan
A picture is attached.
This looks like an OpenGL and/or fltk problem. The best way to
debug this
would be to run the ftlk-opengl test programs gl_overlay and
glpuzzle and
see if they work. You should have them in the test subdir of the
fltk
sources. If you did not install fltk from source it's a problem :(
I should have done this earlier, but better late than never. I
reran the to
test programs you recommended and can verify fltk appears to be
functioning
properly. Pictures attached.
Ben
So it's something in octave/fltk_backend. However since Michael can't
reproduce it (and it will take me ~1 day to compile octave with my
current machine), it seems to be something which is mac specific. Did
you try the fltk-config --post command on octave or fltk_backend.oct?
Shai