|
From: | Ben Abbott |
Subject: | Growing x11 plot window (was: Flickering movies) |
Date: | Thu, 25 Jun 2009 20:38:42 -0400 |
On Jun 25, 2009, at 4:05 PM, Ben Abbott wrote:
On Thursday, June 25, 2009, at 10:45AM, "Marco Caliari" <address@hidden > wrote:Dear maintainers,I'm not sure I will describe a bug or just a different behavior, so I'mwriting to the maintainers' list. The execution of the following code in Octave 3.0.5 x = linspace(-1,1); for i = 1:50 plot(x,i*x.^2) axis([-1,1,0,50]) pause(0.1) end produces a nice and fluent "movie". In particular, the axis box seems fixed (it is fixed to my eyes), and only the curve inside moves. With3.2.0, I get a very flickering movie, with the axis box clearly redrawnat each step. What is strange, moreover, is that if I change pause(0.1) with pause(0.01)the axis box changes its dimensions during the loop and so the illusion ofa movie disappears. I'm using gnuplot 4.2.5.Marco, I see the same effect.This "feature" has been present since Gnuplot allowed the x11 window position and size to be set. Gnuplot allows the x11 window position and size to be set for gnuplot 4.2.5 and later.Unfortunately, I've been unable to demonstrate this behavior using gnuplot scripts (i.e. no Octave). Thus, I'm inclined to conclude the problem is with the plot stream octave send's to gnuplot, but have been unable to debug (isolate) the problem.Ben
Marco / othersI've taken a fresh look at this and have found a simple gnuplot script that demonstrates (for me) the problem of the figure window changing its dimension (nearly always resulting in vertical growth). I've attached a copy of the script.
The script is very simple set terminal x11 set multiplot; plot sin(x); unset multiplot; set multiplot; plot sin(x); unset multiplot; set multiplot; plot sin(x); unset multiplot; set multiplot; plot sin(x); unset multiplot; set multiplot; plot sin(x); unset multiplot; set multiplot; plot sin(x); unset multiplot; ...My experience is that the x11 figure window's growth (or change in dimension) is related to timing. A sufficiently fast computer may not produce the problem.
In any event, if anyone is running gnuplot 4.2.5 or above, I'd appreciate it if they'd run this script and report back what happens. Just type ...
gnuplot --persist "debug.gp" ... or run gnuplot and type load "debug.gp" Thanks, Ben
debug.gp
Description: Binary data
[Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread] |