--[[ $Id: x25.lua 10668 2009-12-02 08:38:49Z airwin $ Filling and clipping polygons. Copyright (C) 2008 Werner Smekal This file is part of PLplot. PLplot is free software you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Library Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. PLplot is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Library General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License along with PLplot if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA --]] -- initialise Lua bindings for PLplot examples. dofile("plplot_examples.lua") -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- main -- -- Test program for filling polygons and proper clipping -------------------------------------------------------------------------- xextreme = {} yextreme ={} x0 = {} y0 = {} -- Parse and process command line arguments pl.parseopts(arg, pl.PL_PARSE_FULL) -- Initialize plplot pl.ssub(3, 3) pl.init() xextreme = { { -120, 120 }, { -120, 120 }, { -120, 120 }, { -80, 80 }, { -220, -120 }, { -20, 20 }, { -20, 20 }, { -80, 80 }, { 20, 120 } } yextreme = { { -120, 120 }, { 20, 120 }, { -20, 120 }, { -20, 120 }, { -120, 120 }, { -120, 120 }, { -20, 20 }, { -80, 80 }, { -120, 120 } } for k = 1, 2 do for j = 1, 4 do if j==1 then -- Polygon 1: a diamond x0 = { 0, -100, 0, 100 } y0 = { -100, 0, 100, 0} end if j==2 then -- Polygon 1: a diamond - reverse direction x0 = { 100, 0, -100, 0 } y0 = { 0, 100, 0, -100} end if j==3 then -- Polygon 2: a square with punctures x0 = { -100, -100, 80, -100, -100, -80, 0, 80, 100, 100 } y0 = { -100, -80, 0, 80, 100, 100, 80, 100, 100, -100} end if j==4 then -- Polygon 2: a square with punctures - reversed direction x0 = { 100, 100, 80, 0, -80, -100, -100, 80, -100, -100 } y0 = { -100, 100, 100, 80, 100, 100, 80, 0, -80, -100} end for i = 1, 9 do pl.adv(0) pl.vsta() pl.wind(xextreme[i][1], xextreme[i][2], yextreme[i][1], yextreme[i][2]) pl.col0(2) pl.box("bc", 1, 0, "bcnv", 10, 0) pl.col0(1) pl.psty(0) if k==1 then pl.fill(x0, y0) else pl.gradient(x0, y0, 45.) end pl.col0(2) pl.lsty(1) pl.line(x0, y0) end end end -- Don't forget to call plend() to finish off! pl.plend()