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Sean
 
Sean
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Sean,
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I think people will use this for publication images if tuned & advertised.  IIRC, in NMA/MD these are called porcupine plots.  If you could provide a few examples that people could copy/paste & see results I think that'd help quite a bit, too.  Again, great stuff.
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[[User:Inchoate|Tree]] 16:30, 2 April 2009 (CDT)
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Jason,
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As per your request, I beefed up the examples.  Somewhat tedious but feel free to rearrange to improve the clarity.  Thanks.
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[[User:slaw|Sean]] 01:23, 3 April 2009 (CDT)

Revision as of 04:23, 3 April 2009

This is cool. I've been wanting to do this for a while, but never got around to it.

I added a photo generated from the defaults and an example script for the users.

-- J


Thanks for the feedback. It actually took a very long time to get it to all work properly. I had to play around with different ways to draw the arrows and figuring out the geometry for the cone was quite challenging. Eventually, it all came together and then I added all of the bells and whistles. The original motivation was for a publication image but I thought other people would be interested. My next goal would be to draw a curved line rather than a straight vector/cylinder that could pass through multiple states which would likely require cubic spline interpolation. Although, it's not currently high on the priority list (graduating is...).

Sean

Sean,

I think people will use this for publication images if tuned & advertised. IIRC, in NMA/MD these are called porcupine plots. If you could provide a few examples that people could copy/paste & see results I think that'd help quite a bit, too. Again, great stuff.

Tree 16:30, 2 April 2009 (CDT)

Jason,

As per your request, I beefed up the examples. Somewhat tedious but feel free to rearrange to improve the clarity. Thanks.


Sean 01:23, 3 April 2009 (CDT)