1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903 904 905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 919 920 921 922 923 924 925 926 927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 955 956 957 958 959 960 961 962 963 964 965 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996 997 998 999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063 1064 1065 1066 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085 1086 1087 1088 1089 1090 1091 1092 1093 1094 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100 1101 1102 1103 1104 1105 1106 1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113 1114 1115 1116 1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1139 1140 1141 1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169 1170 1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184 1185 1186 1187 1188 1189 1190 1191 1192 1193 1194 1195 1196 1197 1198 1199 1200 1201 1202 1203 1204 1205 1206 1207 1208 1209 1210 1211 1212 1213 1214 1215 1216 1217 1218 1219 1220 1221 1222 1223 1224 1225 1226 1227 1228 1229 1230 1231 1232 1233 1234 1235 1236 1237 1238 1239 1240 1241 1242 1243 1244 1245 1246 1247 1248 1249 1250 1251 1252 1253 1254 1255 1256 1257 1258 1259 1260 1261 1262 1263 1264 1265 1266 1267 1268 1269 1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275 1276 1277 1278 1279 1280 1281 1282 1283 1284 1285 1286 1287 1288 1289 1290 1291 1292 1293 1294 1295 1296 1297 1298 1299 1300 1301 1302 1303 1304 1305 1306 1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316 1317 1318 1319 1320 1321 1322 1323 1324 1325 1326 1327 1328 1329 1330 1331 1332 1333 1334 1335 1336 1337 1338 1339 1340 1341 1342 1343 1344 1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1350 1351 1352 1353 1354 1355 1356 1357 1358 1359 1360 1361 1362 1363 1364 1365 1366 1367 1368 1369 1370 1371 1372 1373 1374 1375 1376 1377 1378 1379 1380 1381 1382 1383 1384 1385 1386 1387 1388 1389 1390 1391 1392 1393 1394 1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401 1402 1403 1404 1405 1406 1407 1408 1409 1410 1411 1412 1413 1414 1415 1416 1417 1418 1419 1420 1421 1422 1423 1424 1425 1426 1427 1428 1429 1430 1431 1432 1433 1434 1435 1436 1437 1438 1439 1440 1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466 1467 1468 1469 1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479 1480 1481 1482 1483 1484 1485 1486 1487 1488 1489 1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498 1499 1500 1501 1502 1503 1504 1505 1506 1507 1508 1509 1510 1511 1512 1513 1514 1515 1516 1517 1518 1519 1520 1521 1522 1523 1524 1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540 1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 1570 1571 1572 1573 1574 1575 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 1591 1592 1593 1594 1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600 1601 1602 1603 1604 1605 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614 1615 1616 1617 1618 1619 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624 1625 1626 1627 1628 1629 1630 1631 1632 1633 1634 1635 1636 1637 1638 1639 1640 1641 1642 1643 1644 1645 1646 1647 1648 1649 1650 1651 1652 1653 1654 1655 1656 1657 1658 1659 1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 1670 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692 1693 1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708 1709 1710 1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1724 1725 1726 1727 1728 1729 1730 1731 1732 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761 1762 1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788 1789 1790 1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813 1814 1815 1816 1817 1818 1819 1820 1821 1822 1823 1824 1825 1826 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 1872 1873 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053 2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 2071 2072 2073 2074 2075 2076 2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 2100 2101 2102 2103 2104 2105 2106 2107 2108 2109 2110 2111 2112 2113 2114 2115 2116 2117 2118 2119 2120 2121 2122 2123 2124 2125 2126 2127 2128 2129 2130 2131 2132 2133 2134 2135 2136 2137 2138 2139 2140 2141 2142 2143 2144 2145 2146 2147 2148 2149 2150 2151 2152 2153 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158 2159 2160 2161 2162 2163 2164 2165 2166 2167 2168 2169 2170 2171 2172 2173 2174 2175 2176 2177 2178 2179 2180 2181 2182 2183 2184 2185 2186 2187 2188 2189 2190 2191 2192 2193 2194 2195 2196 2197 2198 2199 2200 2201 2202 2203 2204 2205 2206 2207 2208 2209 2210 2211 2212 2213 2214 2215 2216 2217 2218 2219 2220 2221 2222 2223 2224 2225 2226 2227 2228 2229 2230 2231 2232 2233 2234 2235 2236 2237 2238 2239 2240 2241 2242 2243 2244 2245 2246 2247 2248 2249 2250 2251 2252 2253 2254 2255 2256 2257 2258 2259 2260 2261 2262 2263 2264 2265 2266 2267 2268 2269 2270 2271 2272 2273 2274 2275 2276 2277 2278 2279 2280 2281 2282 2283 2284 2285 2286 2287 2288 2289 2290 2291 2292 2293 2294 2295 2296 2297 2298 2299 2300 2301 2302 2303 2304 2305 2306 2307 2308 2309 2310 2311 2312 2313 2314 2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327 2328 2329 2330 2331 2332 2333 2334 2335 2336 2337 2338 2339 2340 2341 2342 2343 2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349 2350 2351 2352 2353 2354 2355 2356 2357 2358 2359 2360 2361 2362 2363 2364 2365 2366 2367 2368 2369 2370 2371 2372 2373 2374 2375 2376 2377 2378 2379 2380 2381 2382 2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389 2390 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414 2415 2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422 2423 2424 2425 2426 2427 2428 2429 2430 2431 2432 2433 2434 2435 2436 2437 2438 2439 2440 2441 2442 2443 2444 2445 2446 2447 2448 2449 2450 2451 2452 2453 2454 2455 2456 2457 2458 2459 2460 2461 2462 2463 2464 2465 2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471 2472 2473 2474 2475 2476 2477 2478 2479 2480 2481 2482 2483 2484 2485 2486 2487 2488 2489 2490 2491 2492 2493 2494 2495 2496 2497 2498 2499 2500 2501 2502 2503 2504 2505 2506 2507 2508 2509 2510 2511 2512 2513 2514 2515 2516 2517 2518 2519 2520 2521 2522 2523 2524 2525 2526 2527 2528 2529 2530 2531 2532 2533 2534 2535 2536 2537 2538 2539 2540 2541 2542 2543 2544 2545 2546 2547 2548 2549 2550 2551 2552 2553 2554 2555 2556 2557 2558 2559 2560 2561 2562 2563 2564 2565 2566 2567 2568 2569 2570 2571 2572 2573 2574 2575 2576 2577 2578 2579 2580 2581 2582 2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589 2590 2591 2592 2593 2594 2595 2596 2597 2598 2599 2600 2601 2602 2603 2604 2605 2606 2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616 2617 2618 2619 2620 2621 2622 2623 2624 2625 2626 2627 2628 2629 2630 2631 2632 2633 2634 2635 2636 2637 2638 2639 2640 2641 2642 2643 2644 2645 2646 2647 2648 2649 2650 2651 2652 2653 2654 2655 2656 2657 2658 2659 2660 2661 2662 2663 2664 2665 2666 2667 2668 2669 2670 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 2679 2680 2681 2682 2683 2684 2685 2686 2687 2688 2689 2690 2691 2692 2693 2694 2695 2696 2697 2698 2699 2700 2701 2702 2703 2704 2705 2706 2707 2708 2709 2710 2711 2712 2713 2714 2715 2716 2717 2718 2719 2720 2721 2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729 2730 2731 2732 2733 2734 2735 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744 2745 2746 2747 2748 2749 2750 2751 2752 2753 2754 2755 2756 2757 2758 2759 2760 2761 2762 2763 2764 2765 2766 2767 2768 2769 2770 2771 2772 2773 2774 2775 2776 2777 2778 2779 2780 2781 2782 2783 2784 2785 2786 2787 2788 2789 2790 2791 2792 2793 2794 2795 2796 2797 2798 2799 2800 2801 2802 2803 2804 2805 2806 2807 2808 2809 2810 2811 2812 2813 2814 2815 2816 2817 2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823 2824 2825 2826 2827 2828 2829 2830 2831 2832 2833 2834 2835 2836 2837 2838 2839 2840 2841 2842 2843 2844 2845 2846 2847 2848 2849 2850 2851 2852 2853 2854 2855 2856 2857 2858 2859 2860 2861 2862 2863 2864 2865 2866 2867 2868 2869 2870 2871 2872 2873 2874 2875 2876 2877 2878 2879 2880 2881 2882 2883 2884 2885 2886 2887 2888 2889 2890 2891 2892 2893 2894 2895 2896 2897 2898 2899 2900 2901 2902 2903 2904 2905 2906 2907 2908 2909 2910 2911 2912 2913 2914 2915 2916 2917 2918 2919 2920 2921 2922 2923 2924 2925 2926 2927 2928 2929 2930 2931 2932 2933 2934 2935 2936 2937 2938 2939 2940 2941 2942 2943 2944 2945 2946 2947 2948 2949 2950 2951 2952 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963 2964 2965 2966 2967 2968 2969 2970 2971 2972 2973 2974 2975 2976 2977 2978 2979 2980 2981 2982 2983 2984 2985 2986 2987 2988 2989 2990 2991 2992 2993 2994 2995 2996 2997 2998 2999 3000 3001 3002 3003 3004 3005 3006 3007 3008 3009 3010 3011 3012 3013 3014 3015 3016 3017 3018 3019 3020 3021 3022 3023 3024 3025 3026 3027 3028 3029 3030 3031 3032 3033 3034 3035 3036 3037 3038 3039 3040 3041 3042 3043 3044 3045 3046 3047 3048 3049 3050 3051 3052 3053 3054 3055 3056 3057 3058 3059 3060 3061 3062 3063 3064 3065 3066 3067 3068 3069 3070 3071 3072 3073 3074 3075 3076 3077 3078 3079 3080 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 3087 3088 3089 3090 3091 3092 3093 3094 3095 3096 3097 3098 3099 3100 3101 3102 3103 3104 3105 3106 3107 3108 3109 3110 3111 3112 3113 3114 3115 3116 3117 3118 3119 3120 3121 3122 3123 3124 3125 3126 3127 3128 3129 3130 3131 3132 3133 3134 3135 3136 3137 3138 3139 3140 3141 3142 3143 3144 3145 3146 3147 3148 3149 3150 3151 3152 3153 3154 3155 3156 3157 3158 3159 3160 3161 3162 3163 3164 3165 3166 3167 3168 3169 3170 3171 3172 3173 3174 3175 3176 3177 3178 3179 3180 3181 3182 3183 3184 3185 3186 3187 3188 3189 3190 3191 3192 3193 3194 3195 3196 3197 3198 3199 3200 3201 3202 3203 3204 3205 3206 3207 3208 3209 3210 3211 3212 3213 3214 3215 3216 3217 3218 3219 3220 3221 3222 3223 3224 3225 3226 3227 3228 3229 3230 3231 3232 3233 3234 3235 3236 3237 3238 3239 3240 3241 3242 3243 3244 3245 3246 3247 3248 3249 3250 3251 3252 3253 3254 3255 3256 3257 3258 3259 3260 3261 3262 3263 3264 3265 3266 3267 3268 3269 3270 3271 3272 3273 3274 3275 3276 3277 3278 3279 3280 3281 3282 3283 3284 3285 3286 3287 3288 3289 3290 3291 3292 3293 3294 3295 3296 3297 3298 3299 3300 3301 3302 3303 3304 3305 3306 3307 3308 3309 3310 3311 3312 3313 3314 3315 3316 3317 3318 3319 3320 3321 3322 3323 3324 3325 3326 3327 3328 3329 3330 3331 3332 3333 3334 3335 3336 3337 3338 3339 3340 3341 3342 3343 3344 3345 3346 3347 3348 3349 3350 3351 3352 3353 3354 3355 3356 3357 3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 3363 3364 3365 3366 3367 3368 3369 3370 3371 3372 3373 3374 3375 3376 3377 3378 3379 3380 3381 3382 3383 3384 3385 3386 3387 3388 3389 3390 3391 3392 3393 3394 3395 3396 3397 3398 3399 3400 3401 3402 3403 3404 3405 3406 3407 3408 3409 3410 3411 3412 3413 3414 3415 3416 3417 3418 3419 3420 3421 3422 3423 3424 3425 3426 3427 3428 3429 3430 3431 3432 3433 3434 3435 3436 3437 3438 3439 3440 3441 3442 3443 3444 3445 3446 3447 3448 3449 3450 3451 3452 3453 3454 3455 3456 3457 3458 3459 3460 3461 3462 3463 3464 3465 3466 3467 3468 3469 3470 3471 3472 3473 3474 3475 3476 3477 3478 3479 3480 3481 3482 3483 3484 3485 3486 3487 3488 3489 3490 3491 3492 3493 3494 3495 3496 3497 3498 3499 3500 3501 3502 3503 3504 3505 3506 3507 3508 3509 3510 3511 3512 3513 3514 3515 3516 3517 3518 3519 3520 3521 3522 3523 3524 3525 3526 3527 3528 3529 3530 3531 3532 3533 3534 3535 3536 3537 3538 3539 3540 3541 3542 3543 3544 3545 3546 3547 3548 3549 3550 3551 3552 3553 3554 3555 3556 3557 3558 3559 3560 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 3568 3569 3570 3571 3572 3573 3574 3575 3576 3577 3578 3579 3580 3581 3582 3583 3584 3585 3586 3587 3588 3589 3590 3591 3592 3593 3594 3595 3596 3597 3598 3599 3600 3601 3602 3603 3604 3605 3606 3607 3608 3609 3610 3611 3612 3613 3614 3615 3616 3617 3618 3619 3620 3621 3622 3623 3624 3625 3626 3627 3628 3629 3630 3631 3632 3633 3634 3635 3636 3637 3638 3639 3640 3641 3642 3643 3644 3645 3646 3647 3648 3649 3650 3651 3652 3653 3654 3655 3656 3657 3658 3659 3660 3661 3662 3663 3664 3665 3666 3667 3668 3669 3670 3671 3672 3673 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679 3680 3681 3682 3683 3684 3685 3686 3687 3688 3689 3690 3691 3692 3693 3694 3695 3696 3697 3698 3699 3700 3701 3702 3703 3704 3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712 3713 3714 3715 3716 3717 3718 3719 3720 3721 3722 3723 3724 3725 3726 3727 3728 3729 3730 3731 3732 3733 3734 3735 3736 3737 3738 3739 3740 3741 3742 3743 3744 3745 3746 3747 3748 3749 3750 3751 3752 3753 3754 3755 3756 3757 3758 3759 3760 3761 3762 3763 3764 3765 3766 3767 3768 3769 3770 3771 3772 3773 3774 3775 3776 3777 3778 3779 3780 3781 3782 3783 3784 3785 3786 3787 3788 3789 3790 3791 3792 3793 3794 3795 3796 3797 3798 3799 3800 3801 3802 3803 3804 3805 3806 3807 3808 3809 3810 3811 3812 3813 3814 3815 3816 3817 3818 3819 3820 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825 3826 3827 3828 3829 3830 3831 3832 3833 3834 3835 3836 3837 3838 3839 3840 3841 3842 3843 3844 3845 3846 3847 3848 3849 3850 3851 3852 3853 3854 3855 3856 3857 3858 3859 3860 3861 3862 3863 3864 3865 3866 3867 3868 3869 3870 3871 3872 3873 3874 3875 3876 3877 3878 3879 3880 3881 3882 3883 3884 3885 3886 3887 3888 3889 3890 3891 3892 3893 3894 3895 3896 3897 3898 3899 3900 3901 3902 3903 3904 3905 3906 3907 3908 3909 3910 3911 3912 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917 3918 3919 3920 3921 3922 3923 3924 3925 3926 3927 3928 3929 3930 3931 3932 3933 3934 3935 3936 3937 3938 3939 3940 3941 3942 3943 3944 3945 3946 3947 3948 3949 3950 3951 3952 3953 3954 3955 3956 3957 3958 3959 3960 3961 3962 3963 3964 3965 3966 3967 3968 3969 3970 3971 3972 3973 3974 3975 3976 3977 3978 3979 3980 3981 3982 3983 3984 3985 3986 3987 3988 3989 3990 3991 3992 3993 3994 3995 3996 3997 3998 3999 4000 4001 4002 4003 4004 4005 4006 4007 4008 4009 4010 4011 4012 4013 4014 4015 4016 4017 4018 4019 4020 4021 4022 4023 4024 4025 4026 4027 4028 4029 4030 4031 4032 4033 4034 4035 4036 4037 4038 4039 4040 4041 4042 4043 4044 4045 4046 4047 4048 4049 4050 4051 4052 4053 4054 4055 4056 4057 4058 4059 4060 4061 4062 4063 4064 4065 4066 4067 4068 4069 4070 4071 4072 4073 4074 4075 4076 4077 4078 4079 4080 4081 4082 4083 4084 4085 4086 4087 4088 4089 4090 4091 4092 4093 4094 4095 4096 4097 4098 4099 4100 4101 4102 4103 4104 4105 4106 4107 4108 4109 4110 4111 4112 4113 4114 4115 4116 4117 4118 4119 4120 4121 4122 4123 4124 4125 4126 4127 4128 4129 4130 4131 4132 4133 4134 4135 4136 4137 4138 4139 4140 4141 4142 4143 4144 4145 4146 4147 4148 4149 4150 4151 4152 4153 4154 4155 4156 4157 4158 4159 4160 4161 4162 4163 4164 4165 4166 4167 4168 4169 4170 4171 4172 4173 4174 4175 4176 4177 4178 4179 4180 4181 4182 4183 4184 4185 4186 4187 4188 4189 4190 4191 4192 4193 4194 4195 4196 4197 4198 4199 4200 4201 4202 4203 4204 4205 4206 4207 4208 4209 4210 4211 4212 4213 4214 4215 4216 4217 4218 4219 4220 4221 4222 4223 4224 4225 4226 4227 4228 4229 4230 4231 4232 4233 4234 4235 4236 4237 4238 4239 4240 4241 4242 4243 4244 4245 4246 4247 4248 4249 4250 4251 4252 4253 4254 4255 4256 4257 4258 4259 4260 4261 4262 4263 4264 4265 4266 4267 4268 4269 4270 4271 4272 4273 4274 4275 4276 4277 4278 4279 4280 4281 4282 4283 4284 4285 4286 4287 4288 4289 4290 4291 4292 4293 4294 4295 4296 4297 4298 4299 4300 4301 4302 4303 4304 4305 4306 4307 4308 4309 4310 4311 4312 4313 4314 4315 4316 4317 4318 4319 4320 4321 4322 4323 4324 4325 4326 4327 4328 4329 4330 4331 4332 4333 4334 4335 4336 4337 4338 4339 4340 4341 4342 4343 4344 4345 4346 4347 4348 4349 4350 4351 4352 4353 4354 4355 4356 4357 4358 4359 4360 4361 4362 4363 4364 4365 4366 4367 4368 4369 4370 4371 4372 4373 4374 4375 4376 4377 4378 4379 4380 4381 4382 4383 4384 4385 4386 4387 4388 4389 4390 4391 4392 4393 4394 4395 4396 4397 4398 4399 4400 4401 4402 4403 4404 4405 4406 4407 4408 4409 4410 4411 4412 4413 4414 4415 4416 4417 4418 4419 4420 4421 4422 4423 4424 4425 4426 4427 4428 4429 4430 4431 4432 4433 4434 4435 4436 4437 4438 4439 4440 4441 4442 4443 4444 4445 4446 4447 4448 4449 4450 4451 4452 4453 4454 4455 4456 4457 4458 4459 4460 4461 4462 4463 4464 4465 4466 4467 4468 4469 4470 4471 4472 4473 4474 4475 4476 4477 4478 4479 4480 4481 4482 4483 4484 4485 4486 4487 4488 4489 4490 4491 4492 4493 4494 4495 4496 4497 4498 4499 4500 4501 4502 4503 4504 4505 4506 4507 4508 4509 4510 4511 4512 4513 4514 4515 4516 4517 4518 4519 4520 4521 4522 4523 4524 4525 4526 4527 4528 4529 4530 4531 4532 4533 4534 4535 4536 4537 4538 4539 4540 4541 4542 4543 4544 4545 4546 4547 4548 4549 4550 4551 4552 4553 4554 4555 4556 4557 4558 4559 4560 4561 4562 4563 4564 4565 4566 4567 4568 4569 4570 4571 4572 4573 4574 4575 4576 4577 4578 4579 4580 4581 4582 4583 4584 4585 4586 4587 4588 4589 4590 4591 4592 4593 4594 4595 4596 4597 4598 4599 4600 4601 4602 4603 4604 4605 4606 4607 4608 4609 4610 4611 4612 4613 4614 4615 4616 4617 4618 4619 4620 4621 4622 4623 4624 4625 4626 4627 4628 4629 4630 4631 4632 4633 4634 4635 4636 4637 4638 4639 4640 4641 4642 4643 4644 4645 4646 4647 4648 4649 4650 4651 4652 4653 4654 4655 4656 4657 4658 4659 4660 4661 4662 4663 4664 4665 4666 4667 4668 4669 4670 4671 4672 4673 4674 4675 4676 4677 4678 4679 4680 4681 4682 4683 4684 4685 4686 4687 4688 4689 4690 4691 4692 4693 4694 4695 4696 4697 4698 4699 4700 4701 4702 4703 4704 4705 4706 4707 4708 4709 4710 4711 4712 4713 4714 4715 4716 4717 4718 4719 4720 4721 4722 4723 4724 4725 4726 4727 4728 4729 4730 4731 4732 4733 4734 4735 4736 4737 4738 4739 4740 4741 4742 4743 4744 4745 4746 4747 4748 4749 4750 4751 4752 4753 4754 4755 4756 4757 4758 4759 4760 4761 4762 4763 4764 4765 4766 4767 4768 4769 4770 4771 4772 4773 4774 4775 4776 4777 4778 4779 4780 4781 4782 4783 4784 4785 4786 4787 4788 4789 4790 4791 4792 4793 4794 4795 4796 4797 4798 4799 4800 4801 4802 4803 4804 4805 4806 4807 4808 4809 4810 4811 4812 4813 4814 4815 4816 4817 4818 4819 4820 4821 4822 4823 4824 4825 4826 4827 4828 4829 4830 4831 4832 4833 4834 4835 4836 4837 4838 4839 4840 4841 4842 4843 4844 4845 4846 4847 4848 4849 4850 4851 4852 4853 4854 4855 4856 4857 4858 4859 4860 4861 4862 4863 4864 4865 4866 4867 4868 4869 4870 4871 4872 4873 4874 4875 4876 4877 4878 4879 4880 4881 4882 4883 4884 4885 4886 4887 4888 4889 4890 4891 4892 4893 4894 4895 4896 4897 4898 4899 4900 4901 4902 4903 4904 4905 4906 4907 4908 4909 4910 4911 4912 4913 4914 4915 4916 4917 4918 4919 4920 4921 4922 4923 4924 4925 4926 4927 4928 4929 4930 4931 4932 4933 4934 4935 4936 4937 4938 4939 4940 4941 4942 4943 4944 4945 4946 4947 4948 4949 4950 4951 4952 4953 4954 4955 4956 4957 4958 4959 4960 4961 4962 4963 4964 4965 4966 4967 4968 4969 4970 4971 4972 4973 4974 4975 4976 4977 4978 4979 4980 4981 4982 4983 4984 4985 4986 4987 4988 4989 4990 4991 4992 4993 4994 4995 4996 4997 4998 4999 5000 5001 5002 5003 5004 5005 5006 5007 5008 5009 5010 5011 5012 5013 5014 5015 5016 5017 5018 5019 5020 5021 5022 5023 5024 5025 5026 5027 5028 5029 5030 5031 5032 5033 5034 5035 5036 5037 5038 5039 5040 5041 5042 5043 5044 5045 5046 5047 5048 5049 5050 5051 5052 5053 5054 5055 5056 5057 5058 5059 5060 5061 5062 5063 5064 5065 5066 5067 5068 5069 5070 5071 5072 5073 5074 5075 5076 5077 5078 5079 5080 5081 5082 5083 5084 5085 5086 5087 5088 5089 5090 5091 5092 5093 5094 5095 5096 5097 5098 5099 5100 5101 5102 5103 5104 5105 5106 5107 5108 5109 5110 5111 5112 5113 5114 5115 5116 5117 5118 5119 5120 5121 5122 5123 5124 5125 5126 5127 5128 5129 5130 5131 5132 5133 5134 5135 5136 5137 5138 5139 5140 5141 5142 5143 5144 5145 5146 5147 5148 5149 5150 5151 5152 5153 5154 5155 5156 5157 5158 5159 5160 5161 5162 5163 5164 5165 5166 5167 5168 5169 5170 5171 5172 5173 5174 5175 5176 5177 5178 5179 5180 5181 5182 5183 5184 5185 5186 5187 5188 5189 5190 5191 5192 5193 5194 5195 5196 5197 5198 5199 5200 5201 5202 5203 5204 5205 5206 5207 5208 5209 5210 5211 5212 5213 5214 5215 5216 5217 5218 5219 5220 5221 5222 5223 5224 5225 5226 5227 5228 5229 5230 5231 5232 5233 5234 5235 5236 5237 5238 5239 5240 5241 5242 5243 5244 5245 5246 5247 5248 5249 5250 5251 5252 5253 5254 5255 5256 5257 5258 5259 5260 5261 5262 5263 5264 5265 5266 5267 5268 5269 5270 5271 5272 5273 5274 5275 5276 5277 5278 5279 5280 5281 5282 5283 5284 5285 5286 5287 5288 5289 5290 5291 5292 5293 5294 5295 5296 5297 5298 5299 5300 5301 5302 5303 5304 5305 5306 5307 5308 5309 5310 5311 5312 5313 5314 5315 5316 5317 5318 5319 5320 5321 5322 5323 5324 5325 5326 5327 5328 5329 5330 5331 5332 5333 5334 5335 5336 5337 5338 5339 5340 5341 5342 5343 5344 5345 5346 5347 5348 5349 5350 5351 5352 5353 5354 5355 5356 5357 5358 5359 5360 5361 5362 5363 5364 5365 5366 5367 5368 5369 5370 5371 5372 5373 5374 5375 5376 5377 5378 5379 5380 5381 5382 5383 5384 5385 5386 5387 5388 5389 5390 5391 5392 5393 5394 5395 5396 5397 5398 5399 5400 5401 5402 5403 5404 5405 5406 5407 5408 5409 5410 5411 5412 5413 5414 5415 5416 5417 5418 5419 5420 5421 5422 5423 5424 5425 5426 5427 5428 5429 5430 5431 5432 5433 5434 5435 5436 5437 5438 5439 5440 5441 5442 5443 5444 5445 5446 5447 5448 5449 5450 5451 5452 5453 5454 5455 5456 5457 5458 5459 5460 5461 5462 5463 5464 5465 5466 5467 5468 5469 5470 5471 5472 5473 5474 5475 5476 5477 5478 5479 5480 5481 5482 5483 5484 5485 5486 5487 5488 5489 5490 5491 5492 5493 5494 5495 5496 5497 5498 5499 5500 5501 5502 5503 5504 5505 5506 5507 5508 5509 5510 5511 5512 5513 5514 5515 5516 5517 5518 5519 5520 5521 5522 5523 5524 5525 5526 5527 5528 5529 5530 5531 5532 5533 5534 5535 5536 5537 5538 5539 5540 5541 5542 5543 5544 5545 5546 5547 5548 5549 5550 5551 5552 5553 5554 5555 5556 5557 5558 5559 5560 5561 5562 5563 5564 5565 5566 5567 5568 5569 5570 5571 5572 5573 5574 5575 5576 5577 5578 5579 5580 5581 5582 5583 5584 5585 5586 5587 5588 5589 5590 5591 5592 5593 5594 5595 5596 5597 5598 5599 5600 5601 5602 5603 5604 5605 5606 5607 5608 5609 5610 5611 5612 5613 5614 5615 5616 5617 5618 5619 5620 5621 5622 5623 5624 5625 5626 5627 5628 5629 5630 5631 5632 5633 5634 5635 5636 5637 5638 5639 5640 5641 5642 5643 5644 5645 5646 5647 5648 5649 5650 5651 5652 5653 5654 5655 5656 5657 5658 5659 5660 5661 5662 5663 5664 5665 5666 5667 5668 5669 5670 5671 5672 5673 5674 5675 5676 5677 5678 5679 5680 5681 5682 5683 5684 5685 5686 5687 5688 5689 5690 5691 5692 5693 5694 5695 5696 5697 5698 5699 5700 5701 5702 5703 5704 5705 5706 5707 5708 5709 5710 5711 5712 5713 5714 5715 5716 5717 5718 5719 5720 5721 5722 5723 5724 5725 5726 5727 5728 5729 5730 5731 5732 5733 5734 5735 5736 5737 5738 5739 5740 5741 5742 5743 5744 5745 5746 5747 5748 5749 5750 5751 5752 5753 5754 5755 5756 5757 5758 5759 5760 5761 5762 5763 5764 5765 5766 5767 5768 5769 5770 5771 5772 5773 5774 5775 5776 5777 5778 5779 5780 5781 5782 5783 5784 5785 5786 5787 5788 5789 5790 5791 5792 5793 5794 5795 5796 5797 5798 5799 5800 5801 5802 5803 5804 5805 5806 5807 5808 5809 5810 5811 5812 5813 5814 5815 5816 5817 5818 5819 5820 5821 5822 5823 5824 5825 5826 5827 5828 5829 5830 5831 5832 5833 5834 5835 5836 5837 5838 5839 5840 5841 5842 5843 5844 5845 5846 5847 5848 5849 5850 5851 5852 5853 5854 5855 5856 5857 5858 5859 5860 5861 5862 5863 5864 5865 5866 5867 5868 5869 5870 5871 5872 5873 5874 5875 5876 5877 5878 5879 5880 5881 5882 5883 5884 5885 5886 5887 5888 5889 5890 5891 5892 5893 5894 5895 5896 5897 5898 5899 5900 5901 5902 5903 5904 5905 5906 5907 5908 5909 5910 5911 5912 5913 5914 5915 5916 5917 5918 5919 5920 5921 5922 5923 5924 5925 5926 5927 5928 5929 5930 5931 5932 5933 5934 5935 5936 5937 5938 5939 5940 5941 5942 5943 5944 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 5950 5951 5952 5953 5954 5955 5956 5957 5958 5959 5960 5961 5962 5963 5964 5965 5966 5967 5968 5969 5970 5971 5972 5973 5974 5975 5976 5977 5978 5979 5980 5981 5982 5983 5984 5985 5986 5987 5988 5989 5990 5991 5992 5993 5994 5995 5996 5997 5998 5999 6000 6001 6002 6003 6004 6005 6006 6007 6008 6009 6010 6011 6012 6013 6014 6015 6016 6017 6018 6019 6020 6021 6022 6023 6024 6025 6026 6027 6028 6029 6030 6031 6032 6033 6034 6035 6036 6037 6038 6039 6040 6041 6042 6043 6044 6045 6046 6047 6048 6049 6050 6051 6052 6053 6054 6055 6056 6057 6058 6059 6060 6061 6062 6063 6064 6065 6066 6067 6068 6069 6070 6071 6072 6073 6074 6075 6076 6077 6078 6079 6080 6081 6082 6083 6084 6085 6086 6087 6088 6089 6090 6091 6092 6093 6094 6095 6096 6097 6098 6099 6100 6101 6102 6103 6104 6105 6106 6107 6108 6109 6110 6111 6112 6113 6114 6115 6116 6117 6118 6119 6120 6121 6122 6123 6124 6125 6126 6127 6128 6129 6130 6131 6132 6133 6134 6135 6136 6137 6138 6139 6140 6141 6142 6143 6144 6145 6146 6147 6148 6149 6150 6151 6152 6153 6154 6155 6156 6157 6158 6159 6160 6161 6162 6163 6164 6165 6166 6167 6168 6169 6170 6171 6172 6173 6174 6175 6176 6177 6178 6179 6180 6181 6182 6183 6184 6185 6186 6187 6188 6189 6190 6191 6192 6193 6194 6195 6196 6197 6198 6199 6200 6201 6202 6203 6204 6205 6206 6207 6208 6209 6210 6211 6212 6213 6214 6215 6216 6217 6218 6219 6220 6221 6222 6223 6224 6225 6226 6227 6228 6229 6230 6231 6232 6233 6234 6235 6236 6237 6238 6239 6240 6241 6242 6243 6244 6245 6246 6247 6248 6249 6250 6251 6252 6253 6254 6255 6256 6257 6258 6259 6260 6261 6262 6263 6264 6265 6266 6267 6268 6269 6270 6271 6272 6273 6274 6275 6276 6277 6278 6279 6280 6281 6282 6283 6284 6285 6286 6287 6288 6289 6290 6291 6292 6293 6294 6295 6296 6297 6298 6299 6300 6301 6302 6303 6304 6305 6306 6307 6308 6309 6310 6311 6312 6313 6314 6315 6316 6317 6318 6319 6320 6321 6322 6323 6324 6325 6326 6327 6328 6329 6330 6331 6332 6333 6334 6335 6336 6337 6338 6339 6340 6341 6342 6343 6344 6345 6346 6347 6348 6349 6350 6351 6352 6353 6354 6355 6356 6357 6358 6359 6360 6361 6362 6363 6364 6365 6366 6367 6368 6369 6370 6371 6372 6373 6374 6375 6376 6377 6378 6379 6380 6381 6382 6383 6384 6385 6386 6387 6388 6389 6390 6391 6392 6393 6394 6395 6396 6397 6398 6399 6400 6401 6402 6403 6404 6405 6406 6407 6408 6409 6410 6411 6412 6413 6414 6415 6416 6417 6418 6419 6420 6421 6422 6423 6424 6425 6426 6427 6428 6429 6430 6431 6432 6433 6434 6435 6436 6437 6438 6439 6440 6441 6442 6443 6444 6445 6446 6447 6448 6449 6450 6451 6452 6453 6454 6455 6456 6457 6458 6459 6460 6461 6462 6463 6464 6465 6466 6467 6468 6469 6470 6471 6472 6473 6474 6475 6476 6477 6478 6479 6480 6481 6482 6483 6484 6485 6486 6487 6488 6489 6490 6491 6492 6493 6494 6495 6496 6497 6498 6499 6500 6501 6502 6503 6504 6505 6506 6507 6508 6509 6510 6511 6512 6513 6514 6515 6516 6517 6518 6519 6520 6521 6522 6523 6524 6525 6526 6527 6528 6529 6530 6531 6532 6533 6534 6535 6536 6537 6538 6539 6540 6541 6542 6543 6544 6545 6546 6547 6548 6549 6550 6551 6552 6553 6554 6555 6556 6557 6558 6559 6560 6561 6562 6563 6564 6565 6566 6567 6568 6569 6570 6571 6572 6573 6574 6575 6576 6577 6578 6579 6580 6581 6582 6583 6584 6585 6586 6587 6588 6589 6590 6591 6592 6593 6594 6595 6596 6597 6598 6599 6600 6601 6602 6603 6604 6605 6606 6607 6608 6609 6610 6611 6612 6613 6614 6615 6616 6617 6618 6619 6620 6621 6622 6623 6624 6625 6626 6627 6628 6629 6630 6631 6632 6633 6634 6635 6636 6637 6638 6639 6640 6641 6642 6643 6644 6645 6646 6647 6648 6649 6650 6651 6652 6653 6654 6655 6656 6657 6658 6659 6660 6661 6662 6663 6664 6665 6666 6667 6668 6669 6670 6671 6672 6673 6674 6675 6676 6677 6678 6679 6680 6681 6682 6683 6684 6685 6686 6687 6688 6689 6690 6691 6692 6693 6694 6695 6696 6697 6698 6699 6700 6701 6702 6703 6704 6705 6706 6707 6708 6709 6710 6711 6712 6713 6714 6715 6716 6717 6718 6719 6720 6721 6722 6723 6724 6725 6726 6727 6728 6729 6730 6731 6732 6733 6734 6735 6736 6737 6738 6739 6740 6741 6742 6743 6744 6745 6746 6747 6748 6749 6750 6751 6752 6753 6754 6755 6756 6757 6758 6759 6760 6761 6762 6763 6764 6765 6766 6767 6768 6769 6770 6771 6772 6773 6774 6775 6776 6777 6778 6779 6780 6781 6782 6783 6784 6785 6786 6787 6788 6789 6790 6791 6792 6793 6794 6795 6796 6797 6798 6799 6800 6801 6802 6803 6804 6805 6806 6807 6808 6809 6810 6811 6812 6813 6814 6815 6816 6817 6818 6819 6820 6821 6822 6823 6824 6825 6826 6827 6828 6829 6830 6831 6832 6833 6834 6835 6836 6837 6838 6839 6840 6841 6842 6843 6844 6845 6846 6847 6848 6849 6850 6851 6852 6853 6854 6855 6856 6857 6858 6859 6860 6861 6862 6863 6864 6865 6866 6867 6868 6869 6870 6871 6872 6873 6874 6875 6876 6877 6878 6879 6880 6881 6882 6883 6884 6885 6886 6887 6888 6889 6890 6891 6892 6893 6894 6895 6896 6897 6898 6899 6900 6901 6902 6903 6904 6905 6906 6907 6908 6909 6910 6911 6912 6913 6914 6915 6916 6917 6918 6919 6920 6921 6922 6923 6924 6925 6926 6927 6928 6929 6930 6931 6932 6933 6934 6935 6936 6937 6938 6939 6940 6941 6942 6943 6944 6945 6946 6947 6948 6949 6950 6951 6952 6953 6954 6955 6956 6957 6958 6959 6960 6961 6962 6963 6964 6965 6966 6967 6968 6969 6970 6971 6972 6973 6974 6975 6976 6977 6978 6979 6980 6981 6982 6983 6984 6985 6986 6987 6988 6989 6990 6991 6992 6993 6994 6995 6996 6997 6998 6999 7000 7001 7002 7003 7004 7005 7006 7007 7008 7009 7010 7011 7012 7013 7014 7015 7016 7017 7018 7019 7020 7021 7022 7023 7024 7025 7026 7027 7028 7029 7030 7031 7032 7033 7034 7035 7036 7037 7038 7039 7040 7041 7042 7043 7044 7045 7046 7047 7048 7049 7050 7051 7052 7053 7054 7055 7056 7057 7058 7059 7060 7061 7062 7063 7064 7065 7066 7067 7068 7069 7070 7071 7072 7073 7074 7075 7076 7077 7078 7079 7080 7081 7082 7083 7084 7085 7086 7087 7088 7089 7090 7091 7092 7093 7094 7095 7096 7097 7098 7099 7100 7101 7102 7103 7104 7105 7106 7107 7108 7109 7110 7111 7112 7113 7114 7115 7116 7117 7118 7119 7120 7121 7122 7123 7124 7125 7126 7127 7128 7129 7130 7131 7132 7133 7134 7135 7136 7137 7138 7139 7140 7141 7142 7143 7144 7145 7146 7147 7148 7149 7150 7151 7152 7153 7154 7155 7156 7157 7158 7159 7160 7161 7162 7163 7164 7165 7166 7167 7168 7169 7170 7171 7172 7173 7174 7175 7176 7177 7178 7179 7180 7181 7182 7183 7184 7185 7186 7187 7188 7189 7190 7191 7192 7193 7194 7195 7196 7197 7198 7199 7200 7201 7202 7203 7204 7205 7206 7207 7208 7209 7210 7211 7212 7213 7214 7215 7216 7217 7218 7219 7220 7221 7222 7223 7224 7225 7226 7227 7228 7229 7230 7231 7232 7233 7234 7235 7236 7237 7238 7239 7240 7241 7242 7243 7244 7245 7246 7247 7248 7249 7250 7251 7252 7253 7254 7255 7256 7257 7258 7259 7260 7261 7262 7263 7264 7265 7266 7267 7268 7269 7270 7271 7272 7273 7274 7275 7276 7277 7278 7279 7280 7281 7282 7283 7284 7285 7286 7287 7288 7289 7290 7291 7292 7293 7294 7295 7296 7297 7298 7299 7300 7301 7302 7303 7304 7305 7306 7307 7308 7309 7310 7311 7312 7313 7314 7315 7316 7317 7318 7319 7320 7321 7322 7323 7324 7325 7326 7327 7328 7329 7330 7331 7332 7333 7334 7335 7336 7337 7338 7339 7340 7341 7342 7343 7344 7345 7346 7347 7348 7349 7350 7351 7352 7353 7354 7355 7356 7357 7358 7359 7360 7361 7362 7363 7364 7365 7366 7367 7368 7369 7370 7371 7372 7373 7374 7375 7376 7377 7378 7379 7380 7381 7382 7383 7384 7385 7386 7387 7388 7389 7390 7391 7392 7393 7394 7395 7396 7397 7398 7399 7400 7401 7402 7403 7404 7405 7406 7407 7408 7409 7410 7411 7412 7413 7414 7415 7416 7417 7418 7419 7420 7421 7422 7423 7424 7425 7426 7427 7428 7429 7430 7431 7432 7433 7434 7435 7436 7437 7438 7439 7440 7441 7442 7443 7444 7445 7446 7447 7448 7449 7450 7451 7452 7453 7454 7455 7456 7457 7458 7459 7460 7461 7462 7463 7464 7465 7466 7467 7468 7469 7470 7471 7472 7473 7474 7475 7476 7477 7478 7479 7480 7481 7482 7483 7484 7485 7486 7487 7488 7489 7490 7491 7492 7493 7494 7495 7496 7497 7498 7499 7500 7501 7502 7503 7504 7505 7506 7507 7508 7509 7510 7511 7512 7513 7514 7515 7516 7517 7518 7519 7520 7521 7522 7523 7524 7525 7526 7527 7528 7529 7530 7531 7532 7533 7534 7535 7536 7537 7538 7539 7540 7541 7542 7543 7544 7545 7546 7547 7548 7549 7550 7551 7552 7553 7554 7555 7556 7557 7558 7559 7560 7561 7562 7563 7564 7565 7566 7567 7568 7569 7570 7571 7572 7573 7574 7575 7576 7577 7578 7579 7580 7581 7582 7583 7584 7585 7586 7587 7588 7589 7590 7591 7592 7593 7594 7595 7596 7597 7598 7599 7600 7601 7602 7603 7604 7605 7606 7607 7608 7609 7610 7611 7612 7613 7614 7615 7616 7617 7618 7619 7620 7621 7622 7623 7624 7625 7626 7627 7628 7629 7630 7631 7632 7633 7634 7635 7636 7637 7638 7639 7640 7641 7642 7643 7644 7645 7646 7647 7648 7649 7650 7651 7652 7653 7654 7655 7656 7657 7658 7659 7660 7661 7662 7663 7664 7665 7666 7667 7668 7669 7670 7671 7672 7673 7674 7675 7676 7677 7678 7679 7680 7681 7682 7683 7684 7685 7686 7687 7688 7689 7690 7691 7692 7693 7694 7695 7696 7697 7698 7699 7700 7701 7702 7703 7704 7705 7706 7707 7708 7709 7710 7711 7712 7713 7714 7715 7716 7717 7718 7719 7720 7721 7722 7723 7724 7725 7726 7727 7728 7729 7730 7731 7732 7733 7734 7735 7736 7737 7738 7739 7740 7741 7742 7743 7744 7745 7746 7747 7748 7749 7750 7751 7752 7753 7754 7755 7756 7757 7758 7759 7760 7761 7762 7763 7764 7765 7766 7767 7768 7769 7770 7771 7772 7773 7774 7775 7776 7777 7778 7779 7780 7781 7782 7783 7784 7785 7786 7787 7788 7789 7790 7791 7792 7793 7794 7795 7796 7797 7798 7799 7800 7801 7802 7803 7804 7805 7806 7807 7808 7809 7810 7811 7812 7813 7814 7815 7816 7817 7818 7819 7820 7821 7822 7823 7824 7825 7826 7827 7828 7829 7830 7831 7832 7833 7834 7835 7836 7837 7838 7839 7840 7841 7842 7843 7844 7845 7846 7847 7848 7849 7850 7851 7852 7853 7854 7855 7856 7857 7858 7859 7860 7861 7862 7863 7864 7865 7866 7867 7868 7869 7870 7871 7872 7873 7874 7875 7876 7877 7878 7879 7880 7881 7882 7883 7884 7885 7886 7887 7888 7889 7890 7891 7892 7893 7894 7895 7896 7897 7898 7899 7900 7901 7902 7903 7904 7905 7906 7907 7908 7909 7910 7911 7912 7913 7914 7915 7916 7917 7918 7919 7920 7921 7922 7923 7924 7925 7926 7927 7928 7929 7930 7931 7932 7933 7934 7935 7936 7937 7938 7939 7940 7941 7942 7943 7944 7945 7946 7947 7948 7949 7950 7951 7952 7953 7954 7955 7956 7957 7958 7959 7960 7961 7962 7963 7964 7965 7966 7967 7968 7969 7970 7971 7972 7973 7974 7975 7976 7977 7978 7979 7980 7981 7982 7983 7984 7985 7986 7987 7988 7989 7990 7991 7992 7993 7994 7995 7996 7997 7998 7999 8000 8001 8002 8003 8004 8005 8006 8007 8008 8009 8010 8011 8012 8013 8014 8015 8016 8017 8018 8019 8020 8021 8022 8023 8024 8025 8026 8027 8028 8029 8030 8031 8032 8033 8034 8035 8036 8037 8038 8039 8040 8041 8042 8043 8044 8045 8046 8047 8048 8049 8050 8051 8052 8053 8054 8055 8056 8057 8058 8059 8060 8061 8062 8063 8064 8065 8066 8067 8068 8069 8070 8071 8072 8073 8074 8075 8076 8077 8078 8079 8080 8081 8082 8083 8084 8085 8086 8087 8088 8089 8090 8091 8092 8093 8094 8095 8096 8097 8098 8099 8100 8101 8102 8103 8104 8105 8106 8107 8108 8109 8110 8111 8112 8113 8114 8115 8116 8117 8118 8119 8120 8121 8122 8123 8124 8125 8126 8127 8128 8129 8130 8131 8132 8133 8134 8135 8136 8137 8138 8139 8140 8141 8142 8143 8144 8145 8146 8147 8148 8149 8150 8151 8152 8153 8154 8155 8156 8157 8158 8159 8160 8161 8162 8163 8164 8165 8166 8167 8168 8169 8170 8171 8172 8173 8174 8175 8176 8177 8178 8179 8180 8181 8182 8183 8184 8185 8186 8187 8188 8189 8190 8191 8192 8193 8194 8195 8196 8197 8198 8199 8200 8201 8202 8203 8204 8205 8206 8207 8208 8209 8210 8211 8212 8213 8214 8215 8216 8217 8218 8219 8220 8221 8222 8223 8224 8225 8226 8227 8228 8229 8230 8231 8232 8233 8234 8235 8236 8237 8238 8239 8240 8241 8242 8243 8244 8245 8246 8247 8248 8249 8250 8251 8252 8253 8254 8255 8256 8257 8258 8259 8260 8261 8262 8263 8264 8265 8266 8267 8268 8269 8270 8271 8272 8273 8274 8275 8276 8277 8278 8279 8280 8281 8282 8283 8284 8285 8286 8287 8288 8289 8290 8291 8292 8293 8294 8295 8296 8297 8298 8299 8300 8301 8302 8303 8304 8305 8306 8307 8308 8309 8310 8311 8312 8313 8314 8315 8316 8317 8318 8319 8320 8321 8322 8323 8324 8325 8326 8327 8328 8329 8330 8331 8332 8333 8334 8335 8336 8337 8338 8339 8340 8341 8342 8343 8344 8345 8346 8347 8348 8349 8350 8351 8352 8353 8354 8355 8356 8357 8358 8359 8360 8361 8362 8363 8364 8365 8366 8367 8368 8369 8370 8371 8372 8373 8374 8375 8376 8377 8378 8379 8380 8381 8382 8383 8384 8385 8386 8387 8388 8389 8390 8391 8392 8393 8394 8395 8396 8397 8398 8399 8400 8401 8402 8403 8404 8405 8406 8407 8408 8409 8410 8411 8412 8413 8414 8415 8416 8417 8418 8419 8420 8421 8422 8423 8424 8425 8426 8427 8428 8429 8430 8431 8432 8433 8434 8435 8436 8437 8438 8439 8440 8441 8442 8443 8444 8445 8446 8447 8448 8449 8450 8451 8452 8453 8454 8455 8456 8457 8458 8459 8460 8461 8462 8463 8464 8465 8466 8467 8468 8469 8470 8471 8472 8473 8474 8475 8476 8477 8478 8479 8480 8481 8482 8483 8484 8485 8486 8487 8488 8489 8490 8491 8492 8493 8494 8495 8496 8497 8498 8499 8500 8501 8502 8503 8504 8505 8506 8507 8508 8509 8510 8511 8512 8513 8514 8515 8516 8517 8518 8519 8520 8521 8522 8523 8524 8525 8526 8527 8528 8529 8530 8531 8532 8533 8534 8535 8536 8537 8538 8539 8540 8541 8542 8543 8544 8545 8546 8547 8548 8549 8550 8551 8552 8553 8554 8555 8556 8557 8558 8559 8560 8561 8562 8563 8564 8565 8566 8567 8568 8569 8570 8571 8572 8573 8574 8575 8576 8577 8578 8579 8580 8581 8582 8583 8584 8585 8586 8587 8588 8589 8590 8591 8592 8593 8594 8595 8596 8597 8598 8599 8600 8601 8602 8603 8604 8605 8606 8607 8608 8609 8610 8611 8612 8613 8614 8615 8616 8617 8618 8619 8620 8621 8622 8623 8624 8625 8626 8627 8628 8629 8630 8631 8632 8633 8634 8635 8636 8637 8638 8639 8640 8641 8642 8643 8644 8645 8646 8647 8648 8649 8650 8651 8652 8653 8654 8655 8656 8657 8658 8659 8660 8661 8662 8663 8664 8665 8666 8667 8668 8669 8670 8671 8672 8673 8674 8675 8676 8677 8678 8679 8680 8681 8682 8683 8684 8685 8686 8687 8688 8689 8690 8691 8692 8693 8694 8695 8696 8697 8698 8699 8700 8701 8702 8703 8704 8705 8706 8707 8708 8709 8710 8711 8712 8713 8714 8715 8716 8717 8718 8719 8720 8721 8722 8723 8724 8725 8726 8727 8728 8729 8730 8731 8732 8733 8734 8735 8736 8737 8738 8739 8740 8741 8742 8743 8744 8745 8746 8747 8748 8749 8750 8751 8752 8753 8754 8755 8756 8757 8758 8759 8760 8761 8762 8763 8764 8765 8766 8767 8768 8769 8770 8771 8772 8773 8774 8775 8776 8777 8778 8779 8780 8781 8782 8783 8784 8785 8786 8787 8788 8789 8790 8791 8792 8793 8794 8795 8796 8797 8798 8799 8800 8801 8802 8803 8804 8805 8806 8807 8808 8809 8810 8811 8812 8813 8814 8815 8816 8817 8818 8819 8820 8821 8822 8823 8824 8825 8826 8827 8828 8829 8830 8831 8832 8833 8834 8835 8836 8837 8838 8839 8840 8841 8842 8843 8844 8845 8846 8847 8848 8849 8850 8851 8852 8853 8854 8855 8856 8857 8858 8859 8860 8861 8862 8863 8864 8865 8866 8867 8868 8869 8870 8871 8872 8873 8874 8875 8876 8877 8878 8879 8880 8881 8882 8883 8884 8885 8886 8887 8888 8889 8890 8891 8892 8893 8894 8895 8896 8897 8898 8899 8900 8901 8902 8903 8904 8905 8906 8907 8908 8909 8910 8911 8912 8913 8914 8915 8916 8917 8918 8919 8920 8921 8922 8923 8924 8925 8926 8927 8928 8929 8930 8931 8932 8933 8934 8935 8936 8937 8938 8939 8940 8941 8942 8943 8944 8945 8946 8947 8948 8949 8950 8951 8952 8953 8954 8955 8956 8957 8958 8959 8960 8961 8962 8963 8964 8965 8966 8967 8968 8969 8970 8971 8972 8973 8974 8975 8976 8977 8978 8979 8980 8981 8982 8983 8984 8985 8986 8987 8988 8989 8990 8991 8992 8993 8994 8995 8996 8997 8998 8999 9000 9001 9002 9003 9004 9005 9006 9007 9008 9009 9010 9011 9012 9013 9014 9015 9016 9017 9018 9019 9020 9021 9022 9023 9024 9025 9026 9027 9028 9029 9030 9031 9032 9033 9034 9035 9036 9037 9038 9039 9040 9041 9042 9043 9044 9045 9046 9047 9048 9049 9050 9051 9052 9053 9054 9055 9056 9057 9058 9059 9060 9061 9062 9063 9064 9065 9066 9067 9068 9069 9070 9071 9072 9073 9074 9075 9076 9077 9078 9079 9080 9081 9082 9083 9084 9085 9086 9087 9088 9089 9090 9091 9092 9093 9094 9095 9096 9097 9098 9099 9100 9101 9102 9103 9104 9105 9106 9107 9108 9109 9110 9111 9112 9113 9114 9115 9116 9117 9118 9119 9120 9121 9122 9123 9124 9125 9126 9127 9128 9129 9130 9131 9132 9133 9134 9135 9136 9137 9138 9139 9140 9141 9142 9143 9144 9145 9146 9147 9148 9149 9150 9151 9152 9153 9154 9155 9156 9157 9158 9159 9160 9161 9162 9163 9164 9165 9166 9167 9168 9169 9170 9171 9172 9173 9174 9175 9176 9177 9178 9179 9180 9181 9182 9183 9184 9185 9186 9187 9188 9189 9190 9191 9192 9193 9194 9195 9196 9197 9198 9199 9200 9201 9202 9203 9204 9205 9206 9207 9208 9209 9210 9211 9212 9213 9214 9215 9216 9217 9218 9219 9220 9221 9222 9223 9224 9225 9226 9227 9228 9229 9230 9231 9232 9233 9234 9235 9236 9237 9238 9239 9240 9241 9242 9243 9244 9245 9246 9247 9248 9249 9250 9251 9252 9253 9254 9255 9256 9257 9258 9259 9260 9261 9262 9263 9264 9265 9266 9267 9268 9269 9270 9271 9272 9273 9274 9275 9276 9277 9278 9279 9280 9281 9282 9283 9284 9285 9286 9287 9288 9289 9290 9291 9292 9293 9294 9295 9296 9297 9298 9299 9300 9301 9302 9303 9304 9305 9306 9307 9308 9309 9310 9311 9312 9313 9314 9315 9316 9317 9318 9319 9320 9321 9322 9323 9324 9325 9326 9327 9328 9329 9330 9331 9332 9333 9334 9335 9336 9337 9338 9339 9340 9341 9342 9343 9344 9345 9346 9347 9348 9349 9350 9351 9352 9353 9354 9355 9356 9357 9358 9359 9360 9361 9362 9363 9364 9365 9366 9367 9368 9369 9370 9371 9372 9373 9374 9375 9376 9377 9378 9379 9380 9381 9382 9383 9384 9385 9386 9387 9388 9389 9390 9391 9392 9393 9394 9395 9396 9397 9398 9399 9400 9401 9402 9403 9404 9405 9406 9407 9408 9409 9410 9411 9412 9413 9414 9415 9416 9417 9418 9419 9420 9421 9422 9423 9424 9425 9426 9427 9428 9429 9430 9431 9432 9433 9434 9435 9436 9437 9438 9439 9440 9441 9442 9443 9444 9445 9446 9447 9448 9449 9450 9451 9452 9453 9454 9455 9456 9457 9458 9459 9460 9461 9462 9463 9464 9465 9466 9467 9468 9469 9470 9471 9472 9473 9474 9475 9476 9477 9478 9479 9480 9481 9482 9483 9484 9485 9486 9487 9488 9489 9490 9491 9492 9493 9494 9495 9496 9497 9498 9499 9500 9501 9502 9503 9504 9505 9506 9507 9508 9509 9510 9511 9512 9513 9514 9515 9516 9517 9518 9519 9520 9521 9522 9523 9524 9525 9526 9527 9528 9529 9530 9531 9532 9533 9534 9535 9536 9537 9538 9539 9540 9541 9542 9543 9544 9545 9546 9547 9548 9549 9550 9551 9552 9553 9554 9555 9556 9557 9558 9559 9560 9561 9562 9563 9564 9565 9566 9567 9568 9569 9570 9571 9572 9573 9574 9575 9576 9577 9578 9579 9580 9581 9582 9583 9584 9585 9586 9587 9588 9589 9590 9591 9592 9593 9594 9595 9596 9597 9598 9599 9600 9601 9602 9603 9604 9605 9606 9607 9608 9609 9610 9611 9612 9613 9614 9615 9616 9617 9618 9619 9620 9621 9622 9623 9624 9625 9626 9627 9628 9629 9630 9631 9632 9633 9634 9635 9636 9637 9638 9639 9640 9641 9642 9643 9644 9645 9646 9647 9648 9649 9650 9651 9652 9653 9654 9655 9656 9657 9658 9659 9660 9661 9662 9663 9664 9665 9666 9667 9668 9669 9670 9671 9672 9673 9674 9675 9676 9677 9678 9679 9680 9681 9682 9683 9684 9685 9686 9687 9688 9689 9690 9691 9692 9693 9694 9695 9696 9697 9698 9699 9700 9701 9702 9703 9704 9705 9706 9707 9708 9709 9710 9711 9712 9713 9714 9715 9716 9717 9718 9719 9720 9721 9722 9723 9724 9725 9726 9727 9728 9729 9730 9731 9732 9733 9734 9735 9736 9737 9738 9739 9740 9741 9742 9743 9744 9745 9746 9747 9748 9749 9750 9751 9752 9753 9754 9755 9756 9757 9758 9759 9760 9761 9762 9763 9764 9765 9766 9767 9768 9769 9770 9771 9772 9773 9774 9775 9776 9777 9778 9779 9780 9781 9782 9783 9784 9785 9786 9787 9788 9789 9790 9791 9792 9793 9794 9795 9796 9797 9798 9799 9800 9801 9802 9803 9804 9805 9806 9807 9808 9809 9810 9811 9812 9813 9814 9815 9816 9817 9818 9819 9820 9821 9822 9823 9824 9825 9826 9827 9828 9829 9830 9831 9832 9833 9834 9835 9836 9837 9838 9839 9840 9841 9842 9843 9844 9845 9846 9847 9848 9849 9850 9851 9852 9853 9854 9855 9856 9857 9858 9859 9860 9861 9862 9863 9864 9865 9866 9867 9868 9869 9870 9871 9872 9873 9874 9875 9876 9877 9878 9879 9880 9881 9882 9883 9884 9885 9886 9887 9888 9889 9890 9891 9892 9893 9894 9895 9896 9897 9898 9899 9900 9901 9902 9903 9904 9905 9906 9907 9908 9909 9910 9911 9912 9913 9914 9915 9916 9917 9918 9919 9920 9921 9922 9923 9924 9925 9926 9927 9928 9929 9930 9931 9932 9933 9934 9935 9936 9937 9938 9939 9940 9941 9942 9943 9944 9945 9946 9947 9948 9949 9950 9951 9952 9953 9954 9955 9956 9957 9958 9959 9960 9961 9962 9963 9964 9965 9966 9967 9968 9969 9970 9971 9972 9973 9974 9975 9976 9977 9978 9979 9980 9981 9982 9983 9984 9985 9986 9987 9988 9989 9990 9991 9992 9993 9994 9995 9996 9997 9998 9999 10000 10001 10002 10003 10004 10005 10006 10007 10008 10009 10010 10011 10012 10013 10014 10015 10016 10017 10018 10019 10020 10021 10022 10023 10024 10025 10026 10027 10028 10029 10030 10031 10032 10033 10034 10035 10036 10037 10038 10039 10040 10041 10042 10043 10044 10045 10046 10047 10048 10049 10050 10051 10052 10053 10054 10055 10056 10057 10058 10059 10060 10061 10062 10063 10064 10065 10066 10067 10068 10069 10070 10071 10072 10073 10074 10075 10076 10077 10078 10079 10080 10081 10082 10083 10084 10085 10086 10087 10088 10089 10090 10091 10092 10093 10094 10095 10096 10097 10098 10099 10100 10101 10102 10103 10104 10105 10106 10107 10108 10109 10110 10111 10112 10113 10114 10115 10116 10117 10118 10119 10120 10121 10122 10123 10124 10125 10126 10127 10128 10129 10130 10131 10132 10133 10134 10135 10136 10137 10138 10139 10140 10141 10142 10143 10144 10145 10146 10147 10148 10149 10150 10151 10152 10153 10154 10155 10156 10157 10158 10159 10160 10161 10162 10163 10164 10165 10166 10167 10168 10169 10170 10171 10172 10173 10174 10175 10176 10177 10178 10179 10180 10181 10182 10183 10184 10185 10186 10187 10188 10189 10190 10191 10192 10193 10194 10195 10196 10197 10198 10199 10200 10201 10202 10203 10204 10205 10206 10207 10208 10209 10210 10211 10212 10213 10214 10215 10216 10217 10218 10219 10220 10221 10222 10223 10224 10225 10226 10227 10228 10229 10230 10231 10232 10233 10234 10235 10236 10237 10238 10239 10240 10241 10242 10243 10244 10245 10246 10247 10248 10249 10250 10251 10252 10253 10254 10255 10256 10257 10258 10259 10260 10261 10262 10263 10264 10265 10266 10267 10268 10269 10270 10271 10272 10273 10274 10275 10276 10277 10278 10279 10280 10281 10282 10283 10284 10285 10286 10287 10288 10289 10290 10291 10292 10293 10294 10295 10296 10297 10298 10299 10300 10301 10302 10303 10304 10305 10306 10307 10308 10309 10310 10311 10312 10313 10314 10315 10316 10317 10318 10319 10320 10321 10322 10323 10324 10325 10326 10327 10328 10329 10330 10331 10332 10333 10334 10335 10336 10337 10338 10339 10340 10341 10342 10343 10344 10345 10346 10347 10348 10349 10350 10351 10352 10353 10354 10355 10356 10357 10358 10359 10360 10361 10362 10363 10364 10365 10366 10367 10368 10369 10370 10371 10372 10373 10374 10375 10376 10377 10378 10379 10380 10381 10382 10383 10384 10385 10386 10387 10388 10389 10390 10391 10392 10393 10394 10395 10396 10397 10398 10399 10400 10401 10402 10403 10404 10405 10406 10407 10408 10409 10410 10411 10412 10413 10414 10415 10416 10417 10418 10419 10420 10421 10422 10423 10424 10425 10426 10427 10428 10429 10430 10431 10432 10433 10434 10435 10436 10437 10438 10439 10440 10441 10442 10443 10444 10445 10446 10447 10448 10449 10450 10451 10452 10453 10454 10455 10456 10457 10458 10459 10460 10461 10462 10463 10464 10465 10466 10467 10468 10469 10470 10471 10472 10473 10474 10475 10476 10477 10478 10479 10480 10481 10482 10483 10484 10485 10486 10487 10488 10489 10490 10491 10492 10493 10494 10495 10496 10497 10498 10499 10500 10501 10502 10503 10504 10505 10506 10507 10508 10509 10510 10511 10512 10513 10514 10515 10516 10517 10518 10519 10520 10521 10522 10523 10524 10525 10526 10527 10528 10529 10530 10531 10532 10533 10534 10535 10536 10537 10538 10539 10540 10541 10542 10543 10544 10545 10546 10547 10548 10549 10550 10551 10552 10553 10554 10555 10556 10557 10558 10559 10560 10561 10562 10563 10564 10565 10566 10567 10568 10569 10570 10571 10572 10573 10574 10575 10576 10577 10578 10579 10580 10581 10582 10583 10584 10585 10586 10587 10588 10589 10590 10591 10592 10593 10594 10595 10596 10597 10598 10599 10600 10601 10602 10603 10604 10605 10606 10607 10608 10609 10610 10611 10612 10613 10614 10615 10616 10617 10618 10619 10620 10621 10622 10623 10624 10625 10626 10627 10628 10629 10630 10631 10632 10633 10634 10635 10636 10637 10638 10639 10640 10641 10642 10643 10644 10645 10646 10647 10648 10649 10650 10651 10652 10653 10654 10655 10656 10657 10658 10659 10660 10661 10662 10663 10664 10665 10666 10667 10668 10669 10670 10671 10672 10673 10674 10675 10676 10677 10678 10679 10680 10681 10682 10683 10684 10685 10686 10687 10688 10689 10690 10691 10692 10693 10694 10695 10696 10697 10698 10699 10700 10701 10702 10703 10704 10705 10706 10707 10708 10709 10710 10711 10712 10713 10714 10715 10716 10717 10718 10719 10720 10721 10722 10723 10724 10725 10726 10727 10728 10729 10730 10731 10732 10733 10734 10735 10736 10737 10738 10739 10740 10741 10742 10743 10744 10745 10746 10747 10748 10749 10750 10751 10752 10753 10754 10755 10756 10757 10758 10759 10760 10761 10762 10763 10764 10765 10766 10767 10768 10769 10770 10771 10772 10773 10774 10775 10776 10777 10778 10779 10780 10781 10782 10783 10784 10785 10786 10787 10788 10789 10790 10791 10792 10793 10794 10795 10796 10797 10798 10799 10800 10801 10802 10803 10804 10805 10806 10807 10808 10809 10810 10811 10812 10813 10814 10815 10816 10817 10818 10819 10820 10821 10822 10823 10824 10825 10826 10827 10828 10829 10830 10831 10832 10833 10834 10835 10836 10837 10838 10839 10840 10841 10842 10843 10844 10845 10846 10847 10848 10849 10850 10851 10852 10853 10854 10855 10856 10857 10858 10859 10860 10861 10862 10863 10864 10865 10866 10867 10868 10869 10870 10871 10872 10873 10874 10875 10876 10877 10878 10879 10880 10881 10882 10883 10884 10885 10886 10887 10888 10889 10890 10891 10892 10893 10894 10895 10896 10897 10898 10899 10900 10901 10902 10903 10904 10905 10906 10907 10908 10909 10910 10911 10912 10913 10914 10915 10916 10917 10918 10919 10920 10921 10922 10923 10924 10925 10926 10927 10928 10929 10930 10931 10932 10933 10934 10935 10936 10937 10938 10939 10940 10941 10942 10943 10944 10945 10946 10947 10948 10949 10950 10951 10952 10953 10954 10955 10956 10957 10958 10959 10960 10961 10962 10963 10964 10965 10966 10967 10968 10969 10970 10971 10972 10973 10974 10975 10976 10977 10978 10979 10980 10981 10982 10983 10984 10985 10986 10987 10988 10989 10990 10991 10992 10993 10994 10995 10996 10997 10998 10999 11000 11001 11002 11003 11004 11005 11006 11007 11008 11009 11010 11011 11012 11013 11014 11015 11016 11017 11018 11019 11020 11021 11022 11023 11024 11025 11026 11027 11028 11029 11030 11031 11032 11033 11034 11035 11036 11037 11038 11039 11040 11041 11042 11043 11044 11045 11046 11047 11048 11049 11050 11051 11052 11053 11054 11055 11056 11057 11058 11059 11060 11061 11062 11063 11064 11065 11066 11067 11068 11069 11070 11071 11072 11073 11074 11075 11076 11077 11078 11079 11080 11081 11082 11083 11084 11085 11086 11087 11088 11089 11090 11091 11092 11093 11094 11095 11096 11097 11098 11099 11100 11101 11102 11103 11104 11105 11106 11107 11108 11109 11110 11111 11112 11113 11114 11115 11116 11117 11118 11119 11120 11121 11122 11123 11124 11125 11126 11127 11128 11129 11130 11131 11132 11133 11134 11135 11136 11137 11138 11139 11140 11141 11142 11143 11144 11145 11146 11147 11148 11149 11150 11151 11152 11153 11154 11155 11156 11157 11158 11159 11160 11161 11162 11163 11164 11165 11166 11167 11168 11169 11170 11171 11172 11173 11174 11175 11176 11177 11178 11179 11180 11181 11182 11183 11184 11185 11186 11187 11188 11189 11190 11191 11192 11193 11194 11195 11196 11197 11198 11199 11200 11201 11202 11203 11204 11205 11206 11207 11208 11209 11210 11211 11212 11213 11214 11215 11216 11217 11218 11219 11220 11221 11222 11223 11224 11225 11226 11227 11228 11229 11230 11231 11232 11233 11234 11235 11236 11237 11238 11239 11240 11241 11242 11243 11244 11245 11246 11247 11248 11249 11250 11251 11252 11253 11254 11255 11256 11257 11258 11259 11260 11261 11262 11263 11264 11265 11266 11267 11268 11269 11270 11271 11272 11273 11274 11275 11276 11277 11278 11279 11280 11281 11282 11283 11284 11285 11286 11287 11288 11289 11290 11291 11292 11293 11294 11295 11296 11297 11298 11299 11300 11301 11302 11303 11304 11305 11306 11307 11308 11309 11310 11311 11312 11313 11314 11315 11316 11317 11318 11319 11320 11321 11322 11323 11324 11325 11326 11327 11328 11329 11330 11331 11332 11333 11334 11335 11336 11337 11338 11339 11340 11341 11342 11343 11344 11345 11346 11347 11348 11349 11350 11351 11352 11353 11354 11355 11356 11357 11358 11359 11360 11361 11362 11363 11364 11365 11366 11367 11368 11369 11370 11371 11372 11373 11374 11375 11376 11377 11378 11379 11380 11381 11382 11383 11384 11385 11386 11387 11388 11389 11390 11391 11392 11393 11394 11395 11396 11397 11398 11399 11400 11401 11402 11403 11404 11405 11406 11407 11408 11409 11410 11411 11412 11413 11414 11415 11416 11417 11418 11419 11420 11421 11422 11423 11424 11425 11426 11427 11428 11429 11430 11431 11432 11433 11434 11435 11436 11437 11438 11439 11440 11441 11442 11443 11444 11445 11446 11447 11448 11449 11450 11451 11452 11453 11454 11455 11456 11457 11458 11459 11460 11461 11462 11463 11464 11465 11466 11467 11468 11469 11470 11471 11472 11473 11474 11475 11476 11477 11478 11479 11480 11481 11482 11483 11484 11485 11486 11487 11488 11489 11490 11491 11492 11493 11494 11495 11496 11497 11498 11499 11500 11501 11502 11503 11504 11505 11506 11507 11508 11509 11510 11511 11512 11513 11514 11515 11516 11517 11518 11519 11520 11521 11522 11523 11524 11525 11526 11527 11528 11529 11530 11531 11532 11533 11534 11535 11536 11537 11538 11539 11540 11541 11542 11543 11544 11545 11546 11547 11548 11549 11550 11551 11552 11553 11554 11555 11556 11557 11558 11559 11560 11561 11562 11563 11564 11565 11566 11567 11568 11569 11570 11571 11572 11573 11574 11575 11576 11577 11578 11579 11580 11581 11582 11583 11584 11585 11586 11587 11588 11589 11590 11591 11592 11593 11594 11595 11596 11597 11598 11599 11600 11601 11602 11603 11604 11605 11606 11607 11608 11609 11610 11611 11612 11613 11614 11615 11616 11617 11618 11619 11620 11621 11622 11623 11624 11625 11626 11627 11628 11629 11630 11631 11632 11633 11634 11635 11636 11637 11638 11639 11640 11641 11642 11643 11644 11645 11646 11647 11648 11649 11650 11651 11652 11653 11654 11655 11656 11657 11658 11659 11660 11661 11662 11663 11664 11665 11666 11667 11668 11669 11670 11671 11672 11673 11674 11675 11676 11677 11678 11679 11680 11681 11682 11683 11684 11685 11686 11687 11688 11689 11690 11691 11692 11693 11694 11695 11696 11697 11698 11699 11700 11701 11702 11703 11704 11705 11706 11707 11708 11709 11710 11711 11712 11713 11714 11715 11716 11717 11718 11719 11720 11721 11722 11723 11724 11725 11726 11727 11728 11729 11730 11731 11732 11733 11734 11735 11736 11737 11738 11739 11740 11741 11742 11743 11744 11745 11746 11747 11748 11749 11750 11751 11752 11753 11754 11755 11756 11757 11758 11759 11760 11761 11762 11763 11764 11765 11766 11767 11768 11769 11770 11771 11772 11773 11774 11775 11776 11777 11778 11779 11780 11781 11782 11783 11784 11785 11786 11787 11788 11789 11790 11791 11792 11793 11794 11795 11796 11797 11798 11799 11800 11801 11802 11803 11804 11805 11806 11807 11808 11809 11810 11811 11812 11813 11814 11815 11816 11817 11818 11819 11820 11821 11822 11823 11824 11825 11826 11827 11828 11829 11830 11831 11832 11833 11834 11835 11836 11837 11838 11839 11840 11841 11842 11843 11844 11845 11846 11847 11848 11849 11850 11851 11852 11853 11854 11855 11856 11857 11858 11859 11860 11861 11862 11863 11864 11865 11866 11867 11868 11869 11870 11871 11872 11873 11874 11875 11876 11877 11878 11879 11880 11881 11882 11883 11884 11885 11886 11887 11888 11889 11890 11891 11892 11893 11894 11895 11896 11897 11898 11899 11900 11901 11902 11903 11904 11905 11906 11907 11908 11909 11910 11911 11912 11913 11914 11915 11916 11917 11918 11919 11920 11921 11922 11923 11924 11925 11926 11927 11928 11929 11930 11931 11932 11933 11934 11935 11936 11937 11938 11939 11940 11941 11942 11943 11944 11945 11946 11947 11948 11949 11950 11951 11952 11953 11954 11955 11956 11957 11958 11959 11960 11961 11962 11963 11964 11965 11966 11967 11968 11969 11970 11971 11972 11973 11974 11975 11976 11977 11978 11979 11980 11981 11982 11983 11984 11985 11986 11987 11988 11989 11990 11991 11992 11993 11994 11995 11996 11997 11998 11999 12000 12001 12002 12003 12004 12005 12006 12007 12008 12009 12010 12011 12012 12013 12014 12015 12016 12017 12018 12019 12020 12021 12022 12023 12024 12025 12026 12027 12028 12029 12030 12031 12032 12033 12034 12035 12036 12037 12038 12039 12040 12041 12042 12043 12044 12045 12046 12047 12048 12049 12050 12051 12052 12053 12054 12055 12056 12057 12058 12059 12060 12061 12062 12063 12064 12065 12066 12067 12068 12069 12070 12071 12072 12073 12074 12075 12076 12077 12078 12079 12080 12081 12082 12083 12084 12085 12086 12087 12088 12089 12090 12091 12092 12093 12094 12095 12096 12097 12098 12099 12100 12101 12102 12103 12104 12105 12106 12107 12108 12109 12110 12111 12112 12113 12114 12115 12116 12117 12118 12119 12120 12121 12122 12123 12124 12125 12126 12127 12128 12129 12130 12131 12132 12133 12134 12135 12136 12137 12138 12139 12140 12141 12142 12143 12144 12145 12146 12147 12148 12149 12150 12151 12152 12153 12154 12155 12156 12157 12158 12159 12160 12161 12162 12163 12164 12165 12166 12167 12168 12169 12170 12171 12172 12173 12174 12175 12176 12177 12178 12179 12180 12181 12182 12183 12184 12185 12186 12187 12188 12189 12190 12191 12192 12193 12194 12195 12196 12197 12198 12199 12200 12201 12202 12203 12204 12205 12206 12207 12208 12209 12210 12211 12212 12213 12214 12215 12216 12217 12218 12219 12220 12221 12222 12223 12224 12225 12226 12227 12228 12229 12230 12231 12232 12233 12234 12235 12236 12237 12238 12239 12240 12241 12242 12243 12244 12245 12246 12247 12248 12249 12250 12251 12252 12253 12254 12255 12256 12257 12258 12259 12260 12261 12262 12263 12264 12265 12266 12267 12268 12269 12270 12271 12272 12273 12274 12275 12276 12277 12278 12279 12280 12281 12282 12283 12284 12285 12286 12287 12288 12289 12290 12291 12292 12293 12294 12295 12296 12297 12298 12299 12300 12301 12302 12303 12304 12305 12306 12307 12308 12309 12310 12311 12312 12313 12314 12315 12316 12317 12318 12319 12320 12321 12322 12323 12324 12325 12326 12327 12328 12329 12330 12331 12332 12333 12334 12335 12336 12337 12338 12339 12340 12341 12342 12343 12344 12345 12346 12347 12348 12349 12350 12351 12352 12353 12354 12355 12356 12357 12358 12359 12360 12361 12362 12363 12364 12365 12366 12367 12368 12369 12370 12371 12372 12373 12374 12375 12376 12377 12378 12379 12380 12381 12382 12383 12384 12385 12386 12387 12388 12389 12390 12391 12392 12393 12394 12395 12396 12397 12398 12399 12400 12401 12402 12403 12404 12405 12406 12407 12408 12409 12410 12411 12412 12413 12414 12415 12416 12417 12418 12419 12420 12421 12422 12423 12424 12425 12426 12427 12428 12429 12430 12431 12432 12433 12434 12435 12436 12437 12438 12439 12440 12441 12442 12443 12444 12445 12446 12447 12448 12449 12450 12451 12452 12453 12454 12455 12456 12457 12458 12459 12460 12461 12462 12463 12464 12465 12466 12467 12468 12469 12470 12471 12472 12473 12474 12475 12476 12477 12478 12479 12480 12481 12482 12483 12484 12485 12486 12487 12488 12489 12490 12491 12492 12493 12494 12495 12496 12497 12498 12499 12500 12501 12502 12503 12504 12505 12506 12507 12508 12509 12510 12511 12512 12513 12514 12515 12516 12517 12518 12519 12520 12521 12522 12523 12524 12525 12526 12527 12528 12529 12530 12531 12532 12533 12534 12535 12536 12537 12538 12539 12540 12541 12542 12543 12544 12545 12546 12547 12548 12549 12550 12551 12552 12553 12554 12555 12556 12557 12558 12559 12560 12561 12562 12563 12564 12565 12566 12567 12568 12569 12570 12571 12572 12573 12574 12575 12576 12577 12578 12579 12580 12581 12582 12583 12584 12585 12586 12587 12588 12589 12590 12591 12592 12593 12594 12595 12596 12597 12598 12599 12600 12601 12602 12603 12604 12605 12606 12607 12608 12609 12610 12611 12612 12613 12614 12615 12616 12617 12618 12619 12620 12621 12622 12623 12624 12625 12626 12627 12628 12629 12630 12631 12632 12633 12634 12635 12636 12637 12638 12639 12640 12641 12642 12643 12644 12645 12646 12647 12648 12649 12650 12651 12652 12653 12654 12655 12656 12657 12658 12659 12660 12661 12662 12663 12664 12665 12666 12667 12668 12669 12670 12671 12672 12673 12674 12675 12676 12677 12678 12679 12680 12681 12682 12683 12684 12685 12686 12687 12688 12689 12690 12691 12692 12693 12694 12695 12696 12697 12698 12699 12700 12701 12702 12703 12704 12705 12706 12707 12708 12709 12710 12711 12712 12713 12714 12715 12716 12717 12718 12719 12720 12721 12722 12723 12724 12725 12726 12727 12728 12729 12730 12731 12732 12733 12734 12735 12736 12737 12738 12739 12740 12741 12742 12743 12744 12745 12746 12747 12748 12749 12750 12751 12752 12753 12754 12755 12756 12757 12758 12759 12760 12761 12762 12763 12764 12765 12766 12767 12768 12769 12770 12771 12772 12773 12774 12775 12776 12777 12778 12779 12780 12781 12782 12783 12784 12785 12786 12787 12788 12789 12790 12791 12792 12793 12794 12795 12796 12797 12798 12799 12800 12801 12802 12803 12804 12805 12806 12807 12808 12809 12810 12811 12812 12813 12814 12815 12816 12817 12818 12819 12820 12821 12822 12823 12824 12825 12826 12827 12828 12829 12830 12831 12832 12833 12834 12835 12836 12837 12838 12839 12840 12841 12842 12843 12844 12845 12846 12847 12848 12849 12850 12851 12852 12853 12854 12855 12856 12857 12858 12859 12860 12861 12862 12863 12864 12865 12866 12867 12868 12869 12870 12871 12872 12873 12874 12875 12876 12877 12878 12879 12880 12881 12882 12883 12884 12885 12886 12887 12888 12889 12890 12891 12892 12893 12894 12895 12896 12897 12898 12899 12900 12901 12902 12903 12904 12905 12906 12907 12908 12909 12910 12911 12912 12913 12914 12915 12916 12917 12918 12919 12920 12921 12922 12923 12924 12925 12926 12927 12928 12929 12930 12931 12932 12933 12934 12935 12936 12937 12938 12939 12940 12941 12942 12943 12944 12945 12946 12947 12948 12949 12950 12951 12952 12953 12954 12955 12956 12957 12958 12959 12960 12961 12962 12963 12964 12965 12966 12967 12968 12969 12970 12971 12972 12973 12974 12975 12976 12977 12978 12979 12980 12981 12982 12983 12984 12985 12986 12987 12988 12989 12990 12991 12992 12993 12994 12995 12996 12997 12998 12999 13000 13001 13002 13003 13004 13005 13006 13007 13008 13009 13010 13011 13012 13013 13014 13015 13016 13017 13018 13019 13020 13021 13022 13023 13024 13025 13026 13027 13028 13029 13030 13031 13032 13033 13034 13035 13036 13037 13038 13039 13040 13041 13042 13043 13044 13045 13046 13047 13048 13049 13050 13051 13052 13053 13054 13055 13056 13057 13058 13059 13060 13061 13062 13063 13064 13065 13066 13067 13068 13069 13070 13071 13072 13073 13074 13075 13076 13077 13078 13079 13080 13081 13082 13083 13084 13085 13086 13087 13088 13089 13090 13091 13092 13093 13094 13095 13096 13097 13098 13099 13100 13101 13102 13103 13104 13105 13106 13107 13108 13109 13110 13111 13112 13113 13114 13115 13116 13117 13118 13119 13120 13121 13122 13123 13124 13125 13126 13127 13128 13129 13130 13131 13132 13133 13134 13135 13136 13137 13138 13139 13140 13141 13142 13143 13144 13145 13146 13147 13148 13149 13150 13151 13152 13153 13154 13155 13156 13157 13158 13159 13160 13161 13162 13163 13164 13165 13166 13167 13168 13169 13170 13171 13172 13173 13174 13175 13176 13177 13178 13179 13180 13181 13182 13183 13184 13185 13186 13187 13188 13189 13190 13191 13192 13193 13194 13195 13196 13197 13198 13199 13200 13201 13202 13203 13204 13205 13206 13207 13208 13209 13210 13211 13212 13213 13214 13215 13216 13217 13218 13219 13220 13221 13222 13223 13224 13225 13226 13227 13228 13229 13230 13231 13232 13233 13234 13235 13236 13237 13238 13239 13240 13241 13242 13243 13244 13245 13246 13247 13248 13249 13250 13251 13252 13253 13254 13255 13256 13257 13258 13259 13260 13261 13262 13263 13264 13265 13266 13267 13268 13269 13270 13271 13272 13273 13274 13275 13276 13277 13278 13279 13280 13281 13282 13283 13284 13285 13286 13287 13288 13289 13290 13291 13292 13293 13294 13295 13296 13297 13298 13299 13300 13301 13302 13303 13304 13305 13306 13307 13308 13309 13310 13311 13312 13313 13314 13315 13316 13317 13318 13319 13320 13321 13322 13323 13324 13325 13326 13327 13328 13329 13330 13331 13332 13333 13334 13335 13336 13337 13338 13339 13340 13341 13342 13343 13344 13345 13346 13347 13348 13349 13350 13351 13352 13353 13354 13355 13356 13357 13358 13359 13360 13361 13362 13363 13364 13365 13366 13367 13368 13369 13370 13371 13372 13373 13374 13375 13376 13377 13378 13379 13380 13381 13382 13383 13384 13385 13386 13387 13388 13389 13390 13391 13392 13393 13394 13395 13396 13397 13398 13399 13400 13401 13402 13403 13404 13405 13406 13407 13408 13409 13410 13411 13412 13413 13414 13415 13416 13417 13418 13419 13420 13421 13422 13423 13424 13425 13426 13427 13428 13429 13430 13431 13432 13433 13434 13435 13436 13437 13438 13439 13440 13441 13442 13443 13444 13445 13446 13447 13448 13449 13450 13451 13452 13453 13454 13455 13456 13457 13458 13459 13460 13461 13462 13463 13464 13465 13466 13467 13468 13469 13470 13471 13472 13473 13474 13475 13476 13477 13478 13479 13480 13481 13482 13483 13484 13485 13486 13487 13488 13489 13490 13491 13492 13493 13494 13495 13496 13497 13498 13499 13500 13501 13502 13503 13504 13505 13506 13507 13508 13509 13510 13511 13512 13513 13514 13515 13516 13517 13518 13519 13520 13521 13522 13523 13524 13525 13526 13527 13528 13529 13530 13531 13532 13533 13534 13535 13536 13537 13538 13539 13540 13541 13542 13543 13544 13545 13546 13547 13548 13549 13550 13551 13552 13553 13554 13555 13556 13557 13558 13559 13560 13561 13562 13563 13564 13565 13566 13567 13568 13569 13570 13571 13572 13573 13574 13575 13576 13577 13578 13579 13580 13581 13582 13583 13584 13585 13586 13587 13588 13589 13590 13591 13592 13593 13594 13595 13596 13597 13598 13599 13600 13601 13602 13603 13604 13605 13606 13607 13608 13609 13610 13611 13612 13613 13614 13615 13616 13617 13618 13619 13620 13621 13622 13623 13624 13625 13626 13627 13628 13629 13630 13631 13632 13633 13634 13635 13636 13637 13638 13639 13640 13641 13642 13643 13644 13645 13646 13647 13648 13649 13650 13651 13652 13653 13654 13655 13656 13657 13658 13659 13660 13661 13662 13663 13664 13665 13666 13667 13668 13669 13670 13671 13672 13673 13674 13675 13676 13677 13678 13679 13680 13681 13682 13683 13684 13685 13686 13687 13688 13689 13690 13691 13692 13693 13694 13695 13696 13697 13698 13699 13700 13701 13702 13703 13704 13705 13706 13707 13708 13709 13710 13711 13712 13713 13714 13715 13716 13717 13718 13719 13720 13721 13722 13723 13724 13725 13726 13727 13728 13729 13730 13731 13732 13733 13734 13735 13736 13737 13738 13739 13740 13741 13742 13743 13744 13745 13746 13747 13748 13749 13750 13751 13752 13753 13754 13755 13756 13757 13758 13759 13760 13761 13762 13763 13764 13765 13766 13767 13768 13769 13770 13771 13772 13773 13774 13775 13776 13777 13778 13779 13780 13781 13782 13783 13784 13785 13786 13787 13788 13789 13790 13791 13792 13793 13794 13795 13796 13797 13798 13799 13800 13801 13802 13803 13804 13805 13806 13807 13808 13809 13810 13811 13812 13813 13814 13815 13816 13817 13818 13819 13820 13821 13822 13823 13824 13825 13826 13827 13828 13829 13830 13831 13832 13833 13834 13835 13836 13837 13838 13839 13840 13841 13842 13843 13844 13845 13846 13847 13848 13849 13850 13851 13852 13853 13854 13855 13856 13857 13858 13859 13860 13861 13862 13863 13864 13865 13866 13867 13868 13869 13870 13871 13872 13873 13874 13875 13876 13877 13878 13879 13880 13881 13882 13883 13884 13885 13886 13887 13888 13889 13890 13891 13892 13893 13894 13895 13896 13897 13898 13899 13900 13901 13902 13903 13904 13905 13906 13907 13908 13909 13910 13911 13912 13913 13914 13915 13916 13917 13918 13919 13920 13921 13922 13923 13924 13925 13926 13927 13928 13929 13930 13931 13932 13933 13934 13935 13936 13937 13938 13939 13940 13941 13942 13943 13944 13945 13946 13947 13948 13949 13950 13951 13952 13953 13954 13955 13956 13957 13958 13959 13960 13961 13962 13963 13964 13965 13966 13967 13968 13969 13970 13971 13972 13973 13974 13975 13976 13977 13978 13979 13980 13981 13982 13983 13984 13985 13986 13987 13988 13989 13990 13991 13992 13993 13994 13995 13996 13997 13998 13999 14000 14001 14002 14003 14004 14005 14006 14007 14008 14009 14010 14011 14012 14013 14014 14015 14016 14017 14018 14019 14020 14021 14022 14023 14024 14025 14026 14027 14028 14029 14030 14031 14032 14033 14034 14035 14036 14037 14038 14039 14040 14041 14042 14043 14044 14045 14046 14047 14048 14049 14050 14051 14052 14053 14054 14055 14056 14057 14058 14059 14060 14061 14062 14063 14064 14065 14066 14067 14068 14069 14070 14071 14072 14073 14074 14075 14076 14077 14078 14079 14080 14081 14082 14083 14084 14085 14086 14087 14088 14089 14090 14091 14092 14093 14094 14095 14096 14097 14098 14099 14100 14101 14102 14103 14104 14105 14106 14107 14108 14109 14110 14111 14112 14113 14114 14115 14116 14117 14118 14119 14120 14121 14122 14123 14124 14125 14126 14127 14128 14129 14130 14131 14132 14133 14134 14135 14136 14137 14138 14139 14140 14141 14142 14143 14144 14145 14146 14147 14148 14149 14150 14151 14152 14153 14154 14155 14156 14157 14158 14159 14160 14161 14162 14163 14164 14165 14166 14167 14168 14169 14170 14171 14172 14173 14174 14175 14176 14177 14178 14179 14180 14181 14182 14183 14184 14185 14186 14187 14188 14189 14190 14191 14192 14193 14194 14195 14196 14197 14198 14199 14200 14201 14202 14203 14204 14205 14206 14207 14208 14209 14210 14211 14212 14213 14214 14215 14216 14217 14218 14219 14220 14221 14222 14223 14224 14225 14226 14227 14228 14229 14230 14231 14232 14233 14234 14235 14236 14237 14238 14239 14240 14241 14242 14243 14244 14245 14246 14247 14248 14249 14250 14251 14252 14253 14254 14255 14256 14257 14258 14259 14260 14261 14262 14263 14264 14265 14266 14267 14268 14269 14270 14271 14272 14273 14274 14275 14276 14277 14278 14279 14280 14281 14282 14283 14284 14285 14286 14287 14288 14289 14290 14291 14292 14293 14294 14295 14296 14297 14298 14299 14300 14301 14302 14303 14304 14305 14306 14307 14308 14309 14310 14311 14312 14313 14314 14315 14316 14317 14318 14319 14320 14321 14322 14323 14324 14325 14326 14327 14328 14329 14330 14331 14332 14333 14334 14335 14336 14337 14338 14339 14340 14341 14342 14343 14344 14345 14346 14347 14348 14349 14350 14351 14352 14353 14354 14355 14356 14357 14358 14359 14360 14361 14362 14363 14364 14365 14366 14367 14368 14369 14370 14371 14372 14373 14374 14375 14376 14377 14378 14379 14380 14381 14382 14383 14384 14385 14386 14387 14388 14389 14390 14391 14392 14393 14394 14395 14396 14397 14398 14399 14400 14401 14402 14403 14404 14405 14406 14407 14408 14409 14410 14411 14412 14413 14414 14415 14416 14417 14418 14419 14420 14421 14422 14423 14424 14425 14426 14427 14428 14429 14430 14431 14432 14433 14434 14435 14436 14437 14438 14439 14440 14441 14442 14443 14444 14445 14446 14447 14448 14449 14450 14451 14452 14453 14454 14455 14456 14457 14458 14459 14460 14461 14462 14463 14464 14465 14466 14467 14468 14469 14470 14471 14472 14473 14474 14475 14476 14477 14478 14479 14480 14481 14482 14483 14484 14485 14486 14487 14488 14489 14490 14491 14492 14493 14494 14495 14496 14497 14498 14499 14500 14501 14502 14503 14504 14505 14506 14507 14508 14509 14510 14511 14512 14513 14514 14515 14516 14517 14518 14519 14520 14521 14522 14523 14524 14525 14526 14527 14528 14529 14530 14531 14532 14533 14534 14535 14536 14537 14538 14539 14540 14541 14542 14543 14544 14545 14546 14547 14548 14549 14550 14551 14552 14553 14554 14555 14556 14557 14558 14559 14560 14561 14562 14563 14564 14565 14566 14567 14568 14569 14570 14571 14572 14573 14574 14575 14576 14577 14578 14579 14580 14581 14582 14583 14584 14585 14586 14587 14588 14589 14590 14591 14592 14593 14594 14595 14596 14597 14598 14599 14600 14601 14602 14603 14604 14605 14606 14607 14608 14609 14610 14611 14612 14613 14614 14615 14616 14617 14618 14619 14620 14621 14622 14623 14624 14625 14626 14627 14628 14629 14630 14631 14632 14633 14634 14635 14636 14637 14638 14639 14640 14641 14642 14643 14644 14645 14646 14647 14648 14649 14650 14651 14652 14653 14654 14655 14656 14657 14658 14659 14660 14661 14662 14663 14664 14665 14666 14667 14668 14669 14670 14671 14672 14673 14674 14675 14676 14677 14678 14679 14680 14681 14682 14683 14684 14685 14686 14687 14688 14689 14690 14691 14692 14693 14694 14695 14696 14697 14698 14699 14700 14701 14702 14703 14704 14705 14706 14707 14708 14709 14710 14711 14712 14713 14714 14715 14716 14717 14718 14719 14720 14721 14722 14723 14724 14725 14726 14727 14728 14729 14730 14731 14732 14733 14734 14735 14736 14737 14738 14739 14740 14741 14742 14743 14744 14745 14746 14747 14748 14749 14750 14751 14752 14753 14754 14755 14756 14757 14758 14759 14760 14761 14762 14763 14764 14765 14766 14767 14768 14769 14770 14771 14772 14773 14774 14775 14776 14777 14778 14779 14780 14781 14782 14783 14784 14785 14786 14787 14788 14789 14790 14791 14792 14793 14794 14795 14796 14797 14798 14799 14800 14801 14802 14803 14804 14805 14806 14807 14808 14809 14810 14811 14812 14813 14814 14815 14816 14817 14818 14819 14820 14821 14822 14823 14824 14825 14826 14827 14828 14829 14830 14831 14832 14833 14834 14835 14836 14837 14838 14839 14840 14841 14842 14843 14844 14845 14846 14847 14848 14849 14850 14851 14852 14853 14854 14855 14856 14857 14858 14859 14860 14861 14862 14863 14864 14865 14866 14867 14868 14869 14870 14871 14872 14873 14874 14875 14876 14877 14878 14879 14880 14881 14882 14883 14884 14885 14886 14887 14888 14889 14890 14891 14892 14893 14894 14895 14896 14897 14898 14899 14900 14901 14902 14903 14904 14905 14906 14907 14908 14909 14910 14911 14912 14913 14914 14915 14916 14917 14918 14919 14920 14921 14922 14923 14924 14925 14926 14927 14928 14929 14930 14931 14932 14933 14934 14935 14936 14937 14938 14939 14940 14941 14942 14943 14944 14945 14946 14947 14948 14949 14950 14951 14952 14953 14954 14955 14956 14957 14958 14959 14960 14961 14962 14963 14964 14965 14966 14967 14968 14969 14970 14971 14972 14973 14974 14975 14976 14977 14978 14979 14980 14981 14982 14983 14984 14985 14986 14987 14988 14989 14990 14991 14992 14993 14994 14995 14996 14997 14998 14999 15000 15001 15002 15003 15004 15005 15006 15007 15008 15009 15010 15011 15012 15013 15014 15015 15016 15017 15018 15019 15020 15021 15022 15023 15024 15025 15026 15027 15028 15029 15030 15031 15032 15033 15034 15035 15036 15037 15038 15039 15040 15041 15042 15043 15044 15045 15046 15047 15048 15049 15050 15051 15052 15053 15054 15055 15056 15057 15058 15059 15060 15061 15062 15063 15064 15065 15066 15067 15068 15069 15070 15071 15072 15073 15074 15075 15076 15077 15078 15079 15080 15081 15082 15083 15084 15085 15086 15087 15088 15089 15090 15091 15092 15093 15094 15095 15096 15097 15098 15099 15100 15101 15102 15103 15104 15105 15106 15107 15108 15109 15110 15111 15112 15113 15114 15115 15116 15117 15118 15119 15120 15121 15122 15123 15124 15125 15126 15127 15128 15129 15130 15131 15132 15133 15134 15135 15136 15137 15138 15139 15140 15141 15142 15143 15144 15145 15146 15147 15148 15149 15150 15151 15152 15153 15154 15155 15156 15157 15158 15159 15160 15161 15162 15163 15164 15165 15166 15167 15168 15169 15170 15171 15172 15173 15174 15175 15176 15177 15178 15179 15180 15181 15182 15183 15184 15185 15186 15187 15188 15189 15190 15191 15192 15193 15194 15195 15196 15197 15198 15199 15200 15201 15202 15203 15204 15205 15206 15207 15208 15209 15210 15211 15212 15213 15214 15215 15216 15217 15218 15219 15220 15221 15222 15223 15224 15225 15226 15227 15228 15229 15230 15231 15232 15233 15234 15235 15236 15237 15238 15239 15240 15241 15242 15243 15244 15245 15246 15247 15248 15249 15250 15251 15252 15253 15254 15255 15256 15257 15258 15259 15260 15261 15262 15263 15264 15265 15266 15267 15268 15269 15270 15271 15272 15273 15274 15275 15276 15277 15278 15279 15280 15281 15282 15283 15284 15285 15286 15287 15288 15289 15290 15291 15292 15293 15294 15295 15296 15297 15298 15299 15300 15301 15302 15303 15304 15305 15306 15307 15308 15309 15310 15311 15312 15313 15314 15315 15316 15317 15318 15319 15320 15321 15322 15323 15324 15325 15326 15327 15328 15329 15330 15331 15332 15333 15334 15335 15336 15337 15338 15339 15340 15341 15342 15343 15344 15345 15346 15347 15348 15349 15350 15351 15352 15353 15354 15355 15356 15357 15358 15359 15360 15361 15362 15363 15364 15365 15366 15367 15368 15369 15370 15371 15372 15373 15374 15375 15376 15377 15378 15379 15380 15381 15382 15383 15384 15385 15386 15387 15388 15389 15390 15391 15392 15393 15394 15395 15396 15397 15398 15399 15400 15401 15402 15403 15404 15405 15406 15407 15408 15409 15410 15411 15412 15413 15414 15415 15416 15417 15418 15419 15420 15421 15422 15423 15424 15425 15426 15427 15428 15429 15430 15431 15432 15433 15434 15435 15436 15437 15438 15439 15440 15441 15442 15443 15444 15445 15446 15447 15448 15449 15450 15451 15452 15453 15454 15455 15456 15457 15458 15459 15460 15461 15462 15463 15464 15465 15466 15467 15468 15469 15470 15471 15472 15473 15474 15475 15476 15477 15478 15479 15480 15481 15482 15483 15484 15485 15486 15487 15488 15489 15490 15491 15492 15493 15494 15495 15496 15497 15498 15499 15500 15501 15502 15503 15504 15505 15506 15507 15508 15509 15510 15511 15512 15513 15514 15515 15516 15517 15518 15519 15520 15521 15522 15523 15524 15525 15526 15527 15528 15529 15530 15531 15532 15533 15534 15535 15536 15537 15538 15539 15540 15541 15542 15543 15544 15545 15546 15547 15548 15549 15550 15551 15552 15553 15554 15555 15556 15557 15558 15559 15560 15561 15562 15563 15564 15565 15566 15567 15568 15569 15570 15571 15572 15573 15574 15575 15576 15577 15578 15579 15580 15581 15582 15583 15584 15585 15586 15587 15588 15589 15590 15591 15592 15593 15594 15595 15596 15597 15598 15599 15600 15601 15602 15603 15604 15605 15606 15607 15608 15609 15610 15611 15612 15613 15614 15615 15616 15617 15618 15619 15620 15621 15622 15623 15624 15625 15626 15627 15628 15629 15630 15631 15632 15633 15634 15635 15636 15637 15638 15639 15640 15641 15642 15643 15644 15645 15646 15647 15648 15649 15650 15651 15652 15653 15654 15655 15656 15657 15658 15659 15660 15661 15662 15663 15664 15665 15666 15667 15668 15669 15670 15671 15672 15673 15674 15675 15676 15677 15678 15679 15680 15681 15682 15683 15684 15685 15686 15687 15688 15689 15690 15691 15692 15693 15694 15695 15696 15697 15698 15699 15700 15701 15702 15703 15704 15705 15706 15707 15708 15709 15710 15711 15712 15713 15714 15715 15716 15717 15718 15719 15720 15721 15722 15723 15724 15725 15726 15727 15728 15729 15730 15731 15732 15733 15734 15735 15736 15737 15738 15739 15740 15741 15742 15743 15744 15745 15746 15747 15748 15749 15750 15751 15752 15753 15754 15755 15756 15757 15758 15759 15760 15761 15762 15763 15764 15765 15766 15767 15768 15769 15770 15771 15772 15773 15774 15775 15776 15777 15778 15779 15780 15781 15782 15783 15784 15785 15786 15787 15788 15789 15790 15791 15792 15793 15794 15795 15796 15797 15798 15799 15800 15801 15802 15803 15804 15805 15806 15807 15808 15809 15810 15811 15812 15813 15814 15815 15816 15817 15818 15819 15820 15821 15822 15823 15824 15825 15826 15827 15828 15829 15830 15831 15832 15833 15834 15835 15836 15837 15838 15839 15840 15841 15842 15843 15844 15845 15846 15847 15848 15849 15850 15851 15852 15853 15854 15855 15856 15857 15858 15859 15860 15861 15862 15863 15864 15865 15866 15867 15868 15869 15870 15871 15872 15873 15874 15875 15876 15877 15878 15879 15880 15881 15882 15883 15884 15885 15886 15887 15888 15889 15890 15891 15892 15893 15894 15895 15896 15897 15898 15899 15900 15901 15902 15903 15904 15905 15906 15907 15908 15909 15910 15911 15912 15913 15914 15915 15916 15917 15918 15919 15920 15921 15922 15923 15924 15925 15926 15927 15928 15929 15930 15931 15932 15933 15934 15935 15936 15937 15938 15939 15940 15941 15942 15943 15944 15945 15946 15947 15948 15949 15950 15951 15952 15953 15954 15955 15956 15957 15958 15959 15960 15961 15962 15963 15964 15965 15966 15967 15968 15969 15970 15971 15972 15973 15974 15975 15976 15977 15978 15979 15980 15981 15982 15983 15984 15985 15986 15987 15988 15989 15990 15991 15992 15993 15994 15995 15996 15997 15998 15999 16000 16001 16002 16003 16004 16005 16006 16007 16008 16009 16010 16011 16012 16013 16014 16015 16016 16017 16018 16019 16020 16021 16022 16023 16024 16025 16026 16027 16028 16029 16030 16031 16032 16033 16034 16035 16036 16037 16038 16039 16040 16041 16042 16043 16044 16045 16046 16047 16048 16049 16050 16051 16052 16053 16054 16055 16056 16057 16058 16059 16060 16061 16062 16063 16064 16065 16066 16067 16068 16069 16070 16071 16072 16073 16074 16075 16076 16077 16078 16079 16080 16081 16082 16083 16084 16085 16086 16087 16088 16089 16090 16091 16092 16093 16094 16095 16096 16097 16098 16099 16100 16101 16102 16103 16104 16105 16106 16107 16108 16109 16110 16111 16112 16113 16114 16115 16116 16117 16118 16119 16120 16121 16122 16123 16124 16125 16126 16127 16128 16129 16130 16131 16132 16133 16134 16135 16136 16137 16138 16139 16140 16141 16142 16143 16144 16145 16146 16147 16148 16149 16150 16151 16152 16153 16154 16155 16156 16157 16158 16159 16160 16161 16162 16163 16164 16165 16166 16167 16168 16169 16170 16171 16172 16173 16174 16175 16176 16177 16178 16179 16180 16181 16182 16183 16184 16185 16186 16187 16188 16189 16190 16191 16192 16193 16194 16195 16196 16197 16198 16199 16200 16201 16202 16203 16204 16205 16206 16207 16208 16209 16210 16211 16212 16213 16214 16215 16216 16217 16218 16219 16220 16221 16222 16223 16224 16225 16226 16227 16228 16229 16230 16231 16232 16233 16234 16235 16236 16237 16238 16239 16240 16241 16242 16243 16244 16245 16246 16247 16248 16249 16250 16251 16252 16253 16254 16255 16256 16257 16258 16259 16260 16261 16262 16263 16264 16265 16266 16267 16268 16269 16270 16271 16272 16273 16274 16275 16276 16277 16278 16279 16280 16281 16282 16283 16284 16285 16286 16287 16288 16289 16290 16291 16292 16293 16294 16295 16296 16297 16298 16299 16300 16301 16302 16303 16304 16305 16306 16307 16308 16309 16310 16311 16312 16313 16314 16315 16316 16317 16318 16319 16320 16321 16322 16323 16324 16325 16326 16327 16328 16329 16330 16331 16332 16333 16334 16335 16336 16337 16338 16339 16340 16341 16342 16343 16344 16345 16346 16347 16348 16349 16350 16351 16352 16353 16354 16355 16356 16357 16358 16359 16360 16361 16362 16363 16364 16365 16366 16367 16368 16369 16370 16371 16372 16373 16374 16375 16376 16377 16378 16379 16380 16381 16382 16383 16384 16385 16386 16387 16388 16389 16390 16391 16392 16393 16394 16395 16396 16397 16398 16399 16400 16401 16402 16403 16404 16405 16406 16407 16408 16409 16410 16411 16412 16413 16414 16415 16416 16417 16418 16419 16420 16421 16422 16423 16424 16425 16426 16427 16428 16429 16430 16431 16432 16433 16434 16435 16436 16437 16438 16439 16440 16441 16442 16443 16444 16445 16446 16447 16448 16449 16450 16451 16452 16453 16454 16455 16456 16457 16458 16459 16460 16461 16462 16463 16464 16465 16466 16467 16468 16469 16470 16471 16472 16473 16474 16475 16476 16477 16478 16479 16480 16481 16482 16483 16484 16485 16486 16487 16488 16489 16490 16491 16492 16493 16494 16495 16496 16497 16498 16499 16500 16501 16502 16503 16504 16505 16506 16507 16508 16509 16510 16511 16512 16513 16514 16515 16516 16517 16518 16519 16520 16521 16522 16523 16524 16525 16526 16527 16528 16529 16530 16531 16532 16533 16534 16535 16536 16537 16538 16539 16540 16541 16542 16543 16544 16545 16546 16547 16548 16549 16550 16551 16552 16553 16554 16555 16556 16557 16558 16559 16560 16561 16562 16563 16564 16565 16566 16567 16568 16569 16570 16571 16572 16573 16574 16575 16576 16577 16578 16579 16580 16581 16582 16583 16584 16585 16586 16587 16588 16589 16590 16591 16592 16593 16594 16595 16596 16597 16598 16599 16600 16601 16602 16603 16604 16605 16606 16607 16608 16609 16610 16611 16612 16613 16614 16615 16616 16617 16618 16619 16620 16621 16622 16623 16624 16625 16626 16627 16628 16629 16630 16631 16632 16633 16634 16635 16636 16637 16638 16639 16640 16641 16642 16643 16644 16645 16646 16647 16648 16649 16650 16651 16652 16653 16654 16655 16656 16657 16658 16659 16660 16661 16662 16663 16664 16665 16666 16667 16668 16669 16670 16671 16672 16673 16674 16675 16676 16677 16678 16679 16680 16681 16682 16683 16684 16685 16686 16687 16688 16689 16690 16691 16692 16693 16694 16695 16696 16697 16698 16699 16700 16701 16702 16703 16704 16705 16706 16707 16708 16709 16710 16711 16712 16713 16714 16715 16716 16717 16718 16719 16720 16721 16722 16723 16724 16725 16726 16727 16728 16729 16730 16731 16732 16733 16734 16735 16736 16737 16738 16739 16740 16741 16742 16743 16744 16745 16746 16747 16748 16749 16750 16751 16752 16753 16754 16755 16756 16757 16758 16759 16760 16761 16762 16763 16764 16765 16766 16767 16768 16769 16770 16771 16772 16773 16774 16775 16776 16777 16778 16779 16780 16781 16782 16783 16784 16785 16786 16787 16788 16789 16790 16791 16792 16793 16794 16795 16796 16797 16798 16799 16800 16801 16802 16803 16804 16805 16806 16807 16808 16809 16810 16811 16812 16813 16814 16815 16816 16817 16818 16819 16820 16821 16822 16823 16824 16825 16826 16827 16828 16829 16830 16831 16832 16833 16834 16835 16836 16837 16838 16839 16840 16841 16842 16843 16844 16845 16846 16847 16848 16849 16850 16851 16852 16853 16854 16855 16856 16857 16858 16859 16860 16861 16862 16863 16864 16865 16866 16867 16868 16869 16870 16871 16872 16873 16874 16875 16876 16877 16878 16879 16880 16881 16882 16883 16884 16885 16886 16887 16888 16889 16890 16891 16892 16893 16894 16895 16896 16897 16898 16899 16900 16901 16902 16903 16904 16905 16906 16907 16908 16909 16910 16911 16912 16913 16914 16915 16916 16917 16918 16919 16920 16921 16922 16923 16924 16925 16926 16927 16928 16929 16930 16931 16932 16933 16934 16935 16936 16937 16938 16939 16940 16941 16942 16943 16944 16945 16946 16947 16948 16949 16950 16951 16952 16953 16954 16955 16956 16957 16958 16959 16960 16961 16962 16963 16964 16965 16966 16967 16968 16969 16970 16971 16972 16973 16974 16975 16976 16977 16978 16979 16980 16981 16982 16983 16984 16985 16986 16987 16988 16989 16990 16991 16992 16993 16994 16995 16996 16997 16998 16999 17000 17001 17002 17003 17004 17005 17006 17007 17008 17009 17010 17011 17012 17013 17014 17015 17016 17017 17018 17019 17020 17021 17022 17023 17024 17025 17026 17027 17028 17029 17030 17031 17032 17033 17034 17035 17036 17037 17038 17039 17040 17041 17042 17043 17044 17045 17046 17047 17048 17049 17050 17051 17052 17053 17054 17055 17056 17057 17058 17059 17060 17061 17062 17063 17064 17065 17066 17067 17068 17069 17070 17071 17072 17073 17074 17075 17076 17077 17078 17079 17080 17081 17082 17083 17084 17085 17086 17087 17088 17089 17090 17091 17092 17093 17094 17095 17096 17097 17098 17099 17100 17101 17102 17103 17104 17105 17106 17107 17108 17109 17110 17111 17112 17113 17114 17115 17116 17117 17118 17119 17120 17121 17122 17123 17124 17125 17126 17127 17128 17129 17130 17131 17132 17133 17134 17135 17136 17137 17138 17139 17140 17141 17142 17143 17144 17145 17146 17147 17148 17149 17150 17151 17152 17153 17154 17155 17156 17157 17158 17159 17160 17161 17162 17163 17164 17165 17166 17167 17168 17169 17170 17171 17172 17173 17174 17175 17176 17177 17178 17179 17180 17181 17182 17183 17184 17185 17186 17187 17188 17189 17190 17191 17192 17193 17194 17195 17196 17197 17198 17199 17200 17201 17202 17203 17204 17205 17206 17207 17208 17209 17210 17211 17212 17213 17214 17215 17216 17217 17218 17219 17220 17221 17222 17223 17224 17225 17226 17227 17228 17229 17230 17231 17232 17233 17234 17235 17236 17237 17238 17239 17240 17241 17242 17243 17244 17245 17246 17247 17248 17249 17250 17251 17252 17253 17254 17255 17256 17257 17258 17259 17260 17261 17262 17263 17264 17265 17266 17267 17268 17269 17270 17271 17272 17273 17274 17275 17276 17277 17278 17279 17280 17281 17282 17283 17284 17285 17286 17287 17288 17289 17290 17291 17292 17293 17294 17295 17296 17297 17298 17299 17300 17301 17302 17303 17304 17305 17306 17307 17308 17309 17310 17311 17312 17313 17314 17315 17316 17317 17318 17319 17320 17321 17322 17323 17324 17325 17326 17327 17328 17329 17330 17331 17332 17333 17334 17335 17336 17337 17338 17339 17340 17341 17342 17343 17344 17345 17346 17347 17348 17349 17350 17351 17352 17353 17354 17355 17356 17357 17358 17359 17360 17361 17362 17363 17364 17365 17366 17367 17368 17369 17370 17371 17372 17373 17374 17375 17376 17377 17378 17379 17380 17381 17382 17383 17384 17385 17386 17387 17388 17389 17390 17391 17392 17393 17394 17395 17396 17397 17398 17399 17400 17401 17402 17403 17404 17405 17406 17407 17408 17409 17410 17411 17412 17413 17414 17415 17416 17417 17418 17419 17420 17421 17422 17423 17424 17425 17426 17427 17428 17429 17430 17431 17432 17433 17434 17435 17436 17437 17438 17439 17440 17441 17442 17443 17444 17445 17446 17447 17448 17449 17450 17451 17452 17453 17454 17455 17456 17457 17458 17459 17460 17461 17462 17463 17464 17465 17466 17467 17468 17469 17470 17471 17472 17473 17474 17475 17476 17477 17478 17479 17480 17481 17482 17483 17484 17485 17486 17487 17488 17489 17490 17491 17492 17493 17494 17495 17496 17497 17498 17499 17500 17501 17502 17503 17504 17505 17506 17507 17508 17509 17510 17511 17512 17513 17514 17515 17516 17517 17518 17519 17520 17521 17522 17523 17524 17525 17526 17527 17528 17529 17530 17531 17532 17533 17534 17535 17536 17537 17538 17539 17540 17541 17542 17543 17544 17545 17546 17547 17548 17549 17550 17551 17552 17553 17554 17555 17556 17557 17558 17559 17560 17561 17562 17563 17564 17565 17566 17567 17568 17569 17570 17571 17572 17573 17574 17575 17576 17577 17578 17579 17580 17581 17582 17583 17584 17585 17586 17587 17588 17589 17590 17591 17592 17593 17594 17595 17596 17597 17598 17599 17600 17601 17602 17603 17604 17605 17606 17607 17608 17609 17610 17611 17612 17613 17614 17615 17616 17617 17618 17619 17620 17621 17622 17623 17624 17625 17626 17627 17628 17629 17630 17631 17632 17633 17634 17635 17636 17637 17638 17639 17640 17641 17642 17643 17644 17645 17646 17647 17648 17649 17650 17651 17652 17653 17654 17655 17656 17657 17658 17659 17660 17661 17662 17663 17664 17665 17666 17667 17668 17669 17670 17671 17672 17673 17674 17675 17676 17677 17678 17679 17680 17681 17682 17683 17684 17685 17686 17687 17688 17689 17690 17691 17692 17693 17694 17695 17696 17697 17698 17699 17700 17701 17702 17703 17704 17705 17706 17707 17708 17709 17710 17711 17712 17713 17714 17715 17716 17717 17718 17719 17720 17721 17722 17723 17724 17725 17726 17727 17728 17729 17730 17731 17732 17733 17734 17735 17736 17737 17738 17739 17740 17741 17742 17743 17744 17745 17746 17747 17748 17749 17750 17751 17752 17753 17754 17755 17756 17757 17758 17759 17760 17761 17762 17763 17764 17765 17766 17767 17768 17769 17770 17771 17772 17773 17774 17775 17776 17777 17778 17779 17780 17781 17782 17783 17784 17785 17786 17787 17788 17789 17790 17791 17792 17793 17794 17795 17796 17797 17798 17799 17800 17801 17802 17803 17804 17805 17806 17807 17808 17809 17810 17811 17812 17813 17814 17815 17816 17817 17818 17819 17820 17821 17822 17823 17824 17825 17826 17827 17828 17829 17830 17831 17832 17833 17834 17835 17836 17837 17838 17839 17840 17841 17842 17843 17844 17845 17846 17847 17848 17849 17850 17851 17852 17853 17854 17855 17856 17857 17858 17859 17860 17861 17862 17863 17864 17865 17866 17867 17868 17869 17870 17871 17872 17873 17874 17875 17876 17877 17878 17879 17880 17881 17882 17883 17884 17885 17886 17887 17888 17889 17890 17891 17892 17893 17894 17895 17896 17897 17898 17899 17900 17901 17902 17903 17904 17905 17906 17907 17908 17909 17910 17911 17912 17913 17914 17915 17916 17917 17918 17919 17920 17921 17922 17923 17924 17925 17926 17927 17928 17929 17930 17931 17932 17933 17934 17935 17936 17937 17938 17939 17940 17941 17942 17943 17944 17945 17946 17947 17948 17949 17950 17951 17952 17953 17954 17955 17956 17957 17958 17959 17960 17961 17962 17963 17964 17965 17966 17967 17968 17969 17970 17971 17972 17973 17974 17975 17976 17977 17978 17979 17980 17981 17982 17983 17984 17985 17986 17987 17988 17989 17990 17991 17992 17993 17994 17995 17996 17997 17998 17999 18000 18001 18002 18003 18004 18005 18006 18007 18008 18009 18010 18011 18012 18013 18014 18015 18016 18017 18018 18019 18020 18021 18022 18023 18024 18025 18026 18027 18028 18029 18030 18031 18032 18033 18034 18035 18036 18037 18038 18039 18040 18041 18042 18043 18044 18045 18046 18047 18048 18049 18050 18051 18052 18053 18054 18055 18056 18057 18058 18059 18060 18061 18062 18063 18064 18065 18066 18067 18068 18069 18070 18071 18072 18073 18074 18075 18076 18077 18078 18079 18080 18081 18082 18083 18084 18085 18086 18087 18088 18089 18090 18091 18092 18093 18094 18095 18096 18097 18098 18099 18100 18101 18102 18103 18104 18105 18106 18107 18108 18109 18110 18111 18112 18113 18114 18115 18116 18117 18118 18119 18120 18121 18122 18123 18124 18125 18126 18127 18128 18129 18130 18131 18132 18133 18134 18135 18136 18137 18138 18139 18140 18141 18142 18143 18144 18145 18146 18147 18148 18149 18150 18151 18152 18153 18154 18155 18156 18157 18158 18159 18160 18161 18162 18163 18164 18165 18166 18167 18168 18169 18170 18171 18172 18173 18174 18175 18176 18177 18178 18179 18180 18181 18182 18183 18184 18185 18186 18187 18188 18189 18190 18191 18192 18193 18194 18195 18196 18197 18198 18199 18200 18201 18202 18203 18204 18205 18206 18207 18208 18209 18210 18211 18212 18213 18214 18215 18216 18217 18218 18219 18220 18221 18222 18223 18224 18225 18226 18227 18228 18229 18230 18231 18232 18233 18234 18235 18236 18237 18238 18239 18240 18241 18242 18243 18244 18245 18246 18247 18248 18249 18250 18251 18252 18253 18254 18255 18256 18257 18258 18259 18260 18261 18262 18263 18264 18265 18266 18267 18268 18269 18270 18271 18272 18273 18274 18275 18276 18277 18278 18279 18280 18281 18282 18283 18284 18285 18286 18287 18288 18289 18290 18291 18292 18293 18294 18295 18296 18297 18298 18299 18300 18301 18302 18303 18304 18305 18306 18307 18308 18309 18310 18311 18312 18313 18314 18315 18316 18317 18318 18319 18320 18321 18322 18323 18324 18325 18326 18327 18328 18329 18330 18331 18332 18333 18334 18335 18336 18337 18338 18339 18340 18341 18342 18343 18344 18345 18346 18347 18348 18349 18350 18351 18352 18353 18354 18355 18356 18357 18358 18359 18360 18361 18362 18363 18364 18365 18366 18367 18368 18369 18370 18371 18372 18373 18374 18375 18376 18377 18378 18379 18380 18381 18382 18383 18384 18385 18386 18387 18388 18389 18390 18391 18392 18393 18394 18395 18396 18397 18398 18399 18400 18401 18402 18403 18404 18405 18406 18407 18408 18409 18410 18411 18412 18413 18414 18415 18416 18417 18418 18419 18420 18421 18422 18423 18424 18425 18426 18427 18428 18429 18430 18431 18432 18433 18434 18435 18436 18437 18438 18439 18440 18441 18442 18443 18444 18445 18446 18447 18448 18449 18450 18451 18452 18453 18454 18455 18456 18457 18458 18459 18460 18461 18462 18463 18464 18465 18466 18467 18468 18469 18470 18471 18472 18473 18474 18475 18476 18477 18478 18479 18480 18481 18482 18483 18484 18485 18486 18487 18488 18489 18490 18491 18492 18493 18494 18495 18496 18497 18498 18499 18500 18501 18502 18503 18504 18505 18506 18507 18508 18509 18510 18511 18512 18513 18514 18515 18516 18517 18518 18519 18520 18521 18522 18523 18524 18525 18526 18527 18528 18529 18530 18531 18532 18533 18534 18535 18536 18537 18538 18539 18540 18541 18542 18543 18544 18545 18546 18547 18548 18549 18550 18551 18552 18553 18554 18555 18556 18557 18558 18559 18560 18561 18562 18563 18564 18565 18566 18567 18568 18569 18570 18571 18572 18573 18574 18575 18576 18577 18578 18579 18580 18581 18582 18583 18584 18585 18586 18587 18588 18589 18590 18591 18592 18593 18594 18595 18596 18597 18598 18599 18600 18601 18602 18603 18604 18605 18606 18607 18608 18609 18610 18611 18612 18613 18614 18615 18616 18617 18618 18619 18620 18621 18622 18623 18624 18625 18626 18627 18628 18629 18630 18631 18632 18633 18634 18635 18636 18637 18638 18639 18640 18641 18642 18643 18644 18645 18646 18647 18648 18649 18650 18651 18652 18653 18654 18655 18656 18657 18658 18659 18660 18661 18662 18663 18664 18665 18666 18667 18668 18669 18670 18671 18672 18673 18674 18675 18676 18677 18678 18679 18680 18681 18682 18683 18684 18685 18686 18687 18688 18689 18690 18691 18692 18693 18694 18695 18696 18697 18698 18699 18700 18701 18702 18703 18704 18705 18706 18707 18708 18709 18710 18711 18712 18713 18714 18715 18716 18717 18718 18719 18720 18721 18722 18723 18724 18725 18726 18727 18728 18729 18730 18731 18732 18733 18734 18735 18736 18737 18738 18739 18740 18741 18742 18743 18744 18745 18746 18747 18748 18749 18750 18751 18752 18753 18754 18755 18756 18757 18758 18759 18760 18761 18762 18763 18764 18765 18766 18767 18768 18769 18770 18771 18772 18773 18774 18775 18776 18777 18778 18779 18780 18781 18782 18783 18784 18785 18786 18787 18788 18789 18790 18791 18792 18793 18794 18795 18796 18797 18798 18799 18800 18801 18802 18803 18804 18805 18806 18807 18808 18809 18810 18811 18812 18813 18814 18815 18816 18817 18818 18819 18820 18821 18822 18823 18824 18825 18826 18827 18828 18829 18830 18831 18832 18833 18834 18835 18836 18837 18838 18839 18840 18841 18842 18843 18844 18845 18846 18847 18848 18849 18850 18851 18852 18853 18854 18855 18856 18857 18858 18859 18860 18861 18862 18863 18864 18865 18866 18867 18868 18869 18870 18871 18872 18873 18874 18875 18876 18877 18878 18879 18880 18881 18882 18883 18884 18885 18886 18887 18888 18889 18890 18891 18892 18893 18894 18895 18896 18897 18898 18899 18900 18901 18902 18903 18904 18905 18906 18907 18908 18909 18910 18911 18912 18913 18914 18915 18916 18917 18918 18919 18920 18921 18922 18923 18924 18925 18926 18927 18928 18929 18930 18931 18932 18933 18934 18935 18936 18937 18938 18939 18940 18941 18942 18943 18944 18945 18946 18947 18948 18949 18950 18951 18952 18953 18954 18955 18956 18957 18958 18959 18960 18961 18962 18963 18964 18965 18966 18967 18968 18969 18970 18971 18972 18973 18974 18975 18976 18977 18978 18979 18980 18981 18982 18983 18984 18985 18986 18987 18988 18989 18990 18991 18992 18993 18994 18995 18996 18997 18998 18999 19000 19001 19002 19003 19004 19005 19006 19007 19008 19009 19010 19011 19012 19013 19014 19015 19016 19017 19018 19019 19020 19021 19022 19023 19024 19025 19026 19027 19028 19029 19030 19031 19032 19033 19034 19035 19036 19037 19038 19039 19040 19041 19042 19043 19044 19045 19046 19047 19048 19049 19050 19051 19052 19053 19054 19055 19056 19057 19058 19059 19060 19061 19062 19063 19064 19065 19066 19067 19068 19069 19070 19071 19072 19073 19074 19075 19076 19077 19078 19079 19080 19081 19082 19083 19084 19085 19086 19087 19088 19089 19090 19091 19092 19093 19094 19095 19096 19097 19098 19099 19100 19101 19102 19103 19104 19105 19106 19107 19108 19109 19110 19111 19112 19113 19114 19115 19116 19117 19118 19119 19120 19121 19122 19123 19124 19125 19126 19127 19128 19129 19130 19131 19132 19133 19134 19135 19136 19137 19138 19139 19140 19141 19142 19143 19144 19145 19146 19147 19148 19149 19150 19151 19152 19153 19154 19155 19156 19157 19158 19159 19160 19161 19162 19163 19164 19165 19166 19167 19168 19169 19170 19171 19172 19173 19174 19175 19176 19177 19178 19179 19180 19181 19182 19183 19184 19185 19186 19187 19188 19189 19190 19191 19192 19193 19194 19195 19196 19197 19198 19199 19200 19201 19202 19203 19204 19205 19206 19207 19208 19209 19210 19211 19212 19213 19214 19215 19216 19217 19218 19219 19220 19221 19222 19223 19224 19225 19226 19227 19228 19229 19230 19231 19232 19233 19234 19235 19236 19237 19238 19239 19240 19241 19242 19243 19244 19245 19246 19247 19248 19249 19250 19251 19252 19253 19254 19255 19256 19257 19258 19259 19260 19261 19262 19263 19264 19265 19266 19267 19268 19269 19270 19271 19272 19273 19274 19275 19276 19277 19278 19279 19280 19281 19282 19283 19284 19285 19286 19287 19288 19289 19290 19291 19292 19293 19294 19295 19296 19297 19298 19299 19300 19301 19302 19303 19304 19305 19306 19307 19308 19309 19310 19311 19312 19313 19314 19315 19316 19317 19318 19319 19320 19321 19322 19323 19324 19325 19326 19327 19328 19329 19330 19331 19332 19333 19334 19335 19336 19337 19338 19339 19340 19341 19342 19343 19344 19345 19346 19347 19348 19349 19350 19351 19352 19353 19354 19355 19356 19357 19358 19359 19360 19361 19362 19363 19364 19365 19366 19367 19368 19369 19370 19371 19372 19373 19374 19375 19376 19377 19378 19379 19380 19381 19382 19383 19384 19385 19386 19387 19388 19389 19390 19391 19392 19393 19394 19395 19396 19397 19398 19399 19400 19401 19402 19403 19404 19405 19406 19407 19408 19409 19410 19411 19412 19413 19414 19415 19416 19417 19418 19419 19420 19421 19422 19423 19424 19425 19426 19427 19428 19429 19430 19431 19432 19433 19434 19435 19436 19437 19438 19439 19440 19441 19442 19443 19444 19445 19446 19447 19448 19449 19450 19451 19452 19453 19454 19455 19456 19457 19458 19459 19460 19461 19462 19463 19464 19465 19466 19467 19468 19469 19470 19471 19472 19473 19474 19475 19476 19477 19478 19479 19480 19481 19482 19483 19484 19485 19486 19487 19488 19489 19490 19491 19492 19493 19494 19495 19496 19497 19498 19499 19500 19501 19502 19503 19504 19505 19506 19507 19508 19509 19510 19511 19512 19513 19514 19515 19516 19517 19518 19519 19520 19521 19522 19523 19524 19525 19526 19527 19528 19529 19530 19531 19532 19533 19534 19535 19536 19537 19538 19539 19540 19541 19542 19543 19544 19545 19546 19547 19548 19549 19550 19551 19552 19553 19554 19555 19556 19557 19558 19559 19560 19561 19562 19563 19564 19565 19566 19567 19568 19569 19570 19571 19572 19573 19574 19575 19576 19577 19578 19579 19580 19581 19582 19583 19584 19585 19586 19587 19588 19589 19590 19591 19592 19593 19594 19595 19596 19597 19598 19599 19600 19601 19602 19603 19604 19605 19606 19607 19608 19609 19610 19611 19612 19613 19614 19615 19616 19617 19618 19619 19620 19621 19622 19623 19624 19625 19626 19627 19628 19629 19630 19631 19632 19633 19634 19635 19636 19637 19638 19639 19640 19641 19642 19643 19644 19645 19646 19647 19648 19649 19650 19651 19652 19653 19654 19655 19656 19657 19658 19659 19660 19661 19662 19663 19664 19665 19666 19667 19668 19669 19670 19671 19672 19673 19674 19675 19676 19677 19678 19679 19680 19681 19682 19683 19684 19685 19686 19687 19688 19689 19690 19691 19692 19693 19694 19695 19696 19697 19698 19699 19700 19701 19702 19703 19704 19705 19706 19707 19708 19709 19710 19711 19712 19713 19714 19715 19716 19717 19718 19719 19720 19721 19722 19723 19724 19725 19726 19727 19728 19729 19730 19731 19732 19733 19734 19735 19736 19737 19738 19739 19740 19741 19742 19743 19744 19745 19746 19747 19748 19749 19750 19751 19752 19753 19754 19755 19756 19757 19758 19759 19760 19761 19762 19763 19764 19765 19766 19767 19768 19769 19770 19771 19772 19773 19774 19775 19776 19777 19778 19779 19780 19781 19782 19783 19784 19785 19786 19787 19788 19789 19790 19791 19792 19793 19794 19795 19796 19797 19798 19799 19800 19801 19802 19803 19804 19805 19806 19807 19808 19809 19810 19811 19812 19813 19814 19815 19816 19817 19818 19819 19820 19821 19822 19823 19824 19825 19826 19827 19828 19829 19830 19831 19832 19833 19834 19835 19836 19837 19838 19839 19840 19841 19842 19843 19844 19845 19846 19847 19848 19849 19850 19851 19852 19853 19854 19855 19856 19857 19858 19859 19860 19861 19862 19863 19864 19865 19866 19867 19868 19869 19870 19871 19872 19873 19874 19875 19876 19877 19878 19879 19880 19881 19882 19883 19884 19885 19886 19887 19888 19889 19890 19891 19892 19893 19894 19895 19896 19897 19898 19899 19900 19901 19902 19903 19904 19905 19906 19907 19908 19909 19910 19911 19912 19913 19914 19915 19916 19917 19918 19919 19920 19921 19922 19923 19924 19925 19926 19927 19928 19929 19930 19931 19932 19933 19934 19935 19936 19937 19938 19939 19940 19941 19942 19943 19944 19945 19946 19947 19948 19949 19950 19951 19952 19953 19954 19955 19956 19957 19958 19959 19960 19961 19962 19963 19964 19965 19966 19967 19968 19969 19970 19971 19972 19973 19974 19975 19976 19977 19978 19979 19980 19981 19982 19983 19984 19985 19986 19987 19988 19989 19990 19991 19992 19993 19994 19995 19996 19997 19998 19999 20000 20001 20002 20003 20004 20005 20006 20007 20008 20009 20010 20011 20012 20013 20014 20015 20016 20017 20018 20019 20020 20021 20022 20023 20024 20025 20026 20027 20028 20029 20030 20031 20032 20033 20034 20035 20036 20037 20038 20039 20040 20041 20042 20043 20044 20045 20046 20047 20048 20049 20050 20051 20052 20053 20054 20055 20056 20057 20058 20059 20060 20061 20062 20063 20064 20065 20066 20067 20068 20069 20070 20071 20072 20073 20074 20075 20076 20077 20078 20079 20080 20081 20082 20083 20084 20085 20086 20087 20088 20089 20090 20091 20092 20093 20094 20095 20096 20097 20098 20099 20100 20101 20102 20103 20104 20105 20106 20107 20108 20109 20110 20111 20112 20113 20114 20115 20116 20117 20118 20119 20120 20121 20122 20123 20124 20125 20126 20127 20128 20129 20130 20131 20132 20133 20134 20135 20136 20137 20138 20139 20140 20141 20142 20143 20144 20145 20146 20147 20148 20149 20150 20151 20152 20153 20154 20155 20156 20157 20158 20159 20160 20161 20162 20163 20164 20165 20166 20167 20168 20169 20170 20171 20172 20173 20174 20175 20176 20177 20178 20179 20180 20181 20182 20183 20184 20185 20186 20187 20188 20189 20190 20191 20192 20193 20194 20195 20196 20197 20198 20199 20200 20201 20202 20203 20204 20205 20206 20207 20208 20209 20210 20211 20212 20213 20214 20215 20216 20217 20218 20219 20220 20221 20222 20223 20224 20225 20226 20227 20228 20229 20230 20231 20232 20233 20234 20235 20236 20237 20238 20239 20240 20241 20242 20243 20244 20245 20246 20247 20248 20249 20250 20251 20252 20253 20254 20255 20256 20257 20258 20259 20260 20261 20262 20263 20264 20265 20266 20267 20268 20269 20270 20271 20272 20273 20274 20275 20276 20277 20278 20279 20280 20281 20282 20283 20284 20285 20286 20287 20288 20289 20290 20291 20292 20293 20294 20295 20296 20297 20298 20299 20300 20301 20302 20303 20304 20305 20306 20307 20308 20309 20310 20311 20312 20313 20314 20315 20316 20317 20318 20319 20320 20321 20322 20323 20324 20325 20326 20327 20328 20329 20330 20331 20332 20333 20334 20335 20336 20337 20338 20339 20340 20341 20342 20343 20344 20345 20346 20347 20348 20349 20350 20351 20352 20353 20354 20355 20356 20357 20358 20359 20360 20361 20362 20363 20364 20365 20366 20367 20368 20369 20370 20371 20372 20373 20374 20375 20376 20377 20378 20379 20380 20381 20382 20383 20384 20385 20386 20387 20388 20389 20390 20391 20392 20393 20394 20395 20396 20397 20398 20399 20400 20401 20402 20403 20404 20405 20406 20407 20408 20409 20410 20411 20412 20413 20414 20415 20416 20417 20418 20419 20420 20421 20422 20423 20424 20425 20426 20427 20428 20429 20430 20431 20432 20433 20434 20435 20436 20437 20438 20439 20440 20441 20442 20443 20444 20445 20446 20447 20448 20449 20450 20451 20452 20453 20454 20455 20456 20457 20458 20459 20460 20461 20462 20463 20464 20465 20466 20467 20468 20469 20470 20471 20472 20473 20474 20475 20476 20477 20478 20479 20480 20481 20482 20483 20484 20485 20486 20487 20488 20489 20490 20491 20492 20493 20494 20495 20496 20497 20498 20499 20500 20501 20502 20503 20504 20505 20506 20507 20508 20509 20510 20511 20512 20513 20514 20515 20516 20517 20518 20519 20520 20521 20522 20523 20524 20525 20526 20527 20528 20529 20530 20531 20532 20533 20534 20535 20536 20537 20538 20539 20540 20541 20542 20543 20544 20545 20546 20547 20548 20549 20550 20551 20552 20553 20554 20555 20556 20557 20558 20559 20560 20561 20562 20563 20564 20565 20566 20567 20568 20569 20570 20571 20572 20573 20574 20575 20576 20577 20578 20579 20580 20581 20582 20583 20584 20585 20586 20587 20588 20589 20590 20591 20592 20593 20594 20595 20596 20597 20598 20599 20600 20601 20602 20603 20604 20605 20606 20607 20608 20609 20610 20611 20612 20613 20614 20615 20616 20617 20618 20619 20620 20621 20622 20623 20624 20625 20626 20627 20628 20629 20630 20631 20632 20633 20634 20635 20636 20637 20638 20639 20640 20641 20642 20643 20644 20645 20646 20647 20648 20649 20650 20651 20652 20653 20654 20655 20656 20657 20658 20659 20660 20661 20662 20663 20664 20665 20666 20667 20668 20669 20670 20671 20672 20673 20674 20675 20676 20677 20678 20679 20680 20681 20682 20683 20684 20685 20686 20687 20688 20689 20690 20691 20692 20693 20694 20695 20696 20697 20698 20699 20700 20701 20702 20703 20704 20705 20706 20707 20708 20709 20710 20711 20712 20713 20714 20715 20716 20717 20718 20719 20720 20721 20722 20723 20724 20725 20726 20727 20728 20729 20730 20731 20732 20733 20734 20735 20736 20737 20738 20739 20740 20741 20742 20743 20744 20745 20746 20747 20748 20749 20750 20751 20752 20753 20754 20755 20756 20757 20758 20759 20760 20761 20762 20763 20764 20765 20766 20767 20768 20769 20770 20771 20772 20773 20774 20775 20776 20777 20778 20779 20780 20781 20782 20783 20784 20785 20786 20787 20788 20789 20790 20791 20792 20793 20794 20795 20796 20797 20798 20799 20800 20801 20802 20803 20804 20805 20806 20807 20808 20809 20810 20811 20812 20813 20814 20815 20816 20817 20818 20819 20820 20821 20822 20823 20824 20825 20826 20827 20828 20829 20830 20831 20832 20833 20834 20835 20836 20837 20838 20839 20840 20841 20842 20843 20844 20845 20846 20847 20848 20849 20850 20851 20852 20853 20854 20855 20856 20857 20858 20859 20860 20861 20862 20863 20864 20865 20866 20867 20868 20869 20870 20871 20872 20873 20874 20875 20876 20877 20878 20879 20880 20881 20882 20883 20884 20885 20886 20887 20888 20889 20890 20891 20892 20893 20894 20895 20896 20897 20898 20899 20900 20901 20902 20903 20904 20905 20906 20907 20908 20909 20910 20911 20912 20913 20914 20915 20916 20917 20918 20919 20920 20921 20922 20923 20924 20925 20926 20927 20928 20929 20930 20931 20932 20933 20934 20935 20936 20937 20938 20939 20940 20941 20942 20943 20944 20945 20946 20947 20948 20949 20950 20951 20952 20953 20954 20955 20956 20957 20958 20959 20960 20961 20962 20963 20964 20965 20966 20967 20968 20969 20970 20971 20972 20973 20974 20975 20976 20977 20978 20979 20980 20981 20982 20983 20984 20985 20986 20987 20988 20989 20990 20991 20992 20993 20994 20995 20996 20997 20998 20999 21000 21001 21002 21003 21004 21005 21006 21007 21008 21009 21010 21011 21012 21013 21014 21015 21016 21017 21018 21019 21020 21021 21022 21023 21024 21025 21026 21027 21028 21029 21030 21031 21032 21033 21034 21035 21036 21037 21038 21039 21040 21041 21042 21043 21044 21045 21046 21047 21048 21049 21050 21051 21052 21053 21054 21055 21056 21057 21058 21059 21060 21061 21062 21063 21064 21065 21066 21067 21068 21069 21070 21071 21072 21073 21074 21075 21076 21077 21078 21079 21080 21081 21082 21083 21084 21085 21086 21087 21088 21089 21090 21091 21092 21093 21094 21095 21096 21097 21098 21099 21100 21101 21102 21103 21104 21105 21106 21107 21108 21109 21110 21111 21112 21113 21114 21115 21116 21117 21118 21119 21120 21121 21122 21123 21124 21125 21126 21127 21128 21129 21130 21131 21132 21133 21134 21135 21136 21137 21138 21139 21140 21141 21142 21143 21144 21145 21146 21147 21148 21149 21150 21151 21152 21153 21154 21155 21156 21157 21158 21159 21160 21161 21162 21163 21164 21165 21166 21167 21168 21169 21170 21171 21172 21173 21174 21175 21176 21177 21178 21179 21180 21181 21182 21183 21184 21185 21186 21187 21188 21189 21190 21191 21192 21193 21194 21195 21196 21197 21198 21199 21200 21201 21202 21203 21204 21205 21206 21207 21208 21209 21210 21211 21212 21213 21214 21215 21216 21217 21218 21219 21220 21221 21222 21223 21224 21225 21226 21227 21228 21229 21230 21231 21232 21233 21234 21235 21236 21237 21238 21239 21240 21241 21242 21243 21244 21245 21246 21247 21248 21249 21250 21251 21252 21253 21254 21255 21256 21257 21258 21259 21260 21261 21262 21263 21264 21265 21266 21267 21268 21269 21270 21271 21272 21273 21274 21275 21276 21277 21278 21279 21280 21281 21282 21283 21284 21285 21286 21287 21288 21289 21290 21291 21292 21293 21294 21295 21296 21297 21298 21299 21300 21301 21302 21303 21304 21305 21306 21307 21308 21309 21310 21311 21312 21313 21314 21315 21316 21317 21318 21319 21320 21321 21322 21323 21324 21325 21326 21327 21328 21329 21330 21331 21332 21333 21334 21335 21336 21337 21338 21339 21340 21341 21342 21343 21344 21345 21346 21347 21348 21349 21350 21351 21352 21353 21354 21355 21356 21357 21358 21359 21360 21361 21362 21363 21364 21365 21366 21367 21368 21369 21370 21371 21372 21373 21374 21375 21376 21377 21378 21379 21380 21381 21382 21383 21384 21385 21386 21387 21388 21389 21390 21391 21392 21393 21394 21395 21396 21397 21398 21399 21400 21401 21402 21403 21404 21405 21406 21407 21408 21409 21410 21411 21412 21413 21414 21415 21416 21417 21418 21419 21420 21421 21422 21423 21424 21425 21426 21427 21428 21429 21430 21431 21432 21433 21434 21435 21436 21437 21438 21439 21440 21441 21442 21443 21444 21445 21446 21447 21448 21449 21450 21451 21452 21453 21454 21455 21456 21457 21458 21459 21460 21461 21462 21463 21464 21465 21466 21467 21468 21469 21470 21471 21472 21473 21474 21475 21476 21477 21478 21479 21480 21481 21482 21483 21484 21485 21486 21487 21488 21489 21490 21491 21492 21493 21494 21495 21496 21497 21498 21499 21500 21501 21502 21503 21504 21505 21506 21507 21508 21509 21510 21511 21512 21513 21514 21515 21516 21517 21518 21519 21520 21521 21522 21523 21524 21525 21526 21527 21528 21529 21530 21531 21532 21533 21534 21535 21536 21537 21538 21539 21540 21541 21542 21543 21544 21545 21546 21547 21548 21549 21550 21551 21552 21553 21554 21555 21556 21557 21558 21559 21560 21561 21562 21563 21564 21565 21566 21567 21568 21569 21570 21571 21572 21573 21574 21575 21576 21577 21578 21579 21580 21581 21582 21583 21584 21585 21586 21587 21588 21589 21590 21591 21592 21593 21594 21595 21596 21597 21598 21599 21600 21601 21602 21603 21604 21605 21606 21607 21608 21609 21610 21611 21612 21613 21614 21615 21616 21617 21618 21619 21620 21621 21622 21623 21624 21625 21626 21627 21628 21629 21630 21631 21632 21633 21634 21635 21636 21637 21638 21639 21640 21641 21642 21643 21644 21645 21646 21647 21648 21649 21650 21651 21652 21653 21654 21655 21656 21657 21658 21659 21660 21661 21662 21663 21664 21665 21666 21667 21668 21669 21670 21671 21672 21673 21674 21675 21676 21677 21678 21679 21680 21681 21682 21683 21684 21685 21686 21687 21688 21689 21690 21691 21692 21693 21694 21695 21696 21697 21698 21699 21700 21701 21702 21703 21704 21705 21706 21707 21708 21709 21710 21711 21712 21713 21714 21715 21716 21717 21718 21719 21720 21721 21722 21723 21724 21725 21726 21727 21728 21729 21730 21731 21732 21733 21734 21735 21736 21737 21738 21739 21740 21741 21742 21743 21744 21745 21746 21747 21748 21749 21750 21751 21752 21753 21754 21755 21756 21757 21758 21759 21760 21761 21762 21763 21764 21765 21766 21767 21768 21769 21770 21771 21772 21773 21774 21775 21776 21777 21778 21779 21780 21781 21782 21783 21784 21785 21786 21787 21788 21789 21790 21791 21792 21793 21794 21795 21796 21797 21798 21799 21800 21801 21802 21803 21804 21805 21806 21807 21808 21809 21810 21811 21812 21813 21814 21815 21816 21817 21818 21819 21820 21821 21822 21823 21824 21825 21826 21827 21828 21829 21830 21831 21832 21833 21834 21835 21836 21837 21838 21839 21840 21841 21842 21843 21844 21845 21846 21847 21848 21849 21850 21851 21852 21853 21854 21855 21856 21857 21858 21859 21860 21861 21862 21863 21864 21865 21866 21867 21868 21869 21870 21871 21872 21873 21874 21875 21876 21877 21878 21879 21880 21881 21882 21883 21884 21885 21886 21887 21888 21889 21890 21891 21892 21893 21894 21895 21896 21897 21898 21899 21900 21901 21902 21903 21904 21905 21906 21907 21908 21909 21910 21911 21912 21913 21914 21915 21916 21917 21918 21919 21920 21921 21922 21923 21924 21925 21926 21927 21928 21929 21930 21931 21932 21933 21934 21935 21936 21937 21938 21939 21940 21941 21942 21943 21944 21945 21946 21947 21948 21949 21950 21951 21952 21953 21954 21955 21956 21957 21958 21959 21960 21961 21962 21963 21964 21965 21966 21967 21968 21969 21970 21971 21972 21973 21974 21975 21976 21977 21978 21979 21980 21981 21982 21983 21984 21985 21986 21987 21988 21989 21990 21991 21992 21993 21994 21995 21996 21997 21998 21999 22000 22001 22002 22003 22004 22005 22006 22007 22008 22009 22010 22011 22012 22013 22014 22015 22016 22017 22018 22019 22020 22021 22022 22023 22024 22025 22026 22027 22028 22029 22030 22031 22032 22033 22034 22035 22036 22037 22038 22039 22040 22041 22042 22043 22044 22045 22046 22047 22048 22049 22050 22051 22052 22053 22054 22055 22056 22057 22058 22059 22060 22061 22062 22063 22064 22065 22066 22067 22068 22069 22070 22071 22072 22073 22074 22075 22076 22077 22078 22079 22080 22081 22082 22083 22084 22085 22086 22087 22088 22089 22090 22091 22092 22093 22094 22095 22096 22097 22098 22099 22100 22101 22102 22103 22104 22105 22106 22107 22108 22109 22110 22111 22112 22113 22114 22115 22116 22117 22118 22119 22120 22121 22122 22123 22124 22125 22126 22127 22128 22129 22130 22131 22132 22133 22134 22135 22136 22137 22138 22139 22140 22141 22142 22143 22144 22145 22146 22147 22148 22149 22150 22151 22152 22153 22154 22155 22156 22157 22158 22159 22160 22161 22162 22163 22164 22165 22166 22167 22168 22169 22170 22171 22172 22173 22174 22175 22176 22177 22178 22179 22180 22181 22182 22183 22184 22185 22186 22187 22188 22189 22190 22191 22192 22193 22194 22195 22196 22197 22198 22199 22200 22201 22202 22203 22204 22205 22206 22207 22208 22209 22210 22211 22212 22213 22214 22215 22216 22217 22218 22219 22220 22221 22222 22223 22224 22225 22226 22227 22228 22229 22230 22231 22232 22233 22234 22235 22236 22237 22238 22239 22240 22241 22242 22243 22244 22245 22246 22247 22248 22249 22250 22251 22252 22253 22254 22255 22256 22257 22258 22259 22260 22261 22262 22263 22264 22265 22266 22267 22268 22269 22270 22271 22272 22273 22274 22275 22276 22277 22278 22279 22280 22281 22282 22283 22284 22285 22286 22287 22288 22289 22290 22291 22292 22293 22294 22295 22296 22297 22298 22299 22300 22301 22302 22303 22304 22305 22306 22307 22308 22309 22310 22311 22312 22313 22314 22315 22316 22317 22318 22319 22320 22321 22322 22323 22324 22325 22326 22327 22328 22329 22330 22331 22332 22333 22334 22335 22336 22337 22338 22339 22340 22341 22342 22343 22344 22345 22346 22347 22348 22349 22350 22351 22352 22353 22354 22355 22356 22357 22358 22359 22360 22361 22362 22363 22364 22365 22366 22367 22368 22369 22370 22371 22372 22373 22374 22375 22376 22377 22378 22379 22380 22381 22382 22383 22384 22385 22386 22387 22388 22389 22390 22391 22392 22393 22394 22395 22396 22397 22398 22399 22400 22401 22402 22403 22404 22405 22406 22407 22408 22409 22410 22411 22412 22413 22414 22415 22416 22417 22418 22419 22420 22421 22422 22423 22424 22425 22426 22427 22428 22429 22430 22431 22432 22433 22434 22435 22436 22437 22438 22439 22440 22441 22442 22443 22444 22445 22446 22447 22448 22449 22450 22451 22452 22453 22454 22455 22456 22457 22458 22459 22460 22461 22462 22463 22464 22465 22466 22467 22468 22469 22470 22471 22472 22473 22474 22475 22476 22477 22478 22479 22480 22481 22482 22483 22484 22485 22486 22487 22488 22489 22490 22491 22492 22493 22494 22495 22496 22497 22498 22499 22500 22501 22502 22503 22504 22505 22506 22507 22508 22509 22510 22511 22512 22513 22514 22515 22516 22517 22518 22519 22520 22521 22522 22523 22524 22525 22526 22527 22528 22529 22530 22531 22532 22533 22534 22535 22536 22537 22538 22539 22540 22541 22542 22543 22544 22545 22546 22547 22548 22549 22550 22551 22552 22553 22554 22555 22556 22557 22558 22559 22560 22561 22562 22563 22564 22565 22566 22567 22568 22569 22570 22571 22572 22573 22574 22575 22576 22577 22578 22579 22580 22581 22582 22583 22584 22585 22586 22587 22588 22589 22590 22591 22592 22593 22594 22595 22596 22597 22598 22599 22600 22601 22602 22603 22604 22605 22606 22607 22608 22609 22610 22611 22612 22613 22614 22615 22616 22617 22618 22619 22620 22621 22622 22623 22624 22625 22626 22627 22628 22629 22630 22631 22632 22633 22634 22635 22636 22637 22638 22639 22640 22641 22642 22643 22644 22645 22646 22647 22648 22649 22650 22651 22652 22653 22654 22655 22656 22657 22658 22659 22660 22661 22662 22663 22664 22665 22666 22667 22668 22669 22670 22671 22672 22673 22674 22675 22676 22677 22678 22679 22680 22681 22682 22683 22684 22685 22686 22687 22688 22689 22690 22691 22692 22693 22694 22695 22696 22697 22698 22699 22700 22701 22702 22703 22704 22705 22706 22707 22708 22709 22710 22711 22712 22713 22714 22715 22716 22717 22718 22719 22720 22721 22722 22723 22724 22725 22726 22727 22728 22729 22730 22731 22732 22733 22734 22735 22736 22737 22738 22739 22740 22741 22742 22743 22744 22745 22746 22747 22748 22749 22750 22751 22752 22753 22754 22755 22756 22757 22758 22759 22760 22761 22762 22763 22764 22765 22766 22767 22768 22769 22770 22771 22772 22773 22774 22775 22776 22777 22778 22779 22780 22781 22782 22783 22784 22785 22786 22787 22788 22789 22790 22791 22792 22793 22794 22795 22796 22797 22798 22799 22800 22801 22802 22803 22804 22805 22806 22807 22808 22809 22810 22811 22812 22813 22814 22815 22816 22817 22818 22819 22820 22821 22822 22823 22824 22825 22826 22827 22828 22829 22830 22831 22832 22833 22834 22835 22836 22837 22838 22839 22840 22841 22842 22843 22844 22845 22846 22847 22848 22849 22850 22851 22852 22853 22854 22855 22856 22857 22858 22859 22860 22861 22862 22863 22864 22865 22866 22867 22868 22869 22870 22871 22872 22873 22874 22875 22876 22877 22878 22879 22880 22881 22882 22883 22884 22885 22886 22887 22888 22889 22890 22891 22892 22893 22894 22895 22896 22897 22898 22899 22900 22901 22902 22903 22904 22905 22906 22907 22908 22909 22910 22911 22912 22913 22914 22915 22916 22917 22918 22919 22920 22921 22922 22923 22924 22925 22926 22927 22928 22929 22930 22931 22932 22933 22934 22935 22936 22937 22938 22939 22940 22941 22942 22943 22944 22945 22946 22947 22948 22949 22950 22951 22952 22953 22954 22955 22956 22957 22958 22959 22960 22961 22962 22963 22964 22965 22966 22967 22968 22969 22970 22971 22972 22973 22974 22975 22976 22977 22978 22979 22980 22981 22982 22983 22984 22985 22986 22987 22988 22989 22990 22991 22992 22993 22994 22995 22996 22997 22998 22999 23000 23001 23002 23003 23004 23005 23006 23007 23008 23009 23010 23011 23012 23013 23014 23015 23016 23017 23018 23019 23020 23021 23022 23023 23024 23025 23026 23027 23028 23029 23030 23031 23032 23033 23034 23035 23036 23037 23038 23039 23040 23041 23042 23043 23044 23045 23046 23047 23048 23049 23050 23051 23052 23053 23054 23055 23056 23057 23058 23059 23060 23061 23062 23063 23064 23065 23066 23067 23068 23069 23070 23071 23072 23073 23074 23075 23076 23077 23078 23079 23080 23081 23082 23083 23084 23085 23086 23087 23088 23089 23090 23091 23092 23093 23094 23095 23096 23097 23098 23099 23100 23101 23102 23103 23104 23105 23106 23107 23108 23109 23110 23111 23112 23113 23114 23115 23116 23117 23118 23119 23120 23121 23122 23123 23124 23125 23126 23127 23128 23129 23130 23131 23132 23133 23134 23135 23136 23137 23138 23139 23140 23141 23142 23143 23144 23145 23146 23147 23148 23149 23150 23151 23152 23153 23154 23155 23156 23157 23158 23159 23160 23161 23162 23163 23164 23165 23166 23167 23168 23169 23170 23171 23172 23173 23174 23175 23176 23177 23178 23179 23180 23181 23182 23183 23184 23185 23186 23187 23188 23189 23190 23191 23192 23193 23194 23195 23196 23197 23198 23199 23200 23201 23202 23203 23204 23205 23206 23207 23208 23209 23210 23211 23212 23213 23214 23215 23216 23217 23218 23219 23220 23221 23222 23223 23224 23225 23226 23227 23228 23229 23230 23231 23232 23233 23234 23235 23236 23237 23238 23239 23240 23241 23242 23243 23244 23245 23246 23247 23248 23249 23250 23251 23252 23253 23254 23255 23256 23257 23258 23259 23260 23261 23262 23263 23264 23265 23266 23267 23268 23269 23270 23271 23272 23273 23274 23275 23276 23277 23278 23279 23280 23281 23282 23283 23284 23285 23286 23287 23288 23289 23290 23291 23292 23293 23294 23295 23296 23297 23298 23299 23300 23301 23302 23303 23304 23305 23306 23307 23308 23309 23310 23311 23312 23313 23314 23315 23316 23317 23318 23319 23320 23321 23322 23323 23324 23325 23326 23327 23328 23329 23330 23331 23332 23333 23334 23335 23336 23337 23338 23339 23340 23341 23342 23343 23344 23345 23346 23347 23348 23349 23350 23351 23352 23353 23354 23355 23356 23357 23358 23359 23360 23361 23362 23363 23364 23365 23366 23367 23368 23369 23370 23371 23372 23373 23374 23375 23376 23377 23378 23379 23380 23381 23382 23383 23384 23385 23386 23387 23388 23389 23390 23391 23392 23393 23394 23395 23396 23397 23398 23399 23400 23401 23402 23403 23404 23405 23406 23407 23408 23409 23410 23411 23412 23413 23414 23415 23416 23417 23418 23419 23420 23421 23422 23423 23424 23425 23426 23427 23428 23429 23430 23431 23432 23433 23434 23435 23436 23437 23438 23439 23440 23441 23442 23443 23444 23445 23446 23447 23448 23449 23450 23451 23452 23453 23454 23455 23456 23457 23458 23459 23460 23461 23462 23463 23464 23465 23466 23467 23468 23469 23470 23471 23472 23473 23474 23475 23476 23477 23478 23479 23480 23481 23482 23483 23484 23485 23486 23487 23488 23489 23490 23491 23492 23493 23494 23495 23496 23497 23498 23499 23500 23501 23502 23503 23504 23505 23506 23507 23508 23509 23510 23511 23512 23513 23514 23515 23516 23517 23518 23519 23520 23521 23522 23523 23524 23525 23526 23527 23528 23529 23530 23531 23532 23533 23534 23535 23536 23537 23538 23539 23540 23541 23542 23543 23544 23545 23546 23547 23548 23549 23550 23551 23552 23553 23554 23555 23556 23557 23558 23559 23560 23561 23562 23563 23564 23565 23566 23567 23568 23569 23570 23571 23572 23573 23574 23575 23576 23577 23578 23579 23580 23581 23582 23583 23584 23585 23586 23587 23588 23589 23590 23591 23592 23593 23594 23595 23596 23597 23598 23599 23600 23601 23602 23603 23604 23605 23606 23607 23608 23609 23610 23611 23612 23613 23614 23615 23616 23617 23618 23619 23620 23621 23622 23623 23624 23625 23626 23627 23628 23629 23630 23631 23632 23633 23634 23635 23636 23637 23638 23639 23640 23641 23642 23643 23644 23645 23646 23647 23648 23649 23650 23651 23652 23653 23654 23655 23656 23657 23658 23659 23660 23661 23662 23663 23664 23665 23666 23667 23668 23669 23670 23671 23672 23673 23674 23675 23676 23677 23678 23679 23680 23681 23682 23683 23684 23685 23686 23687 23688 23689 23690 23691 23692 23693 23694 23695 23696 23697 23698 23699 23700 23701 23702 23703 23704 23705 23706 23707 23708 23709 23710 23711 23712 23713 23714 23715 23716 23717 23718 23719 23720 23721 23722 23723 23724 23725 23726 23727 23728 23729 23730 23731 23732 23733 23734 23735 23736 23737 23738 23739 23740 23741 23742 23743 23744 23745 23746 23747 23748 23749 23750 23751 23752 23753 23754 23755 23756 23757 23758 23759 23760 23761 23762 23763 23764 23765 23766 23767 23768 23769 23770 23771 23772 23773 23774 23775 23776 23777 23778 23779 23780 23781 23782 23783 23784 23785 23786 23787 23788 23789 23790 23791 23792 23793 23794 23795 23796 23797 23798 23799 23800 23801 23802 23803 23804 23805 23806 23807 23808 23809 23810 23811 23812 23813 23814 23815 23816 23817 23818 23819 23820 23821 23822 23823 23824 23825 23826 23827 23828 23829 23830 23831 23832 23833 23834 23835 23836 23837 23838 23839 23840 23841 23842 23843 23844 23845 23846 23847 23848 23849 23850 23851 23852 23853 23854 23855 23856 23857 23858 23859 23860 23861 23862 23863 23864 23865 23866 23867 23868 23869 23870 23871 23872 23873 23874 23875 23876 23877 23878 23879 23880 23881 23882 23883 23884 23885 23886 23887 23888 23889 23890 23891 23892 23893 23894 23895 23896 23897 23898 23899 23900 23901 23902 23903 23904 23905 23906 23907 23908 23909 23910 23911 23912 23913 23914 23915 23916 23917 23918 23919 23920 23921 23922 23923 23924 23925 23926 23927 23928 23929 23930 23931 23932 23933 23934 23935 23936 23937 23938 23939 23940 23941 23942 23943 23944 23945 23946 23947 23948 23949 23950 23951 23952 23953 23954 23955 23956 23957 23958 23959 23960 23961 23962 23963 23964 23965 23966 23967 23968 23969 23970 23971 23972 23973 23974 23975 23976 23977 23978 23979 23980 23981 23982 23983 23984 23985 23986 23987 23988 23989 23990 23991 23992 23993 23994 23995 23996 23997 23998 23999 24000 24001 24002 24003 24004 24005 24006 24007 24008 24009 24010 24011 24012 24013 24014 24015 24016 24017 24018 24019 24020 24021 24022 24023 24024 24025 24026 24027 24028 24029 24030 24031 24032 24033 24034 24035 24036 24037 24038 24039 24040 24041 24042 24043 24044 24045 24046 24047 24048 24049 24050 24051 24052 24053 24054 24055 24056 24057 24058 24059 24060 24061 24062 24063 24064 24065 24066 24067 24068 24069 24070 24071 24072 24073 24074 24075 24076 24077 24078 24079 24080 24081 24082 24083 24084 24085 24086 24087 24088 24089 24090 24091 24092 24093 24094 24095 24096 24097 24098 24099 24100 24101 24102 24103 24104 24105 24106 24107 24108 24109 24110 24111 24112 24113 24114 24115 24116 24117 24118 24119 24120 24121 24122 24123 24124 24125 24126 24127 24128 24129 24130 24131 24132 24133 24134 24135 24136 24137 24138 24139 24140 24141 24142 24143 24144 24145 24146 24147 24148 24149 24150 24151 24152 24153 24154 24155 24156 24157 24158 24159 24160 24161 24162 24163 24164 24165 24166 24167 24168 24169 24170 24171 24172 24173 24174 24175 24176 24177 24178 24179 24180 24181 24182 24183 24184 24185 24186 24187 24188 24189 24190 24191 24192 24193 24194 24195 24196 24197 24198 24199 24200 24201 24202 24203 24204 24205 24206 24207 24208 24209 24210 24211 24212 24213 24214 24215 24216 24217 24218 24219 24220 24221 24222 24223 24224 24225 24226 24227 24228 24229 24230 24231 24232 24233 24234 24235 24236 24237 24238 24239 24240 24241 24242 24243 24244 24245 24246 24247 24248 24249 24250 24251 24252 24253 24254 24255 24256 24257 24258 24259 24260 24261 24262 24263 24264 24265 24266 24267 24268 24269 24270 24271 24272 24273 24274 24275 24276 24277 24278 24279 24280 24281 24282 24283 24284 24285 24286 24287 24288 24289 24290 24291 24292 24293 24294 24295 24296 24297 24298 24299 24300 24301 24302 24303 24304 24305 24306 24307 24308 24309 24310 24311 24312 24313 24314 24315 24316 24317 24318 24319 24320 24321 24322 24323 24324 24325 24326 24327 24328 24329 24330 24331 24332 24333 24334 24335 24336 24337 24338 24339 24340 24341 24342 24343 24344 24345 24346 24347 24348 24349 24350 24351 24352 24353 24354 24355 24356 24357 24358 24359 24360 24361 24362 24363 24364 24365 24366 24367 24368 24369 24370 24371 24372 24373 24374 24375 24376 24377 24378 24379 24380 24381 24382 24383 24384 24385 24386 24387 24388 24389 24390 24391 24392 24393 24394 24395 24396 24397 24398 24399 24400 24401 24402 24403 24404 24405 24406 24407 24408 24409 24410 24411 24412 24413 24414 24415 24416 24417 24418 24419 24420 24421 24422 24423 24424 24425 24426 24427 24428 24429 24430 24431 24432 24433 24434 24435 24436 24437 24438 24439 24440 24441 24442 24443 24444 24445 24446 24447 24448 24449 24450 24451 24452 24453 24454 24455 24456 24457 24458 24459 24460 24461 24462 24463 24464 24465 24466 24467 24468 24469 24470 24471 24472 24473 24474 24475 24476 24477 24478 24479 24480 24481 24482 24483 24484 24485 24486 24487 24488 24489 24490 24491 24492 24493 24494 24495 24496 24497 24498 24499 24500 24501 24502 24503 24504 24505 24506 24507 24508 24509 24510 24511 24512 24513 24514 24515 24516 24517 24518 24519 24520 24521 24522 24523 24524 24525 24526 24527 24528 24529 24530 24531 24532 24533 24534 24535 24536 24537 24538 24539 24540 24541 24542 24543 24544 24545 24546 24547 24548 24549 24550 24551 24552 24553 24554 24555 24556 24557 24558 24559 24560 24561 24562 24563 24564 24565 24566 24567 24568 24569 24570 24571 24572 24573 24574 24575 24576 24577 24578 24579 24580 24581 24582 24583 24584 24585 24586 24587 24588 24589 24590 24591 24592 24593 24594 24595 24596 24597 24598 24599 24600 24601 24602 24603 24604 24605 24606 24607 24608 24609 24610 24611 24612 24613 24614 24615 24616 24617 24618 24619 24620 24621 24622 24623 24624 24625 24626 24627 24628 24629 24630 24631 24632 24633 24634 24635 24636 24637 24638 24639 24640 24641 24642 24643 24644 24645 24646 24647 24648 24649 24650 24651 24652 24653 24654 24655 24656 24657 24658 24659 24660 24661 24662 24663 24664 24665 24666 24667 24668 24669 24670 24671 24672 24673 24674 24675 24676 24677 24678 24679 24680 24681 24682 24683 24684 24685 24686 24687 24688 24689 24690 24691 24692 24693 24694 24695 24696 24697 24698 24699 24700 24701 24702 24703 24704 24705 24706 24707 24708 24709 24710 24711 24712 24713 24714 24715 24716 24717 24718 24719 24720 24721 24722 24723 24724 24725 24726 24727 24728 24729 24730 24731 24732 24733 24734 24735 24736 24737 24738 24739 24740 24741 24742 24743 24744 24745 24746 24747 24748 24749 24750 24751 24752 24753 24754 24755 24756 24757 24758 24759 24760 24761 24762 24763 24764 24765 24766 24767 24768 24769 24770 24771 24772 24773 24774 24775 24776 24777 24778 24779 24780 24781 24782 24783 24784 24785 24786 24787 24788 24789 24790 24791 24792 24793 24794 24795 24796 24797 24798 24799 24800 24801 24802 24803 24804 24805 24806 24807 24808 24809 24810 24811 24812 24813 24814 24815 24816 24817 24818 24819 24820 24821 24822 24823 24824 24825 24826 24827 24828 24829 24830 24831 24832 24833 24834 24835 24836 24837 24838 24839 24840 24841 24842 24843 24844 24845 24846 24847 24848 24849 24850 24851 24852 24853 24854 24855 24856 24857 24858 24859 24860 24861 24862 24863 24864 24865 24866 24867 24868 24869 24870 24871 24872 24873 24874 24875 24876 24877 24878 24879 24880 24881 24882 24883 24884 24885 24886 24887 24888 24889 24890 24891 24892 24893 24894 24895 24896 24897 24898 24899 24900 24901 24902 24903 24904 24905 24906 24907 24908 24909 24910 24911 24912 24913 24914 24915 24916 24917 24918 24919 24920 24921 24922 24923 24924 24925 24926 24927 24928 24929 24930 24931 24932 24933 24934 24935 24936 24937 24938 24939 24940 24941 24942 24943 24944 24945 24946 24947 24948 24949 24950 24951 24952 24953 24954 24955 24956 24957 24958 24959 24960 24961 24962 24963 24964 24965 24966 24967 24968 24969 24970 24971 24972 24973 24974 24975 24976 24977 24978 24979 24980 24981 24982 24983 24984 24985 24986 24987 24988 24989 24990 24991 24992 24993 24994 24995 24996 24997 24998 24999 25000 25001 25002 25003 25004 25005 25006 25007 25008 25009 25010 25011 25012 25013 25014 25015 25016 25017 25018 25019 25020 25021 25022 25023 25024 25025 25026 25027 25028 25029 25030 25031 25032 25033 25034 25035 25036 25037 25038 25039 25040 25041 25042 25043 25044 25045 25046 25047 25048 25049 25050 25051 25052 25053 25054 25055 25056 25057 25058 25059 25060 25061 25062 25063 25064 25065 25066 25067 25068 25069 25070 25071 25072 25073 25074 25075 25076 25077 25078 25079 25080 25081 25082 25083 25084 25085 25086 25087 25088 25089 25090 25091 25092 25093 25094 25095 25096 25097 25098 25099 25100 25101 25102 25103 25104 25105 25106 25107 25108 25109 25110 25111 25112 25113 25114 25115 25116 25117 25118 25119 25120 25121 25122 25123 25124 25125 25126 25127 25128 25129 25130 25131 25132 25133 25134 25135 25136 25137 25138 25139 25140 25141 25142 25143 25144 25145 25146 25147 25148 25149 25150 25151 25152 25153 25154 25155 25156 25157 25158 25159 25160 25161 25162 25163 25164 25165 25166 25167 25168 25169 25170 25171 25172 25173 25174 25175 25176 25177 25178 25179 25180 25181 25182 25183 25184 25185 25186 25187 25188 25189 25190 25191 25192 25193 25194 25195 25196 25197 25198 25199 25200 25201 25202 25203 25204 25205 25206 25207 25208 25209 25210 25211 25212 25213 25214 25215 25216 25217 25218 25219 25220 25221 25222 25223 25224 25225 25226 25227 25228 25229 25230 25231 25232 25233 25234 25235 25236 25237 25238 25239 25240 25241 25242 25243 25244 25245 25246 25247 25248 25249 25250 25251 25252 25253 25254 25255 25256 25257 25258 25259 25260 25261 25262 25263 25264 25265 25266 25267 25268 25269 25270 25271 25272 25273 25274 25275 25276 25277 25278 25279 25280 25281 25282 25283 25284 25285 25286 25287 25288 25289 25290 25291 25292 25293 25294 25295 25296 25297 25298 25299 25300 25301 25302 25303 25304 25305 25306 25307 25308 25309 25310 25311 25312 25313 25314 25315 25316 25317 25318 25319 25320 25321 25322 25323 25324 25325 25326 25327 25328 25329 25330 25331 25332 25333 25334 25335 25336 25337 25338 25339 25340 25341 25342 25343 25344 25345 25346 25347 25348 25349 25350 25351 25352 25353 25354 25355 25356 25357 25358 25359 25360 25361 25362 25363 25364 25365 25366 25367 25368 25369 25370 25371 25372 25373 25374 25375 25376 25377 25378 25379 25380 25381 25382 25383 25384 25385 25386 25387 25388 25389 25390 25391 25392 25393 25394 25395 25396 25397 25398 25399 25400 25401 25402 25403 25404 25405 25406 25407 25408 25409 25410 25411 25412 25413 25414 25415 25416 25417 25418 25419 25420 25421 25422 25423 25424 25425 25426 25427 25428 25429 25430 25431 25432 25433 25434 25435 25436 25437 25438 25439 25440 25441 25442 25443 25444 25445 25446 25447 25448 25449 25450 25451 25452 25453 25454 25455 25456 25457 25458 25459 25460 25461 25462 25463 25464 25465 25466 25467 25468 25469 25470 25471 25472 25473 25474 25475 25476 25477 25478 25479 25480 25481 25482 25483 25484 25485 25486 25487 25488 25489 25490 25491 25492 25493 25494 25495 25496 25497 25498 25499 25500 25501 25502 25503 25504 25505 25506 25507 25508 25509 25510 25511 25512 25513 25514 25515 25516 25517 25518 25519 25520 25521 25522 25523 25524 25525 25526 25527 25528 25529 25530 25531 25532 25533 25534 25535 25536 25537 25538 25539 25540 25541 25542 25543 25544 25545 25546 25547 25548 25549 25550 25551 25552 25553 25554 25555 25556 25557 25558 25559 25560 25561 25562 25563 25564 25565 25566 25567 25568 25569 25570 25571 25572 25573 25574 25575 25576 25577 25578 25579 25580 25581 25582 25583 25584 25585 25586 25587 25588 25589 25590 25591 25592 25593 25594 25595 25596 25597 25598 25599 25600 25601 25602 25603 25604 25605 25606 25607 25608 25609 25610 25611 25612 25613 25614 25615 25616 25617 25618 25619 25620 25621 25622 25623 25624 25625 25626 25627 25628 25629 25630 25631 25632 25633 25634 25635 25636 25637 25638 25639 25640 25641 25642 25643 25644 25645 25646 25647 25648 25649 25650 25651 25652 25653 25654 25655 25656 25657 25658 25659 25660 25661 25662 25663 25664 25665 25666 25667 25668 25669 25670 25671 25672 25673 25674 25675 25676 25677 25678 25679 25680 25681 25682 25683 25684 25685 25686 25687 25688 25689 25690 25691 25692 25693 25694 25695 25696 25697 25698 25699 25700 25701 25702 25703 25704 25705 25706 25707 25708 25709 25710 25711 25712 25713 25714 25715 25716 25717 25718 25719 25720 25721 25722 25723 25724 25725 25726 25727 25728 25729 25730 25731 25732 25733 25734 25735 25736 25737 25738 25739 25740 25741 25742 25743 25744 25745 25746 25747 25748 25749 25750 25751 25752 25753 25754 25755 25756 25757 25758 25759 25760 25761 25762 25763 25764 25765 25766 25767 25768 25769 25770 25771 25772 25773 25774 25775 25776 25777 25778 25779 25780 25781 25782 25783 25784 25785 25786 25787 25788 25789 25790 25791 25792 25793 25794 25795 25796 25797 25798 25799 25800 25801 25802 25803 25804 25805 25806 25807 25808 25809 25810 25811 25812 25813 25814 25815 25816 25817 25818 25819 25820 25821 25822 25823 25824 25825 25826 25827 25828 25829 25830 25831 25832 25833 25834 25835 25836 25837 25838 25839 25840 25841 25842 25843 25844 25845 25846 25847 25848 25849 25850 25851 25852 25853 25854 25855 25856 25857 25858 25859 25860 25861 25862 25863 25864 25865 25866 25867 25868 25869 25870 25871 25872 25873 25874 25875 25876 25877 25878 25879 25880 25881 25882 25883 25884 25885 25886 25887 25888 25889 25890 25891 25892 25893 25894 25895 25896 25897 25898 25899 25900 25901 25902 25903 25904 25905 25906 25907 25908 25909 25910 25911 25912 25913 25914 25915 25916 25917 25918 25919 25920 25921 25922 25923 25924 25925 25926 25927 25928 25929 25930 25931 25932 25933 25934 25935 25936 25937 25938 25939 25940 25941 25942 25943 25944 25945 25946 25947 25948 25949 25950 25951 25952 25953 25954 25955 25956 25957 25958 25959 25960 25961 25962 25963 25964 25965 25966 25967 25968 25969 25970 25971 25972 25973 25974 25975 25976 25977 25978 25979 25980 25981 25982 25983 25984 25985 25986 25987 25988 25989 25990 25991 25992 25993 25994 25995 25996 25997 25998 25999 26000 26001 26002 26003 26004 26005 26006 26007 26008 26009 26010 26011 26012 26013 26014 26015 26016 26017 26018 26019 26020 26021 26022 26023 26024 26025 26026 26027 26028 26029 26030 26031 26032 26033 26034 26035 26036 26037 26038 26039 26040 26041 26042 26043 26044 26045 26046 26047 26048 26049 26050 26051 26052 26053 26054 26055 26056 26057 26058 26059 26060 26061 26062 26063 26064 26065 26066 26067 26068 26069 26070 26071 26072 26073 26074 26075 26076 26077 26078 26079 26080 26081 26082 26083 26084 26085 26086 26087 26088 26089 26090 26091 26092 26093 26094 26095 26096 26097 26098 26099 26100 26101 26102 26103 26104 26105 26106 26107 26108 26109 26110 26111 26112 26113 26114 26115 26116 26117 26118 26119 26120 26121 26122 26123 26124 26125 26126 26127 26128 26129 26130 26131 26132 26133 26134 26135 26136 26137 26138 26139 26140 26141 26142 26143 26144 26145 26146 26147 26148 26149 26150 26151 26152 26153 26154 26155 26156 26157 26158 26159 26160 26161 26162 26163 26164 26165 26166 26167 26168 26169 26170 26171 26172 26173 26174 26175 26176 26177 26178 26179 26180 26181 26182 26183 26184 26185 26186 26187 26188 26189 26190 26191 26192 26193 26194 26195 26196 26197 26198 26199 26200 26201 26202 26203 26204 26205 26206 26207 26208 26209 26210 26211 26212 26213 26214 26215 26216 26217 26218 26219 26220 26221 26222 26223 26224 26225 26226 26227 26228 26229 26230 26231 26232 26233 26234 26235 26236 26237 26238 26239 26240 26241 26242 26243 26244 26245 26246 26247 26248 26249 26250 26251 26252 26253 26254 26255 26256 26257 26258 26259 26260 26261 26262 26263 26264 26265 26266 26267 26268 26269 26270 26271 26272 26273 26274 26275 26276 26277 26278 26279 26280 26281 26282 26283 26284 26285 26286 26287 26288 26289 26290 26291 26292 26293 26294 26295 26296 26297 26298 26299 26300 26301 26302 26303 26304 26305 26306 26307 26308 26309 26310 26311 26312 26313 26314 26315 26316 26317 26318 26319 26320 26321 26322 26323 26324 26325 26326 26327 26328 26329 26330 26331 26332 26333 26334 26335 26336 26337 26338 26339 26340 26341 26342 26343 26344 26345 26346 26347 26348 26349 26350 26351 26352 26353 26354 26355 26356 26357 26358 26359 26360 26361 26362 26363 26364 26365 26366 26367 26368 26369 26370 26371 26372 26373 26374 26375 26376 26377 26378 26379 26380 26381 26382 26383 26384 26385 26386 26387 26388 26389 26390 26391 26392 26393 26394 26395 26396 26397 26398 26399 26400 26401 26402 26403 26404 26405 26406 26407 26408 26409 26410 26411 26412 26413 26414 26415 26416 26417 26418 26419 26420 26421 26422 26423 26424 26425 26426 26427 26428 26429 26430 26431 26432 26433 26434 26435 26436 26437 26438 26439 26440 26441 26442 26443 26444 26445 26446 26447 26448 26449 26450 26451 26452 26453 26454 26455 26456 26457 26458 26459 26460 26461 26462 26463 26464 26465 26466 26467 26468 26469 26470 26471 26472 26473 26474 26475 26476 26477 26478 26479 26480 26481 26482 26483 26484 26485 26486 26487 26488 26489 26490 26491 26492 26493 26494 26495 26496 26497 26498 26499 26500 26501 26502 26503 26504 26505 26506 26507 26508 26509 26510 26511 26512 26513 26514 26515 26516 26517 26518 26519 26520 26521 26522 26523 26524 26525 26526 26527 26528 26529 26530 26531 26532 26533 26534 26535 26536 26537 26538 26539 26540 26541 26542 26543 26544 26545 26546 26547 26548 26549 26550 26551 26552 26553 26554 26555 26556 26557 26558 26559 26560 26561 26562 26563 26564 26565 26566 26567 26568 26569 26570 26571 26572 26573 26574 26575 26576 26577 26578 26579 26580 26581 26582 26583 26584 26585 26586 26587 26588 26589 26590 26591 26592 26593 26594 26595 26596 26597 26598 26599 26600 26601 26602 26603 26604 26605 26606 26607 26608 26609 26610 26611 26612 26613 26614 26615 26616 26617 26618 26619 26620 26621 26622 26623 26624 26625 26626 26627 26628 26629 26630 26631 26632 26633 26634 26635 26636 26637 26638 26639 26640 26641 26642 26643 26644 26645 26646 26647 26648 26649 26650 26651 26652 26653 26654 26655 26656 26657 26658 26659 26660 26661 26662 26663 26664 26665 26666 26667 26668 26669 26670 26671 26672 26673 26674 26675 26676 26677 26678 26679 26680 26681 26682 26683 26684 26685 26686 26687 26688 26689 26690 26691 26692 26693 26694 26695 26696 26697 26698 26699 26700 26701 26702 26703 26704 26705 26706 26707 26708 26709 26710 26711 26712 26713 26714 26715 26716 26717 26718 26719 26720 26721 26722 26723 26724 26725 26726 26727 26728 26729 26730 26731 26732 26733 26734 26735 26736 26737 26738 26739 26740 26741 26742 26743 26744 26745 26746 26747 26748 26749 26750 26751 26752 26753 26754 26755 26756 26757 26758 26759 26760 26761 26762 26763 26764 26765 26766 26767 26768 26769 26770 26771 26772 26773 26774 26775 26776 26777 26778 26779 26780 26781 26782 26783 26784 26785 26786 26787 26788 26789 26790 26791 26792 26793 26794 26795 26796 26797 26798 26799 26800 26801 26802 26803 26804 26805 26806 26807 26808 26809 26810 26811 26812 26813 26814 26815 26816 26817 26818 26819 26820 26821 26822 26823 26824 26825 26826 26827 26828 26829 26830 26831 26832 26833 26834 26835 26836 26837 26838 26839 26840 26841 26842 26843 26844 26845 26846 26847 26848 26849 26850 26851 26852 26853 26854 26855 26856 26857 26858 26859 26860 26861 26862 26863 26864 26865 26866 26867 26868 26869 26870 26871 26872 26873 26874 26875 26876 26877 26878 26879 26880 26881 26882 26883 26884 26885 26886 26887 26888 26889 26890 26891 26892 26893 26894 26895 26896 26897 26898 26899 26900 26901 26902 26903 26904 26905 26906 26907 26908 26909 26910 26911 26912 26913 26914 26915 26916 26917 26918 26919 26920 26921 26922 26923 26924 26925 26926 26927 26928 26929 26930 26931 26932 26933 26934 26935 26936 26937 26938 26939 26940 26941 26942 26943 26944 26945 26946 26947 26948 26949 26950 26951 26952 26953 26954 26955 26956 26957 26958 26959 26960 26961 26962 26963 26964 26965 26966 26967 26968 26969 26970 26971 26972 26973 26974 26975 26976 26977 26978 26979 26980 26981 26982 26983 26984 26985 26986 26987 26988 26989 26990 26991 26992 26993 26994 26995 26996 26997 26998 26999 27000 27001 27002 27003 27004 27005 27006 27007 27008 27009 27010 27011 27012 27013 27014 27015 27016 27017 27018 27019 27020 27021 27022 27023 27024 27025 27026 27027 27028 27029 27030 27031 27032 27033 27034 27035 27036 27037 27038 27039 27040 27041 27042 27043 27044 27045 27046 27047 27048 27049 27050 27051 27052 27053 27054 27055 27056 27057 27058 27059 27060 27061 27062 27063 27064 27065 27066 27067 27068 27069 27070 27071 27072 27073 27074 27075 27076 27077 27078 27079 27080 27081 27082 27083 27084 27085 27086 27087 27088 27089 27090 27091 27092 27093 27094 27095 27096 27097 27098 27099 27100 27101 27102 27103 27104 27105 27106 27107 27108 27109 27110 27111 27112 27113 27114 27115 27116 27117 27118 27119 27120 27121 27122 27123 27124 27125 27126 27127 27128 27129 27130 27131 27132 27133 27134 27135 27136 27137 27138 27139 27140 27141 27142 27143 27144 27145 27146 27147 27148 27149 27150 27151 27152 27153 27154 27155 27156 27157 27158 27159 27160 27161 27162 27163 27164 27165 27166 27167 27168 27169 27170 27171 27172 27173 27174 27175 27176 27177 27178 27179 27180 27181 27182 27183 27184 27185 27186 27187 27188 27189 27190 27191 27192 27193 27194 27195 27196 27197 27198 27199 27200 27201 27202 27203 27204 27205 27206 27207 27208 27209 27210 27211 27212 27213 27214 27215 27216 27217 27218 27219 27220 27221 27222 27223 27224 27225 27226 27227 27228 27229 27230 27231 27232 27233 27234 27235 27236 27237 27238 27239 27240 27241 27242 27243 27244 27245 27246 27247 27248 27249 27250 27251 27252 27253 27254 27255 27256 27257 27258 27259 27260 27261 27262 27263 27264 27265 27266 27267 27268 27269 27270 27271 27272 27273 27274 27275 27276 27277 27278 27279 27280 27281 27282 27283 27284 27285 27286 27287 27288 27289 27290 27291 27292 27293 27294 27295 27296 27297 27298 27299 27300 27301 27302 27303 27304 27305 27306 27307 27308 27309 27310 27311 27312 27313 27314 27315 27316 27317 27318 27319 27320 27321 27322 27323 27324 27325 27326 27327 27328 27329 27330 27331 27332 27333 27334 27335 27336 27337 27338 27339 27340 27341 27342 27343 27344 27345 27346 27347 27348 27349 27350 27351 27352 27353 27354 27355 27356 27357 27358 27359 27360 27361 27362 27363 27364 27365 27366 27367 27368 27369 27370 27371 27372 27373 27374 27375 27376 27377 27378 27379 27380 27381 27382 27383 27384 27385 27386 27387 27388 27389 27390 27391 27392 27393 27394 27395 27396 27397 27398 27399 27400 27401 27402 27403 27404 27405 27406 27407 27408 27409 27410 27411 27412 27413 27414 27415 27416 27417 27418 27419 27420 27421 27422 27423 27424 27425 27426 27427 27428 27429 27430 27431 27432 27433 27434 27435 27436 27437 27438 27439 27440 27441 27442 27443 27444 27445 27446 27447 27448 27449 27450 27451 27452 27453 27454 27455 27456 27457 27458 27459 27460 27461 27462 27463 27464 27465 27466 27467 27468 27469 27470 27471 27472 27473 27474 27475 27476 27477 27478 27479 27480 27481 27482 27483 27484 27485 27486 27487 27488 27489 27490 27491 27492 27493 27494 27495 27496 27497 27498 27499 27500 27501 27502 27503 27504 27505 27506 27507 27508 27509 27510 27511 27512 27513 27514 27515 27516 27517 27518 27519 27520 27521 27522 27523 27524 27525 27526 27527 27528 27529 27530 27531 27532 27533 27534 27535 27536 27537 27538 27539 27540 27541 27542 27543 27544 27545 27546 27547 27548 27549 27550 27551 27552 27553 27554 27555 27556 27557 27558 27559 27560 27561 27562 27563 27564 27565 27566 27567 27568 27569 27570 27571 27572 27573 27574 27575 27576 27577 27578 27579 27580 27581 27582 27583 27584 27585 27586 27587 27588 27589 27590 27591 27592 27593 27594 27595 27596 27597 27598 27599 27600 27601 27602 27603 27604 27605 27606 27607 27608 27609 27610 27611 27612 27613 27614 27615 27616 27617 27618 27619 27620 27621 27622 27623 27624 27625 27626 27627 27628 27629 27630 27631 27632 27633 27634 27635 27636 27637 27638 27639 27640 27641 27642 27643 27644 27645 27646 27647 27648 27649 27650 27651 27652 27653 27654 27655 27656 27657 27658 27659 27660 27661 27662 27663 27664 27665 27666 27667 27668 27669 27670 27671 27672 27673 27674 27675 27676 27677 27678 27679 27680 27681 27682 27683 27684 27685 27686 27687 27688 27689 27690 27691 27692 27693 27694 27695 27696 27697 27698 27699 27700 27701 27702 27703 27704 27705 27706 27707 27708 27709 27710 27711 27712 27713 27714 27715 27716 27717 27718 27719 27720 27721 27722 27723 27724 27725 27726 27727 27728 27729 27730 27731 27732 27733 27734 27735 27736 27737 27738 27739 27740 27741 27742 27743 27744 27745 27746 27747 27748 27749 27750 27751 27752 27753 27754 27755 27756 27757 27758 27759 27760 27761 27762 27763 27764 27765 27766 27767 27768 27769 27770 27771 27772 27773 27774 27775 27776 27777 27778 27779 27780 27781 27782 27783 27784 27785 27786 27787 27788 27789 27790 27791 27792 27793 27794 27795 27796 27797 27798 27799 27800 27801 27802 27803 27804 27805 27806 27807 27808 27809 27810 27811 27812 27813 27814 27815 27816 27817 27818 27819 27820 27821 27822 27823 27824 27825 27826 27827 27828 27829 27830 27831 27832 27833 27834 27835 27836 27837 27838 27839 27840 27841 27842 27843 27844 27845 27846 27847 27848 27849 27850 27851 27852 27853 27854 27855 27856 27857 27858 27859 27860 27861 27862 27863 27864 27865 27866 27867 27868 27869 27870 27871 27872 27873 27874 27875 27876 27877 27878 27879 27880 27881 27882 27883 27884 27885 27886 27887 27888 27889 27890 27891 27892 27893 27894 27895 27896 27897 27898 27899 27900 27901 27902 27903 27904 27905 27906 27907 27908 27909 27910 27911 27912 27913 27914 27915 27916 27917 27918 27919 27920 27921 27922 27923 27924 27925 27926 27927 27928 27929 27930 27931 27932 27933 27934 27935 27936 27937 27938 27939 27940 27941 27942 27943 27944 27945 27946 27947 27948 27949 27950 27951 27952 27953 27954 27955 27956 27957 27958 27959 27960 27961 27962 27963 27964 27965 27966 27967 27968 27969 27970 27971 27972 27973 27974 27975 27976 27977 27978 27979 27980 27981 27982 27983 27984 27985 27986 27987 27988 27989 27990 27991 27992 27993 27994 27995 27996 27997 27998 27999 28000 28001 28002 28003 28004 28005 28006 28007 28008 28009 28010 28011 28012 28013 28014 28015 28016 28017 28018 28019 28020 28021 28022 28023 28024 28025 28026 28027 28028 28029 28030 28031 28032 28033 28034 28035 28036 28037 28038 28039 28040 28041 28042 28043 28044 28045 28046 28047 28048 28049 28050 28051 28052 28053 28054 28055 28056 28057 28058 28059 28060 28061 28062 28063 28064 28065 28066 28067 28068 28069 28070 28071 28072 28073 28074 28075 28076 28077 28078 28079 28080 28081 28082 28083 28084 28085 28086 28087 28088 28089 28090 28091 28092 28093 28094 28095 28096 28097 28098 28099 28100 28101 28102 28103 28104 28105 28106 28107 28108 28109 28110 28111 28112 28113 28114 28115 28116 28117 28118 28119 28120 28121 28122 28123 28124 28125 28126 28127 28128 28129 28130 28131 28132 28133 28134 28135 28136 28137 28138 28139 28140 28141 28142 28143 28144 28145 28146 28147 28148 28149 28150 28151 28152 28153 28154 28155 28156 28157 28158 28159 28160 28161 28162 28163 28164 28165 28166 28167 28168 28169 28170 28171 28172 28173 28174 28175 28176 28177 28178 28179 28180 28181 28182 28183 28184 28185 28186 28187 28188 28189 28190 28191 28192 28193 28194 28195 28196 28197 28198 28199 28200 28201 28202 28203 28204 28205 28206 28207 28208 28209 28210 28211 28212 28213 28214 28215 28216 28217 28218 28219 28220 28221 28222 28223 28224 28225 28226 28227 28228 28229 28230 28231 28232 28233 28234 28235 28236 28237 28238 28239 28240 28241 28242 28243 28244 28245 28246 28247 28248 28249 28250 28251 28252 28253 28254 28255 28256 28257 28258 28259 28260 28261 28262 28263 28264 28265 28266 28267 28268 28269 28270 28271 28272 28273 28274 28275 28276 28277 28278 28279 28280 28281 28282 28283 28284 28285 28286 28287 28288 28289 28290 28291 28292 28293 28294 28295 28296 28297 28298 28299 28300 28301 28302 28303 28304 28305 28306 28307 28308 28309 28310 28311 28312 28313 28314 28315 28316 28317 28318 28319 28320 28321 28322 28323 28324 28325 28326 28327 28328 28329 28330 28331 28332 28333 28334 28335 28336 28337 28338 28339 28340 28341 28342 28343 28344 28345 28346 28347 28348 28349 28350 28351 28352 28353 28354 28355 28356 28357 28358 28359 28360 28361 28362 28363 28364 28365 28366 28367 28368 28369 28370 28371 28372 28373 28374 28375 28376 28377 28378 28379 28380 28381 28382 28383 28384 28385 28386 28387 28388 28389 28390 28391 28392 28393 28394 28395 28396 28397 28398 28399 28400 28401 28402 28403 28404 28405 28406 28407 28408 28409 28410 28411 28412 28413 28414 28415 28416 28417 28418 28419 28420 28421 28422 28423 28424 28425 28426 28427 28428 28429 28430 28431 28432 28433 28434 28435 28436 28437 28438 28439 28440 28441 28442 28443 28444 28445 28446 28447 28448 28449 28450 28451 28452 28453 28454 28455 28456 28457 28458 28459 28460 28461 28462 28463 28464 28465 28466 28467 28468 28469 28470 28471 28472 28473 28474 28475 28476 28477 28478 28479 28480 28481 28482 28483 28484 28485 28486 28487 28488 28489 28490 28491 28492 28493 28494 28495 28496 28497 28498 28499 28500 28501 28502 28503 28504 28505 28506 28507 28508 28509 28510 28511 28512 28513 28514 28515 28516 28517 28518 28519 28520 28521 28522 28523 28524 28525 28526 28527 28528 28529 28530 28531 28532 28533 28534 28535 28536 28537 28538 28539 28540 28541 28542 28543 28544 28545 28546 28547 28548 28549 28550 28551 28552 28553 28554 28555 28556 28557 28558 28559 28560 28561 28562 28563 28564 28565 28566 28567 28568 28569 28570 28571 28572 28573 28574 28575 28576 28577 28578 28579 28580 28581 28582 28583 28584 28585 28586 28587 28588 28589 28590 28591 28592 28593 28594 28595 28596 28597 28598 28599 28600 28601 28602 28603 28604 28605 28606 28607 28608 28609 28610 28611 28612 28613 28614 28615 28616 28617 28618 28619 28620 28621 28622 28623 28624 28625 28626 28627 28628 28629 28630 28631 28632 28633 28634 28635 28636 28637 28638 28639 28640 28641 28642 28643 28644 28645 28646 28647 28648 28649 28650 28651 28652 28653 28654 28655 28656 28657 28658 28659 28660 28661 28662 28663 28664 28665 28666 28667 28668 28669 28670 28671 28672 28673 28674 28675 28676 28677 28678 28679 28680 28681 28682 28683 28684 28685 28686 28687 28688 28689 28690 28691 28692 28693 28694 28695 28696 28697 28698 28699 28700 28701 28702 28703 28704 28705 28706 28707 28708 28709 28710 28711 28712 28713 28714 28715 28716 28717 28718 28719 28720 28721 28722 28723 28724 28725 28726 28727 28728 28729 28730 28731 28732 28733 28734 28735 28736 28737 28738 28739 28740 28741 28742 28743 28744 28745 28746 28747 28748 28749 28750 28751 28752 28753 28754 28755 28756 28757 28758 28759 28760 28761 28762 28763 28764 28765 28766 28767 28768 28769 28770 28771 28772 28773 28774 28775 28776 28777 28778 28779 28780 28781 28782 28783 28784 28785 28786 28787 28788 28789 28790 28791 28792 28793 28794 28795 28796 28797 28798 28799 28800 28801 28802 28803 28804 28805 28806 28807 28808 28809 28810 28811 28812 28813 28814 28815 28816 28817 28818 28819 28820 28821 28822 28823 28824 28825 28826 28827 28828 28829 28830 28831 28832 28833 28834 28835 28836 28837 28838 28839 28840 28841 28842 28843 28844 28845 28846 28847 28848 28849 28850 28851 28852 28853 28854 28855 28856 28857 28858 28859 28860 28861 28862 28863 28864 28865 28866 28867 28868 28869 28870 28871 28872 28873 28874 28875 28876 28877 28878 28879 28880 28881 28882 28883 28884 28885 28886 28887 28888 28889 28890 28891 28892 28893 28894 28895 28896 28897 28898 28899 28900 28901 28902 28903 28904 28905 28906 28907 28908 28909 28910 28911 28912 28913 28914 28915 28916 28917 28918 28919 28920 28921 28922 28923 28924 28925 28926 28927 28928 28929 28930 28931 28932 28933 28934 28935 28936 28937 28938 28939 28940 28941 28942 28943 28944 28945 28946 28947 28948 28949 28950 28951 28952 28953 28954 28955 28956 28957 28958 28959 28960 28961 28962 28963 28964 28965 28966 28967 28968 28969 28970 28971 28972 28973 28974 28975 28976 28977 28978 28979 28980 28981 28982 28983 28984 28985 28986 28987 28988 28989 28990 28991 28992 28993 28994 28995 28996 28997 28998 28999 29000 29001 29002 29003 29004 29005 29006 29007 29008 29009 29010 29011 29012 29013 29014 29015 29016 29017 29018 29019 29020 29021 29022 29023 29024 29025 29026 29027 29028 29029 29030 29031 29032 29033 29034 29035 29036 29037 29038 29039 29040 29041 29042 29043 29044 29045 29046 29047 29048 29049 29050 29051 29052 29053 29054 29055 29056 29057 29058 29059 29060 29061 29062 29063 29064 29065 29066 29067 29068 29069 29070 29071 29072 29073 29074 29075 29076 29077 29078 29079 29080 29081 29082 29083 29084 29085 29086 29087 29088 29089 29090 29091 29092 29093 29094 29095 29096 29097 29098 29099 29100 29101 29102 29103 29104 29105 29106 29107 29108 29109 29110 29111 29112 29113 29114 29115 29116 29117 29118 29119 29120 29121 29122 29123 29124 29125 29126 29127 29128 29129 29130 29131 29132 29133 29134 29135 29136 29137 29138 29139 29140 29141 29142 29143 29144 29145 29146 29147 29148 29149 29150 29151 29152 29153 29154 29155 29156 29157 29158 29159 29160 29161 29162 29163 29164 29165 29166 29167 29168 29169 29170 29171 29172 29173 29174 29175 29176 29177 29178 29179 29180 29181 29182 29183 29184 29185 29186 29187 29188 29189 29190 29191 29192 29193 29194 29195 29196 29197 29198 29199 29200 29201 29202 29203 29204 29205 29206 29207 29208 29209 29210 29211 29212 29213 29214 29215 29216 29217 29218 29219 29220 29221 29222 29223 29224 29225 29226 29227 29228 29229 29230 29231 29232 29233 29234 29235 29236 29237 29238 29239 29240 29241 29242 29243 29244 29245 29246 29247 29248 29249 29250 29251 29252 29253 29254 29255 29256 29257 29258 29259 29260 29261 29262 29263 29264 29265 29266 29267 29268 29269 29270 29271 29272 29273 29274 29275 29276 29277 29278 29279 29280 29281 29282 29283 29284 29285 29286 29287 29288 29289 29290 29291 29292 29293 29294 29295 29296 29297 29298 29299 29300 29301 29302 29303 29304 29305 29306 29307 29308 29309 29310 29311 29312 29313 29314 29315 29316 29317 29318 29319 29320 29321 29322 29323 29324 29325 29326 29327 29328 29329 29330 29331 29332 29333 29334 29335 29336 29337 29338 29339 29340 29341 29342 29343 29344 29345 29346 29347 29348 29349 29350 29351 29352 29353 29354 29355 29356 29357 29358 29359 29360 29361 29362 29363 29364 29365 29366 29367 29368 29369 29370 29371 29372 29373 29374 29375 29376 29377 29378 29379 29380 29381 29382 29383 29384 29385 29386 29387 29388 29389 29390 29391 29392 29393 29394 29395 29396 29397 29398 29399 29400 29401 29402 29403 29404 29405 29406 29407 29408 29409 29410 29411 29412 29413 29414 29415 29416 29417 29418 29419 29420 29421 29422 29423 29424 29425 29426 29427 29428 29429 29430 29431 29432 29433 29434 29435 29436 29437 29438 29439 29440 29441 29442 29443 29444 29445 29446 29447 29448 29449 29450 29451 29452 29453 29454 29455 29456 29457 29458 29459 29460 29461 29462 29463 29464 29465 29466 29467 29468 29469 29470 29471 29472 29473 29474 29475 29476 29477 29478 29479 29480 29481 29482 29483 29484 29485 29486 29487 29488 29489 29490 29491 29492 29493 29494 29495 29496 29497 29498 29499 29500 29501 29502 29503 29504 29505 29506 29507 29508 29509 29510 29511 29512 29513 29514 29515 29516 29517 29518 29519 29520 29521 29522 29523 29524 29525 29526 29527 29528 29529 29530 29531 29532 29533 29534 29535 29536 29537 29538 29539 29540 29541 29542 29543 29544 29545 29546 29547 29548 29549 29550 29551 29552 29553 29554 29555 29556 29557 29558 29559 29560 29561 29562 29563 29564 29565 29566 29567 29568 29569 29570 29571 29572 29573 29574 29575 29576 29577 29578 29579 29580 29581 29582 29583 29584 29585 29586 29587 29588 29589 29590 29591 29592 29593 29594 29595 29596 29597 29598 29599 29600 29601 29602 29603 29604 29605 29606 29607 29608 29609 29610 29611 29612 29613 29614 29615 29616 29617 29618 29619 29620 29621 29622 29623 29624 29625 29626 29627 29628 29629 29630 29631 29632 29633 29634 29635 29636 29637 29638 29639 29640 29641 29642 29643 29644 29645 29646 29647 29648 29649 29650 29651 29652 29653 29654 29655 29656 29657 29658 29659 29660 29661 29662 29663 29664 29665 29666 29667 29668 29669 29670 29671 29672 29673 29674 29675 29676 29677 29678 29679 29680 29681 29682 29683 29684 29685 29686 29687 29688 29689 29690 29691 29692 29693 29694 29695 29696 29697 29698 29699 29700 29701 29702 29703 29704 29705 29706 29707 29708 29709 29710 29711 29712 29713 29714 29715 29716 29717 29718 29719 29720 29721 29722 29723 29724 29725 29726 29727 29728 29729 29730 29731 29732 29733 29734 29735 29736 29737 29738 29739 29740 29741 29742 29743 29744 29745 29746 29747 29748 29749 29750 29751 29752 29753 29754 29755 29756 29757 29758 29759 29760 29761 29762 29763 29764 29765 29766 29767 29768 29769 29770 29771 29772 29773 29774 29775 29776 29777 29778 29779 29780 29781 29782 29783 29784 29785 29786 29787 29788 29789 29790 29791 29792 29793 29794 29795 29796 29797 29798 29799 29800 29801 29802 29803 29804 29805 29806 29807 29808 29809 29810 29811 29812 29813 29814 29815 29816 29817 29818 29819 29820 29821 29822 29823 29824 29825 29826 29827 29828 29829 29830 29831 29832 29833 29834 29835 29836 29837 29838 29839 29840 29841 29842 29843 29844 29845 29846 29847 29848 29849 29850 29851 29852 29853 29854 29855 29856 29857 29858 29859 29860 29861 29862 29863 29864 29865 29866 29867 29868 29869 29870 29871 29872 29873 29874 29875 29876 29877 29878 29879 29880 29881 29882 29883 29884 29885 29886 29887 29888 29889 29890 29891 29892 29893 29894 29895 29896 29897 29898 29899 29900 29901 29902 29903 29904 29905 29906 29907 29908 29909 29910 29911 29912 29913 29914 29915 29916 29917 29918 29919 29920 29921 29922 29923 29924 29925 29926 29927 29928 29929 29930 29931 29932 29933 29934 29935 29936 29937 29938 29939 29940 29941 29942 29943 29944 29945 29946 29947 29948 29949 29950 29951 29952 29953 29954 29955 29956 29957 29958 29959 29960 29961 29962 29963 29964 29965 29966 29967 29968 29969 29970 29971 29972 29973 29974 29975 29976 29977 29978 29979 29980 29981 29982 29983 29984 29985 29986 29987 29988 29989 29990 29991 29992 29993 29994 29995 29996 29997 29998 29999 30000 30001 30002 30003 30004 30005 30006 30007 30008 30009 30010 30011 30012 30013 30014 30015 30016 30017 30018 30019 30020 30021 30022 30023 30024 30025 30026 30027 30028 30029 30030 30031 30032 30033 30034 30035 30036 30037 30038 30039 30040 30041 30042 30043 30044 30045 30046 30047 30048 30049 30050 30051 30052 30053 30054 30055 30056 30057 30058 30059 30060 30061 30062 30063 30064 30065 30066 30067 30068 30069 30070 30071 30072 30073 30074 30075 30076 30077 30078 30079 30080 30081 30082 30083 30084 30085 30086 30087 30088 30089 30090 30091 30092 30093 30094 30095 30096 30097 30098 30099 30100 30101 30102 30103 30104 30105 30106 30107 30108 30109 30110 30111 30112 30113 30114 30115 30116 30117 30118 30119 30120 30121 30122 30123 30124 30125 30126 30127 30128 30129 30130 30131 30132 30133 30134 30135 30136 30137 30138 30139 30140 30141 30142 30143 30144 30145 30146 30147 30148 30149 30150 30151 30152 30153 30154 30155 30156 30157 30158 30159 30160 30161 30162 30163 30164 30165 30166 30167 30168 30169 30170 30171 30172 30173 30174 30175 30176 30177 30178 30179 30180 30181 30182 30183 30184 30185 30186 30187 30188 30189 30190 30191 30192 30193 30194 30195 30196 30197 30198 30199 30200 30201 30202 30203 30204 30205 30206 30207 30208 30209 30210 30211 30212 30213 30214 30215 30216 30217 30218 30219 30220 30221 30222 30223 30224 30225 30226 30227 30228 30229 30230 30231 30232 30233 30234 30235 30236 30237 30238 30239 30240 30241 30242 30243 30244 30245 30246 30247 30248 30249 30250 30251 30252 30253 30254 30255 30256 30257 30258 30259 30260 30261 30262 30263 30264 30265 30266 30267 30268 30269 30270 30271 30272 30273 30274 30275 30276 30277 30278 30279 30280 30281 30282 30283 30284 30285 30286 30287 30288 30289 30290 30291 30292 30293 30294 30295 30296 30297 30298 30299 30300 30301 30302 30303 30304 30305 30306 30307 30308 30309 30310 30311 30312 30313 30314 30315 30316 30317 30318 30319 30320 30321 30322 30323 30324 30325 30326 30327 30328 30329 30330 30331 30332 30333 30334 30335 30336 30337 30338 30339 30340 30341 30342 30343 30344 30345 30346 30347 30348 30349 30350 30351 30352 30353 30354 30355 30356 30357 30358 30359 30360 30361 30362 30363 30364 30365 30366 30367 30368 30369 30370 30371 30372 30373 30374 30375 30376 30377 30378 30379 30380 30381 30382 30383 30384 30385 30386 30387 30388 30389 30390 30391 30392 30393 30394 30395 30396 30397 30398 30399 30400 30401 30402 30403 30404 30405 30406 30407 30408 30409 30410 30411 30412 30413 30414 30415 30416 30417 30418 30419 30420 30421 30422 30423 30424 30425 30426 30427 30428 30429 30430 30431 30432 30433 30434 30435 30436 30437 30438 30439 30440 30441 30442 30443 30444 30445 30446 30447 30448 30449 30450 30451 30452 30453 30454 30455 30456 30457 30458 30459 30460 30461 30462 30463 30464 30465 30466 30467 30468 30469 30470 30471 30472 30473 30474 30475 30476 30477 30478 30479 30480 30481 30482 30483 30484 30485 30486 30487 30488 30489 30490 30491 30492 30493 30494 30495 30496 30497 30498 30499 30500 30501 30502 30503 30504 30505 30506 30507 30508 30509 30510 30511 30512 30513 30514 30515 30516 30517 30518 30519 30520 30521 30522 30523 30524 30525 30526 30527 30528 30529 30530 30531 30532 30533 30534 30535 30536 30537 30538 30539 30540 30541 30542 30543 30544 30545 30546 30547 30548 30549 30550 30551 30552 30553 30554 30555 30556 30557 30558 30559 30560 30561 30562 30563 30564 30565 30566 30567 30568 30569 30570 30571 30572 30573 30574 30575 30576 30577 30578 30579 30580 30581 30582 30583 30584 30585 30586 30587 30588 30589 30590 30591 30592 30593 30594 30595 30596 30597 30598 30599 30600 30601 30602 30603 30604 30605 30606 30607 30608 30609 30610 30611 30612 30613 30614 30615 30616 30617 30618 30619 30620 30621 30622 30623 30624 30625 30626 30627 30628 30629 30630 30631 30632 30633 30634 30635 30636 30637 30638 30639 30640 30641 30642 30643 30644 30645 30646 30647 30648 30649 30650 30651 30652 30653 30654 30655 30656 30657 30658 30659 30660 30661 30662 30663 30664 30665 30666 30667 30668 30669 30670 30671 30672 30673 30674 30675 30676 30677 30678 30679 30680 30681 30682 30683 30684 30685 30686 30687 30688 30689 30690 30691 30692 30693 30694 30695 30696 30697 30698 30699 30700 30701 30702 30703 30704 30705 30706 30707 30708 30709 30710 30711 30712 30713 30714 30715 30716 30717 30718 30719 30720 30721 30722 30723 30724 30725 30726 30727 30728 30729 30730 30731 30732 30733 30734 30735 30736 30737 30738 30739 30740 30741 30742 30743 30744 30745 30746 30747 30748 30749 30750 30751 30752 30753 30754 30755 30756 30757 30758 30759 30760 30761 30762 30763 30764 30765 30766 30767 30768 30769 30770 30771 30772 30773 30774 30775 30776 30777 30778 30779 30780 30781 30782 30783 30784 30785 30786 30787 30788 30789 30790 30791 30792 30793 30794 30795 30796 30797 30798 30799 30800 30801 30802 30803 30804 30805 30806 30807 30808 30809 30810 30811 30812 30813 30814 30815 30816 30817 30818 30819 30820 30821 30822 30823 30824 30825 30826 30827 30828 30829 30830 30831 30832 30833 30834 30835 30836 30837 30838 30839 30840 30841 30842 30843 30844 30845 30846 30847 30848 30849 30850 30851 30852 30853 30854 30855 30856 30857 30858 30859 30860 30861 30862 30863 30864 30865 30866 30867 30868 30869 30870 30871 30872 30873 30874 30875 30876 30877 30878 30879 30880 30881 30882 30883 30884 30885 30886 30887 30888 30889 30890 30891 30892 30893 30894 30895 30896 30897 30898 30899 30900 30901 30902 30903 30904 30905 30906 30907 30908 30909 30910 30911 30912 30913 30914 30915 30916 30917 30918 30919 30920 30921 30922 30923 30924 30925 30926 30927 30928 30929 30930 30931 30932 30933 30934 30935 30936 30937 30938 30939 30940 30941 30942 30943 30944 30945 30946 30947 30948 30949 30950 30951 30952 30953 30954 30955 30956 30957 30958 30959 30960 30961 30962 30963 30964 30965 30966 30967 30968 30969 30970 30971 30972 30973 30974 30975 30976 30977 30978 30979 30980 30981 30982 30983 30984 30985 30986 30987 30988 30989 30990 30991 30992 30993 30994 30995 30996 30997 30998 30999 31000 31001 31002 31003 31004 31005 31006 31007 31008 31009 31010 31011 31012 31013 31014 31015 31016 31017 31018 31019 31020 31021 31022 31023 31024 31025 31026 31027 31028 31029 31030 31031 31032 31033 31034 31035 31036 31037 31038 31039 31040 31041 31042 31043 31044 31045 31046 31047 31048 31049 31050 31051 31052 31053 31054 31055 31056 31057 31058 31059 31060 31061 31062 31063 31064 31065 31066 31067 31068 31069 31070 31071 31072 31073 31074 31075 31076 31077 31078 31079 31080 31081 31082 31083 31084 31085 31086 31087 31088 31089 31090 31091 31092 31093 31094 31095 31096 31097 31098 31099 31100 31101 31102 31103 31104 31105 31106 31107 31108 31109 31110 31111 31112 31113 31114 31115 31116 31117 31118 31119 31120 31121 31122 31123 31124 31125 31126 31127 31128 31129 31130 31131 31132 31133 31134 31135 31136 31137 31138 31139 31140 31141 31142 31143 31144 31145 31146 31147 31148 31149 31150 31151 31152 31153 31154 31155 31156 31157 31158 31159 31160 31161 31162 31163 31164 31165 31166 31167 31168 31169 31170 31171 31172 31173 31174 31175 31176 31177 31178 31179 31180 31181 31182 31183 31184 31185 31186 31187 31188 31189 31190 31191 31192 31193 31194 31195 31196 31197 31198 31199 31200 31201 31202 31203 31204 31205 31206 31207 31208 31209 31210 31211 31212 31213 31214 31215 31216 31217 31218 31219 31220 31221 31222 31223 31224 31225 31226 31227 31228 31229 31230 31231 31232 31233 31234 31235 31236 31237 31238 31239 31240 31241 31242 31243 31244 31245 31246 31247 31248 31249 31250 31251 31252 31253 31254 31255 31256 31257 31258 31259 31260 31261 31262 31263 31264 31265 31266 31267 31268 31269 31270 31271 31272 31273 31274 31275 31276 31277 31278 31279 31280 31281 31282 31283 31284 31285 31286 31287 31288 31289 31290 31291 31292 31293 31294 31295 31296 31297 31298 31299 31300 31301 31302 31303 31304 31305 31306 31307 31308 31309 31310 31311 31312 31313 31314 31315 31316 31317 31318 31319 31320 31321 31322 31323 31324 31325 31326 31327 31328 31329 31330 31331 31332 31333 31334 31335 31336 31337 31338 31339 31340 31341 31342 31343 31344 31345 31346 31347 31348 31349 31350 31351 31352 31353 31354 31355 31356 31357 31358 31359 31360 31361 31362 31363 31364 31365 31366 31367 31368 31369 31370 31371 31372 31373 31374 31375 31376 31377 31378 31379 31380 31381 31382 31383 31384 31385 31386 31387 31388 31389 31390 31391 31392 31393 31394 31395 31396 31397 31398 31399 31400 31401 31402 31403 31404 31405 31406 31407 31408 31409 31410 31411 31412 31413 31414 31415 31416 31417 31418 31419 31420 31421 31422 31423 31424 31425 31426 31427 31428 31429 31430 31431 31432 31433 31434 31435 31436 31437 31438 31439 31440 31441 31442 31443 31444 31445 31446 31447 31448 31449 31450 31451 31452 31453 31454 31455 31456 31457 31458 31459 31460 31461 31462 31463 31464 31465 31466 31467 31468 31469 31470 31471 31472 31473 31474 31475 31476 31477 31478 31479 31480 31481 31482 31483 31484 31485 31486 31487 31488 31489 31490 31491 31492 31493 31494 31495 31496 31497 31498 31499 31500 31501 31502 31503 31504 31505 31506 31507 31508 31509 31510 31511 31512 31513 31514 31515 31516 31517 31518 31519 31520 31521 31522 31523 31524 31525 31526 31527 31528 31529 31530 31531 31532 31533 31534 31535 31536 31537 31538 31539 31540 31541 31542 31543 31544 31545 31546 31547 31548 31549 31550 31551 31552 31553 31554 31555 31556 31557 31558 31559 31560 31561 31562 31563 31564 31565 31566 31567 31568 31569 31570 31571 31572 31573 31574 31575 31576 31577 31578 31579 31580 31581 31582 31583 31584 31585 31586 31587 31588 31589 31590 31591 31592 31593 31594 31595 31596 31597 31598 31599 31600 31601 31602 31603 31604 31605 31606 31607 31608 31609 31610 31611 31612 31613 31614 31615 31616 31617 31618 31619 31620 31621 31622 31623 31624 31625 31626 31627 31628 31629 31630 31631 31632 31633 31634 31635 31636 31637 31638 31639 31640 31641 31642 31643 31644 31645 31646 31647 31648 31649 31650 31651 31652 31653 31654 31655 31656 31657 31658 31659 31660 31661 31662 31663 31664 31665 31666 31667 31668 31669 31670 31671 31672 31673 31674 31675 31676 31677 31678 31679 31680 31681 31682 31683 31684 31685 31686 31687 31688 31689 31690 31691 31692 31693 31694 31695 31696 31697 31698 31699 31700 31701 31702 31703 31704 31705 31706 31707 31708 31709 31710 31711 31712 31713 31714 31715 31716 31717 31718 31719 31720 31721 31722 31723 31724 31725 31726 31727 31728 31729 31730 31731 31732 31733 31734 31735 31736 31737 31738 31739 31740 31741 31742 31743 31744 31745 31746 31747 31748 31749 31750 31751 31752 31753 31754 31755 31756 31757 31758 31759 31760 31761 31762 31763 31764 31765 31766 31767 31768 31769 31770 31771 31772 31773 31774 31775 31776 31777 31778 31779 31780 31781 31782 31783 31784 31785 31786 31787 31788 31789 31790 31791 31792 31793 31794 31795 31796 31797 31798 31799 31800 31801 31802 31803 31804 31805 31806 31807 31808 31809 31810 31811 31812 31813 31814 31815 31816 31817 31818 31819 31820 31821 31822 31823 31824 31825 31826 31827 31828 31829 31830 31831 31832 31833 31834 31835 31836 31837 31838 31839 31840 31841 31842 31843 31844 31845 31846 31847 31848 31849 31850 31851 31852 31853 31854 31855 31856 31857 31858 31859 31860 31861 31862 31863 31864 31865 31866 31867 31868 31869 31870 31871 31872 31873 31874 31875 31876 31877 31878 31879 31880 31881 31882 31883 31884 31885 31886 31887 31888 31889 31890 31891 31892 31893 31894 31895 31896 31897 31898 31899 31900 31901 31902 31903 31904 31905 31906 31907 31908 31909 31910 31911 31912 31913 31914 31915 31916 31917 31918 31919 31920 31921 31922 31923 31924 31925 31926 31927 31928 31929 31930 31931 31932 31933 31934 31935 31936 31937 31938 31939 31940 31941 31942 31943 31944 31945 31946 31947 31948 31949 31950 31951 31952 31953 31954 31955 31956 31957 31958 31959 31960 31961 31962 31963 31964 31965 31966 31967 31968 31969 31970 31971 31972 31973 31974 31975 31976 31977 31978 31979 31980 31981 31982 31983 31984 31985 31986 31987 31988 31989 31990 31991 31992 31993 31994 31995 31996 31997 31998 31999 32000 32001 32002 32003 32004 32005 32006 32007 32008 32009 32010 32011 32012 32013 32014 32015 32016 32017 32018 32019 32020 32021 32022 32023 32024 32025 32026 32027 32028 32029 32030 32031 32032 32033 32034 32035 32036 32037 32038 32039 32040 32041 32042 32043 32044 32045 32046 32047 32048 32049 32050 32051 32052 32053 32054 32055 32056 32057 32058 32059 32060 32061 32062 32063 32064 32065 32066 32067 32068 32069 32070 32071 32072 32073 32074 32075 32076 32077 32078 32079 32080 32081 32082 32083 32084 32085 32086 32087 32088 32089 32090 32091 32092 32093 32094 32095 32096 32097 32098 32099 32100 32101 32102 32103 32104 32105 32106 32107 32108 32109 32110 32111 32112 32113 32114 32115 32116 32117 32118 32119 32120 32121 32122 32123 32124 32125 32126 32127 32128 32129 32130 32131 32132 32133 32134 32135 32136 32137 32138 32139 32140 32141 32142 32143 32144 32145 32146 32147 32148 32149 32150 32151 32152 32153 32154 32155 32156 32157 32158 32159 32160 32161 32162 32163 32164 32165 32166 32167 32168 32169 32170 32171 32172 32173 32174 32175 32176 32177 32178 32179 32180 32181 32182 32183 32184 32185 32186 32187 32188 32189 32190 32191 32192 32193 32194 32195 32196 32197 32198 32199 32200 32201 32202 32203 32204 32205 32206 32207 32208 32209 32210 32211 32212 32213 32214 32215 32216 32217 32218 32219 32220 32221 32222 32223 32224 32225 32226 32227 32228 32229 32230 32231 32232 32233 32234 32235 32236 32237 32238 32239 32240 32241 32242 32243 32244 32245 32246 32247 32248 32249 32250 32251 32252 32253 32254 32255 32256 32257 32258 32259 32260 32261 32262 32263 32264 32265 32266 32267 32268 32269 32270 32271 32272 32273 32274 32275 32276 32277 32278 32279 32280 32281 32282 32283 32284 32285 32286 32287 32288 32289 32290 32291 32292 32293 32294 32295 32296 32297 32298 32299 32300 32301 32302 32303 32304 32305 32306 32307 32308 32309 32310 32311 32312 32313 32314 32315 32316 32317 32318 32319 32320 32321 32322 32323 32324 32325 32326 32327 32328 32329 32330 32331 32332 32333 32334 32335 32336 32337 32338 32339 32340 32341 32342 32343 32344 32345 32346 32347 32348 32349 32350 32351 32352 32353 32354 32355 32356 32357 32358 32359 32360 32361 32362 32363 32364 32365 32366 32367 32368 32369 32370 32371 32372 32373 32374 32375 32376 32377 32378 32379 32380 32381 32382 32383 32384 32385 32386 32387 32388 32389 32390 32391 32392 32393 32394 32395 32396 32397 32398 32399 32400 32401 32402 32403 32404 32405 32406 32407 32408 32409 32410 32411 32412 32413 32414 32415 32416 32417 32418 32419 32420 32421 32422 32423 32424 32425 32426 32427 32428 32429 32430 32431 32432 32433 32434 32435 32436 32437 32438 32439 32440 32441 32442 32443 32444 32445 32446 32447 32448 32449 32450 32451 32452 32453 32454 32455 32456 32457 32458 32459 32460 32461 32462 32463 32464 32465 32466 32467 32468 32469 32470 32471 32472 32473 32474 32475 32476 32477 32478 32479 32480 32481 32482 32483 32484 32485 32486 32487 32488 32489 32490 32491 32492 32493 32494 32495 32496 32497 32498 32499 32500 32501 32502 32503 32504 32505 32506 32507 32508 32509 32510 32511 32512 32513 32514 32515 32516 32517 32518 32519 32520 32521 32522 32523 32524 32525 32526 32527 32528 32529 32530 32531 32532 32533 32534 32535 32536 32537 32538 32539 32540 32541 32542 32543 32544 32545 32546 32547 32548 32549 32550 32551 32552 32553 32554 32555 32556 32557 32558 32559 32560 32561 32562 32563 32564 32565 32566 32567 32568 32569 32570 32571 32572 32573 32574 32575 32576 32577 32578 32579 32580 32581 32582 32583 32584 32585 32586 32587 32588 32589 32590 32591 32592 32593 32594 32595 32596 32597 32598 32599 32600 32601 32602 32603 32604 32605 32606 32607 32608 32609 32610 32611 32612 32613 32614 32615 32616 32617 32618 32619 32620 32621 32622 32623 32624 32625 32626 32627 32628 32629 32630 32631 32632 32633 32634 32635 32636 32637 32638 32639 32640 32641 32642 32643 32644 32645 32646 32647 32648 32649 32650 32651 32652 32653 32654 32655 32656 32657 32658 32659 32660 32661 32662 32663 32664 32665 32666 32667 32668 32669 32670 32671 32672 32673 32674 32675 32676 32677 32678 32679 32680 32681 32682 32683 32684 32685 32686 32687 32688 32689 32690 32691 32692 32693 32694 32695 32696 32697 32698 32699 32700 32701 32702 32703 32704 32705 32706 32707 32708 32709 32710 32711 32712 32713 32714 32715 32716 32717 32718 32719 32720 32721 32722 32723 32724 32725 32726 32727 32728 32729 32730 32731 32732 32733 32734 32735 32736 32737 32738 32739 32740 32741 32742 32743 32744 32745 32746 32747 32748 32749 32750 32751 32752 32753 32754 32755 32756 32757 32758 32759 32760 32761 32762 32763 32764 32765 32766 32767 32768 32769 32770 32771 32772 32773 32774 32775 32776 32777 32778 32779 32780 32781 32782 32783 32784 32785 32786 32787 32788 32789 32790 32791 32792 32793 32794 32795 32796 32797 32798 32799 32800 32801 32802 32803 32804 32805 32806 32807 32808 32809 32810 32811 32812 32813 32814 32815 32816 32817 32818 32819 32820 32821 32822 32823 32824 32825 32826 32827 32828 32829 32830 32831 32832 32833 32834 32835 32836 32837 32838 32839 32840 32841 32842 32843 32844 32845 32846 32847 32848 32849 32850 32851 32852 32853 32854 32855 32856 32857 32858 32859 32860 32861 32862 32863 32864 32865 32866 32867 32868 32869 32870 32871 32872 32873 32874 32875 32876 32877 32878 32879 32880 32881 32882 32883 32884 32885 32886 32887 32888 32889 32890 32891 32892 32893 32894 32895 32896 32897 32898 32899 32900 32901 32902 32903 32904 32905 32906 32907 32908 32909 32910 32911 32912 32913 32914 32915 32916 32917 32918 32919 32920 32921 32922 32923 32924 32925 32926 32927 32928 32929 32930 32931 32932 32933 32934 32935 32936 32937 32938 32939 32940 32941 32942 32943 32944 32945 32946 32947 32948 32949 32950 32951 32952 32953 32954 32955 32956 32957 32958 32959 32960 32961 32962 32963 32964 32965 32966 32967 32968 32969 32970 32971 32972 32973 32974 32975 32976 32977 32978 32979 32980 32981 32982 32983 32984 32985 32986 32987 32988 32989 32990 32991 32992 32993 32994 32995 32996 32997 32998 32999 33000 33001 33002 33003 33004 33005 33006 33007 33008 33009 33010 33011 33012 33013 33014 33015 33016 33017 33018 33019 33020 33021 33022 33023 33024 33025 33026 33027 33028 33029 33030 33031 33032 33033 33034 33035 33036 33037 33038 33039 33040 33041 33042 33043 33044 33045 33046 33047 33048 33049 33050 33051 33052 33053 33054 33055 33056 33057 33058 33059 33060 33061 33062 33063 33064 33065 33066 33067 33068 33069 33070 33071 33072 33073 33074 33075 33076 33077 33078 33079 33080 33081 33082 33083 33084 33085 33086 33087 33088 33089 33090 33091 33092 33093 33094 33095 33096 33097 33098 33099 33100 33101 33102 33103 33104 33105 33106 33107 33108 33109 33110 33111 33112 33113 33114 33115 33116 33117 33118 33119 33120 33121 33122 33123 33124 33125 33126 33127 33128 33129 33130 33131 33132 33133 33134 33135 33136 33137 33138 33139 33140 33141 33142 33143 33144 33145 33146 33147 33148 33149 33150 33151 33152 33153 33154 33155 33156 33157 33158 33159 33160 33161 33162 33163 33164 33165 33166 33167 33168 33169 33170 33171 33172 33173 33174 33175 33176 33177 33178 33179 33180 33181 33182 33183 33184 33185 33186 33187 33188 33189 33190 33191 33192 33193 33194 33195 33196 33197 33198 33199 33200 33201 33202 33203 33204 33205 33206 33207 33208 33209 33210 33211 33212 33213 33214 33215 33216 33217 33218 33219 33220 33221 33222 33223 33224 33225 33226 33227 33228 33229 33230 33231 33232 33233 33234 33235 33236 33237 33238 33239 33240 33241 33242 33243 33244 33245 33246 33247 33248 33249 33250 33251 33252 33253 33254 33255 33256 33257 33258 33259 33260 33261 33262 33263 33264 33265 33266 33267 33268 33269 33270 33271 33272 33273 33274 33275 33276 33277 33278 33279 33280 33281 33282 33283 33284 33285 33286 33287 33288 33289 33290 33291 33292 33293 33294 33295 33296 33297 33298 33299 33300 33301 33302 33303 33304 33305 33306 33307 33308 33309 33310 33311 33312 33313 33314 33315 33316 33317 33318 33319 33320 33321 33322 33323 33324 33325 33326 33327 33328 33329 33330 33331 33332 33333 33334 33335 33336 33337 33338 33339 33340 33341 33342 33343 33344 33345 33346 33347 33348 33349 33350 33351 33352 33353 33354 33355 33356 33357 33358 33359 33360 33361 33362 33363 33364 33365 33366 33367 33368 33369 33370 33371 33372 33373 33374 33375 33376 33377 33378 33379 33380 33381 33382 33383 33384 33385 33386 33387 33388 33389 33390 33391 33392 33393 33394 33395 33396 33397 33398 33399 33400 33401 33402 33403 33404 33405 33406 33407 33408 33409 33410 33411 33412 33413 33414 33415 33416 33417 33418 33419 33420 33421 33422 33423 33424 33425 33426 33427 33428 33429 33430 33431 33432 33433 33434 33435 33436 33437 33438 33439 33440 33441 33442 33443 33444 33445 33446 33447 33448 33449 33450 33451 33452 33453 33454 33455 33456 33457 33458 33459 33460 33461 33462 33463 33464 33465 33466 33467 33468 33469 33470 33471 33472 33473 33474 33475 33476 33477 33478 33479 33480 33481 33482 33483 33484 33485 33486 33487 33488 33489 33490 33491 33492 33493 33494 33495 33496 33497 33498 33499 33500 33501 33502 33503 33504 33505 33506 33507 33508 33509 33510 33511 33512 33513 33514 33515 33516 33517 33518 33519 33520 33521 33522 33523 33524 33525 33526 33527 33528 33529 33530 33531 33532 33533 33534 33535 33536 33537 33538 33539 33540 33541 33542 33543 33544 33545 33546 33547 33548 33549 33550 33551 33552 33553 33554 33555 33556 33557 33558 33559 33560 33561 33562 33563 33564 33565 33566 33567 33568 33569 33570 33571 33572 33573 33574 33575 33576 33577 33578 33579 33580 33581 33582 33583 33584 33585 33586 33587 33588 33589 33590 33591 33592 33593 33594 33595 33596 33597 33598 33599 33600 33601 33602 33603 33604 33605 33606 33607 33608 33609 33610 33611 33612 33613 33614 33615 33616 33617 33618 33619 33620 33621 33622 33623 33624 33625 33626 33627 33628 33629 33630 33631 33632 33633 33634 33635 33636 33637 33638 33639 33640 33641 33642 33643 33644 33645 33646 33647 33648 33649 33650 33651 33652 33653 33654 33655 33656 33657 33658 33659 33660 33661 33662 33663 33664 33665 33666 33667 33668 33669 33670 33671 33672 33673 33674 33675 33676 33677 33678 33679 33680 33681 33682 33683 33684 33685 33686 33687 33688 33689 33690 33691 33692 33693 33694 33695 33696 33697 33698 33699 33700 33701 33702 33703 33704 33705 33706 33707 33708 33709 33710 33711 33712 33713 33714 33715 33716 33717 33718 33719 33720 33721 33722 33723 33724 33725 33726 33727 33728 33729 33730 33731 33732 33733 33734 33735 33736 33737 33738 33739 33740 33741 33742 33743 33744 33745 33746 33747 33748 33749 33750 33751 33752 33753 33754 33755 33756 33757 33758 33759 33760 33761 33762 33763 33764 33765 33766 33767 33768 33769 33770 33771 33772 33773 33774 33775 33776 33777 33778 33779 33780 33781 33782 33783 33784 33785 33786 33787 33788 33789 33790 33791 33792 33793 33794 33795 33796 33797 33798 33799 33800 33801 33802 33803 33804 33805 33806 33807 33808 33809 33810 33811 33812 33813 33814 33815 33816 33817 33818 33819 33820 33821 33822 33823 33824 33825 33826 33827 33828 33829 33830 33831 33832 33833 33834 33835 33836 33837 33838 33839 33840 33841 33842 33843 33844 33845 33846 33847 33848 33849 33850 33851 33852 33853 33854 33855 33856 33857 33858 33859 33860 33861 33862 33863 33864 33865 33866 33867 33868 33869 33870 33871 33872 33873 33874 33875 33876 33877 33878 33879 33880 33881 33882 33883 33884 33885 33886 33887 33888 33889 33890 33891 33892 33893 33894 33895 33896 33897 33898 33899 33900 33901 33902 33903 33904 33905 33906 33907 33908 33909 33910 33911 33912 33913 33914 33915 33916 33917 33918 33919 33920 33921 33922 33923 33924 33925 33926 33927 33928 33929 33930 33931 33932 33933 33934 33935 33936 33937 33938 33939 33940 33941 33942 33943 33944 33945 33946 33947 33948 33949 33950 33951 33952 33953 33954 33955 33956 33957 33958 33959 33960 33961 33962 33963 33964 33965 33966 33967 33968 33969 33970 33971 33972 33973 33974 33975 33976 33977 33978 33979 33980 33981 33982 33983 33984 33985 33986 33987 33988 33989 33990 33991 33992 33993 33994 33995 33996 33997 33998 33999 34000 34001 34002 34003 34004 34005 34006 34007 34008 34009 34010 34011 34012 34013 34014 34015 34016 34017 34018 34019 34020 34021 34022 34023 34024 34025 34026 34027 34028 34029 34030 34031 34032 34033 34034 34035 34036 34037 34038 34039 34040 34041 34042 34043 34044 34045 34046 34047 34048 34049 34050 34051 34052 34053 34054 34055 34056 34057 34058 34059 34060 34061 34062 34063 34064 34065 34066 34067 34068 34069 34070 34071 34072 34073 34074 34075 34076 34077 34078 34079 34080 34081 34082 34083 34084 34085 34086 34087 34088 34089 34090 34091 34092 34093 34094 34095 34096 34097 34098 34099 34100 34101 34102 34103 34104 34105 34106 34107 34108 34109 34110 34111 34112 34113 34114 34115 34116 34117 34118 34119 34120 34121 34122 34123 34124 34125 34126 34127 34128 34129 34130 34131 34132 34133 34134 34135 34136 34137 34138 34139 34140 34141 34142 34143 34144 34145 34146 34147 34148 34149 34150 34151 34152 34153 34154 34155 34156 34157 34158 34159 34160 34161 34162 34163 34164 34165 34166 34167 34168 34169 34170 34171 34172 34173 34174 34175 34176 34177 34178 34179 34180 34181 34182 34183 34184 34185 34186 34187 34188 34189 34190 34191 34192 34193 34194 34195 34196 34197 34198 34199 34200 34201 34202 34203 34204 34205 34206 34207 34208 34209 34210 34211 34212 34213 34214 34215 34216 34217 34218 34219 34220 34221 34222 34223 34224 34225 34226 34227 34228 34229 34230 34231 34232 34233 34234 34235 34236 34237 34238 34239 34240 34241 34242 34243 34244 34245 34246 34247 34248 34249 34250 34251 34252 34253 34254 34255 34256 34257 34258 34259 34260 34261 34262 34263 34264 34265 34266 34267 34268 34269 34270 34271 34272 34273 34274 34275 34276 34277 34278 34279 34280 34281 34282 34283 34284 34285 34286 34287 34288 34289 34290 34291 34292 34293 34294 34295 34296 34297 34298 34299 34300 34301 34302 34303 34304 34305 34306 34307 34308 34309 34310 34311 34312 34313 34314 34315 34316 34317 34318 34319 34320 34321 34322 34323 34324 34325 34326 34327 34328 34329 34330 34331 34332 34333 34334 34335 34336 34337 34338 34339 34340 34341 34342 34343 34344 34345 34346 34347 34348 34349 34350 34351 34352 34353 34354 34355 34356 34357 34358 34359 34360 34361 34362 34363 34364 34365 34366 34367 34368 34369 34370 34371 34372 34373 34374 34375 34376 34377 34378 34379 34380 34381 34382 34383 34384 34385 34386 34387 34388 34389 34390 34391 34392 34393 34394 34395 34396 34397 34398 34399 34400 34401 34402 34403 34404 34405 34406 34407 34408 34409 34410 34411 34412 34413 34414 34415 34416 34417 34418 34419 34420 34421 34422 34423 34424 34425 34426 34427 34428 34429 34430 34431 34432 34433 34434 34435 34436 34437 34438 34439 34440 34441 34442 34443 34444 34445 34446 34447 34448 34449 34450 34451 34452 34453 34454 34455 34456 34457 34458 34459 34460 34461 34462 34463 34464 34465 34466 34467 34468 34469 34470 34471 34472 34473 34474 34475 34476 34477 34478 34479 34480 34481 34482 34483 34484 34485 34486 34487 34488 34489 34490 34491 34492 34493 34494 34495 34496 34497 34498 34499 34500 34501 34502 34503 34504 34505 34506 34507 34508 34509 34510 34511 34512 34513 34514 34515 34516 34517 34518 34519 34520 34521 34522 34523 34524 34525 34526 34527 34528 34529 34530 34531 34532 34533 34534 34535 34536 34537 34538 34539 34540 34541 34542 34543 34544 34545 34546 34547 34548 34549 34550 34551 34552 34553 34554 34555 34556 34557 34558 34559 34560 34561 34562 34563 34564 34565 34566 34567 34568 34569 34570 34571 34572 34573 34574 34575 34576 34577 34578 34579 34580 34581 34582 34583 34584 34585 34586 34587 34588 34589 34590 34591 34592 34593 34594 34595 34596 34597 34598 34599 34600 34601 34602 34603 34604 34605 34606 34607 34608 34609 34610 34611 34612 34613 34614 34615 34616 34617 34618 34619 34620 34621 34622 34623 34624 34625 34626 34627 34628 34629 34630 34631 34632 34633 34634 34635 34636 34637 34638 34639 34640 34641 34642 34643 34644 34645 34646 34647 34648 34649 34650 34651 34652 34653 34654 34655 34656 34657 34658 34659 34660 34661 34662 34663 34664 34665 34666 34667 34668 34669 34670 34671 34672 34673 34674 34675 34676 34677 34678 34679 34680 34681 34682 34683 34684 34685 34686 34687 34688 34689 34690 34691 34692 34693 34694 34695 34696 34697 34698 34699 34700 34701 34702 34703 34704 34705 34706 34707 34708 34709 34710 34711 34712 34713 34714 34715 34716 34717 34718 34719 34720 34721 34722 34723 34724 34725 34726 34727 34728 34729 34730 34731 34732 34733 34734 34735 34736 34737 34738 34739 34740 34741 34742 34743 34744 34745 34746 34747 34748 34749 34750 34751 34752 34753 34754 34755 34756 34757 34758 34759 34760 34761 34762 34763 34764 34765 34766 34767 34768 34769 34770 34771 34772 34773 34774 34775 34776 34777 34778 34779 34780 34781 34782 34783 34784 34785 34786 34787 34788 34789 34790 34791 34792 34793 34794 34795 34796 34797 34798 34799 34800 34801 34802 34803 34804 34805 34806 34807 34808 34809 34810 34811 34812 34813 34814 34815 34816 34817 34818 34819 34820 34821 34822 34823 34824 34825 34826 34827 34828 34829 34830 34831 34832 34833 34834 34835 34836 34837 34838 34839 34840 34841 34842 34843 34844 34845 34846 34847 34848 34849 34850 34851 34852 34853 34854 34855 34856 34857 34858 34859 34860 34861 34862 34863 34864 34865 34866 34867 34868 34869 34870 34871 34872 34873 34874 34875 34876 34877 34878 34879 34880 34881 34882 34883 34884 34885 34886 34887 34888 34889 34890 34891 34892 34893 34894 34895 34896 34897 34898 34899 34900 34901 34902 34903 34904 34905 34906 34907 34908 34909 34910 34911 34912 34913 34914 34915 34916 34917 34918 34919 34920 34921 34922 34923 34924 34925 34926 34927 34928 34929 34930 34931 34932 34933 34934 34935 34936 34937 34938 34939 34940 34941 34942 34943 34944 34945 34946 34947 34948 34949 34950 34951 34952 34953 34954 34955 34956 34957 34958 34959 34960 34961 34962 34963 34964 34965 34966 34967 34968 34969 34970 34971 34972 34973 34974 34975 34976 34977 34978 34979 34980 34981 34982 34983 34984 34985 34986 34987 34988 34989 34990 34991 34992 34993 34994 34995 34996 34997 34998 34999 35000 35001 35002 35003 35004 35005 35006 35007 35008 35009 35010 35011 35012 35013 35014 35015 35016 35017 35018 35019 35020 35021 35022 35023 35024 35025 35026 35027 35028 35029 35030 35031 35032 35033 35034 35035 35036 35037 35038 35039 35040 35041 35042 35043 35044 35045 35046 35047 35048 35049 35050 35051 35052 35053 35054 35055 35056 35057 35058 35059 35060 35061 35062 35063 35064 35065 35066 35067 35068 35069 35070 35071 35072 35073 35074 35075 35076 35077 35078 35079 35080 35081 35082 35083 35084 35085 35086 35087 35088 35089 35090 35091 35092 35093 35094 35095 35096 35097 35098 35099 35100 35101 35102 35103 35104 35105 35106 35107 35108 35109 35110 35111 35112 35113 35114 35115 35116 35117 35118 35119 35120 35121 35122 35123 35124 35125 35126 35127 35128 35129 35130 35131 35132 35133 35134 35135 35136 35137 35138 35139 35140 35141 35142 35143 35144 35145 35146 35147 35148 35149 35150 35151 35152 35153 35154 35155 35156 35157 35158 35159 35160 35161 35162 35163 35164 35165 35166 35167 35168 35169 35170 35171 35172 35173 35174 35175 35176 35177 35178 35179 35180 35181 35182 35183 35184 35185 35186 35187 35188 35189 35190 35191 35192 35193 35194 35195 35196 35197 35198 35199 35200 35201 35202 35203 35204 35205 35206 35207 35208 35209 35210 35211 35212 35213 35214 35215 35216 35217 35218 35219 35220 35221 35222 35223 35224 35225 35226 35227 35228 35229 35230 35231 35232 35233 35234 35235 35236 35237 35238 35239 35240 35241 35242 35243 35244 35245 35246 35247 35248 35249 35250 35251 35252 35253 35254 35255 35256 35257 35258 35259 35260 35261 35262 35263 35264 35265 35266 35267 35268 35269 35270 35271 35272 35273 35274 35275 35276 35277 35278 35279 35280 35281 35282 35283 35284 35285 35286 35287 35288 35289 35290 35291 35292 35293 35294 35295 35296 35297 35298 35299 35300 35301 35302 35303 35304 35305 35306 35307 35308 35309 35310 35311 35312 35313 35314 35315 35316 35317 35318 35319 35320 35321 35322 35323 35324 35325 35326 35327 35328 35329 35330 35331 35332 35333 35334 35335 35336 35337 35338 35339 35340 35341 35342 35343 35344 35345 35346 35347 35348 35349 35350 35351 35352 35353 35354 35355 35356 35357 35358 35359 35360 35361 35362 35363 35364 35365 35366 35367 35368 35369 35370 35371 35372 35373 35374 35375 35376 35377 35378 35379 35380 35381 35382 35383 35384 35385 35386 35387 35388 35389 35390 35391 35392 35393 35394 35395 35396 35397 35398 35399 35400 35401 35402 35403 35404 35405 35406 35407 35408 35409 35410 35411 35412 35413 35414 35415 35416 35417 35418 35419 35420 35421 35422 35423 35424 35425 35426 35427 35428 35429 35430 35431 35432 35433 35434 35435 35436 35437 35438 35439 35440 35441 35442 35443 35444 35445 35446 35447 35448 35449 35450 35451 35452 35453 35454 35455 35456 35457 35458 35459 35460 35461 35462 35463 35464 35465 35466 35467 35468 35469 35470 35471 35472 35473 35474 35475 35476 35477 35478 35479 35480 35481 35482 35483 35484 35485 35486 35487 35488 35489 35490 35491 35492 35493 35494 35495 35496
|
/***************************************************************************
** **
** QCustomPlot, an easy to use, modern plotting widget for Qt **
** Copyright (C) 2011-2021 Emanuel Eichhammer **
** **
** This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify **
** it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by **
** the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or **
** (at your option) any later version. **
** **
** This program 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 General Public License for more details. **
** **
** You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License **
** along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/. **
** **
****************************************************************************
** Author: Emanuel Eichhammer **
** Website/Contact: http://www.qcustomplot.com/ **
** Date: 29.03.21 **
** Version: 2.1.0 **
****************************************************************************/
#include "qcustomplot.h"
/* including file 'src/vector2d.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 7973 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPVector2D
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPVector2D
\brief Represents two doubles as a mathematical 2D vector
This class acts as a replacement for QVector2D with the advantage of double precision instead of
single, and some convenience methods tailored for the QCustomPlot library.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn void QCPVector2D::setX(double x)
Sets the x coordinate of this vector to \a x.
\see setY
*/
/*! \fn void QCPVector2D::setY(double y)
Sets the y coordinate of this vector to \a y.
\see setX
*/
/*! \fn double QCPVector2D::length() const
Returns the length of this vector.
\see lengthSquared
*/
/*! \fn double QCPVector2D::lengthSquared() const
Returns the squared length of this vector. In some situations, e.g. when just trying to find the
shortest vector of a group, this is faster than calculating \ref length, because it avoids
calculation of a square root.
\see length
*/
/*! \fn double QCPVector2D::angle() const
Returns the angle of the vector in radians. The angle is measured between the positive x line and
the vector, counter-clockwise in a mathematical coordinate system (y axis upwards positive). In
screen/widget coordinates where the y axis is inverted, the angle appears clockwise.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPVector2D::toPoint() const
Returns a QPoint which has the x and y coordinates of this vector, truncating any floating point
information.
\see toPointF
*/
/*! \fn QPointF QCPVector2D::toPointF() const
Returns a QPointF which has the x and y coordinates of this vector.
\see toPoint
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPVector2D::isNull() const
Returns whether this vector is null. A vector is null if \c qIsNull returns true for both x and y
coordinates, i.e. if both are binary equal to 0.
*/
/*! \fn QCPVector2D QCPVector2D::perpendicular() const
Returns a vector perpendicular to this vector, with the same length.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPVector2D::dot() const
Returns the dot/scalar product of this vector with the specified vector \a vec.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a QCPVector2D object and initializes the x and y coordinates to 0.
*/
QCPVector2D::QCPVector2D() :
mX(0),
mY(0)
{
}
/*!
Creates a QCPVector2D object and initializes the \a x and \a y coordinates with the specified
values.
*/
QCPVector2D::QCPVector2D(double x, double y) :
mX(x),
mY(y)
{
}
/*!
Creates a QCPVector2D object and initializes the x and y coordinates respective coordinates of
the specified \a point.
*/
QCPVector2D::QCPVector2D(const QPoint &point) :
mX(point.x()),
mY(point.y())
{
}
/*!
Creates a QCPVector2D object and initializes the x and y coordinates respective coordinates of
the specified \a point.
*/
QCPVector2D::QCPVector2D(const QPointF &point) :
mX(point.x()),
mY(point.y())
{
}
/*!
Normalizes this vector. After this operation, the length of the vector is equal to 1.
If the vector has both entries set to zero, this method does nothing.
\see normalized, length, lengthSquared
*/
void QCPVector2D::normalize()
{
if (mX == 0.0 && mY == 0.0) return;
const double lenInv = 1.0/length();
mX *= lenInv;
mY *= lenInv;
}
/*!
Returns a normalized version of this vector. The length of the returned vector is equal to 1.
If the vector has both entries set to zero, this method returns the vector unmodified.
\see normalize, length, lengthSquared
*/
QCPVector2D QCPVector2D::normalized() const
{
if (mX == 0.0 && mY == 0.0) return *this;
const double lenInv = 1.0/length();
return QCPVector2D(mX*lenInv, mY*lenInv);
}
/*! \overload
Returns the squared shortest distance of this vector (interpreted as a point) to the finite line
segment given by \a start and \a end.
\see distanceToStraightLine
*/
double QCPVector2D::distanceSquaredToLine(const QCPVector2D &start, const QCPVector2D &end) const
{
const QCPVector2D v(end-start);
const double vLengthSqr = v.lengthSquared();
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(vLengthSqr))
{
const double mu = v.dot(*this-start)/vLengthSqr;
if (mu < 0)
return (*this-start).lengthSquared();
else if (mu > 1)
return (*this-end).lengthSquared();
else
return ((start + mu*v)-*this).lengthSquared();
} else
return (*this-start).lengthSquared();
}
/*! \overload
Returns the squared shortest distance of this vector (interpreted as a point) to the finite line
segment given by \a line.
\see distanceToStraightLine
*/
double QCPVector2D::distanceSquaredToLine(const QLineF &line) const
{
return distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(line.p1()), QCPVector2D(line.p2()));
}
/*!
Returns the shortest distance of this vector (interpreted as a point) to the infinite straight
line given by a \a base point and a \a direction vector.
\see distanceSquaredToLine
*/
double QCPVector2D::distanceToStraightLine(const QCPVector2D &base, const QCPVector2D &direction) const
{
return qAbs((*this-base).dot(direction.perpendicular()))/direction.length();
}
/*!
Scales this vector by the given \a factor, i.e. the x and y components are multiplied by \a
factor.
*/
QCPVector2D &QCPVector2D::operator*=(double factor)
{
mX *= factor;
mY *= factor;
return *this;
}
/*!
Scales this vector by the given \a divisor, i.e. the x and y components are divided by \a
divisor.
*/
QCPVector2D &QCPVector2D::operator/=(double divisor)
{
mX /= divisor;
mY /= divisor;
return *this;
}
/*!
Adds the given \a vector to this vector component-wise.
*/
QCPVector2D &QCPVector2D::operator+=(const QCPVector2D &vector)
{
mX += vector.mX;
mY += vector.mY;
return *this;
}
/*!
subtracts the given \a vector from this vector component-wise.
*/
QCPVector2D &QCPVector2D::operator-=(const QCPVector2D &vector)
{
mX -= vector.mX;
mY -= vector.mY;
return *this;
}
/* end of 'src/vector2d.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/painter.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 8656 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPainter
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPainter
\brief QPainter subclass used internally
This QPainter subclass is used to provide some extended functionality e.g. for tweaking position
consistency between antialiased and non-antialiased painting. Further it provides workarounds
for QPainter quirks.
\warning This class intentionally hides non-virtual functions of QPainter, e.g. setPen, save and
restore. So while it is possible to pass a QCPPainter instance to a function that expects a
QPainter pointer, some of the workarounds and tweaks will be unavailable to the function (because
it will call the base class implementations of the functions actually hidden by QCPPainter).
*/
/*!
Creates a new QCPPainter instance and sets default values
*/
QCPPainter::QCPPainter() :
mModes(pmDefault),
mIsAntialiasing(false)
{
// don't setRenderHint(QPainter::NonCosmeticDefautPen) here, because painter isn't active yet and
// a call to begin() will follow
}
/*!
Creates a new QCPPainter instance on the specified paint \a device and sets default values. Just
like the analogous QPainter constructor, begins painting on \a device immediately.
Like \ref begin, this method sets QPainter::NonCosmeticDefaultPen in Qt versions before Qt5.
*/
QCPPainter::QCPPainter(QPaintDevice *device) :
QPainter(device),
mModes(pmDefault),
mIsAntialiasing(false)
{
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 0, 0) // before Qt5, default pens used to be cosmetic if NonCosmeticDefaultPen flag isn't set. So we set it to get consistency across Qt versions.
if (isActive())
setRenderHint(QPainter::NonCosmeticDefaultPen);
#endif
}
/*!
Sets the pen of the painter and applies certain fixes to it, depending on the mode of this
QCPPainter.
\note this function hides the non-virtual base class implementation.
*/
void QCPPainter::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
QPainter::setPen(pen);
if (mModes.testFlag(pmNonCosmetic))
makeNonCosmetic();
}
/*! \overload
Sets the pen (by color) of the painter and applies certain fixes to it, depending on the mode of
this QCPPainter.
\note this function hides the non-virtual base class implementation.
*/
void QCPPainter::setPen(const QColor &color)
{
QPainter::setPen(color);
if (mModes.testFlag(pmNonCosmetic))
makeNonCosmetic();
}
/*! \overload
Sets the pen (by style) of the painter and applies certain fixes to it, depending on the mode of
this QCPPainter.
\note this function hides the non-virtual base class implementation.
*/
void QCPPainter::setPen(Qt::PenStyle penStyle)
{
QPainter::setPen(penStyle);
if (mModes.testFlag(pmNonCosmetic))
makeNonCosmetic();
}
/*! \overload
Works around a Qt bug introduced with Qt 4.8 which makes drawing QLineF unpredictable when
antialiasing is disabled. Thus when antialiasing is disabled, it rounds the \a line to
integer coordinates and then passes it to the original drawLine.
\note this function hides the non-virtual base class implementation.
*/
void QCPPainter::drawLine(const QLineF &line)
{
if (mIsAntialiasing || mModes.testFlag(pmVectorized))
QPainter::drawLine(line);
else
QPainter::drawLine(line.toLine());
}
/*!
Sets whether painting uses antialiasing or not. Use this method instead of using setRenderHint
with QPainter::Antialiasing directly, as it allows QCPPainter to regain pixel exactness between
antialiased and non-antialiased painting (Since Qt < 5.0 uses slightly different coordinate systems for
AA/Non-AA painting).
*/
void QCPPainter::setAntialiasing(bool enabled)
{
setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing, enabled);
if (mIsAntialiasing != enabled)
{
mIsAntialiasing = enabled;
if (!mModes.testFlag(pmVectorized)) // antialiasing half-pixel shift only needed for rasterized outputs
{
if (mIsAntialiasing)
translate(0.5, 0.5);
else
translate(-0.5, -0.5);
}
}
}
/*!
Sets the mode of the painter. This controls whether the painter shall adjust its
fixes/workarounds optimized for certain output devices.
*/
void QCPPainter::setModes(QCPPainter::PainterModes modes)
{
mModes = modes;
}
/*!
Sets the QPainter::NonCosmeticDefaultPen in Qt versions before Qt5 after beginning painting on \a
device. This is necessary to get cosmetic pen consistency across Qt versions, because since Qt5,
all pens are non-cosmetic by default, and in Qt4 this render hint must be set to get that
behaviour.
The Constructor \ref QCPPainter(QPaintDevice *device) which directly starts painting also sets
the render hint as appropriate.
\note this function hides the non-virtual base class implementation.
*/
bool QCPPainter::begin(QPaintDevice *device)
{
bool result = QPainter::begin(device);
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 0, 0) // before Qt5, default pens used to be cosmetic if NonCosmeticDefaultPen flag isn't set. So we set it to get consistency across Qt versions.
if (result)
setRenderHint(QPainter::NonCosmeticDefaultPen);
#endif
return result;
}
/*! \overload
Sets the mode of the painter. This controls whether the painter shall adjust its
fixes/workarounds optimized for certain output devices.
*/
void QCPPainter::setMode(QCPPainter::PainterMode mode, bool enabled)
{
if (!enabled && mModes.testFlag(mode))
mModes &= ~mode;
else if (enabled && !mModes.testFlag(mode))
mModes |= mode;
}
/*!
Saves the painter (see QPainter::save). Since QCPPainter adds some new internal state to
QPainter, the save/restore functions are reimplemented to also save/restore those members.
\note this function hides the non-virtual base class implementation.
\see restore
*/
void QCPPainter::save()
{
mAntialiasingStack.push(mIsAntialiasing);
QPainter::save();
}
/*!
Restores the painter (see QPainter::restore). Since QCPPainter adds some new internal state to
QPainter, the save/restore functions are reimplemented to also save/restore those members.
\note this function hides the non-virtual base class implementation.
\see save
*/
void QCPPainter::restore()
{
if (!mAntialiasingStack.isEmpty())
mIsAntialiasing = mAntialiasingStack.pop();
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Unbalanced save/restore";
QPainter::restore();
}
/*!
Changes the pen width to 1 if it currently is 0. This function is called in the \ref setPen
overrides when the \ref pmNonCosmetic mode is set.
*/
void QCPPainter::makeNonCosmetic()
{
if (qFuzzyIsNull(pen().widthF()))
{
QPen p = pen();
p.setWidth(1);
QPainter::setPen(p);
}
}
/* end of 'src/painter.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/paintbuffer.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 18915 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAbstractPaintBuffer
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAbstractPaintBuffer
\brief The abstract base class for paint buffers, which define the rendering backend
This abstract base class defines the basic interface that a paint buffer needs to provide in
order to be usable by QCustomPlot.
A paint buffer manages both a surface to draw onto, and the matching paint device. The size of
the surface can be changed via \ref setSize. External classes (\ref QCustomPlot and \ref
QCPLayer) request a painter via \ref startPainting and then perform the draw calls. Once the
painting is complete, \ref donePainting is called, so the paint buffer implementation can do
clean up if necessary. Before rendering a frame, each paint buffer is usually filled with a color
using \ref clear (usually the color is \c Qt::transparent), to remove the contents of the
previous frame.
The simplest paint buffer implementation is \ref QCPPaintBufferPixmap which allows regular
software rendering via the raster engine. Hardware accelerated rendering via pixel buffers and
frame buffer objects is provided by \ref QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer and \ref QCPPaintBufferGlFbo.
They are used automatically if \ref QCustomPlot::setOpenGl is enabled.
*/
/* start documentation of pure virtual functions */
/*! \fn virtual QCPPainter *QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::startPainting() = 0
Returns a \ref QCPPainter which is ready to draw to this buffer. The ownership and thus the
responsibility to delete the painter after the painting operations are complete is given to the
caller of this method.
Once you are done using the painter, delete the painter and call \ref donePainting.
While a painter generated with this method is active, you must not call \ref setSize, \ref
setDevicePixelRatio or \ref clear.
This method may return 0, if a painter couldn't be activated on the buffer. This usually
indicates a problem with the respective painting backend.
*/
/*! \fn virtual void QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::draw(QCPPainter *painter) const = 0
Draws the contents of this buffer with the provided \a painter. This is the method that is used
to finally join all paint buffers and draw them onto the screen.
*/
/*! \fn virtual void QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::clear(const QColor &color) = 0
Fills the entire buffer with the provided \a color. To have an empty transparent buffer, use the
named color \c Qt::transparent.
This method must not be called if there is currently a painter (acquired with \ref startPainting)
active.
*/
/*! \fn virtual void QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::reallocateBuffer() = 0
Reallocates the internal buffer with the currently configured size (\ref setSize) and device
pixel ratio, if applicable (\ref setDevicePixelRatio). It is called as soon as any of those
properties are changed on this paint buffer.
\note Subclasses of \ref QCPAbstractPaintBuffer must call their reimplementation of this method
in their constructor, to perform the first allocation (this can not be done by the base class
because calling pure virtual methods in base class constructors is not possible).
*/
/* end documentation of pure virtual functions */
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn virtual void QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::donePainting()
If you have acquired a \ref QCPPainter to paint onto this paint buffer via \ref startPainting,
call this method as soon as you are done with the painting operations and have deleted the
painter.
paint buffer subclasses may use this method to perform any type of cleanup that is necessary. The
default implementation does nothing.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a paint buffer and initializes it with the provided \a size and \a devicePixelRatio.
Subclasses must call their \ref reallocateBuffer implementation in their respective constructors.
*/
QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::QCPAbstractPaintBuffer(const QSize &size, double devicePixelRatio) :
mSize(size),
mDevicePixelRatio(devicePixelRatio),
mInvalidated(true)
{
}
QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::~QCPAbstractPaintBuffer()
{
}
/*!
Sets the paint buffer size.
The buffer is reallocated (by calling \ref reallocateBuffer), so any painters that were obtained
by \ref startPainting are invalidated and must not be used after calling this method.
If \a size is already the current buffer size, this method does nothing.
*/
void QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::setSize(const QSize &size)
{
if (mSize != size)
{
mSize = size;
reallocateBuffer();
}
}
/*!
Sets the invalidated flag to \a invalidated.
This mechanism is used internally in conjunction with isolated replotting of \ref QCPLayer
instances (in \ref QCPLayer::lmBuffered mode). If \ref QCPLayer::replot is called on a buffered
layer, i.e. an isolated repaint of only that layer (and its dedicated paint buffer) is requested,
QCustomPlot will decide depending on the invalidated flags of other paint buffers whether it also
replots them, instead of only the layer on which the replot was called.
The invalidated flag is set to true when \ref QCPLayer association has changed, i.e. if layers
were added or removed from this buffer, or if they were reordered. It is set to false as soon as
all associated \ref QCPLayer instances are drawn onto the buffer.
Under normal circumstances, it is not necessary to manually call this method.
*/
void QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::setInvalidated(bool invalidated)
{
mInvalidated = invalidated;
}
/*!
Sets the device pixel ratio to \a ratio. This is useful to render on high-DPI output devices.
The ratio is automatically set to the device pixel ratio used by the parent QCustomPlot instance.
The buffer is reallocated (by calling \ref reallocateBuffer), so any painters that were obtained
by \ref startPainting are invalidated and must not be used after calling this method.
\note This method is only available for Qt versions 5.4 and higher.
*/
void QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::setDevicePixelRatio(double ratio)
{
if (!qFuzzyCompare(ratio, mDevicePixelRatio))
{
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
mDevicePixelRatio = ratio;
reallocateBuffer();
#else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Device pixel ratios not supported for Qt versions before 5.4";
mDevicePixelRatio = 1.0;
#endif
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPaintBufferPixmap
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPaintBufferPixmap
\brief A paint buffer based on QPixmap, using software raster rendering
This paint buffer is the default and fall-back paint buffer which uses software rendering and
QPixmap as internal buffer. It is used if \ref QCustomPlot::setOpenGl is false.
*/
/*!
Creates a pixmap paint buffer instancen with the specified \a size and \a devicePixelRatio, if
applicable.
*/
QCPPaintBufferPixmap::QCPPaintBufferPixmap(const QSize &size, double devicePixelRatio) :
QCPAbstractPaintBuffer(size, devicePixelRatio)
{
QCPPaintBufferPixmap::reallocateBuffer();
}
QCPPaintBufferPixmap::~QCPPaintBufferPixmap()
{
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPPainter *QCPPaintBufferPixmap::startPainting()
{
QCPPainter *result = new QCPPainter(&mBuffer);
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(6, 0, 0)
result->setRenderHint(QPainter::HighQualityAntialiasing);
#endif
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferPixmap::draw(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
if (painter && painter->isActive())
painter->drawPixmap(0, 0, mBuffer);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid or inactive painter passed";
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferPixmap::clear(const QColor &color)
{
mBuffer.fill(color);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferPixmap::reallocateBuffer()
{
setInvalidated();
if (!qFuzzyCompare(1.0, mDevicePixelRatio))
{
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
mBuffer = QPixmap(mSize*mDevicePixelRatio);
mBuffer.setDevicePixelRatio(mDevicePixelRatio);
#else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Device pixel ratios not supported for Qt versions before 5.4";
mDevicePixelRatio = 1.0;
mBuffer = QPixmap(mSize);
#endif
} else
{
mBuffer = QPixmap(mSize);
}
}
#ifdef QCP_OPENGL_PBUFFER
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer
\brief A paint buffer based on OpenGL pixel buffers, using hardware accelerated rendering
This paint buffer is one of the OpenGL paint buffers which facilitate hardware accelerated plot
rendering. It is based on OpenGL pixel buffers (pbuffer) and is used in Qt versions before 5.0.
(See \ref QCPPaintBufferGlFbo used in newer Qt versions.)
The OpenGL paint buffers are used if \ref QCustomPlot::setOpenGl is set to true, and if they are
supported by the system.
*/
/*!
Creates a \ref QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer instance with the specified \a size and \a
devicePixelRatio, if applicable.
The parameter \a multisamples defines how many samples are used per pixel. Higher values thus
result in higher quality antialiasing. If the specified \a multisamples value exceeds the
capability of the graphics hardware, the highest supported multisampling is used.
*/
QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer::QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer(const QSize &size, double devicePixelRatio, int multisamples) :
QCPAbstractPaintBuffer(size, devicePixelRatio),
mGlPBuffer(0),
mMultisamples(qMax(0, multisamples))
{
QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer::reallocateBuffer();
}
QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer::~QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer()
{
if (mGlPBuffer)
delete mGlPBuffer;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPPainter *QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer::startPainting()
{
if (!mGlPBuffer->isValid())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL frame buffer object doesn't exist, reallocateBuffer was not called?";
return 0;
}
QCPPainter *result = new QCPPainter(mGlPBuffer);
result->setRenderHint(QPainter::HighQualityAntialiasing);
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer::draw(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
if (!painter || !painter->isActive())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid or inactive painter passed";
return;
}
if (!mGlPBuffer->isValid())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL pbuffer isn't valid, reallocateBuffer was not called?";
return;
}
painter->drawImage(0, 0, mGlPBuffer->toImage());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer::clear(const QColor &color)
{
if (mGlPBuffer->isValid())
{
mGlPBuffer->makeCurrent();
glClearColor(color.redF(), color.greenF(), color.blueF(), color.alphaF());
glClear(GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT | GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT);
mGlPBuffer->doneCurrent();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL pbuffer invalid or context not current";
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer::reallocateBuffer()
{
if (mGlPBuffer)
delete mGlPBuffer;
QGLFormat format;
format.setAlpha(true);
format.setSamples(mMultisamples);
mGlPBuffer = new QGLPixelBuffer(mSize, format);
}
#endif // QCP_OPENGL_PBUFFER
#ifdef QCP_OPENGL_FBO
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPaintBufferGlFbo
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPaintBufferGlFbo
\brief A paint buffer based on OpenGL frame buffers objects, using hardware accelerated rendering
This paint buffer is one of the OpenGL paint buffers which facilitate hardware accelerated plot
rendering. It is based on OpenGL frame buffer objects (fbo) and is used in Qt versions 5.0 and
higher. (See \ref QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer used in older Qt versions.)
The OpenGL paint buffers are used if \ref QCustomPlot::setOpenGl is set to true, and if they are
supported by the system.
*/
/*!
Creates a \ref QCPPaintBufferGlFbo instance with the specified \a size and \a devicePixelRatio,
if applicable.
All frame buffer objects shall share one OpenGL context and paint device, which need to be set up
externally and passed via \a glContext and \a glPaintDevice. The set-up is done in \ref
QCustomPlot::setupOpenGl and the context and paint device are managed by the parent QCustomPlot
instance.
*/
QCPPaintBufferGlFbo::QCPPaintBufferGlFbo(const QSize &size, double devicePixelRatio, QWeakPointer<QOpenGLContext> glContext, QWeakPointer<QOpenGLPaintDevice> glPaintDevice) :
QCPAbstractPaintBuffer(size, devicePixelRatio),
mGlContext(glContext),
mGlPaintDevice(glPaintDevice),
mGlFrameBuffer(0)
{
QCPPaintBufferGlFbo::reallocateBuffer();
}
QCPPaintBufferGlFbo::~QCPPaintBufferGlFbo()
{
if (mGlFrameBuffer)
delete mGlFrameBuffer;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPPainter *QCPPaintBufferGlFbo::startPainting()
{
QSharedPointer<QOpenGLPaintDevice> paintDevice = mGlPaintDevice.toStrongRef();
QSharedPointer<QOpenGLContext> context = mGlContext.toStrongRef();
if (!paintDevice)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL paint device doesn't exist";
return 0;
}
if (!context)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL context doesn't exist";
return 0;
}
if (!mGlFrameBuffer)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL frame buffer object doesn't exist, reallocateBuffer was not called?";
return 0;
}
if (QOpenGLContext::currentContext() != context.data())
context->makeCurrent(context->surface());
mGlFrameBuffer->bind();
QCPPainter *result = new QCPPainter(paintDevice.data());
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(6, 0, 0)
result->setRenderHint(QPainter::HighQualityAntialiasing);
#endif
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferGlFbo::donePainting()
{
if (mGlFrameBuffer && mGlFrameBuffer->isBound())
mGlFrameBuffer->release();
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Either OpenGL frame buffer not valid or was not bound";
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferGlFbo::draw(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
if (!painter || !painter->isActive())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid or inactive painter passed";
return;
}
if (!mGlFrameBuffer)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL frame buffer object doesn't exist, reallocateBuffer was not called?";
return;
}
painter->drawImage(0, 0, mGlFrameBuffer->toImage());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferGlFbo::clear(const QColor &color)
{
QSharedPointer<QOpenGLContext> context = mGlContext.toStrongRef();
if (!context)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL context doesn't exist";
return;
}
if (!mGlFrameBuffer)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL frame buffer object doesn't exist, reallocateBuffer was not called?";
return;
}
if (QOpenGLContext::currentContext() != context.data())
context->makeCurrent(context->surface());
mGlFrameBuffer->bind();
glClearColor(color.redF(), color.greenF(), color.blueF(), color.alphaF());
glClear(GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT | GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT);
mGlFrameBuffer->release();
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPaintBufferGlFbo::reallocateBuffer()
{
// release and delete possibly existing framebuffer:
if (mGlFrameBuffer)
{
if (mGlFrameBuffer->isBound())
mGlFrameBuffer->release();
delete mGlFrameBuffer;
mGlFrameBuffer = 0;
}
QSharedPointer<QOpenGLPaintDevice> paintDevice = mGlPaintDevice.toStrongRef();
QSharedPointer<QOpenGLContext> context = mGlContext.toStrongRef();
if (!paintDevice)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL paint device doesn't exist";
return;
}
if (!context)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL context doesn't exist";
return;
}
// create new fbo with appropriate size:
context->makeCurrent(context->surface());
QOpenGLFramebufferObjectFormat frameBufferFormat;
frameBufferFormat.setSamples(context->format().samples());
frameBufferFormat.setAttachment(QOpenGLFramebufferObject::CombinedDepthStencil);
mGlFrameBuffer = new QOpenGLFramebufferObject(mSize*mDevicePixelRatio, frameBufferFormat);
if (paintDevice->size() != mSize*mDevicePixelRatio)
paintDevice->setSize(mSize*mDevicePixelRatio);
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
paintDevice->setDevicePixelRatio(mDevicePixelRatio);
#endif
}
#endif // QCP_OPENGL_FBO
/* end of 'src/paintbuffer.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/layer.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 37615 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLayer
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLayer
\brief A layer that may contain objects, to control the rendering order
The Layering system of QCustomPlot is the mechanism to control the rendering order of the
elements inside the plot.
It is based on the two classes QCPLayer and QCPLayerable. QCustomPlot holds an ordered list of
one or more instances of QCPLayer (see QCustomPlot::addLayer, QCustomPlot::layer,
QCustomPlot::moveLayer, etc.). When replotting, QCustomPlot goes through the list of layers
bottom to top and successively draws the layerables of the layers into the paint buffer(s).
A QCPLayer contains an ordered list of QCPLayerable instances. QCPLayerable is an abstract base
class from which almost all visible objects derive, like axes, grids, graphs, items, etc.
\section qcplayer-defaultlayers Default layers
Initially, QCustomPlot has six layers: "background", "grid", "main", "axes", "legend" and
"overlay" (in that order). On top is the "overlay" layer, which only contains the QCustomPlot's
selection rect (\ref QCustomPlot::selectionRect). The next two layers "axes" and "legend" contain
the default axes and legend, so they will be drawn above plottables. In the middle, there is the
"main" layer. It is initially empty and set as the current layer (see
QCustomPlot::setCurrentLayer). This means, all new plottables, items etc. are created on this
layer by default. Then comes the "grid" layer which contains the QCPGrid instances (which belong
tightly to QCPAxis, see \ref QCPAxis::grid). The Axis rect background shall be drawn behind
everything else, thus the default QCPAxisRect instance is placed on the "background" layer. Of
course, the layer affiliation of the individual objects can be changed as required (\ref
QCPLayerable::setLayer).
\section qcplayer-ordering Controlling the rendering order via layers
Controlling the ordering of layerables in the plot is easy: Create a new layer in the position
you want the layerable to be in, e.g. above "main", with \ref QCustomPlot::addLayer. Then set the
current layer with \ref QCustomPlot::setCurrentLayer to that new layer and finally create the
objects normally. They will be placed on the new layer automatically, due to the current layer
setting. Alternatively you could have also ignored the current layer setting and just moved the
objects with \ref QCPLayerable::setLayer to the desired layer after creating them.
It is also possible to move whole layers. For example, If you want the grid to be shown in front
of all plottables/items on the "main" layer, just move it above "main" with
QCustomPlot::moveLayer.
The rendering order within one layer is simply by order of creation or insertion. The item
created last (or added last to the layer), is drawn on top of all other objects on that layer.
When a layer is deleted, the objects on it are not deleted with it, but fall on the layer below
the deleted layer, see QCustomPlot::removeLayer.
\section qcplayer-buffering Replotting only a specific layer
If the layer mode (\ref setMode) is set to \ref lmBuffered, you can replot only this specific
layer by calling \ref replot. In certain situations this can provide better replot performance,
compared with a full replot of all layers. Upon creation of a new layer, the layer mode is
initialized to \ref lmLogical. The only layer that is set to \ref lmBuffered in a new \ref
QCustomPlot instance is the "overlay" layer, containing the selection rect.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QList<QCPLayerable*> QCPLayer::children() const
Returns a list of all layerables on this layer. The order corresponds to the rendering order:
layerables with higher indices are drawn above layerables with lower indices.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPLayer::index() const
Returns the index this layer has in the QCustomPlot. The index is the integer number by which this layer can be
accessed via \ref QCustomPlot::layer.
Layers with higher indices will be drawn above layers with lower indices.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a new QCPLayer instance.
Normally you shouldn't directly instantiate layers, use \ref QCustomPlot::addLayer instead.
\warning It is not checked that \a layerName is actually a unique layer name in \a parentPlot.
This check is only performed by \ref QCustomPlot::addLayer.
*/
QCPLayer::QCPLayer(QCustomPlot *parentPlot, const QString &layerName) :
QObject(parentPlot),
mParentPlot(parentPlot),
mName(layerName),
mIndex(-1), // will be set to a proper value by the QCustomPlot layer creation function
mVisible(true),
mMode(lmLogical)
{
// Note: no need to make sure layerName is unique, because layer
// management is done with QCustomPlot functions.
}
QCPLayer::~QCPLayer()
{
// If child layerables are still on this layer, detach them, so they don't try to reach back to this
// then invalid layer once they get deleted/moved themselves. This only happens when layers are deleted
// directly, like in the QCustomPlot destructor. (The regular layer removal procedure for the user is to
// call QCustomPlot::removeLayer, which moves all layerables off this layer before deleting it.)
while (!mChildren.isEmpty())
mChildren.last()->setLayer(nullptr); // removes itself from mChildren via removeChild()
if (mParentPlot->currentLayer() == this)
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "The parent plot's mCurrentLayer will be a dangling pointer. Should have been set to a valid layer or nullptr beforehand.";
}
/*!
Sets whether this layer is visible or not. If \a visible is set to false, all layerables on this
layer will be invisible.
This function doesn't change the visibility property of the layerables (\ref
QCPLayerable::setVisible), but the \ref QCPLayerable::realVisibility of each layerable takes the
visibility of the parent layer into account.
*/
void QCPLayer::setVisible(bool visible)
{
mVisible = visible;
}
/*!
Sets the rendering mode of this layer.
If \a mode is set to \ref lmBuffered for a layer, it will be given a dedicated paint buffer by
the parent QCustomPlot instance. This means it may be replotted individually by calling \ref
QCPLayer::replot, without needing to replot all other layers.
Layers which are set to \ref lmLogical (the default) are used only to define the rendering order
and can't be replotted individually.
Note that each layer which is set to \ref lmBuffered requires additional paint buffers for the
layers below, above and for the layer itself. This increases the memory consumption and
(slightly) decreases the repainting speed because multiple paint buffers need to be joined. So
you should carefully choose which layers benefit from having their own paint buffer. A typical
example would be a layer which contains certain layerables (e.g. items) that need to be changed
and thus replotted regularly, while all other layerables on other layers stay static. By default,
only the topmost layer called "overlay" is in mode \ref lmBuffered, and contains the selection
rect.
\see replot
*/
void QCPLayer::setMode(QCPLayer::LayerMode mode)
{
if (mMode != mode)
{
mMode = mode;
if (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> pb = mPaintBuffer.toStrongRef())
pb->setInvalidated();
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws the contents of this layer with the provided \a painter.
\see replot, drawToPaintBuffer
*/
void QCPLayer::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
foreach (QCPLayerable *child, mChildren)
{
if (child->realVisibility())
{
painter->save();
painter->setClipRect(child->clipRect().translated(0, -1));
child->applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
child->draw(painter);
painter->restore();
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws the contents of this layer into the paint buffer which is associated with this layer. The
association is established by the parent QCustomPlot, which manages all paint buffers (see \ref
QCustomPlot::setupPaintBuffers).
\see draw
*/
void QCPLayer::drawToPaintBuffer()
{
if (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> pb = mPaintBuffer.toStrongRef())
{
if (QCPPainter *painter = pb->startPainting())
{
if (painter->isActive())
draw(painter);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "paint buffer returned inactive painter";
delete painter;
pb->donePainting();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "paint buffer returned nullptr painter";
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no valid paint buffer associated with this layer";
}
/*!
If the layer mode (\ref setMode) is set to \ref lmBuffered, this method allows replotting only
the layerables on this specific layer, without the need to replot all other layers (as a call to
\ref QCustomPlot::replot would do).
QCustomPlot also makes sure to replot all layers instead of only this one, if the layer ordering
or any layerable-layer-association has changed since the last full replot and any other paint
buffers were thus invalidated.
If the layer mode is \ref lmLogical however, this method simply calls \ref QCustomPlot::replot on
the parent QCustomPlot instance.
\see draw
*/
void QCPLayer::replot()
{
if (mMode == lmBuffered && !mParentPlot->hasInvalidatedPaintBuffers())
{
if (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> pb = mPaintBuffer.toStrongRef())
{
pb->clear(Qt::transparent);
drawToPaintBuffer();
pb->setInvalidated(false); // since layer is lmBuffered, we know only this layer is on buffer and we can reset invalidated flag
mParentPlot->update();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no valid paint buffer associated with this layer";
} else
mParentPlot->replot();
}
/*! \internal
Adds the \a layerable to the list of this layer. If \a prepend is set to true, the layerable will
be prepended to the list, i.e. be drawn beneath the other layerables already in the list.
This function does not change the \a mLayer member of \a layerable to this layer. (Use
QCPLayerable::setLayer to change the layer of an object, not this function.)
\see removeChild
*/
void QCPLayer::addChild(QCPLayerable *layerable, bool prepend)
{
if (!mChildren.contains(layerable))
{
if (prepend)
mChildren.prepend(layerable);
else
mChildren.append(layerable);
if (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> pb = mPaintBuffer.toStrongRef())
pb->setInvalidated();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "layerable is already child of this layer" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(layerable);
}
/*! \internal
Removes the \a layerable from the list of this layer.
This function does not change the \a mLayer member of \a layerable. (Use QCPLayerable::setLayer
to change the layer of an object, not this function.)
\see addChild
*/
void QCPLayer::removeChild(QCPLayerable *layerable)
{
if (mChildren.removeOne(layerable))
{
if (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> pb = mPaintBuffer.toStrongRef())
pb->setInvalidated();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "layerable is not child of this layer" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(layerable);
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLayerable
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLayerable
\brief Base class for all drawable objects
This is the abstract base class most visible objects derive from, e.g. plottables, axes, grid
etc.
Every layerable is on a layer (QCPLayer) which allows controlling the rendering order by stacking
the layers accordingly.
For details about the layering mechanism, see the QCPLayer documentation.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPLayerable *QCPLayerable::parentLayerable() const
Returns the parent layerable of this layerable. The parent layerable is used to provide
visibility hierarchies in conjunction with the method \ref realVisibility. This way, layerables
only get drawn if their parent layerables are visible, too.
Note that a parent layerable is not necessarily also the QObject parent for memory management.
Further, a layerable doesn't always have a parent layerable, so this function may return \c
nullptr.
A parent layerable is set implicitly when placed inside layout elements and doesn't need to be
set manually by the user.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/* start documentation of pure virtual functions */
/*! \fn virtual void QCPLayerable::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const = 0
\internal
This function applies the default antialiasing setting to the specified \a painter, using the
function \ref applyAntialiasingHint. It is the antialiasing state the painter is put in, when
\ref draw is called on the layerable. If the layerable has multiple entities whose antialiasing
setting may be specified individually, this function should set the antialiasing state of the
most prominent entity. In this case however, the \ref draw function usually calls the specialized
versions of this function before drawing each entity, effectively overriding the setting of the
default antialiasing hint.
<b>First example:</b> QCPGraph has multiple entities that have an antialiasing setting: The graph
line, fills and scatters. Those can be configured via QCPGraph::setAntialiased,
QCPGraph::setAntialiasedFill and QCPGraph::setAntialiasedScatters. Consequently, there isn't only
the QCPGraph::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint function (which corresponds to the graph line's
antialiasing), but specialized ones like QCPGraph::applyFillAntialiasingHint and
QCPGraph::applyScattersAntialiasingHint. So before drawing one of those entities, QCPGraph::draw
calls the respective specialized applyAntialiasingHint function.
<b>Second example:</b> QCPItemLine consists only of a line so there is only one antialiasing
setting which can be controlled with QCPItemLine::setAntialiased. (This function is inherited by
all layerables. The specialized functions, as seen on QCPGraph, must be added explicitly to the
respective layerable subclass.) Consequently it only has the normal
QCPItemLine::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint. The \ref QCPItemLine::draw function doesn't need to
care about setting any antialiasing states, because the default antialiasing hint is already set
on the painter when the \ref draw function is called, and that's the state it wants to draw the
line with.
*/
/*! \fn virtual void QCPLayerable::draw(QCPPainter *painter) const = 0
\internal
This function draws the layerable with the specified \a painter. It is only called by
QCustomPlot, if the layerable is visible (\ref setVisible).
Before this function is called, the painter's antialiasing state is set via \ref
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint, see the documentation there. Further, the clipping rectangle was
set to \ref clipRect.
*/
/* end documentation of pure virtual functions */
/* start documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPLayerable::layerChanged(QCPLayer *newLayer);
This signal is emitted when the layer of this layerable changes, i.e. this layerable is moved to
a different layer.
\see setLayer
*/
/* end documentation of signals */
/*!
Creates a new QCPLayerable instance.
Since QCPLayerable is an abstract base class, it can't be instantiated directly. Use one of the
derived classes.
If \a plot is provided, it automatically places itself on the layer named \a targetLayer. If \a
targetLayer is an empty string, it places itself on the current layer of the plot (see \ref
QCustomPlot::setCurrentLayer).
It is possible to provide \c nullptr as \a plot. In that case, you should assign a parent plot at
a later time with \ref initializeParentPlot.
The layerable's parent layerable is set to \a parentLayerable, if provided. Direct layerable
parents are mainly used to control visibility in a hierarchy of layerables. This means a
layerable is only drawn, if all its ancestor layerables are also visible. Note that \a
parentLayerable does not become the QObject-parent (for memory management) of this layerable, \a
plot does. It is not uncommon to set the QObject-parent to something else in the constructors of
QCPLayerable subclasses, to guarantee a working destruction hierarchy.
*/
QCPLayerable::QCPLayerable(QCustomPlot *plot, QString targetLayer, QCPLayerable *parentLayerable) :
QObject(plot),
mVisible(true),
mParentPlot(plot),
mParentLayerable(parentLayerable),
mLayer(nullptr),
mAntialiased(true)
{
if (mParentPlot)
{
if (targetLayer.isEmpty())
setLayer(mParentPlot->currentLayer());
else if (!setLayer(targetLayer))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "setting QCPlayerable initial layer to" << targetLayer << "failed.";
}
}
QCPLayerable::~QCPLayerable()
{
if (mLayer)
{
mLayer->removeChild(this);
mLayer = nullptr;
}
}
/*!
Sets the visibility of this layerable object. If an object is not visible, it will not be drawn
on the QCustomPlot surface, and user interaction with it (e.g. click and selection) is not
possible.
*/
void QCPLayerable::setVisible(bool on)
{
mVisible = on;
}
/*!
Sets the \a layer of this layerable object. The object will be placed on top of the other objects
already on \a layer.
If \a layer is 0, this layerable will not be on any layer and thus not appear in the plot (or
interact/receive events).
Returns true if the layer of this layerable was successfully changed to \a layer.
*/
bool QCPLayerable::setLayer(QCPLayer *layer)
{
return moveToLayer(layer, false);
}
/*! \overload
Sets the layer of this layerable object by name
Returns true on success, i.e. if \a layerName is a valid layer name.
*/
bool QCPLayerable::setLayer(const QString &layerName)
{
if (!mParentPlot)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no parent QCustomPlot set";
return false;
}
if (QCPLayer *layer = mParentPlot->layer(layerName))
{
return setLayer(layer);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "there is no layer with name" << layerName;
return false;
}
}
/*!
Sets whether this object will be drawn antialiased or not.
Note that antialiasing settings may be overridden by QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
*/
void QCPLayerable::setAntialiased(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiased = enabled;
}
/*!
Returns whether this layerable is visible, taking the visibility of the layerable parent and the
visibility of this layerable's layer into account. This is the method that is consulted to decide
whether a layerable shall be drawn or not.
If this layerable has a direct layerable parent (usually set via hierarchies implemented in
subclasses, like in the case of \ref QCPLayoutElement), this function returns true only if this
layerable has its visibility set to true and the parent layerable's \ref realVisibility returns
true.
*/
bool QCPLayerable::realVisibility() const
{
return mVisible && (!mLayer || mLayer->visible()) && (!mParentLayerable || mParentLayerable.data()->realVisibility());
}
/*!
This function is used to decide whether a click hits a layerable object or not.
\a pos is a point in pixel coordinates on the QCustomPlot surface. This function returns the
shortest pixel distance of this point to the object. If the object is either invisible or the
distance couldn't be determined, -1.0 is returned. Further, if \a onlySelectable is true and the
object is not selectable, -1.0 is returned, too.
If the object is represented not by single lines but by an area like a \ref QCPItemText or the
bars of a \ref QCPBars plottable, a click inside the area should also be considered a hit. In
these cases this function thus returns a constant value greater zero but still below the parent
plot's selection tolerance. (typically the selectionTolerance multiplied by 0.99).
Providing a constant value for area objects allows selecting line objects even when they are
obscured by such area objects, by clicking close to the lines (i.e. closer than
0.99*selectionTolerance).
The actual setting of the selection state is not done by this function. This is handled by the
parent QCustomPlot when the mouseReleaseEvent occurs, and the finally selected object is notified
via the \ref selectEvent/\ref deselectEvent methods.
\a details is an optional output parameter. Every layerable subclass may place any information
in \a details. This information will be passed to \ref selectEvent when the parent QCustomPlot
decides on the basis of this selectTest call, that the object was successfully selected. The
subsequent call to \ref selectEvent will carry the \a details. This is useful for multi-part
objects (like QCPAxis). This way, a possibly complex calculation to decide which part was clicked
is only done once in \ref selectTest. The result (i.e. the actually clicked part) can then be
placed in \a details. So in the subsequent \ref selectEvent, the decision which part was
selected doesn't have to be done a second time for a single selection operation.
In the case of 1D Plottables (\ref QCPAbstractPlottable1D, like \ref QCPGraph or \ref QCPBars) \a
details will be set to a \ref QCPDataSelection, describing the closest data point to \a pos.
You may pass \c nullptr as \a details to indicate that you are not interested in those selection
details.
\see selectEvent, deselectEvent, mousePressEvent, wheelEvent, QCustomPlot::setInteractions,
QCPAbstractPlottable1D::selectTestRect
*/
double QCPLayerable::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(pos)
Q_UNUSED(onlySelectable)
Q_UNUSED(details)
return -1.0;
}
/*! \internal
Sets the parent plot of this layerable. Use this function once to set the parent plot if you have
passed \c nullptr in the constructor. It can not be used to move a layerable from one QCustomPlot
to another one.
Note that, unlike when passing a non \c nullptr parent plot in the constructor, this function
does not make \a parentPlot the QObject-parent of this layerable. If you want this, call
QObject::setParent(\a parentPlot) in addition to this function.
Further, you will probably want to set a layer (\ref setLayer) after calling this function, to
make the layerable appear on the QCustomPlot.
The parent plot change will be propagated to subclasses via a call to \ref parentPlotInitialized
so they can react accordingly (e.g. also initialize the parent plot of child layerables, like
QCPLayout does).
*/
void QCPLayerable::initializeParentPlot(QCustomPlot *parentPlot)
{
if (mParentPlot)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "called with mParentPlot already initialized";
return;
}
if (!parentPlot)
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "called with parentPlot zero";
mParentPlot = parentPlot;
parentPlotInitialized(mParentPlot);
}
/*! \internal
Sets the parent layerable of this layerable to \a parentLayerable. Note that \a parentLayerable does not
become the QObject-parent (for memory management) of this layerable.
The parent layerable has influence on the return value of the \ref realVisibility method. Only
layerables with a fully visible parent tree will return true for \ref realVisibility, and thus be
drawn.
\see realVisibility
*/
void QCPLayerable::setParentLayerable(QCPLayerable *parentLayerable)
{
mParentLayerable = parentLayerable;
}
/*! \internal
Moves this layerable object to \a layer. If \a prepend is true, this object will be prepended to
the new layer's list, i.e. it will be drawn below the objects already on the layer. If it is
false, the object will be appended.
Returns true on success, i.e. if \a layer is a valid layer.
*/
bool QCPLayerable::moveToLayer(QCPLayer *layer, bool prepend)
{
if (layer && !mParentPlot)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no parent QCustomPlot set";
return false;
}
if (layer && layer->parentPlot() != mParentPlot)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "layer" << layer->name() << "is not in same QCustomPlot as this layerable";
return false;
}
QCPLayer *oldLayer = mLayer;
if (mLayer)
mLayer->removeChild(this);
mLayer = layer;
if (mLayer)
mLayer->addChild(this, prepend);
if (mLayer != oldLayer)
emit layerChanged(mLayer);
return true;
}
/*! \internal
Sets the QCPainter::setAntialiasing state on the provided \a painter, depending on the \a
localAntialiased value as well as the overrides \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements. Which override enum this function takes into account is
controlled via \a overrideElement.
*/
void QCPLayerable::applyAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter, bool localAntialiased, QCP::AntialiasedElement overrideElement) const
{
if (mParentPlot && mParentPlot->notAntialiasedElements().testFlag(overrideElement))
painter->setAntialiasing(false);
else if (mParentPlot && mParentPlot->antialiasedElements().testFlag(overrideElement))
painter->setAntialiasing(true);
else
painter->setAntialiasing(localAntialiased);
}
/*! \internal
This function is called by \ref initializeParentPlot, to allow subclasses to react on the setting
of a parent plot. This is the case when \c nullptr was passed as parent plot in the constructor,
and the parent plot is set at a later time.
For example, QCPLayoutElement/QCPLayout hierarchies may be created independently of any
QCustomPlot at first. When they are then added to a layout inside the QCustomPlot, the top level
element of the hierarchy gets its parent plot initialized with \ref initializeParentPlot. To
propagate the parent plot to all the children of the hierarchy, the top level element then uses
this function to pass the parent plot on to its child elements.
The default implementation does nothing.
\see initializeParentPlot
*/
void QCPLayerable::parentPlotInitialized(QCustomPlot *parentPlot)
{
Q_UNUSED(parentPlot)
}
/*! \internal
Returns the selection category this layerable shall belong to. The selection category is used in
conjunction with \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions to control which objects are selectable and
which aren't.
Subclasses that don't fit any of the normal \ref QCP::Interaction values can use \ref
QCP::iSelectOther. This is what the default implementation returns.
\see QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
QCP::Interaction QCPLayerable::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectOther;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the clipping rectangle of this layerable object. By default, this is the viewport of the
parent QCustomPlot. Specific subclasses may reimplement this function to provide different
clipping rects.
The returned clipping rect is set on the painter before the draw function of the respective
object is called.
*/
QRect QCPLayerable::clipRect() const
{
if (mParentPlot)
return mParentPlot->viewport();
else
return {};
}
/*! \internal
This event is called when the layerable shall be selected, as a consequence of a click by the
user. Subclasses should react to it by setting their selection state appropriately. The default
implementation does nothing.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the selection. \a additive indicates, whether the user
was holding the multi-select-modifier while performing the selection (see \ref
QCustomPlot::setMultiSelectModifier). if \a additive is true, the selection state must be toggled
(i.e. become selected when unselected and unselected when selected).
Every selectEvent is preceded by a call to \ref selectTest, which has returned positively (i.e.
returned a value greater than 0 and less than the selection tolerance of the parent QCustomPlot).
The \a details data you output from \ref selectTest is fed back via \a details here. You may
use it to transport any kind of information from the selectTest to the possibly subsequent
selectEvent. Usually \a details is used to transfer which part was clicked, if it is a layerable
that has multiple individually selectable parts (like QCPAxis). This way selectEvent doesn't need
to do the calculation again to find out which part was actually clicked.
\a selectionStateChanged is an output parameter. If the pointer is non-null, this function must
set the value either to true or false, depending on whether the selection state of this layerable
was actually changed. For layerables that only are selectable as a whole and not in parts, this
is simple: if \a additive is true, \a selectionStateChanged must also be set to true, because the
selection toggles. If \a additive is false, \a selectionStateChanged is only set to true, if the
layerable was previously unselected and now is switched to the selected state.
\see selectTest, deselectEvent
*/
void QCPLayerable::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
Q_UNUSED(additive)
Q_UNUSED(details)
Q_UNUSED(selectionStateChanged)
}
/*! \internal
This event is called when the layerable shall be deselected, either as consequence of a user
interaction or a call to \ref QCustomPlot::deselectAll. Subclasses should react to it by
unsetting their selection appropriately.
just as in \ref selectEvent, the output parameter \a selectionStateChanged (if non-null), must
return true or false when the selection state of this layerable has changed or not changed,
respectively.
\see selectTest, selectEvent
*/
void QCPLayerable::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(selectionStateChanged)
}
/*!
This event gets called when the user presses a mouse button while the cursor is over the
layerable. Whether a cursor is over the layerable is decided by a preceding call to \ref
selectTest.
The current pixel position of the cursor on the QCustomPlot widget is accessible via \c
event->pos(). The parameter \a details contains layerable-specific details about the hit, which
were generated in the previous call to \ref selectTest. For example, One-dimensional plottables
like \ref QCPGraph or \ref QCPBars convey the clicked data point in the \a details parameter, as
\ref QCPDataSelection packed as QVariant. Multi-part objects convey the specific \c
SelectablePart that was hit (e.g. \ref QCPAxis::SelectablePart in the case of axes).
QCustomPlot uses an event propagation system that works the same as Qt's system. If your
layerable doesn't reimplement the \ref mousePressEvent or explicitly calls \c event->ignore() in
its reimplementation, the event will be propagated to the next layerable in the stacking order.
Once a layerable has accepted the \ref mousePressEvent, it is considered the mouse grabber and
will receive all following calls to \ref mouseMoveEvent or \ref mouseReleaseEvent for this mouse
interaction (a "mouse interaction" in this context ends with the release).
The default implementation does nothing except explicitly ignoring the event with \c
event->ignore().
\see mouseMoveEvent, mouseReleaseEvent, mouseDoubleClickEvent, wheelEvent
*/
void QCPLayerable::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
event->ignore();
}
/*!
This event gets called when the user moves the mouse while holding a mouse button, after this
layerable has become the mouse grabber by accepting the preceding \ref mousePressEvent.
The current pixel position of the cursor on the QCustomPlot widget is accessible via \c
event->pos(). The parameter \a startPos indicates the position where the initial \ref
mousePressEvent occurred, that started the mouse interaction.
The default implementation does nothing.
\see mousePressEvent, mouseReleaseEvent, mouseDoubleClickEvent, wheelEvent
*/
void QCPLayerable::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(startPos)
event->ignore();
}
/*!
This event gets called when the user releases the mouse button, after this layerable has become
the mouse grabber by accepting the preceding \ref mousePressEvent.
The current pixel position of the cursor on the QCustomPlot widget is accessible via \c
event->pos(). The parameter \a startPos indicates the position where the initial \ref
mousePressEvent occurred, that started the mouse interaction.
The default implementation does nothing.
\see mousePressEvent, mouseMoveEvent, mouseDoubleClickEvent, wheelEvent
*/
void QCPLayerable::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(startPos)
event->ignore();
}
/*!
This event gets called when the user presses the mouse button a second time in a double-click,
while the cursor is over the layerable. Whether a cursor is over the layerable is decided by a
preceding call to \ref selectTest.
The \ref mouseDoubleClickEvent is called instead of the second \ref mousePressEvent. So in the
case of a double-click, the event succession is
<i>pressEvent – releaseEvent – doubleClickEvent – releaseEvent</i>.
The current pixel position of the cursor on the QCustomPlot widget is accessible via \c
event->pos(). The parameter \a details contains layerable-specific details about the hit, which
were generated in the previous call to \ref selectTest. For example, One-dimensional plottables
like \ref QCPGraph or \ref QCPBars convey the clicked data point in the \a details parameter, as
\ref QCPDataSelection packed as QVariant. Multi-part objects convey the specific \c
SelectablePart that was hit (e.g. \ref QCPAxis::SelectablePart in the case of axes).
Similarly to \ref mousePressEvent, once a layerable has accepted the \ref mouseDoubleClickEvent,
it is considered the mouse grabber and will receive all following calls to \ref mouseMoveEvent
and \ref mouseReleaseEvent for this mouse interaction (a "mouse interaction" in this context ends
with the release).
The default implementation does nothing except explicitly ignoring the event with \c
event->ignore().
\see mousePressEvent, mouseMoveEvent, mouseReleaseEvent, wheelEvent
*/
void QCPLayerable::mouseDoubleClickEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
event->ignore();
}
/*!
This event gets called when the user turns the mouse scroll wheel while the cursor is over the
layerable. Whether a cursor is over the layerable is decided by a preceding call to \ref
selectTest.
The current pixel position of the cursor on the QCustomPlot widget is accessible via \c
event->pos().
The \c event->angleDelta() indicates how far the mouse wheel was turned, which is usually +/- 120
for single rotation steps. However, if the mouse wheel is turned rapidly, multiple steps may
accumulate to one event, making the delta larger. On the other hand, if the wheel has very smooth
steps or none at all, the delta may be smaller.
The default implementation does nothing.
\see mousePressEvent, mouseMoveEvent, mouseReleaseEvent, mouseDoubleClickEvent
*/
void QCPLayerable::wheelEvent(QWheelEvent *event)
{
event->ignore();
}
/* end of 'src/layer.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/range.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 12221 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPRange
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPRange
\brief Represents the range an axis is encompassing.
contains a \a lower and \a upper double value and provides convenience input, output and
modification functions.
\see QCPAxis::setRange
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn double QCPRange::size() const
Returns the size of the range, i.e. \a upper-\a lower
*/
/*! \fn double QCPRange::center() const
Returns the center of the range, i.e. (\a upper+\a lower)*0.5
*/
/*! \fn void QCPRange::normalize()
Makes sure \a lower is numerically smaller than \a upper. If this is not the case, the values are
swapped.
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPRange::contains(double value) const
Returns true when \a value lies within or exactly on the borders of the range.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange &QCPRange::operator+=(const double& value)
Adds \a value to both boundaries of the range.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange &QCPRange::operator-=(const double& value)
Subtracts \a value from both boundaries of the range.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange &QCPRange::operator*=(const double& value)
Multiplies both boundaries of the range by \a value.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange &QCPRange::operator/=(const double& value)
Divides both boundaries of the range by \a value.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Minimum range size (\a upper - \a lower) the range changing functions will accept. Smaller
intervals would cause errors due to the 11-bit exponent of double precision numbers,
corresponding to a minimum magnitude of roughly 1e-308.
\warning Do not use this constant to indicate "arbitrarily small" values in plotting logic (as
values that will appear in the plot)! It is intended only as a bound to compare against, e.g. to
prevent axis ranges from obtaining underflowing ranges.
\see validRange, maxRange
*/
const double QCPRange::minRange = 1e-280;
/*!
Maximum values (negative and positive) the range will accept in range-changing functions.
Larger absolute values would cause errors due to the 11-bit exponent of double precision numbers,
corresponding to a maximum magnitude of roughly 1e308.
\warning Do not use this constant to indicate "arbitrarily large" values in plotting logic (as
values that will appear in the plot)! It is intended only as a bound to compare against, e.g. to
prevent axis ranges from obtaining overflowing ranges.
\see validRange, minRange
*/
const double QCPRange::maxRange = 1e250;
/*!
Constructs a range with \a lower and \a upper set to zero.
*/
QCPRange::QCPRange() :
lower(0),
upper(0)
{
}
/*! \overload
Constructs a range with the specified \a lower and \a upper values.
The resulting range will be normalized (see \ref normalize), so if \a lower is not numerically
smaller than \a upper, they will be swapped.
*/
QCPRange::QCPRange(double lower, double upper) :
lower(lower),
upper(upper)
{
normalize();
}
/*! \overload
Expands this range such that \a otherRange is contained in the new range. It is assumed that both
this range and \a otherRange are normalized (see \ref normalize).
If this range contains NaN as lower or upper bound, it will be replaced by the respective bound
of \a otherRange.
If \a otherRange is already inside the current range, this function does nothing.
\see expanded
*/
void QCPRange::expand(const QCPRange &otherRange)
{
if (lower > otherRange.lower || qIsNaN(lower))
lower = otherRange.lower;
if (upper < otherRange.upper || qIsNaN(upper))
upper = otherRange.upper;
}
/*! \overload
Expands this range such that \a includeCoord is contained in the new range. It is assumed that
this range is normalized (see \ref normalize).
If this range contains NaN as lower or upper bound, the respective bound will be set to \a
includeCoord.
If \a includeCoord is already inside the current range, this function does nothing.
\see expand
*/
void QCPRange::expand(double includeCoord)
{
if (lower > includeCoord || qIsNaN(lower))
lower = includeCoord;
if (upper < includeCoord || qIsNaN(upper))
upper = includeCoord;
}
/*! \overload
Returns an expanded range that contains this and \a otherRange. It is assumed that both this
range and \a otherRange are normalized (see \ref normalize).
If this range contains NaN as lower or upper bound, the returned range's bound will be taken from
\a otherRange.
\see expand
*/
QCPRange QCPRange::expanded(const QCPRange &otherRange) const
{
QCPRange result = *this;
result.expand(otherRange);
return result;
}
/*! \overload
Returns an expanded range that includes the specified \a includeCoord. It is assumed that this
range is normalized (see \ref normalize).
If this range contains NaN as lower or upper bound, the returned range's bound will be set to \a
includeCoord.
\see expand
*/
QCPRange QCPRange::expanded(double includeCoord) const
{
QCPRange result = *this;
result.expand(includeCoord);
return result;
}
/*!
Returns this range, possibly modified to not exceed the bounds provided as \a lowerBound and \a
upperBound. If possible, the size of the current range is preserved in the process.
If the range shall only be bounded at the lower side, you can set \a upperBound to \ref
QCPRange::maxRange. If it shall only be bounded at the upper side, set \a lowerBound to -\ref
QCPRange::maxRange.
*/
QCPRange QCPRange::bounded(double lowerBound, double upperBound) const
{
if (lowerBound > upperBound)
qSwap(lowerBound, upperBound);
QCPRange result(lower, upper);
if (result.lower < lowerBound)
{
result.lower = lowerBound;
result.upper = lowerBound + size();
if (result.upper > upperBound || qFuzzyCompare(size(), upperBound-lowerBound))
result.upper = upperBound;
} else if (result.upper > upperBound)
{
result.upper = upperBound;
result.lower = upperBound - size();
if (result.lower < lowerBound || qFuzzyCompare(size(), upperBound-lowerBound))
result.lower = lowerBound;
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a sanitized version of the range. Sanitized means for logarithmic scales, that
the range won't span the positive and negative sign domain, i.e. contain zero. Further
\a lower will always be numerically smaller (or equal) to \a upper.
If the original range does span positive and negative sign domains or contains zero,
the returned range will try to approximate the original range as good as possible.
If the positive interval of the original range is wider than the negative interval, the
returned range will only contain the positive interval, with lower bound set to \a rangeFac or
\a rangeFac *\a upper, whichever is closer to zero. Same procedure is used if the negative interval
is wider than the positive interval, this time by changing the \a upper bound.
*/
QCPRange QCPRange::sanitizedForLogScale() const
{
double rangeFac = 1e-3;
QCPRange sanitizedRange(lower, upper);
sanitizedRange.normalize();
// can't have range spanning negative and positive values in log plot, so change range to fix it
//if (qFuzzyCompare(sanitizedRange.lower+1, 1) && !qFuzzyCompare(sanitizedRange.upper+1, 1))
if (sanitizedRange.lower == 0.0 && sanitizedRange.upper != 0.0)
{
// case lower is 0
if (rangeFac < sanitizedRange.upper*rangeFac)
sanitizedRange.lower = rangeFac;
else
sanitizedRange.lower = sanitizedRange.upper*rangeFac;
} //else if (!qFuzzyCompare(lower+1, 1) && qFuzzyCompare(upper+1, 1))
else if (sanitizedRange.lower != 0.0 && sanitizedRange.upper == 0.0)
{
// case upper is 0
if (-rangeFac > sanitizedRange.lower*rangeFac)
sanitizedRange.upper = -rangeFac;
else
sanitizedRange.upper = sanitizedRange.lower*rangeFac;
} else if (sanitizedRange.lower < 0 && sanitizedRange.upper > 0)
{
// find out whether negative or positive interval is wider to decide which sign domain will be chosen
if (-sanitizedRange.lower > sanitizedRange.upper)
{
// negative is wider, do same as in case upper is 0
if (-rangeFac > sanitizedRange.lower*rangeFac)
sanitizedRange.upper = -rangeFac;
else
sanitizedRange.upper = sanitizedRange.lower*rangeFac;
} else
{
// positive is wider, do same as in case lower is 0
if (rangeFac < sanitizedRange.upper*rangeFac)
sanitizedRange.lower = rangeFac;
else
sanitizedRange.lower = sanitizedRange.upper*rangeFac;
}
}
// due to normalization, case lower>0 && upper<0 should never occur, because that implies upper<lower
return sanitizedRange;
}
/*!
Returns a sanitized version of the range. Sanitized means for linear scales, that
\a lower will always be numerically smaller (or equal) to \a upper.
*/
QCPRange QCPRange::sanitizedForLinScale() const
{
QCPRange sanitizedRange(lower, upper);
sanitizedRange.normalize();
return sanitizedRange;
}
/*!
Checks, whether the specified range is within valid bounds, which are defined
as QCPRange::maxRange and QCPRange::minRange.
A valid range means:
\li range bounds within -maxRange and maxRange
\li range size above minRange
\li range size below maxRange
*/
bool QCPRange::validRange(double lower, double upper)
{
return (lower > -maxRange &&
upper < maxRange &&
qAbs(lower-upper) > minRange &&
qAbs(lower-upper) < maxRange &&
!(lower > 0 && qIsInf(upper/lower)) &&
!(upper < 0 && qIsInf(lower/upper)));
}
/*!
\overload
Checks, whether the specified range is within valid bounds, which are defined
as QCPRange::maxRange and QCPRange::minRange.
A valid range means:
\li range bounds within -maxRange and maxRange
\li range size above minRange
\li range size below maxRange
*/
bool QCPRange::validRange(const QCPRange &range)
{
return (range.lower > -maxRange &&
range.upper < maxRange &&
qAbs(range.lower-range.upper) > minRange &&
qAbs(range.lower-range.upper) < maxRange &&
!(range.lower > 0 && qIsInf(range.upper/range.lower)) &&
!(range.upper < 0 && qIsInf(range.lower/range.upper)));
}
/* end of 'src/axis/range.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/selection.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 21837 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPDataRange
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPDataRange
\brief Describes a data range given by begin and end index
QCPDataRange holds two integers describing the begin (\ref setBegin) and end (\ref setEnd) index
of a contiguous set of data points. The \a end index corresponds to the data point just after the
last data point of the data range, like in standard iterators.
Data Ranges are not bound to a certain plottable, thus they can be freely exchanged, created and
modified. If a non-contiguous data set shall be described, the class \ref QCPDataSelection is
used, which holds and manages multiple instances of \ref QCPDataRange. In most situations, \ref
QCPDataSelection is thus used.
Both \ref QCPDataRange and \ref QCPDataSelection offer convenience methods to work with them,
e.g. \ref bounded, \ref expanded, \ref intersects, \ref intersection, \ref adjusted, \ref
contains. Further, addition and subtraction operators (defined in \ref QCPDataSelection) can be
used to join/subtract data ranges and data selections (or mixtures), to retrieve a corresponding
\ref QCPDataSelection.
%QCustomPlot's \ref dataselection "data selection mechanism" is based on \ref QCPDataSelection and
QCPDataRange.
\note Do not confuse \ref QCPDataRange with \ref QCPRange. A \ref QCPRange describes an interval
in floating point plot coordinates, e.g. the current axis range.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn int QCPDataRange::size() const
Returns the number of data points described by this data range. This is equal to the end index
minus the begin index.
\see length
*/
/*! \fn int QCPDataRange::length() const
Returns the number of data points described by this data range. Equivalent to \ref size.
*/
/*! \fn void QCPDataRange::setBegin(int begin)
Sets the begin of this data range. The \a begin index points to the first data point that is part
of the data range.
No checks or corrections are made to ensure the resulting range is valid (\ref isValid).
\see setEnd
*/
/*! \fn void QCPDataRange::setEnd(int end)
Sets the end of this data range. The \a end index points to the data point just after the last
data point that is part of the data range.
No checks or corrections are made to ensure the resulting range is valid (\ref isValid).
\see setBegin
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPDataRange::isValid() const
Returns whether this range is valid. A valid range has a begin index greater or equal to 0, and
an end index greater or equal to the begin index.
\note Invalid ranges should be avoided and are never the result of any of QCustomPlot's methods
(unless they are themselves fed with invalid ranges). Do not pass invalid ranges to QCustomPlot's
methods. The invalid range is not inherently prevented in QCPDataRange, to allow temporary
invalid begin/end values while manipulating the range. An invalid range is not necessarily empty
(\ref isEmpty), since its \ref length can be negative and thus non-zero.
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPDataRange::isEmpty() const
Returns whether this range is empty, i.e. whether its begin index equals its end index.
\see size, length
*/
/*! \fn QCPDataRange QCPDataRange::adjusted(int changeBegin, int changeEnd) const
Returns a data range where \a changeBegin and \a changeEnd were added to the begin and end
indices, respectively.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates an empty QCPDataRange, with begin and end set to 0.
*/
QCPDataRange::QCPDataRange() :
mBegin(0),
mEnd(0)
{
}
/*!
Creates a QCPDataRange, initialized with the specified \a begin and \a end.
No checks or corrections are made to ensure the resulting range is valid (\ref isValid).
*/
QCPDataRange::QCPDataRange(int begin, int end) :
mBegin(begin),
mEnd(end)
{
}
/*!
Returns a data range that matches this data range, except that parts exceeding \a other are
excluded.
This method is very similar to \ref intersection, with one distinction: If this range and the \a
other range share no intersection, the returned data range will be empty with begin and end set
to the respective boundary side of \a other, at which this range is residing. (\ref intersection
would just return a range with begin and end set to 0.)
*/
QCPDataRange QCPDataRange::bounded(const QCPDataRange &other) const
{
QCPDataRange result(intersection(other));
if (result.isEmpty()) // no intersection, preserve respective bounding side of otherRange as both begin and end of return value
{
if (mEnd <= other.mBegin)
result = QCPDataRange(other.mBegin, other.mBegin);
else
result = QCPDataRange(other.mEnd, other.mEnd);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a data range that contains both this data range as well as \a other.
*/
QCPDataRange QCPDataRange::expanded(const QCPDataRange &other) const
{
return {qMin(mBegin, other.mBegin), qMax(mEnd, other.mEnd)};
}
/*!
Returns the data range which is contained in both this data range and \a other.
This method is very similar to \ref bounded, with one distinction: If this range and the \a other
range share no intersection, the returned data range will be empty with begin and end set to 0.
(\ref bounded would return a range with begin and end set to one of the boundaries of \a other,
depending on which side this range is on.)
\see QCPDataSelection::intersection
*/
QCPDataRange QCPDataRange::intersection(const QCPDataRange &other) const
{
QCPDataRange result(qMax(mBegin, other.mBegin), qMin(mEnd, other.mEnd));
if (result.isValid())
return result;
else
return {};
}
/*!
Returns whether this data range and \a other share common data points.
\see intersection, contains
*/
bool QCPDataRange::intersects(const QCPDataRange &other) const
{
return !( (mBegin > other.mBegin && mBegin >= other.mEnd) ||
(mEnd <= other.mBegin && mEnd < other.mEnd) );
}
/*!
Returns whether all data points of \a other are also contained inside this data range.
\see intersects
*/
bool QCPDataRange::contains(const QCPDataRange &other) const
{
return mBegin <= other.mBegin && mEnd >= other.mEnd;
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPDataSelection
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPDataSelection
\brief Describes a data set by holding multiple QCPDataRange instances
QCPDataSelection manages multiple instances of QCPDataRange in order to represent any (possibly
disjoint) set of data selection.
The data selection can be modified with addition and subtraction operators which take
QCPDataSelection and QCPDataRange instances, as well as methods such as \ref addDataRange and
\ref clear. Read access is provided by \ref dataRange, \ref dataRanges, \ref dataRangeCount, etc.
The method \ref simplify is used to join directly adjacent or even overlapping QCPDataRange
instances. QCPDataSelection automatically simplifies when using the addition/subtraction
operators. The only case when \ref simplify is left to the user, is when calling \ref
addDataRange, with the parameter \a simplify explicitly set to false. This is useful if many data
ranges will be added to the selection successively and the overhead for simplifying after each
iteration shall be avoided. In this case, you should make sure to call \ref simplify after
completing the operation.
Use \ref enforceType to bring the data selection into a state complying with the constraints for
selections defined in \ref QCP::SelectionType.
%QCustomPlot's \ref dataselection "data selection mechanism" is based on QCPDataSelection and
QCPDataRange.
\section qcpdataselection-iterating Iterating over a data selection
As an example, the following code snippet calculates the average value of a graph's data
\ref QCPAbstractPlottable::selection "selection":
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpdataselection-iterating-1
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn int QCPDataSelection::dataRangeCount() const
Returns the number of ranges that make up the data selection. The ranges can be accessed by \ref
dataRange via their index.
\see dataRange, dataPointCount
*/
/*! \fn QList<QCPDataRange> QCPDataSelection::dataRanges() const
Returns all data ranges that make up the data selection. If the data selection is simplified (the
usual state of the selection, see \ref simplify), the ranges are sorted by ascending data point
index.
\see dataRange
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPDataSelection::isEmpty() const
Returns true if there are no data ranges, and thus no data points, in this QCPDataSelection
instance.
\see dataRangeCount
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates an empty QCPDataSelection.
*/
QCPDataSelection::QCPDataSelection()
{
}
/*!
Creates a QCPDataSelection containing the provided \a range.
*/
QCPDataSelection::QCPDataSelection(const QCPDataRange &range)
{
mDataRanges.append(range);
}
/*!
Returns true if this selection is identical (contains the same data ranges with the same begin
and end indices) to \a other.
Note that both data selections must be in simplified state (the usual state of the selection, see
\ref simplify) for this operator to return correct results.
*/
bool QCPDataSelection::operator==(const QCPDataSelection &other) const
{
if (mDataRanges.size() != other.mDataRanges.size())
return false;
for (int i=0; i<mDataRanges.size(); ++i)
{
if (mDataRanges.at(i) != other.mDataRanges.at(i))
return false;
}
return true;
}
/*!
Adds the data selection of \a other to this data selection, and then simplifies this data
selection (see \ref simplify).
*/
QCPDataSelection &QCPDataSelection::operator+=(const QCPDataSelection &other)
{
mDataRanges << other.mDataRanges;
simplify();
return *this;
}
/*!
Adds the data range \a other to this data selection, and then simplifies this data selection (see
\ref simplify).
*/
QCPDataSelection &QCPDataSelection::operator+=(const QCPDataRange &other)
{
addDataRange(other);
return *this;
}
/*!
Removes all data point indices that are described by \a other from this data selection.
*/
QCPDataSelection &QCPDataSelection::operator-=(const QCPDataSelection &other)
{
for (int i=0; i<other.dataRangeCount(); ++i)
*this -= other.dataRange(i);
return *this;
}
/*!
Removes all data point indices that are described by \a other from this data selection.
*/
QCPDataSelection &QCPDataSelection::operator-=(const QCPDataRange &other)
{
if (other.isEmpty() || isEmpty())
return *this;
simplify();
int i=0;
while (i < mDataRanges.size())
{
const int thisBegin = mDataRanges.at(i).begin();
const int thisEnd = mDataRanges.at(i).end();
if (thisBegin >= other.end())
break; // since data ranges are sorted after the simplify() call, no ranges which contain other will come after this
if (thisEnd > other.begin()) // ranges which don't fulfill this are entirely before other and can be ignored
{
if (thisBegin >= other.begin()) // range leading segment is encompassed
{
if (thisEnd <= other.end()) // range fully encompassed, remove completely
{
mDataRanges.removeAt(i);
continue;
} else // only leading segment is encompassed, trim accordingly
mDataRanges[i].setBegin(other.end());
} else // leading segment is not encompassed
{
if (thisEnd <= other.end()) // only trailing segment is encompassed, trim accordingly
{
mDataRanges[i].setEnd(other.begin());
} else // other lies inside this range, so split range
{
mDataRanges[i].setEnd(other.begin());
mDataRanges.insert(i+1, QCPDataRange(other.end(), thisEnd));
break; // since data ranges are sorted (and don't overlap) after simplify() call, we're done here
}
}
}
++i;
}
return *this;
}
/*!
Returns the total number of data points contained in all data ranges that make up this data
selection.
*/
int QCPDataSelection::dataPointCount() const
{
int result = 0;
foreach (QCPDataRange dataRange, mDataRanges)
result += dataRange.length();
return result;
}
/*!
Returns the data range with the specified \a index.
If the data selection is simplified (the usual state of the selection, see \ref simplify), the
ranges are sorted by ascending data point index.
\see dataRangeCount
*/
QCPDataRange QCPDataSelection::dataRange(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mDataRanges.size())
{
return mDataRanges.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of range:" << index;
return {};
}
}
/*!
Returns a \ref QCPDataRange which spans the entire data selection, including possible
intermediate segments which are not part of the original data selection.
*/
QCPDataRange QCPDataSelection::span() const
{
if (isEmpty())
return {};
else
return {mDataRanges.first().begin(), mDataRanges.last().end()};
}
/*!
Adds the given \a dataRange to this data selection. This is equivalent to the += operator but
allows disabling immediate simplification by setting \a simplify to false. This can improve
performance if adding a very large amount of data ranges successively. In this case, make sure to
call \ref simplify manually, after the operation.
*/
void QCPDataSelection::addDataRange(const QCPDataRange &dataRange, bool simplify)
{
mDataRanges.append(dataRange);
if (simplify)
this->simplify();
}
/*!
Removes all data ranges. The data selection then contains no data points.
\ref isEmpty
*/
void QCPDataSelection::clear()
{
mDataRanges.clear();
}
/*!
Sorts all data ranges by range begin index in ascending order, and then joins directly adjacent
or overlapping ranges. This can reduce the number of individual data ranges in the selection, and
prevents possible double-counting when iterating over the data points held by the data ranges.
This method is automatically called when using the addition/subtraction operators. The only case
when \ref simplify is left to the user, is when calling \ref addDataRange, with the parameter \a
simplify explicitly set to false.
*/
void QCPDataSelection::simplify()
{
// remove any empty ranges:
for (int i=mDataRanges.size()-1; i>=0; --i)
{
if (mDataRanges.at(i).isEmpty())
mDataRanges.removeAt(i);
}
if (mDataRanges.isEmpty())
return;
// sort ranges by starting value, ascending:
std::sort(mDataRanges.begin(), mDataRanges.end(), lessThanDataRangeBegin);
// join overlapping/contiguous ranges:
int i = 1;
while (i < mDataRanges.size())
{
if (mDataRanges.at(i-1).end() >= mDataRanges.at(i).begin()) // range i overlaps/joins with i-1, so expand range i-1 appropriately and remove range i from list
{
mDataRanges[i-1].setEnd(qMax(mDataRanges.at(i-1).end(), mDataRanges.at(i).end()));
mDataRanges.removeAt(i);
} else
++i;
}
}
/*!
Makes sure this data selection conforms to the specified \a type selection type. Before the type
is enforced, \ref simplify is called.
Depending on \a type, enforcing means adding new data points that were previously not part of the
selection, or removing data points from the selection. If the current selection already conforms
to \a type, the data selection is not changed.
\see QCP::SelectionType
*/
void QCPDataSelection::enforceType(QCP::SelectionType type)
{
simplify();
switch (type)
{
case QCP::stNone:
{
mDataRanges.clear();
break;
}
case QCP::stWhole:
{
// whole selection isn't defined by data range, so don't change anything (is handled in plottable methods)
break;
}
case QCP::stSingleData:
{
// reduce all data ranges to the single first data point:
if (!mDataRanges.isEmpty())
{
if (mDataRanges.size() > 1)
mDataRanges = QList<QCPDataRange>() << mDataRanges.first();
if (mDataRanges.first().length() > 1)
mDataRanges.first().setEnd(mDataRanges.first().begin()+1);
}
break;
}
case QCP::stDataRange:
{
if (!isEmpty())
mDataRanges = QList<QCPDataRange>() << span();
break;
}
case QCP::stMultipleDataRanges:
{
// this is the selection type that allows all concievable combinations of ranges, so do nothing
break;
}
}
}
/*!
Returns true if the data selection \a other is contained entirely in this data selection, i.e.
all data point indices that are in \a other are also in this data selection.
\see QCPDataRange::contains
*/
bool QCPDataSelection::contains(const QCPDataSelection &other) const
{
if (other.isEmpty()) return false;
int otherIndex = 0;
int thisIndex = 0;
while (thisIndex < mDataRanges.size() && otherIndex < other.mDataRanges.size())
{
if (mDataRanges.at(thisIndex).contains(other.mDataRanges.at(otherIndex)))
++otherIndex;
else
++thisIndex;
}
return thisIndex < mDataRanges.size(); // if thisIndex ran all the way to the end to find a containing range for the current otherIndex, other is not contained in this
}
/*!
Returns a data selection containing the points which are both in this data selection and in the
data range \a other.
A common use case is to limit an unknown data selection to the valid range of a data container,
using \ref QCPDataContainer::dataRange as \a other. One can then safely iterate over the returned
data selection without exceeding the data container's bounds.
*/
QCPDataSelection QCPDataSelection::intersection(const QCPDataRange &other) const
{
QCPDataSelection result;
foreach (QCPDataRange dataRange, mDataRanges)
result.addDataRange(dataRange.intersection(other), false);
result.simplify();
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a data selection containing the points which are both in this data selection and in the
data selection \a other.
*/
QCPDataSelection QCPDataSelection::intersection(const QCPDataSelection &other) const
{
QCPDataSelection result;
for (int i=0; i<other.dataRangeCount(); ++i)
result += intersection(other.dataRange(i));
result.simplify();
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a data selection which is the exact inverse of this data selection, with \a outerRange
defining the base range on which to invert. If \a outerRange is smaller than the \ref span of
this data selection, it is expanded accordingly.
For example, this method can be used to retrieve all unselected segments by setting \a outerRange
to the full data range of the plottable, and calling this method on a data selection holding the
selected segments.
*/
QCPDataSelection QCPDataSelection::inverse(const QCPDataRange &outerRange) const
{
if (isEmpty())
return QCPDataSelection(outerRange);
QCPDataRange fullRange = outerRange.expanded(span());
QCPDataSelection result;
// first unselected segment:
if (mDataRanges.first().begin() != fullRange.begin())
result.addDataRange(QCPDataRange(fullRange.begin(), mDataRanges.first().begin()), false);
// intermediate unselected segments:
for (int i=1; i<mDataRanges.size(); ++i)
result.addDataRange(QCPDataRange(mDataRanges.at(i-1).end(), mDataRanges.at(i).begin()), false);
// last unselected segment:
if (mDataRanges.last().end() != fullRange.end())
result.addDataRange(QCPDataRange(mDataRanges.last().end(), fullRange.end()), false);
result.simplify();
return result;
}
/* end of 'src/selection.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/selectionrect.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 9215 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPSelectionRect
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPSelectionRect
\brief Provides rect/rubber-band data selection and range zoom interaction
QCPSelectionRect is used by QCustomPlot when the \ref QCustomPlot::setSelectionRectMode is not
\ref QCP::srmNone. When the user drags the mouse across the plot, the current selection rect
instance (\ref QCustomPlot::setSelectionRect) is forwarded these events and makes sure an
according rect shape is drawn. At the begin, during, and after completion of the interaction, it
emits the corresponding signals \ref started, \ref changed, \ref canceled, and \ref accepted.
The QCustomPlot instance connects own slots to the current selection rect instance, in order to
react to an accepted selection rect interaction accordingly.
\ref isActive can be used to check whether the selection rect is currently active. An ongoing
selection interaction can be cancelled programmatically via calling \ref cancel at any time.
The appearance of the selection rect can be controlled via \ref setPen and \ref setBrush.
If you wish to provide custom behaviour, e.g. a different visual representation of the selection
rect (\ref QCPSelectionRect::draw), you can subclass QCPSelectionRect and pass an instance of
your subclass to \ref QCustomPlot::setSelectionRect.
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn bool QCPSelectionRect::isActive() const
Returns true if there is currently a selection going on, i.e. the user has started dragging a
selection rect, but hasn't released the mouse button yet.
\see cancel
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/* start documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPSelectionRect::started(QMouseEvent *event);
This signal is emitted when a selection rect interaction was initiated, i.e. the user just
started dragging the selection rect with the mouse.
*/
/*! \fn void QCPSelectionRect::changed(const QRect &rect, QMouseEvent *event);
This signal is emitted while the selection rect interaction is ongoing and the \a rect has
changed its size due to the user moving the mouse.
Note that \a rect may have a negative width or height, if the selection is being dragged to the
upper or left side of the selection rect origin.
*/
/*! \fn void QCPSelectionRect::canceled(const QRect &rect, QInputEvent *event);
This signal is emitted when the selection interaction was cancelled. Note that \a event is \c
nullptr if the selection interaction was cancelled programmatically, by a call to \ref cancel.
The user may cancel the selection interaction by pressing the escape key. In this case, \a event
holds the respective input event.
Note that \a rect may have a negative width or height, if the selection is being dragged to the
upper or left side of the selection rect origin.
*/
/*! \fn void QCPSelectionRect::accepted(const QRect &rect, QMouseEvent *event);
This signal is emitted when the selection interaction was completed by the user releasing the
mouse button.
Note that \a rect may have a negative width or height, if the selection is being dragged to the
upper or left side of the selection rect origin.
*/
/* end documentation of signals */
/*!
Creates a new QCPSelectionRect instance. To make QCustomPlot use the selection rect instance,
pass it to \ref QCustomPlot::setSelectionRect. \a parentPlot should be set to the same
QCustomPlot widget.
*/
QCPSelectionRect::QCPSelectionRect(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPLayerable(parentPlot),
mPen(QBrush(Qt::gray), 0, Qt::DashLine),
mBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mActive(false)
{
}
QCPSelectionRect::~QCPSelectionRect()
{
cancel();
}
/*!
A convenience function which returns the coordinate range of the provided \a axis, that this
selection rect currently encompasses.
*/
QCPRange QCPSelectionRect::range(const QCPAxis *axis) const
{
if (axis)
{
if (axis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
return {axis->pixelToCoord(mRect.left()), axis->pixelToCoord(mRect.left()+mRect.width())};
else
return {axis->pixelToCoord(mRect.top()+mRect.height()), axis->pixelToCoord(mRect.top())};
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "called with axis zero";
return {};
}
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the selection rect outline.
\see setBrush
*/
void QCPSelectionRect::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to fill the selection rect. By default the selection rect is not
filled, i.e. \a brush is <tt>Qt::NoBrush</tt>.
\see setPen
*/
void QCPSelectionRect::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
If there is currently a selection interaction going on (\ref isActive), the interaction is
canceled. The selection rect will emit the \ref canceled signal.
*/
void QCPSelectionRect::cancel()
{
if (mActive)
{
mActive = false;
emit canceled(mRect, nullptr);
}
}
/*! \internal
This method is called by QCustomPlot to indicate that a selection rect interaction was initiated.
The default implementation sets the selection rect to active, initializes the selection rect
geometry and emits the \ref started signal.
*/
void QCPSelectionRect::startSelection(QMouseEvent *event)
{
mActive = true;
mRect = QRect(event->pos(), event->pos());
emit started(event);
}
/*! \internal
This method is called by QCustomPlot to indicate that an ongoing selection rect interaction needs
to update its geometry. The default implementation updates the rect and emits the \ref changed
signal.
*/
void QCPSelectionRect::moveSelection(QMouseEvent *event)
{
mRect.setBottomRight(event->pos());
emit changed(mRect, event);
layer()->replot();
}
/*! \internal
This method is called by QCustomPlot to indicate that an ongoing selection rect interaction has
finished by the user releasing the mouse button. The default implementation deactivates the
selection rect and emits the \ref accepted signal.
*/
void QCPSelectionRect::endSelection(QMouseEvent *event)
{
mRect.setBottomRight(event->pos());
mActive = false;
emit accepted(mRect, event);
}
/*! \internal
This method is called by QCustomPlot when a key has been pressed by the user while the selection
rect interaction is active. The default implementation allows to \ref cancel the interaction by
hitting the escape key.
*/
void QCPSelectionRect::keyPressEvent(QKeyEvent *event)
{
if (event->key() == Qt::Key_Escape && mActive)
{
mActive = false;
emit canceled(mRect, event);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPSelectionRect::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeOther);
}
/*! \internal
If the selection rect is active (\ref isActive), draws the selection rect defined by \a mRect.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPSelectionRect::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (mActive)
{
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
painter->drawRect(mRect);
}
}
/* end of 'src/selectionrect.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/layout.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 78863 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPMarginGroup
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPMarginGroup
\brief A margin group allows synchronization of margin sides if working with multiple layout elements.
QCPMarginGroup allows you to tie a margin side of two or more layout elements together, such that
they will all have the same size, based on the largest required margin in the group.
\n
\image html QCPMarginGroup.png "Demonstration of QCPMarginGroup"
\n
In certain situations it is desirable that margins at specific sides are synchronized across
layout elements. For example, if one QCPAxisRect is below another one in a grid layout, it will
provide a cleaner look to the user if the left and right margins of the two axis rects are of the
same size. The left axis of the top axis rect will then be at the same horizontal position as the
left axis of the lower axis rect, making them appear aligned. The same applies for the right
axes. This is what QCPMarginGroup makes possible.
To add/remove a specific side of a layout element to/from a margin group, use the \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setMarginGroup method. To completely break apart the margin group, either call
\ref clear, or just delete the margin group.
\section QCPMarginGroup-example Example
First create a margin group:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpmargingroup-creation-1
Then set this group on the layout element sides:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpmargingroup-creation-2
Here, we've used the first two axis rects of the plot and synchronized their left margins with
each other and their right margins with each other.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QList<QCPLayoutElement*> QCPMarginGroup::elements(QCP::MarginSide side) const
Returns a list of all layout elements that have their margin \a side associated with this margin
group.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a new QCPMarginGroup instance in \a parentPlot.
*/
QCPMarginGroup::QCPMarginGroup(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QObject(parentPlot),
mParentPlot(parentPlot)
{
mChildren.insert(QCP::msLeft, QList<QCPLayoutElement*>());
mChildren.insert(QCP::msRight, QList<QCPLayoutElement*>());
mChildren.insert(QCP::msTop, QList<QCPLayoutElement*>());
mChildren.insert(QCP::msBottom, QList<QCPLayoutElement*>());
}
QCPMarginGroup::~QCPMarginGroup()
{
clear();
}
/*!
Returns whether this margin group is empty. If this function returns true, no layout elements use
this margin group to synchronize margin sides.
*/
bool QCPMarginGroup::isEmpty() const
{
QHashIterator<QCP::MarginSide, QList<QCPLayoutElement*> > it(mChildren);
while (it.hasNext())
{
it.next();
if (!it.value().isEmpty())
return false;
}
return true;
}
/*!
Clears this margin group. The synchronization of the margin sides that use this margin group is
lifted and they will use their individual margin sizes again.
*/
void QCPMarginGroup::clear()
{
// make all children remove themselves from this margin group:
QHashIterator<QCP::MarginSide, QList<QCPLayoutElement*> > it(mChildren);
while (it.hasNext())
{
it.next();
const QList<QCPLayoutElement*> elements = it.value();
for (int i=elements.size()-1; i>=0; --i)
elements.at(i)->setMarginGroup(it.key(), nullptr); // removes itself from mChildren via removeChild
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the synchronized common margin for \a side. This is the margin value that will be used by
the layout element on the respective side, if it is part of this margin group.
The common margin is calculated by requesting the automatic margin (\ref
QCPLayoutElement::calculateAutoMargin) of each element associated with \a side in this margin
group, and choosing the largest returned value. (QCPLayoutElement::minimumMargins is taken into
account, too.)
*/
int QCPMarginGroup::commonMargin(QCP::MarginSide side) const
{
// query all automatic margins of the layout elements in this margin group side and find maximum:
int result = 0;
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *el, mChildren.value(side))
{
if (!el->autoMargins().testFlag(side))
continue;
int m = qMax(el->calculateAutoMargin(side), QCP::getMarginValue(el->minimumMargins(), side));
if (m > result)
result = m;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Adds \a element to the internal list of child elements, for the margin \a side.
This function does not modify the margin group property of \a element.
*/
void QCPMarginGroup::addChild(QCP::MarginSide side, QCPLayoutElement *element)
{
if (!mChildren[side].contains(element))
mChildren[side].append(element);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "element is already child of this margin group side" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(element);
}
/*! \internal
Removes \a element from the internal list of child elements, for the margin \a side.
This function does not modify the margin group property of \a element.
*/
void QCPMarginGroup::removeChild(QCP::MarginSide side, QCPLayoutElement *element)
{
if (!mChildren[side].removeOne(element))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "element is not child of this margin group side" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(element);
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLayoutElement
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLayoutElement
\brief The abstract base class for all objects that form \ref thelayoutsystem "the layout system".
This is an abstract base class. As such, it can't be instantiated directly, rather use one of its subclasses.
A Layout element is a rectangular object which can be placed in layouts. It has an outer rect
(QCPLayoutElement::outerRect) and an inner rect (\ref QCPLayoutElement::rect). The difference
between outer and inner rect is called its margin. The margin can either be set to automatic or
manual (\ref setAutoMargins) on a per-side basis. If a side is set to manual, that margin can be
set explicitly with \ref setMargins and will stay fixed at that value. If it's set to automatic,
the layout element subclass will control the value itself (via \ref calculateAutoMargin).
Layout elements can be placed in layouts (base class QCPLayout) like QCPLayoutGrid. The top level
layout is reachable via \ref QCustomPlot::plotLayout, and is a \ref QCPLayoutGrid. Since \ref
QCPLayout itself derives from \ref QCPLayoutElement, layouts can be nested.
Thus in QCustomPlot one can divide layout elements into two categories: The ones that are
invisible by themselves, because they don't draw anything. Their only purpose is to manage the
position and size of other layout elements. This category of layout elements usually use
QCPLayout as base class. Then there is the category of layout elements which actually draw
something. For example, QCPAxisRect, QCPLegend and QCPTextElement are of this category. This does
not necessarily mean that the latter category can't have child layout elements. QCPLegend for
instance, actually derives from QCPLayoutGrid and the individual legend items are child layout
elements in the grid layout.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPLayout *QCPLayoutElement::layout() const
Returns the parent layout of this layout element.
*/
/*! \fn QRect QCPLayoutElement::rect() const
Returns the inner rect of this layout element. The inner rect is the outer rect (\ref outerRect, \ref
setOuterRect) shrinked by the margins (\ref setMargins, \ref setAutoMargins).
In some cases, the area between outer and inner rect is left blank. In other cases the margin
area is used to display peripheral graphics while the main content is in the inner rect. This is
where automatic margin calculation becomes interesting because it allows the layout element to
adapt the margins to the peripheral graphics it wants to draw. For example, \ref QCPAxisRect
draws the axis labels and tick labels in the margin area, thus needs to adjust the margins (if
\ref setAutoMargins is enabled) according to the space required by the labels of the axes.
\see outerRect
*/
/*! \fn QRect QCPLayoutElement::outerRect() const
Returns the outer rect of this layout element. The outer rect is the inner rect expanded by the
margins (\ref setMargins, \ref setAutoMargins). The outer rect is used (and set via \ref
setOuterRect) by the parent \ref QCPLayout to control the size of this layout element.
\see rect
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates an instance of QCPLayoutElement and sets default values.
*/
QCPLayoutElement::QCPLayoutElement(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPLayerable(parentPlot), // parenthood is changed as soon as layout element gets inserted into a layout (except for top level layout)
mParentLayout(nullptr),
mMinimumSize(),
mMaximumSize(QWIDGETSIZE_MAX, QWIDGETSIZE_MAX),
mSizeConstraintRect(scrInnerRect),
mRect(0, 0, 0, 0),
mOuterRect(0, 0, 0, 0),
mMargins(0, 0, 0, 0),
mMinimumMargins(0, 0, 0, 0),
mAutoMargins(QCP::msAll)
{
}
QCPLayoutElement::~QCPLayoutElement()
{
setMarginGroup(QCP::msAll, nullptr); // unregister at margin groups, if there are any
// unregister at layout:
if (qobject_cast<QCPLayout*>(mParentLayout)) // the qobject_cast is just a safeguard in case the layout forgets to call clear() in its dtor and this dtor is called by QObject dtor
mParentLayout->take(this);
}
/*!
Sets the outer rect of this layout element. If the layout element is inside a layout, the layout
sets the position and size of this layout element using this function.
Calling this function externally has no effect, since the layout will overwrite any changes to
the outer rect upon the next replot.
The layout element will adapt its inner \ref rect by applying the margins inward to the outer rect.
\see rect
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setOuterRect(const QRect &rect)
{
if (mOuterRect != rect)
{
mOuterRect = rect;
mRect = mOuterRect.adjusted(mMargins.left(), mMargins.top(), -mMargins.right(), -mMargins.bottom());
}
}
/*!
Sets the margins of this layout element. If \ref setAutoMargins is disabled for some or all
sides, this function is used to manually set the margin on those sides. Sides that are still set
to be handled automatically are ignored and may have any value in \a margins.
The margin is the distance between the outer rect (controlled by the parent layout via \ref
setOuterRect) and the inner \ref rect (which usually contains the main content of this layout
element).
\see setAutoMargins
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setMargins(const QMargins &margins)
{
if (mMargins != margins)
{
mMargins = margins;
mRect = mOuterRect.adjusted(mMargins.left(), mMargins.top(), -mMargins.right(), -mMargins.bottom());
}
}
/*!
If \ref setAutoMargins is enabled on some or all margins, this function is used to provide
minimum values for those margins.
The minimum values are not enforced on margin sides that were set to be under manual control via
\ref setAutoMargins.
\see setAutoMargins
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumMargins(const QMargins &margins)
{
if (mMinimumMargins != margins)
{
mMinimumMargins = margins;
}
}
/*!
Sets on which sides the margin shall be calculated automatically. If a side is calculated
automatically, a minimum margin value may be provided with \ref setMinimumMargins. If a side is
set to be controlled manually, the value may be specified with \ref setMargins.
Margin sides that are under automatic control may participate in a \ref QCPMarginGroup (see \ref
setMarginGroup), to synchronize (align) it with other layout elements in the plot.
\see setMinimumMargins, setMargins, QCP::MarginSide
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setAutoMargins(QCP::MarginSides sides)
{
mAutoMargins = sides;
}
/*!
Sets the minimum size of this layout element. A parent layout tries to respect the \a size here
by changing row/column sizes in the layout accordingly.
If the parent layout size is not sufficient to satisfy all minimum size constraints of its child
layout elements, the layout may set a size that is actually smaller than \a size. QCustomPlot
propagates the layout's size constraints to the outside by setting its own minimum QWidget size
accordingly, so violations of \a size should be exceptions.
Whether this constraint applies to the inner or the outer rect can be specified with \ref
setSizeConstraintRect (see \ref rect and \ref outerRect).
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumSize(const QSize &size)
{
if (mMinimumSize != size)
{
mMinimumSize = size;
if (mParentLayout)
mParentLayout->sizeConstraintsChanged();
}
}
/*! \overload
Sets the minimum size of this layout element.
Whether this constraint applies to the inner or the outer rect can be specified with \ref
setSizeConstraintRect (see \ref rect and \ref outerRect).
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumSize(int width, int height)
{
setMinimumSize(QSize(width, height));
}
/*!
Sets the maximum size of this layout element. A parent layout tries to respect the \a size here
by changing row/column sizes in the layout accordingly.
Whether this constraint applies to the inner or the outer rect can be specified with \ref
setSizeConstraintRect (see \ref rect and \ref outerRect).
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setMaximumSize(const QSize &size)
{
if (mMaximumSize != size)
{
mMaximumSize = size;
if (mParentLayout)
mParentLayout->sizeConstraintsChanged();
}
}
/*! \overload
Sets the maximum size of this layout element.
Whether this constraint applies to the inner or the outer rect can be specified with \ref
setSizeConstraintRect (see \ref rect and \ref outerRect).
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setMaximumSize(int width, int height)
{
setMaximumSize(QSize(width, height));
}
/*!
Sets to which rect of a layout element the size constraints apply. Size constraints can be set
via \ref setMinimumSize and \ref setMaximumSize.
The outer rect (\ref outerRect) includes the margins (e.g. in the case of a QCPAxisRect the axis
labels), whereas the inner rect (\ref rect) does not.
\see setMinimumSize, setMaximumSize
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setSizeConstraintRect(SizeConstraintRect constraintRect)
{
if (mSizeConstraintRect != constraintRect)
{
mSizeConstraintRect = constraintRect;
if (mParentLayout)
mParentLayout->sizeConstraintsChanged();
}
}
/*!
Sets the margin \a group of the specified margin \a sides.
Margin groups allow synchronizing specified margins across layout elements, see the documentation
of \ref QCPMarginGroup.
To unset the margin group of \a sides, set \a group to \c nullptr.
Note that margin groups only work for margin sides that are set to automatic (\ref
setAutoMargins).
\see QCP::MarginSide
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::setMarginGroup(QCP::MarginSides sides, QCPMarginGroup *group)
{
QVector<QCP::MarginSide> sideVector;
if (sides.testFlag(QCP::msLeft)) sideVector.append(QCP::msLeft);
if (sides.testFlag(QCP::msRight)) sideVector.append(QCP::msRight);
if (sides.testFlag(QCP::msTop)) sideVector.append(QCP::msTop);
if (sides.testFlag(QCP::msBottom)) sideVector.append(QCP::msBottom);
foreach (QCP::MarginSide side, sideVector)
{
if (marginGroup(side) != group)
{
QCPMarginGroup *oldGroup = marginGroup(side);
if (oldGroup) // unregister at old group
oldGroup->removeChild(side, this);
if (!group) // if setting to 0, remove hash entry. Else set hash entry to new group and register there
{
mMarginGroups.remove(side);
} else // setting to a new group
{
mMarginGroups[side] = group;
group->addChild(side, this);
}
}
}
}
/*!
Updates the layout element and sub-elements. This function is automatically called before every
replot by the parent layout element. It is called multiple times, once for every \ref
UpdatePhase. The phases are run through in the order of the enum values. For details about what
happens at the different phases, see the documentation of \ref UpdatePhase.
Layout elements that have child elements should call the \ref update method of their child
elements, and pass the current \a phase unchanged.
The default implementation executes the automatic margin mechanism in the \ref upMargins phase.
Subclasses should make sure to call the base class implementation.
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::update(UpdatePhase phase)
{
if (phase == upMargins)
{
if (mAutoMargins != QCP::msNone)
{
// set the margins of this layout element according to automatic margin calculation, either directly or via a margin group:
QMargins newMargins = mMargins;
const QList<QCP::MarginSide> allMarginSides = QList<QCP::MarginSide>() << QCP::msLeft << QCP::msRight << QCP::msTop << QCP::msBottom;
foreach (QCP::MarginSide side, allMarginSides)
{
if (mAutoMargins.testFlag(side)) // this side's margin shall be calculated automatically
{
if (mMarginGroups.contains(side))
QCP::setMarginValue(newMargins, side, mMarginGroups[side]->commonMargin(side)); // this side is part of a margin group, so get the margin value from that group
else
QCP::setMarginValue(newMargins, side, calculateAutoMargin(side)); // this side is not part of a group, so calculate the value directly
// apply minimum margin restrictions:
if (QCP::getMarginValue(newMargins, side) < QCP::getMarginValue(mMinimumMargins, side))
QCP::setMarginValue(newMargins, side, QCP::getMarginValue(mMinimumMargins, side));
}
}
setMargins(newMargins);
}
}
}
/*!
Returns the suggested minimum size this layout element (the \ref outerRect) may be compressed to,
if no manual minimum size is set.
if a minimum size (\ref setMinimumSize) was not set manually, parent layouts use the returned size
(usually indirectly through \ref QCPLayout::getFinalMinimumOuterSize) to determine the minimum
allowed size of this layout element.
A manual minimum size is considered set if it is non-zero.
The default implementation simply returns the sum of the horizontal margins for the width and the
sum of the vertical margins for the height. Reimplementations may use their detailed knowledge
about the layout element's content to provide size hints.
*/
QSize QCPLayoutElement::minimumOuterSizeHint() const
{
return {mMargins.left()+mMargins.right(), mMargins.top()+mMargins.bottom()};
}
/*!
Returns the suggested maximum size this layout element (the \ref outerRect) may be expanded to,
if no manual maximum size is set.
if a maximum size (\ref setMaximumSize) was not set manually, parent layouts use the returned
size (usually indirectly through \ref QCPLayout::getFinalMaximumOuterSize) to determine the
maximum allowed size of this layout element.
A manual maximum size is considered set if it is smaller than Qt's \c QWIDGETSIZE_MAX.
The default implementation simply returns \c QWIDGETSIZE_MAX for both width and height, implying
no suggested maximum size. Reimplementations may use their detailed knowledge about the layout
element's content to provide size hints.
*/
QSize QCPLayoutElement::maximumOuterSizeHint() const
{
return {QWIDGETSIZE_MAX, QWIDGETSIZE_MAX};
}
/*!
Returns a list of all child elements in this layout element. If \a recursive is true, all
sub-child elements are included in the list, too.
\warning There may be \c nullptr entries in the returned list. For example, QCPLayoutGrid may
have empty cells which yield \c nullptr at the respective index.
*/
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> QCPLayoutElement::elements(bool recursive) const
{
Q_UNUSED(recursive)
return QList<QCPLayoutElement*>();
}
/*!
Layout elements are sensitive to events inside their outer rect. If \a pos is within the outer
rect, this method returns a value corresponding to 0.99 times the parent plot's selection
tolerance. However, layout elements are not selectable by default. So if \a onlySelectable is
true, -1.0 is returned.
See \ref QCPLayerable::selectTest for a general explanation of this virtual method.
QCPLayoutElement subclasses may reimplement this method to provide more specific selection test
behaviour.
*/
double QCPLayoutElement::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable)
return -1;
if (QRectF(mOuterRect).contains(pos))
{
if (mParentPlot)
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "parent plot not defined";
return -1;
}
} else
return -1;
}
/*! \internal
propagates the parent plot initialization to all child elements, by calling \ref
QCPLayerable::initializeParentPlot on them.
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::parentPlotInitialized(QCustomPlot *parentPlot)
{
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *el, elements(false))
{
if (!el->parentPlot())
el->initializeParentPlot(parentPlot);
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the margin size for this \a side. It is used if automatic margins is enabled for this \a
side (see \ref setAutoMargins). If a minimum margin was set with \ref setMinimumMargins, the
returned value will not be smaller than the specified minimum margin.
The default implementation just returns the respective manual margin (\ref setMargins) or the
minimum margin, whichever is larger.
*/
int QCPLayoutElement::calculateAutoMargin(QCP::MarginSide side)
{
return qMax(QCP::getMarginValue(mMargins, side), QCP::getMarginValue(mMinimumMargins, side));
}
/*! \internal
This virtual method is called when this layout element was moved to a different QCPLayout, or
when this layout element has changed its logical position (e.g. row and/or column) within the
same QCPLayout. Subclasses may use this to react accordingly.
Since this method is called after the completion of the move, you can access the new parent
layout via \ref layout().
The default implementation does nothing.
*/
void QCPLayoutElement::layoutChanged()
{
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLayout
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLayout
\brief The abstract base class for layouts
This is an abstract base class for layout elements whose main purpose is to define the position
and size of other child layout elements. In most cases, layouts don't draw anything themselves
(but there are exceptions to this, e.g. QCPLegend).
QCPLayout derives from QCPLayoutElement, and thus can itself be nested in other layouts.
QCPLayout introduces a common interface for accessing and manipulating the child elements. Those
functions are most notably \ref elementCount, \ref elementAt, \ref takeAt, \ref take, \ref
simplify, \ref removeAt, \ref remove and \ref clear. Individual subclasses may add more functions
to this interface which are more specialized to the form of the layout. For example, \ref
QCPLayoutGrid adds functions that take row and column indices to access cells of the layout grid
more conveniently.
Since this is an abstract base class, you can't instantiate it directly. Rather use one of its
subclasses like QCPLayoutGrid or QCPLayoutInset.
For a general introduction to the layout system, see the dedicated documentation page \ref
thelayoutsystem "The Layout System".
*/
/* start documentation of pure virtual functions */
/*! \fn virtual int QCPLayout::elementCount() const = 0
Returns the number of elements/cells in the layout.
\see elements, elementAt
*/
/*! \fn virtual QCPLayoutElement* QCPLayout::elementAt(int index) const = 0
Returns the element in the cell with the given \a index. If \a index is invalid, returns \c
nullptr.
Note that even if \a index is valid, the respective cell may be empty in some layouts (e.g.
QCPLayoutGrid), so this function may return \c nullptr in those cases. You may use this function
to check whether a cell is empty or not.
\see elements, elementCount, takeAt
*/
/*! \fn virtual QCPLayoutElement* QCPLayout::takeAt(int index) = 0
Removes the element with the given \a index from the layout and returns it.
If the \a index is invalid or the cell with that index is empty, returns \c nullptr.
Note that some layouts don't remove the respective cell right away but leave an empty cell after
successful removal of the layout element. To collapse empty cells, use \ref simplify.
\see elementAt, take
*/
/*! \fn virtual bool QCPLayout::take(QCPLayoutElement* element) = 0
Removes the specified \a element from the layout and returns true on success.
If the \a element isn't in this layout, returns false.
Note that some layouts don't remove the respective cell right away but leave an empty cell after
successful removal of the layout element. To collapse empty cells, use \ref simplify.
\see takeAt
*/
/* end documentation of pure virtual functions */
/*!
Creates an instance of QCPLayout and sets default values. Note that since QCPLayout
is an abstract base class, it can't be instantiated directly.
*/
QCPLayout::QCPLayout()
{
}
/*!
If \a phase is \ref upLayout, calls \ref updateLayout, which subclasses may reimplement to
reposition and resize their cells.
Finally, the call is propagated down to all child \ref QCPLayoutElement "QCPLayoutElements".
For details about this method and the update phases, see the documentation of \ref
QCPLayoutElement::update.
*/
void QCPLayout::update(UpdatePhase phase)
{
QCPLayoutElement::update(phase);
// set child element rects according to layout:
if (phase == upLayout)
updateLayout();
// propagate update call to child elements:
const int elCount = elementCount();
for (int i=0; i<elCount; ++i)
{
if (QCPLayoutElement *el = elementAt(i))
el->update(phase);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> QCPLayout::elements(bool recursive) const
{
const int c = elementCount();
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> result;
#if QT_VERSION >= QT_VERSION_CHECK(4, 7, 0)
result.reserve(c);
#endif
for (int i=0; i<c; ++i)
result.append(elementAt(i));
if (recursive)
{
for (int i=0; i<c; ++i)
{
if (result.at(i))
result << result.at(i)->elements(recursive);
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Simplifies the layout by collapsing empty cells. The exact behavior depends on subclasses, the
default implementation does nothing.
Not all layouts need simplification. For example, QCPLayoutInset doesn't use explicit
simplification while QCPLayoutGrid does.
*/
void QCPLayout::simplify()
{
}
/*!
Removes and deletes the element at the provided \a index. Returns true on success. If \a index is
invalid or points to an empty cell, returns false.
This function internally uses \ref takeAt to remove the element from the layout and then deletes
the returned element. Note that some layouts don't remove the respective cell right away but leave an
empty cell after successful removal of the layout element. To collapse empty cells, use \ref
simplify.
\see remove, takeAt
*/
bool QCPLayout::removeAt(int index)
{
if (QCPLayoutElement *el = takeAt(index))
{
delete el;
return true;
} else
return false;
}
/*!
Removes and deletes the provided \a element. Returns true on success. If \a element is not in the
layout, returns false.
This function internally uses \ref takeAt to remove the element from the layout and then deletes
the element. Note that some layouts don't remove the respective cell right away but leave an
empty cell after successful removal of the layout element. To collapse empty cells, use \ref
simplify.
\see removeAt, take
*/
bool QCPLayout::remove(QCPLayoutElement *element)
{
if (take(element))
{
delete element;
return true;
} else
return false;
}
/*!
Removes and deletes all layout elements in this layout. Finally calls \ref simplify to make sure
all empty cells are collapsed.
\see remove, removeAt
*/
void QCPLayout::clear()
{
for (int i=elementCount()-1; i>=0; --i)
{
if (elementAt(i))
removeAt(i);
}
simplify();
}
/*!
Subclasses call this method to report changed (minimum/maximum) size constraints.
If the parent of this layout is again a QCPLayout, forwards the call to the parent's \ref
sizeConstraintsChanged. If the parent is a QWidget (i.e. is the \ref QCustomPlot::plotLayout of
QCustomPlot), calls QWidget::updateGeometry, so if the QCustomPlot widget is inside a Qt QLayout,
it may update itself and resize cells accordingly.
*/
void QCPLayout::sizeConstraintsChanged() const
{
if (QWidget *w = qobject_cast<QWidget*>(parent()))
w->updateGeometry();
else if (QCPLayout *l = qobject_cast<QCPLayout*>(parent()))
l->sizeConstraintsChanged();
}
/*! \internal
Subclasses reimplement this method to update the position and sizes of the child elements/cells
via calling their \ref QCPLayoutElement::setOuterRect. The default implementation does nothing.
The geometry used as a reference is the inner \ref rect of this layout. Child elements should stay
within that rect.
\ref getSectionSizes may help with the reimplementation of this function.
\see update
*/
void QCPLayout::updateLayout()
{
}
/*! \internal
Associates \a el with this layout. This is done by setting the \ref QCPLayoutElement::layout, the
\ref QCPLayerable::parentLayerable and the QObject parent to this layout.
Further, if \a el didn't previously have a parent plot, calls \ref
QCPLayerable::initializeParentPlot on \a el to set the paret plot.
This method is used by subclass specific methods that add elements to the layout. Note that this
method only changes properties in \a el. The removal from the old layout and the insertion into
the new layout must be done additionally.
*/
void QCPLayout::adoptElement(QCPLayoutElement *el)
{
if (el)
{
el->mParentLayout = this;
el->setParentLayerable(this);
el->setParent(this);
if (!el->parentPlot())
el->initializeParentPlot(mParentPlot);
el->layoutChanged();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Null element passed";
}
/*! \internal
Disassociates \a el from this layout. This is done by setting the \ref QCPLayoutElement::layout
and the \ref QCPLayerable::parentLayerable to zero. The QObject parent is set to the parent
QCustomPlot.
This method is used by subclass specific methods that remove elements from the layout (e.g. \ref
take or \ref takeAt). Note that this method only changes properties in \a el. The removal from
the old layout must be done additionally.
*/
void QCPLayout::releaseElement(QCPLayoutElement *el)
{
if (el)
{
el->mParentLayout = nullptr;
el->setParentLayerable(nullptr);
el->setParent(mParentPlot);
// Note: Don't initializeParentPlot(0) here, because layout element will stay in same parent plot
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Null element passed";
}
/*! \internal
This is a helper function for the implementation of \ref updateLayout in subclasses.
It calculates the sizes of one-dimensional sections with provided constraints on maximum section
sizes, minimum section sizes, relative stretch factors and the final total size of all sections.
The QVector entries refer to the sections. Thus all QVectors must have the same size.
\a maxSizes gives the maximum allowed size of each section. If there shall be no maximum size
imposed, set all vector values to Qt's QWIDGETSIZE_MAX.
\a minSizes gives the minimum allowed size of each section. If there shall be no minimum size
imposed, set all vector values to zero. If the \a minSizes entries add up to a value greater than
\a totalSize, sections will be scaled smaller than the proposed minimum sizes. (In other words,
not exceeding the allowed total size is taken to be more important than not going below minimum
section sizes.)
\a stretchFactors give the relative proportions of the sections to each other. If all sections
shall be scaled equally, set all values equal. If the first section shall be double the size of
each individual other section, set the first number of \a stretchFactors to double the value of
the other individual values (e.g. {2, 1, 1, 1}).
\a totalSize is the value that the final section sizes will add up to. Due to rounding, the
actual sum may differ slightly. If you want the section sizes to sum up to exactly that value,
you could distribute the remaining difference on the sections.
The return value is a QVector containing the section sizes.
*/
QVector<int> QCPLayout::getSectionSizes(QVector<int> maxSizes, QVector<int> minSizes, QVector<double> stretchFactors, int totalSize) const
{
if (maxSizes.size() != minSizes.size() || minSizes.size() != stretchFactors.size())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Passed vector sizes aren't equal:" << maxSizes << minSizes << stretchFactors;
return QVector<int>();
}
if (stretchFactors.isEmpty())
return QVector<int>();
int sectionCount = stretchFactors.size();
QVector<double> sectionSizes(sectionCount);
// if provided total size is forced smaller than total minimum size, ignore minimum sizes (squeeze sections):
int minSizeSum = 0;
for (int i=0; i<sectionCount; ++i)
minSizeSum += minSizes.at(i);
if (totalSize < minSizeSum)
{
// new stretch factors are minimum sizes and minimum sizes are set to zero:
for (int i=0; i<sectionCount; ++i)
{
stretchFactors[i] = minSizes.at(i);
minSizes[i] = 0;
}
}
QList<int> minimumLockedSections;
QList<int> unfinishedSections;
for (int i=0; i<sectionCount; ++i)
unfinishedSections.append(i);
double freeSize = totalSize;
int outerIterations = 0;
while (!unfinishedSections.isEmpty() && outerIterations < sectionCount*2) // the iteration check ist just a failsafe in case something really strange happens
{
++outerIterations;
int innerIterations = 0;
while (!unfinishedSections.isEmpty() && innerIterations < sectionCount*2) // the iteration check ist just a failsafe in case something really strange happens
{
++innerIterations;
// find section that hits its maximum next:
int nextId = -1;
double nextMax = 1e12;
foreach (int secId, unfinishedSections)
{
double hitsMaxAt = (maxSizes.at(secId)-sectionSizes.at(secId))/stretchFactors.at(secId);
if (hitsMaxAt < nextMax)
{
nextMax = hitsMaxAt;
nextId = secId;
}
}
// check if that maximum is actually within the bounds of the total size (i.e. can we stretch all remaining sections so far that the found section
// actually hits its maximum, without exceeding the total size when we add up all sections)
double stretchFactorSum = 0;
foreach (int secId, unfinishedSections)
stretchFactorSum += stretchFactors.at(secId);
double nextMaxLimit = freeSize/stretchFactorSum;
if (nextMax < nextMaxLimit) // next maximum is actually hit, move forward to that point and fix the size of that section
{
foreach (int secId, unfinishedSections)
{
sectionSizes[secId] += nextMax*stretchFactors.at(secId); // increment all sections
freeSize -= nextMax*stretchFactors.at(secId);
}
unfinishedSections.removeOne(nextId); // exclude the section that is now at maximum from further changes
} else // next maximum isn't hit, just distribute rest of free space on remaining sections
{
foreach (int secId, unfinishedSections)
sectionSizes[secId] += nextMaxLimit*stretchFactors.at(secId); // increment all sections
unfinishedSections.clear();
}
}
if (innerIterations == sectionCount*2)
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Exceeded maximum expected inner iteration count, layouting aborted. Input was:" << maxSizes << minSizes << stretchFactors << totalSize;
// now check whether the resulting section sizes violate minimum restrictions:
bool foundMinimumViolation = false;
for (int i=0; i<sectionSizes.size(); ++i)
{
if (minimumLockedSections.contains(i))
continue;
if (sectionSizes.at(i) < minSizes.at(i)) // section violates minimum
{
sectionSizes[i] = minSizes.at(i); // set it to minimum
foundMinimumViolation = true; // make sure we repeat the whole optimization process
minimumLockedSections.append(i);
}
}
if (foundMinimumViolation)
{
freeSize = totalSize;
for (int i=0; i<sectionCount; ++i)
{
if (!minimumLockedSections.contains(i)) // only put sections that haven't hit their minimum back into the pool
unfinishedSections.append(i);
else
freeSize -= sectionSizes.at(i); // remove size of minimum locked sections from available space in next round
}
// reset all section sizes to zero that are in unfinished sections (all others have been set to their minimum):
foreach (int secId, unfinishedSections)
sectionSizes[secId] = 0;
}
}
if (outerIterations == sectionCount*2)
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Exceeded maximum expected outer iteration count, layouting aborted. Input was:" << maxSizes << minSizes << stretchFactors << totalSize;
QVector<int> result(sectionCount);
for (int i=0; i<sectionCount; ++i)
result[i] = qRound(sectionSizes.at(i));
return result;
}
/*! \internal
This is a helper function for the implementation of subclasses.
It returns the minimum size that should finally be used for the outer rect of the passed layout
element \a el.
It takes into account whether a manual minimum size is set (\ref
QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumSize), which size constraint is set (\ref
QCPLayoutElement::setSizeConstraintRect), as well as the minimum size hint, if no manual minimum
size was set (\ref QCPLayoutElement::minimumOuterSizeHint).
*/
QSize QCPLayout::getFinalMinimumOuterSize(const QCPLayoutElement *el)
{
QSize minOuterHint = el->minimumOuterSizeHint();
QSize minOuter = el->minimumSize(); // depending on sizeConstraitRect this might be with respect to inner rect, so possibly add margins in next four lines (preserving unset minimum of 0)
if (minOuter.width() > 0 && el->sizeConstraintRect() == QCPLayoutElement::scrInnerRect)
minOuter.rwidth() += el->margins().left() + el->margins().right();
if (minOuter.height() > 0 && el->sizeConstraintRect() == QCPLayoutElement::scrInnerRect)
minOuter.rheight() += el->margins().top() + el->margins().bottom();
return {minOuter.width() > 0 ? minOuter.width() : minOuterHint.width(),
minOuter.height() > 0 ? minOuter.height() : minOuterHint.height()};
}
/*! \internal
This is a helper function for the implementation of subclasses.
It returns the maximum size that should finally be used for the outer rect of the passed layout
element \a el.
It takes into account whether a manual maximum size is set (\ref
QCPLayoutElement::setMaximumSize), which size constraint is set (\ref
QCPLayoutElement::setSizeConstraintRect), as well as the maximum size hint, if no manual maximum
size was set (\ref QCPLayoutElement::maximumOuterSizeHint).
*/
QSize QCPLayout::getFinalMaximumOuterSize(const QCPLayoutElement *el)
{
QSize maxOuterHint = el->maximumOuterSizeHint();
QSize maxOuter = el->maximumSize(); // depending on sizeConstraitRect this might be with respect to inner rect, so possibly add margins in next four lines (preserving unset maximum of QWIDGETSIZE_MAX)
if (maxOuter.width() < QWIDGETSIZE_MAX && el->sizeConstraintRect() == QCPLayoutElement::scrInnerRect)
maxOuter.rwidth() += el->margins().left() + el->margins().right();
if (maxOuter.height() < QWIDGETSIZE_MAX && el->sizeConstraintRect() == QCPLayoutElement::scrInnerRect)
maxOuter.rheight() += el->margins().top() + el->margins().bottom();
return {maxOuter.width() < QWIDGETSIZE_MAX ? maxOuter.width() : maxOuterHint.width(),
maxOuter.height() < QWIDGETSIZE_MAX ? maxOuter.height() : maxOuterHint.height()};
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLayoutGrid
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLayoutGrid
\brief A layout that arranges child elements in a grid
Elements are laid out in a grid with configurable stretch factors (\ref setColumnStretchFactor,
\ref setRowStretchFactor) and spacing (\ref setColumnSpacing, \ref setRowSpacing).
Elements can be added to cells via \ref addElement. The grid is expanded if the specified row or
column doesn't exist yet. Whether a cell contains a valid layout element can be checked with \ref
hasElement, that element can be retrieved with \ref element. If rows and columns that only have
empty cells shall be removed, call \ref simplify. Removal of elements is either done by just
adding the element to a different layout or by using the QCPLayout interface \ref take or \ref
remove.
If you use \ref addElement(QCPLayoutElement*) without explicit parameters for \a row and \a
column, the grid layout will choose the position according to the current \ref setFillOrder and
the wrapping (\ref setWrap).
Row and column insertion can be performed with \ref insertRow and \ref insertColumn.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn int QCPLayoutGrid::rowCount() const
Returns the number of rows in the layout.
\see columnCount
*/
/*! \fn int QCPLayoutGrid::columnCount() const
Returns the number of columns in the layout.
\see rowCount
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates an instance of QCPLayoutGrid and sets default values.
*/
QCPLayoutGrid::QCPLayoutGrid() :
mColumnSpacing(5),
mRowSpacing(5),
mWrap(0),
mFillOrder(foColumnsFirst)
{
}
QCPLayoutGrid::~QCPLayoutGrid()
{
// clear all child layout elements. This is important because only the specific layouts know how
// to handle removing elements (clear calls virtual removeAt method to do that).
clear();
}
/*!
Returns the element in the cell in \a row and \a column.
Returns \c nullptr if either the row/column is invalid or if the cell is empty. In those cases, a
qDebug message is printed. To check whether a cell exists and isn't empty, use \ref hasElement.
\see addElement, hasElement
*/
QCPLayoutElement *QCPLayoutGrid::element(int row, int column) const
{
if (row >= 0 && row < mElements.size())
{
if (column >= 0 && column < mElements.first().size())
{
if (QCPLayoutElement *result = mElements.at(row).at(column))
return result;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Requested cell is empty. Row:" << row << "Column:" << column;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid column. Row:" << row << "Column:" << column;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid row. Row:" << row << "Column:" << column;
return nullptr;
}
/*! \overload
Adds the \a element to cell with \a row and \a column. If \a element is already in a layout, it
is first removed from there. If \a row or \a column don't exist yet, the layout is expanded
accordingly.
Returns true if the element was added successfully, i.e. if the cell at \a row and \a column
didn't already have an element.
Use the overload of this method without explicit row/column index to place the element according
to the configured fill order and wrapping settings.
\see element, hasElement, take, remove
*/
bool QCPLayoutGrid::addElement(int row, int column, QCPLayoutElement *element)
{
if (!hasElement(row, column))
{
if (element && element->layout()) // remove from old layout first
element->layout()->take(element);
expandTo(row+1, column+1);
mElements[row][column] = element;
if (element)
adoptElement(element);
return true;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "There is already an element in the specified row/column:" << row << column;
return false;
}
/*! \overload
Adds the \a element to the next empty cell according to the current fill order (\ref
setFillOrder) and wrapping (\ref setWrap). If \a element is already in a layout, it is first
removed from there. If necessary, the layout is expanded to hold the new element.
Returns true if the element was added successfully.
\see setFillOrder, setWrap, element, hasElement, take, remove
*/
bool QCPLayoutGrid::addElement(QCPLayoutElement *element)
{
int rowIndex = 0;
int colIndex = 0;
if (mFillOrder == foColumnsFirst)
{
while (hasElement(rowIndex, colIndex))
{
++colIndex;
if (colIndex >= mWrap && mWrap > 0)
{
colIndex = 0;
++rowIndex;
}
}
} else
{
while (hasElement(rowIndex, colIndex))
{
++rowIndex;
if (rowIndex >= mWrap && mWrap > 0)
{
rowIndex = 0;
++colIndex;
}
}
}
return addElement(rowIndex, colIndex, element);
}
/*!
Returns whether the cell at \a row and \a column exists and contains a valid element, i.e. isn't
empty.
\see element
*/
bool QCPLayoutGrid::hasElement(int row, int column)
{
if (row >= 0 && row < rowCount() && column >= 0 && column < columnCount())
return mElements.at(row).at(column);
else
return false;
}
/*!
Sets the stretch \a factor of \a column.
Stretch factors control the relative sizes of rows and columns. Cells will not be resized beyond
their minimum and maximum widths/heights, regardless of the stretch factor. (see \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumSize, \ref QCPLayoutElement::setMaximumSize, \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setSizeConstraintRect.)
The default stretch factor of newly created rows/columns is 1.
\see setColumnStretchFactors, setRowStretchFactor
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::setColumnStretchFactor(int column, double factor)
{
if (column >= 0 && column < columnCount())
{
if (factor > 0)
mColumnStretchFactors[column] = factor;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid stretch factor, must be positive:" << factor;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid column:" << column;
}
/*!
Sets the stretch \a factors of all columns. \a factors must have the size \ref columnCount.
Stretch factors control the relative sizes of rows and columns. Cells will not be resized beyond
their minimum and maximum widths/heights, regardless of the stretch factor. (see \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumSize, \ref QCPLayoutElement::setMaximumSize, \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setSizeConstraintRect.)
The default stretch factor of newly created rows/columns is 1.
\see setColumnStretchFactor, setRowStretchFactors
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::setColumnStretchFactors(const QList<double> &factors)
{
if (factors.size() == mColumnStretchFactors.size())
{
mColumnStretchFactors = factors;
for (int i=0; i<mColumnStretchFactors.size(); ++i)
{
if (mColumnStretchFactors.at(i) <= 0)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid stretch factor, must be positive:" << mColumnStretchFactors.at(i);
mColumnStretchFactors[i] = 1;
}
}
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Column count not equal to passed stretch factor count:" << factors;
}
/*!
Sets the stretch \a factor of \a row.
Stretch factors control the relative sizes of rows and columns. Cells will not be resized beyond
their minimum and maximum widths/heights, regardless of the stretch factor. (see \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumSize, \ref QCPLayoutElement::setMaximumSize, \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setSizeConstraintRect.)
The default stretch factor of newly created rows/columns is 1.
\see setColumnStretchFactors, setRowStretchFactor
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::setRowStretchFactor(int row, double factor)
{
if (row >= 0 && row < rowCount())
{
if (factor > 0)
mRowStretchFactors[row] = factor;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid stretch factor, must be positive:" << factor;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid row:" << row;
}
/*!
Sets the stretch \a factors of all rows. \a factors must have the size \ref rowCount.
Stretch factors control the relative sizes of rows and columns. Cells will not be resized beyond
their minimum and maximum widths/heights, regardless of the stretch factor. (see \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumSize, \ref QCPLayoutElement::setMaximumSize, \ref
QCPLayoutElement::setSizeConstraintRect.)
The default stretch factor of newly created rows/columns is 1.
\see setRowStretchFactor, setColumnStretchFactors
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::setRowStretchFactors(const QList<double> &factors)
{
if (factors.size() == mRowStretchFactors.size())
{
mRowStretchFactors = factors;
for (int i=0; i<mRowStretchFactors.size(); ++i)
{
if (mRowStretchFactors.at(i) <= 0)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid stretch factor, must be positive:" << mRowStretchFactors.at(i);
mRowStretchFactors[i] = 1;
}
}
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Row count not equal to passed stretch factor count:" << factors;
}
/*!
Sets the gap that is left blank between columns to \a pixels.
\see setRowSpacing
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::setColumnSpacing(int pixels)
{
mColumnSpacing = pixels;
}
/*!
Sets the gap that is left blank between rows to \a pixels.
\see setColumnSpacing
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::setRowSpacing(int pixels)
{
mRowSpacing = pixels;
}
/*!
Sets the maximum number of columns or rows that are used, before new elements added with \ref
addElement(QCPLayoutElement*) will start to fill the next row or column, respectively. It depends
on \ref setFillOrder, whether rows or columns are wrapped.
If \a count is set to zero, no wrapping will ever occur.
If you wish to re-wrap the elements currently in the layout, call \ref setFillOrder with \a
rearrange set to true (the actual fill order doesn't need to be changed for the rearranging to be
done).
Note that the method \ref addElement(int row, int column, QCPLayoutElement *element) with
explicitly stated row and column is not subject to wrapping and can place elements even beyond
the specified wrapping point.
\see setFillOrder
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::setWrap(int count)
{
mWrap = qMax(0, count);
}
/*!
Sets the filling order and wrapping behaviour that is used when adding new elements with the
method \ref addElement(QCPLayoutElement*).
The specified \a order defines whether rows or columns are filled first. Using \ref setWrap, you
can control at which row/column count wrapping into the next column/row will occur. If you set it
to zero, no wrapping will ever occur. Changing the fill order also changes the meaning of the
linear index used e.g. in \ref elementAt and \ref takeAt. The default fill order for \ref
QCPLayoutGrid is \ref foColumnsFirst.
If you want to have all current elements arranged in the new order, set \a rearrange to true. The
elements will be rearranged in a way that tries to preserve their linear index. However, empty
cells are skipped during build-up of the new cell order, which shifts the succeeding element's
index. The rearranging is performed even if the specified \a order is already the current fill
order. Thus this method can be used to re-wrap the current elements.
If \a rearrange is false, the current element arrangement is not changed, which means the
linear indexes change (because the linear index is dependent on the fill order).
Note that the method \ref addElement(int row, int column, QCPLayoutElement *element) with
explicitly stated row and column is not subject to wrapping and can place elements even beyond
the specified wrapping point.
\see setWrap, addElement(QCPLayoutElement*)
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::setFillOrder(FillOrder order, bool rearrange)
{
// if rearranging, take all elements via linear index of old fill order:
const int elCount = elementCount();
QVector<QCPLayoutElement*> tempElements;
if (rearrange)
{
tempElements.reserve(elCount);
for (int i=0; i<elCount; ++i)
{
if (elementAt(i))
tempElements.append(takeAt(i));
}
simplify();
}
// change fill order as requested:
mFillOrder = order;
// if rearranging, re-insert via linear index according to new fill order:
if (rearrange)
{
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *tempElement, tempElements)
addElement(tempElement);
}
}
/*!
Expands the layout to have \a newRowCount rows and \a newColumnCount columns. So the last valid
row index will be \a newRowCount-1, the last valid column index will be \a newColumnCount-1.
If the current column/row count is already larger or equal to \a newColumnCount/\a newRowCount,
this function does nothing in that dimension.
Newly created cells are empty, new rows and columns have the stretch factor 1.
Note that upon a call to \ref addElement, the layout is expanded automatically to contain the
specified row and column, using this function.
\see simplify
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::expandTo(int newRowCount, int newColumnCount)
{
// add rows as necessary:
while (rowCount() < newRowCount)
{
mElements.append(QList<QCPLayoutElement*>());
mRowStretchFactors.append(1);
}
// go through rows and expand columns as necessary:
int newColCount = qMax(columnCount(), newColumnCount);
for (int i=0; i<rowCount(); ++i)
{
while (mElements.at(i).size() < newColCount)
mElements[i].append(nullptr);
}
while (mColumnStretchFactors.size() < newColCount)
mColumnStretchFactors.append(1);
}
/*!
Inserts a new row with empty cells at the row index \a newIndex. Valid values for \a newIndex
range from 0 (inserts a row at the top) to \a rowCount (appends a row at the bottom).
\see insertColumn
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::insertRow(int newIndex)
{
if (mElements.isEmpty() || mElements.first().isEmpty()) // if grid is completely empty, add first cell
{
expandTo(1, 1);
return;
}
if (newIndex < 0)
newIndex = 0;
if (newIndex > rowCount())
newIndex = rowCount();
mRowStretchFactors.insert(newIndex, 1);
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> newRow;
for (int col=0; col<columnCount(); ++col)
newRow.append(nullptr);
mElements.insert(newIndex, newRow);
}
/*!
Inserts a new column with empty cells at the column index \a newIndex. Valid values for \a
newIndex range from 0 (inserts a column at the left) to \a columnCount (appends a column at the
right).
\see insertRow
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::insertColumn(int newIndex)
{
if (mElements.isEmpty() || mElements.first().isEmpty()) // if grid is completely empty, add first cell
{
expandTo(1, 1);
return;
}
if (newIndex < 0)
newIndex = 0;
if (newIndex > columnCount())
newIndex = columnCount();
mColumnStretchFactors.insert(newIndex, 1);
for (int row=0; row<rowCount(); ++row)
mElements[row].insert(newIndex, nullptr);
}
/*!
Converts the given \a row and \a column to the linear index used by some methods of \ref
QCPLayoutGrid and \ref QCPLayout.
The way the cells are indexed depends on \ref setFillOrder. If it is \ref foRowsFirst, the
indices increase left to right and then top to bottom. If it is \ref foColumnsFirst, the indices
increase top to bottom and then left to right.
For the returned index to be valid, \a row and \a column must be valid indices themselves, i.e.
greater or equal to zero and smaller than the current \ref rowCount/\ref columnCount.
\see indexToRowCol
*/
int QCPLayoutGrid::rowColToIndex(int row, int column) const
{
if (row >= 0 && row < rowCount())
{
if (column >= 0 && column < columnCount())
{
switch (mFillOrder)
{
case foRowsFirst: return column*rowCount() + row;
case foColumnsFirst: return row*columnCount() + column;
}
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "row index out of bounds:" << row;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "column index out of bounds:" << column;
return 0;
}
/*!
Converts the linear index to row and column indices and writes the result to \a row and \a
column.
The way the cells are indexed depends on \ref setFillOrder. If it is \ref foRowsFirst, the
indices increase left to right and then top to bottom. If it is \ref foColumnsFirst, the indices
increase top to bottom and then left to right.
If there are no cells (i.e. column or row count is zero), sets \a row and \a column to -1.
For the retrieved \a row and \a column to be valid, the passed \a index must be valid itself,
i.e. greater or equal to zero and smaller than the current \ref elementCount.
\see rowColToIndex
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::indexToRowCol(int index, int &row, int &column) const
{
row = -1;
column = -1;
const int nCols = columnCount();
const int nRows = rowCount();
if (nCols == 0 || nRows == 0)
return;
if (index < 0 || index >= elementCount())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << index;
return;
}
switch (mFillOrder)
{
case foRowsFirst:
{
column = index / nRows;
row = index % nRows;
break;
}
case foColumnsFirst:
{
row = index / nCols;
column = index % nCols;
break;
}
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPLayoutGrid::updateLayout()
{
QVector<int> minColWidths, minRowHeights, maxColWidths, maxRowHeights;
getMinimumRowColSizes(&minColWidths, &minRowHeights);
getMaximumRowColSizes(&maxColWidths, &maxRowHeights);
int totalRowSpacing = (rowCount()-1) * mRowSpacing;
int totalColSpacing = (columnCount()-1) * mColumnSpacing;
QVector<int> colWidths = getSectionSizes(maxColWidths, minColWidths, mColumnStretchFactors.toVector(), mRect.width()-totalColSpacing);
QVector<int> rowHeights = getSectionSizes(maxRowHeights, minRowHeights, mRowStretchFactors.toVector(), mRect.height()-totalRowSpacing);
// go through cells and set rects accordingly:
int yOffset = mRect.top();
for (int row=0; row<rowCount(); ++row)
{
if (row > 0)
yOffset += rowHeights.at(row-1)+mRowSpacing;
int xOffset = mRect.left();
for (int col=0; col<columnCount(); ++col)
{
if (col > 0)
xOffset += colWidths.at(col-1)+mColumnSpacing;
if (mElements.at(row).at(col))
mElements.at(row).at(col)->setOuterRect(QRect(xOffset, yOffset, colWidths.at(col), rowHeights.at(row)));
}
}
}
/*!
\seebaseclassmethod
Note that the association of the linear \a index to the row/column based cells depends on the
current setting of \ref setFillOrder.
\see rowColToIndex
*/
QCPLayoutElement *QCPLayoutGrid::elementAt(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < elementCount())
{
int row, col;
indexToRowCol(index, row, col);
return mElements.at(row).at(col);
} else
return nullptr;
}
/*!
\seebaseclassmethod
Note that the association of the linear \a index to the row/column based cells depends on the
current setting of \ref setFillOrder.
\see rowColToIndex
*/
QCPLayoutElement *QCPLayoutGrid::takeAt(int index)
{
if (QCPLayoutElement *el = elementAt(index))
{
releaseElement(el);
int row, col;
indexToRowCol(index, row, col);
mElements[row][col] = nullptr;
return el;
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Attempt to take invalid index:" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
bool QCPLayoutGrid::take(QCPLayoutElement *element)
{
if (element)
{
for (int i=0; i<elementCount(); ++i)
{
if (elementAt(i) == element)
{
takeAt(i);
return true;
}
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Element not in this layout, couldn't take";
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Can't take nullptr element";
return false;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> QCPLayoutGrid::elements(bool recursive) const
{
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> result;
const int elCount = elementCount();
#if QT_VERSION >= QT_VERSION_CHECK(4, 7, 0)
result.reserve(elCount);
#endif
for (int i=0; i<elCount; ++i)
result.append(elementAt(i));
if (recursive)
{
for (int i=0; i<elCount; ++i)
{
if (result.at(i))
result << result.at(i)->elements(recursive);
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Simplifies the layout by collapsing rows and columns which only contain empty cells.
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::simplify()
{
// remove rows with only empty cells:
for (int row=rowCount()-1; row>=0; --row)
{
bool hasElements = false;
for (int col=0; col<columnCount(); ++col)
{
if (mElements.at(row).at(col))
{
hasElements = true;
break;
}
}
if (!hasElements)
{
mRowStretchFactors.removeAt(row);
mElements.removeAt(row);
if (mElements.isEmpty()) // removed last element, also remove stretch factor (wouldn't happen below because also columnCount changed to 0 now)
mColumnStretchFactors.clear();
}
}
// remove columns with only empty cells:
for (int col=columnCount()-1; col>=0; --col)
{
bool hasElements = false;
for (int row=0; row<rowCount(); ++row)
{
if (mElements.at(row).at(col))
{
hasElements = true;
break;
}
}
if (!hasElements)
{
mColumnStretchFactors.removeAt(col);
for (int row=0; row<rowCount(); ++row)
mElements[row].removeAt(col);
}
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QSize QCPLayoutGrid::minimumOuterSizeHint() const
{
QVector<int> minColWidths, minRowHeights;
getMinimumRowColSizes(&minColWidths, &minRowHeights);
QSize result(0, 0);
foreach (int w, minColWidths)
result.rwidth() += w;
foreach (int h, minRowHeights)
result.rheight() += h;
result.rwidth() += qMax(0, columnCount()-1) * mColumnSpacing;
result.rheight() += qMax(0, rowCount()-1) * mRowSpacing;
result.rwidth() += mMargins.left()+mMargins.right();
result.rheight() += mMargins.top()+mMargins.bottom();
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QSize QCPLayoutGrid::maximumOuterSizeHint() const
{
QVector<int> maxColWidths, maxRowHeights;
getMaximumRowColSizes(&maxColWidths, &maxRowHeights);
QSize result(0, 0);
foreach (int w, maxColWidths)
result.setWidth(qMin(result.width()+w, QWIDGETSIZE_MAX));
foreach (int h, maxRowHeights)
result.setHeight(qMin(result.height()+h, QWIDGETSIZE_MAX));
result.rwidth() += qMax(0, columnCount()-1) * mColumnSpacing;
result.rheight() += qMax(0, rowCount()-1) * mRowSpacing;
result.rwidth() += mMargins.left()+mMargins.right();
result.rheight() += mMargins.top()+mMargins.bottom();
if (result.height() > QWIDGETSIZE_MAX)
result.setHeight(QWIDGETSIZE_MAX);
if (result.width() > QWIDGETSIZE_MAX)
result.setWidth(QWIDGETSIZE_MAX);
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Places the minimum column widths and row heights into \a minColWidths and \a minRowHeights
respectively.
The minimum height of a row is the largest minimum height of any element's outer rect in that
row. The minimum width of a column is the largest minimum width of any element's outer rect in
that column.
This is a helper function for \ref updateLayout.
\see getMaximumRowColSizes
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::getMinimumRowColSizes(QVector<int> *minColWidths, QVector<int> *minRowHeights) const
{
*minColWidths = QVector<int>(columnCount(), 0);
*minRowHeights = QVector<int>(rowCount(), 0);
for (int row=0; row<rowCount(); ++row)
{
for (int col=0; col<columnCount(); ++col)
{
if (QCPLayoutElement *el = mElements.at(row).at(col))
{
QSize minSize = getFinalMinimumOuterSize(el);
if (minColWidths->at(col) < minSize.width())
(*minColWidths)[col] = minSize.width();
if (minRowHeights->at(row) < minSize.height())
(*minRowHeights)[row] = minSize.height();
}
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Places the maximum column widths and row heights into \a maxColWidths and \a maxRowHeights
respectively.
The maximum height of a row is the smallest maximum height of any element's outer rect in that
row. The maximum width of a column is the smallest maximum width of any element's outer rect in
that column.
This is a helper function for \ref updateLayout.
\see getMinimumRowColSizes
*/
void QCPLayoutGrid::getMaximumRowColSizes(QVector<int> *maxColWidths, QVector<int> *maxRowHeights) const
{
*maxColWidths = QVector<int>(columnCount(), QWIDGETSIZE_MAX);
*maxRowHeights = QVector<int>(rowCount(), QWIDGETSIZE_MAX);
for (int row=0; row<rowCount(); ++row)
{
for (int col=0; col<columnCount(); ++col)
{
if (QCPLayoutElement *el = mElements.at(row).at(col))
{
QSize maxSize = getFinalMaximumOuterSize(el);
if (maxColWidths->at(col) > maxSize.width())
(*maxColWidths)[col] = maxSize.width();
if (maxRowHeights->at(row) > maxSize.height())
(*maxRowHeights)[row] = maxSize.height();
}
}
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLayoutInset
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLayoutInset
\brief A layout that places child elements aligned to the border or arbitrarily positioned
Elements are placed either aligned to the border or at arbitrary position in the area of the
layout. Which placement applies is controlled with the \ref InsetPlacement (\ref
setInsetPlacement).
Elements are added via \ref addElement(QCPLayoutElement *element, Qt::Alignment alignment) or
addElement(QCPLayoutElement *element, const QRectF &rect). If the first method is used, the inset
placement will default to \ref ipBorderAligned and the element will be aligned according to the
\a alignment parameter. The second method defaults to \ref ipFree and allows placing elements at
arbitrary position and size, defined by \a rect.
The alignment or rect can be set via \ref setInsetAlignment or \ref setInsetRect, respectively.
This is the layout that every QCPAxisRect has as \ref QCPAxisRect::insetLayout.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn virtual void QCPLayoutInset::simplify()
The QCPInsetLayout does not need simplification since it can never have empty cells due to its
linear index structure. This method does nothing.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates an instance of QCPLayoutInset and sets default values.
*/
QCPLayoutInset::QCPLayoutInset()
{
}
QCPLayoutInset::~QCPLayoutInset()
{
// clear all child layout elements. This is important because only the specific layouts know how
// to handle removing elements (clear calls virtual removeAt method to do that).
clear();
}
/*!
Returns the placement type of the element with the specified \a index.
*/
QCPLayoutInset::InsetPlacement QCPLayoutInset::insetPlacement(int index) const
{
if (elementAt(index))
return mInsetPlacement.at(index);
else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid element index:" << index;
return ipFree;
}
}
/*!
Returns the alignment of the element with the specified \a index. The alignment only has a
meaning, if the inset placement (\ref setInsetPlacement) is \ref ipBorderAligned.
*/
Qt::Alignment QCPLayoutInset::insetAlignment(int index) const
{
if (elementAt(index))
return mInsetAlignment.at(index);
else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid element index:" << index;
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 2, 0)
return nullptr;
#else
return {};
#endif
}
}
/*!
Returns the rect of the element with the specified \a index. The rect only has a
meaning, if the inset placement (\ref setInsetPlacement) is \ref ipFree.
*/
QRectF QCPLayoutInset::insetRect(int index) const
{
if (elementAt(index))
return mInsetRect.at(index);
else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid element index:" << index;
return {};
}
}
/*!
Sets the inset placement type of the element with the specified \a index to \a placement.
\see InsetPlacement
*/
void QCPLayoutInset::setInsetPlacement(int index, QCPLayoutInset::InsetPlacement placement)
{
if (elementAt(index))
mInsetPlacement[index] = placement;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid element index:" << index;
}
/*!
If the inset placement (\ref setInsetPlacement) is \ref ipBorderAligned, this function
is used to set the alignment of the element with the specified \a index to \a alignment.
\a alignment is an or combination of the following alignment flags: Qt::AlignLeft,
Qt::AlignHCenter, Qt::AlighRight, Qt::AlignTop, Qt::AlignVCenter, Qt::AlignBottom. Any other
alignment flags will be ignored.
*/
void QCPLayoutInset::setInsetAlignment(int index, Qt::Alignment alignment)
{
if (elementAt(index))
mInsetAlignment[index] = alignment;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid element index:" << index;
}
/*!
If the inset placement (\ref setInsetPlacement) is \ref ipFree, this function is used to set the
position and size of the element with the specified \a index to \a rect.
\a rect is given in fractions of the whole inset layout rect. So an inset with rect (0, 0, 1, 1)
will span the entire layout. An inset with rect (0.6, 0.1, 0.35, 0.35) will be in the top right
corner of the layout, with 35% width and height of the parent layout.
Note that the minimum and maximum sizes of the embedded element (\ref
QCPLayoutElement::setMinimumSize, \ref QCPLayoutElement::setMaximumSize) are enforced.
*/
void QCPLayoutInset::setInsetRect(int index, const QRectF &rect)
{
if (elementAt(index))
mInsetRect[index] = rect;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid element index:" << index;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPLayoutInset::updateLayout()
{
for (int i=0; i<mElements.size(); ++i)
{
QCPLayoutElement *el = mElements.at(i);
QRect insetRect;
QSize finalMinSize = getFinalMinimumOuterSize(el);
QSize finalMaxSize = getFinalMaximumOuterSize(el);
if (mInsetPlacement.at(i) == ipFree)
{
insetRect = QRect(int( rect().x()+rect().width()*mInsetRect.at(i).x() ),
int( rect().y()+rect().height()*mInsetRect.at(i).y() ),
int( rect().width()*mInsetRect.at(i).width() ),
int( rect().height()*mInsetRect.at(i).height() ));
if (insetRect.size().width() < finalMinSize.width())
insetRect.setWidth(finalMinSize.width());
if (insetRect.size().height() < finalMinSize.height())
insetRect.setHeight(finalMinSize.height());
if (insetRect.size().width() > finalMaxSize.width())
insetRect.setWidth(finalMaxSize.width());
if (insetRect.size().height() > finalMaxSize.height())
insetRect.setHeight(finalMaxSize.height());
} else if (mInsetPlacement.at(i) == ipBorderAligned)
{
insetRect.setSize(finalMinSize);
Qt::Alignment al = mInsetAlignment.at(i);
if (al.testFlag(Qt::AlignLeft)) insetRect.moveLeft(rect().x());
else if (al.testFlag(Qt::AlignRight)) insetRect.moveRight(rect().x()+rect().width());
else insetRect.moveLeft(int( rect().x()+rect().width()*0.5-finalMinSize.width()*0.5 )); // default to Qt::AlignHCenter
if (al.testFlag(Qt::AlignTop)) insetRect.moveTop(rect().y());
else if (al.testFlag(Qt::AlignBottom)) insetRect.moveBottom(rect().y()+rect().height());
else insetRect.moveTop(int( rect().y()+rect().height()*0.5-finalMinSize.height()*0.5 )); // default to Qt::AlignVCenter
}
mElements.at(i)->setOuterRect(insetRect);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
int QCPLayoutInset::elementCount() const
{
return mElements.size();
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPLayoutElement *QCPLayoutInset::elementAt(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mElements.size())
return mElements.at(index);
else
return nullptr;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPLayoutElement *QCPLayoutInset::takeAt(int index)
{
if (QCPLayoutElement *el = elementAt(index))
{
releaseElement(el);
mElements.removeAt(index);
mInsetPlacement.removeAt(index);
mInsetAlignment.removeAt(index);
mInsetRect.removeAt(index);
return el;
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Attempt to take invalid index:" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
bool QCPLayoutInset::take(QCPLayoutElement *element)
{
if (element)
{
for (int i=0; i<elementCount(); ++i)
{
if (elementAt(i) == element)
{
takeAt(i);
return true;
}
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Element not in this layout, couldn't take";
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Can't take nullptr element";
return false;
}
/*!
The inset layout is sensitive to events only at areas where its (visible) child elements are
sensitive. If the selectTest method of any of the child elements returns a positive number for \a
pos, this method returns a value corresponding to 0.99 times the parent plot's selection
tolerance. The inset layout is not selectable itself by default. So if \a onlySelectable is true,
-1.0 is returned.
See \ref QCPLayerable::selectTest for a general explanation of this virtual method.
*/
double QCPLayoutInset::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable)
return -1;
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *el, mElements)
{
// inset layout shall only return positive selectTest, if actually an inset object is at pos
// else it would block the entire underlying QCPAxisRect with its surface.
if (el->realVisibility() && el->selectTest(pos, onlySelectable) >= 0)
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
return -1;
}
/*!
Adds the specified \a element to the layout as an inset aligned at the border (\ref
setInsetAlignment is initialized with \ref ipBorderAligned). The alignment is set to \a
alignment.
\a alignment is an or combination of the following alignment flags: Qt::AlignLeft,
Qt::AlignHCenter, Qt::AlighRight, Qt::AlignTop, Qt::AlignVCenter, Qt::AlignBottom. Any other
alignment flags will be ignored.
\see addElement(QCPLayoutElement *element, const QRectF &rect)
*/
void QCPLayoutInset::addElement(QCPLayoutElement *element, Qt::Alignment alignment)
{
if (element)
{
if (element->layout()) // remove from old layout first
element->layout()->take(element);
mElements.append(element);
mInsetPlacement.append(ipBorderAligned);
mInsetAlignment.append(alignment);
mInsetRect.append(QRectF(0.6, 0.6, 0.4, 0.4));
adoptElement(element);
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Can't add nullptr element";
}
/*!
Adds the specified \a element to the layout as an inset with free positioning/sizing (\ref
setInsetAlignment is initialized with \ref ipFree). The position and size is set to \a
rect.
\a rect is given in fractions of the whole inset layout rect. So an inset with rect (0, 0, 1, 1)
will span the entire layout. An inset with rect (0.6, 0.1, 0.35, 0.35) will be in the top right
corner of the layout, with 35% width and height of the parent layout.
\see addElement(QCPLayoutElement *element, Qt::Alignment alignment)
*/
void QCPLayoutInset::addElement(QCPLayoutElement *element, const QRectF &rect)
{
if (element)
{
if (element->layout()) // remove from old layout first
element->layout()->take(element);
mElements.append(element);
mInsetPlacement.append(ipFree);
mInsetAlignment.append(Qt::AlignRight|Qt::AlignTop);
mInsetRect.append(rect);
adoptElement(element);
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Can't add nullptr element";
}
/* end of 'src/layout.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/lineending.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 11189 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLineEnding
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLineEnding
\brief Handles the different ending decorations for line-like items
\image html QCPLineEnding.png "The various ending styles currently supported"
For every ending a line-like item has, an instance of this class exists. For example, QCPItemLine
has two endings which can be set with QCPItemLine::setHead and QCPItemLine::setTail.
The styles themselves are defined via the enum QCPLineEnding::EndingStyle. Most decorations can
be modified regarding width and length, see \ref setWidth and \ref setLength. The direction of
the ending decoration (e.g. direction an arrow is pointing) is controlled by the line-like item.
For example, when both endings of a QCPItemLine are set to be arrows, they will point to opposite
directions, e.g. "outward". This can be changed by \ref setInverted, which would make the
respective arrow point inward.
Note that due to the overloaded QCPLineEnding constructor, you may directly specify a
QCPLineEnding::EndingStyle where actually a QCPLineEnding is expected, e.g.
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcplineending-sethead
*/
/*!
Creates a QCPLineEnding instance with default values (style \ref esNone).
*/
QCPLineEnding::QCPLineEnding() :
mStyle(esNone),
mWidth(8),
mLength(10),
mInverted(false)
{
}
/*!
Creates a QCPLineEnding instance with the specified values.
*/
QCPLineEnding::QCPLineEnding(QCPLineEnding::EndingStyle style, double width, double length, bool inverted) :
mStyle(style),
mWidth(width),
mLength(length),
mInverted(inverted)
{
}
/*!
Sets the style of the ending decoration.
*/
void QCPLineEnding::setStyle(QCPLineEnding::EndingStyle style)
{
mStyle = style;
}
/*!
Sets the width of the ending decoration, if the style supports it. On arrows, for example, the
width defines the size perpendicular to the arrow's pointing direction.
\see setLength
*/
void QCPLineEnding::setWidth(double width)
{
mWidth = width;
}
/*!
Sets the length of the ending decoration, if the style supports it. On arrows, for example, the
length defines the size in pointing direction.
\see setWidth
*/
void QCPLineEnding::setLength(double length)
{
mLength = length;
}
/*!
Sets whether the ending decoration shall be inverted. For example, an arrow decoration will point
inward when \a inverted is set to true.
Note that also the \a width direction is inverted. For symmetrical ending styles like arrows or
discs, this doesn't make a difference. However, asymmetric styles like \ref esHalfBar are
affected by it, which can be used to control to which side the half bar points to.
*/
void QCPLineEnding::setInverted(bool inverted)
{
mInverted = inverted;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the maximum pixel radius the ending decoration might cover, starting from the position
the decoration is drawn at (typically a line ending/\ref QCPItemPosition of an item).
This is relevant for clipping. Only omit painting of the decoration when the position where the
decoration is supposed to be drawn is farther away from the clipping rect than the returned
distance.
*/
double QCPLineEnding::boundingDistance() const
{
switch (mStyle)
{
case esNone:
return 0;
case esFlatArrow:
case esSpikeArrow:
case esLineArrow:
case esSkewedBar:
return qSqrt(mWidth*mWidth+mLength*mLength); // items that have width and length
case esDisc:
case esSquare:
case esDiamond:
case esBar:
case esHalfBar:
return mWidth*1.42; // items that only have a width -> width*sqrt(2)
}
return 0;
}
/*!
Starting from the origin of this line ending (which is style specific), returns the length
covered by the line ending symbol, in backward direction.
For example, the \ref esSpikeArrow has a shorter real length than a \ref esFlatArrow, even if
both have the same \ref setLength value, because the spike arrow has an inward curved back, which
reduces the length along its center axis (the drawing origin for arrows is at the tip).
This function is used for precise, style specific placement of line endings, for example in
QCPAxes.
*/
double QCPLineEnding::realLength() const
{
switch (mStyle)
{
case esNone:
case esLineArrow:
case esSkewedBar:
case esBar:
case esHalfBar:
return 0;
case esFlatArrow:
return mLength;
case esDisc:
case esSquare:
case esDiamond:
return mWidth*0.5;
case esSpikeArrow:
return mLength*0.8;
}
return 0;
}
/*! \internal
Draws the line ending with the specified \a painter at the position \a pos. The direction of the
line ending is controlled with \a dir.
*/
void QCPLineEnding::draw(QCPPainter *painter, const QCPVector2D &pos, const QCPVector2D &dir) const
{
if (mStyle == esNone)
return;
QCPVector2D lengthVec = dir.normalized() * mLength*(mInverted ? -1 : 1);
if (lengthVec.isNull())
lengthVec = QCPVector2D(1, 0);
QCPVector2D widthVec = dir.normalized().perpendicular() * mWidth*0.5*(mInverted ? -1 : 1);
QPen penBackup = painter->pen();
QBrush brushBackup = painter->brush();
QPen miterPen = penBackup;
miterPen.setJoinStyle(Qt::MiterJoin); // to make arrow heads spikey
QBrush brush(painter->pen().color(), Qt::SolidPattern);
switch (mStyle)
{
case esNone: break;
case esFlatArrow:
{
QPointF points[3] = {pos.toPointF(),
(pos-lengthVec+widthVec).toPointF(),
(pos-lengthVec-widthVec).toPointF()
};
painter->setPen(miterPen);
painter->setBrush(brush);
painter->drawConvexPolygon(points, 3);
painter->setBrush(brushBackup);
painter->setPen(penBackup);
break;
}
case esSpikeArrow:
{
QPointF points[4] = {pos.toPointF(),
(pos-lengthVec+widthVec).toPointF(),
(pos-lengthVec*0.8).toPointF(),
(pos-lengthVec-widthVec).toPointF()
};
painter->setPen(miterPen);
painter->setBrush(brush);
painter->drawConvexPolygon(points, 4);
painter->setBrush(brushBackup);
painter->setPen(penBackup);
break;
}
case esLineArrow:
{
QPointF points[3] = {(pos-lengthVec+widthVec).toPointF(),
pos.toPointF(),
(pos-lengthVec-widthVec).toPointF()
};
painter->setPen(miterPen);
painter->drawPolyline(points, 3);
painter->setPen(penBackup);
break;
}
case esDisc:
{
painter->setBrush(brush);
painter->drawEllipse(pos.toPointF(), mWidth*0.5, mWidth*0.5);
painter->setBrush(brushBackup);
break;
}
case esSquare:
{
QCPVector2D widthVecPerp = widthVec.perpendicular();
QPointF points[4] = {(pos-widthVecPerp+widthVec).toPointF(),
(pos-widthVecPerp-widthVec).toPointF(),
(pos+widthVecPerp-widthVec).toPointF(),
(pos+widthVecPerp+widthVec).toPointF()
};
painter->setPen(miterPen);
painter->setBrush(brush);
painter->drawConvexPolygon(points, 4);
painter->setBrush(brushBackup);
painter->setPen(penBackup);
break;
}
case esDiamond:
{
QCPVector2D widthVecPerp = widthVec.perpendicular();
QPointF points[4] = {(pos-widthVecPerp).toPointF(),
(pos-widthVec).toPointF(),
(pos+widthVecPerp).toPointF(),
(pos+widthVec).toPointF()
};
painter->setPen(miterPen);
painter->setBrush(brush);
painter->drawConvexPolygon(points, 4);
painter->setBrush(brushBackup);
painter->setPen(penBackup);
break;
}
case esBar:
{
painter->drawLine((pos+widthVec).toPointF(), (pos-widthVec).toPointF());
break;
}
case esHalfBar:
{
painter->drawLine((pos+widthVec).toPointF(), pos.toPointF());
break;
}
case esSkewedBar:
{
QCPVector2D shift;
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(painter->pen().widthF()) || painter->modes().testFlag(QCPPainter::pmNonCosmetic))
shift = dir.normalized()*qMax(qreal(1.0), painter->pen().widthF())*qreal(0.5);
// if drawing with thick (non-cosmetic) pen, shift bar a little in line direction to prevent line from sticking through bar slightly
painter->drawLine((pos+widthVec+lengthVec*0.2*(mInverted?-1:1)+shift).toPointF(),
(pos-widthVec-lengthVec*0.2*(mInverted?-1:1)+shift).toPointF());
break;
}
}
}
/*! \internal
\overload
Draws the line ending. The direction is controlled with the \a angle parameter in radians.
*/
void QCPLineEnding::draw(QCPPainter *painter, const QCPVector2D &pos, double angle) const
{
draw(painter, pos, QCPVector2D(qCos(angle), qSin(angle)));
}
/* end of 'src/lineending.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/labelpainter.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 27296 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLabelPainterPrivate
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLabelPainterPrivate
\internal
\brief (Private)
This is a private class and not part of the public QCustomPlot interface.
*/
const QChar QCPLabelPainterPrivate::SymbolDot(183);
const QChar QCPLabelPainterPrivate::SymbolCross(215);
/*!
Constructs a QCPLabelPainterPrivate instance. Make sure to not create a new
instance on every redraw, to utilize the caching mechanisms.
the \a parentPlot does not take ownership of the label painter. Make sure
to delete it appropriately.
*/
QCPLabelPainterPrivate::QCPLabelPainterPrivate(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
mAnchorMode(amRectangular),
mAnchorSide(asLeft),
mAnchorReferenceType(artNormal),
mColor(Qt::black),
mPadding(0),
mRotation(0),
mSubstituteExponent(true),
mMultiplicationSymbol(QChar(215)),
mAbbreviateDecimalPowers(false),
mParentPlot(parentPlot),
mLabelCache(16)
{
analyzeFontMetrics();
}
QCPLabelPainterPrivate::~QCPLabelPainterPrivate()
{
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setAnchorSide(AnchorSide side)
{
mAnchorSide = side;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setAnchorMode(AnchorMode mode)
{
mAnchorMode = mode;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setAnchorReference(const QPointF &pixelPoint)
{
mAnchorReference = pixelPoint;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setAnchorReferenceType(AnchorReferenceType type)
{
mAnchorReferenceType = type;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (mFont != font)
{
mFont = font;
analyzeFontMetrics();
}
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setColor(const QColor &color)
{
mColor = color;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setPadding(int padding)
{
mPadding = padding;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setRotation(double rotation)
{
mRotation = qBound(-90.0, rotation, 90.0);
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setSubstituteExponent(bool enabled)
{
mSubstituteExponent = enabled;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setMultiplicationSymbol(QChar symbol)
{
mMultiplicationSymbol = symbol;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setAbbreviateDecimalPowers(bool enabled)
{
mAbbreviateDecimalPowers = enabled;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::setCacheSize(int labelCount)
{
mLabelCache.setMaxCost(labelCount);
}
int QCPLabelPainterPrivate::cacheSize() const
{
return mLabelCache.maxCost();
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::drawTickLabel(QCPPainter *painter, const QPointF &tickPos, const QString &text)
{
double realRotation = mRotation;
AnchorSide realSide = mAnchorSide;
// for circular axes, the anchor side is determined depending on the quadrant of tickPos with respect to mCircularReference
if (mAnchorMode == amSkewedUpright)
{
realSide = skewedAnchorSide(tickPos, 0.2, 0.3);
} else if (mAnchorMode == amSkewedRotated) // in this mode every label is individually rotated to match circle tangent
{
realSide = skewedAnchorSide(tickPos, 0, 0);
realRotation += QCPVector2D(tickPos-mAnchorReference).angle()/M_PI*180.0;
if (realRotation > 90) realRotation -= 180;
else if (realRotation < -90) realRotation += 180;
}
realSide = rotationCorrectedSide(realSide, realRotation); // rotation angles may change the true anchor side of the label
drawLabelMaybeCached(painter, mFont, mColor, getAnchorPos(tickPos), realSide, realRotation, text);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the size ("margin" in QCPAxisRect context, so measured perpendicular to the axis backbone
direction) needed to fit the axis.
*/
/* TODO: needed?
int QCPLabelPainterPrivate::size() const
{
int result = 0;
// get length of tick marks pointing outwards:
if (!tickPositions.isEmpty())
result += qMax(0, qMax(tickLengthOut, subTickLengthOut));
// calculate size of tick labels:
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
{
QSize tickLabelsSize(0, 0);
if (!tickLabels.isEmpty())
{
for (int i=0; i<tickLabels.size(); ++i)
getMaxTickLabelSize(tickLabelFont, tickLabels.at(i), &tickLabelsSize);
result += QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal ? tickLabelsSize.height() : tickLabelsSize.width();
result += tickLabelPadding;
}
}
// calculate size of axis label (only height needed, because left/right labels are rotated by 90 degrees):
if (!label.isEmpty())
{
QFontMetrics fontMetrics(labelFont);
QRect bounds;
bounds = fontMetrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignHCenter | Qt::AlignVCenter, label);
result += bounds.height() + labelPadding;
}
return result;
}
*/
/*! \internal
Clears the internal label cache. Upon the next \ref draw, all labels will be created new. This
method is called automatically if any parameters have changed that invalidate the cached labels,
such as font, color, etc. Usually you won't need to call this method manually.
*/
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::clearCache()
{
mLabelCache.clear();
}
/*! \internal
Returns a hash that allows uniquely identifying whether the label parameters have changed such
that the cached labels must be refreshed (\ref clearCache). It is used in \ref draw. If the
return value of this method hasn't changed since the last redraw, the respective label parameters
haven't changed and cached labels may be used.
*/
QByteArray QCPLabelPainterPrivate::generateLabelParameterHash() const
{
QByteArray result;
result.append(QByteArray::number(mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio()));
result.append(QByteArray::number(mRotation));
//result.append(QByteArray::number((int)tickLabelSide)); TODO: check whether this is really a cache-invalidating property
result.append(QByteArray::number((int)mSubstituteExponent));
result.append(QString(mMultiplicationSymbol).toUtf8());
result.append(mColor.name().toLatin1()+QByteArray::number(mColor.alpha(), 16));
result.append(mFont.toString().toLatin1());
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Draws a single tick label with the provided \a painter, utilizing the internal label cache to
significantly speed up drawing of labels that were drawn in previous calls. The tick label is
always bound to an axis, the distance to the axis is controllable via \a distanceToAxis in
pixels. The pixel position in the axis direction is passed in the \a position parameter. Hence
for the bottom axis, \a position would indicate the horizontal pixel position (not coordinate),
at which the label should be drawn.
In order to later draw the axis label in a place that doesn't overlap with the tick labels, the
largest tick label size is needed. This is acquired by passing a \a tickLabelsSize to the \ref
drawTickLabel calls during the process of drawing all tick labels of one axis. In every call, \a
tickLabelsSize is expanded, if the drawn label exceeds the value \a tickLabelsSize currently
holds.
The label is drawn with the font and pen that are currently set on the \a painter. To draw
superscripted powers, the font is temporarily made smaller by a fixed factor (see \ref
getTickLabelData).
*/
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::drawLabelMaybeCached(QCPPainter *painter, const QFont &font, const QColor &color, const QPointF &pos, AnchorSide side, double rotation, const QString &text)
{
// warning: if you change anything here, also adapt getMaxTickLabelSize() accordingly!
if (text.isEmpty()) return;
QSize finalSize;
if (mParentPlot->plottingHints().testFlag(QCP::phCacheLabels) && !painter->modes().testFlag(QCPPainter::pmNoCaching)) // label caching enabled
{
QByteArray key = cacheKey(text, color, rotation, side);
CachedLabel *cachedLabel = mLabelCache.take(QString::fromUtf8(key)); // attempt to take label from cache (don't use object() because we want ownership/prevent deletion during our operations, we re-insert it afterwards)
if (!cachedLabel) // no cached label existed, create it
{
LabelData labelData = getTickLabelData(font, color, rotation, side, text);
cachedLabel = createCachedLabel(labelData);
}
// if label would be partly clipped by widget border on sides, don't draw it (only for outside tick labels):
bool labelClippedByBorder = false;
/*
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
{
if (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal)
labelClippedByBorder = labelAnchor.x()+cachedLabel->offset.x()+cachedLabel->pixmap.width()/mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio() > viewportRect.right() || labelAnchor.x()+cachedLabel->offset.x() < viewportRect.left();
else
labelClippedByBorder = labelAnchor.y()+cachedLabel->offset.y()+cachedLabel->pixmap.height()/mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio() > viewportRect.bottom() || labelAnchor.y()+cachedLabel->offset.y() < viewportRect.top();
}
*/
if (!labelClippedByBorder)
{
painter->drawPixmap(pos+cachedLabel->offset, cachedLabel->pixmap);
finalSize = cachedLabel->pixmap.size()/mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio(); // TODO: collect this in a member rect list?
}
mLabelCache.insert(QString::fromUtf8(key), cachedLabel);
} else // label caching disabled, draw text directly on surface:
{
LabelData labelData = getTickLabelData(font, color, rotation, side, text);
// if label would be partly clipped by widget border on sides, don't draw it (only for outside tick labels):
bool labelClippedByBorder = false;
/*
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
{
if (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal)
labelClippedByBorder = finalPosition.x()+(labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.width()+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.left()) > viewportRect.right() || finalPosition.x()+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.left() < viewportRect.left();
else
labelClippedByBorder = finalPosition.y()+(labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.height()+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.top()) > viewportRect.bottom() || finalPosition.y()+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.top() < viewportRect.top();
}
*/
if (!labelClippedByBorder)
{
drawText(painter, pos, labelData);
finalSize = labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.size();
}
}
/*
// expand passed tickLabelsSize if current tick label is larger:
if (finalSize.width() > tickLabelsSize->width())
tickLabelsSize->setWidth(finalSize.width());
if (finalSize.height() > tickLabelsSize->height())
tickLabelsSize->setHeight(finalSize.height());
*/
}
QPointF QCPLabelPainterPrivate::getAnchorPos(const QPointF &tickPos)
{
switch (mAnchorMode)
{
case amRectangular:
{
switch (mAnchorSide)
{
case asLeft: return tickPos+QPointF(mPadding, 0);
case asRight: return tickPos+QPointF(-mPadding, 0);
case asTop: return tickPos+QPointF(0, mPadding);
case asBottom: return tickPos+QPointF(0, -mPadding);
case asTopLeft: return tickPos+QPointF(mPadding*M_SQRT1_2, mPadding*M_SQRT1_2);
case asTopRight: return tickPos+QPointF(-mPadding*M_SQRT1_2, mPadding*M_SQRT1_2);
case asBottomRight: return tickPos+QPointF(-mPadding*M_SQRT1_2, -mPadding*M_SQRT1_2);
case asBottomLeft: return tickPos+QPointF(mPadding*M_SQRT1_2, -mPadding*M_SQRT1_2);
}
}
case amSkewedUpright:
case amSkewedRotated:
{
QCPVector2D anchorNormal(tickPos-mAnchorReference);
if (mAnchorReferenceType == artTangent)
anchorNormal = anchorNormal.perpendicular();
anchorNormal.normalize();
return tickPos+(anchorNormal*mPadding).toPointF();
}
}
return tickPos;
}
/*! \internal
This is a \ref placeTickLabel helper function.
Draws the tick label specified in \a labelData with \a painter at the pixel positions \a x and \a
y. This function is used by \ref placeTickLabel to create new tick labels for the cache, or to
directly draw the labels on the QCustomPlot surface when label caching is disabled, i.e. when
QCP::phCacheLabels plotting hint is not set.
*/
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::drawText(QCPPainter *painter, const QPointF &pos, const LabelData &labelData) const
{
// backup painter settings that we're about to change:
QTransform oldTransform = painter->transform();
QFont oldFont = painter->font();
QPen oldPen = painter->pen();
// transform painter to position/rotation:
painter->translate(pos);
painter->setTransform(labelData.transform, true);
// draw text:
painter->setFont(labelData.baseFont);
painter->setPen(QPen(labelData.color));
if (!labelData.expPart.isEmpty()) // use superscripted exponent typesetting
{
painter->drawText(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, labelData.basePart);
if (!labelData.suffixPart.isEmpty())
painter->drawText(labelData.baseBounds.width()+1+labelData.expBounds.width(), 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, labelData.suffixPart);
painter->setFont(labelData.expFont);
painter->drawText(labelData.baseBounds.width()+1, 0, labelData.expBounds.width(), labelData.expBounds.height(), Qt::TextDontClip, labelData.expPart);
} else
{
painter->drawText(0, 0, labelData.totalBounds.width(), labelData.totalBounds.height(), Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignHCenter, labelData.basePart);
}
/* Debug code to draw label bounding boxes, baseline, and capheight
painter->save();
painter->setPen(QPen(QColor(0, 0, 0, 150)));
painter->drawRect(labelData.totalBounds);
const int baseline = labelData.totalBounds.height()-mLetterDescent;
painter->setPen(QPen(QColor(255, 0, 0, 150)));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, baseline, labelData.totalBounds.width(), baseline));
painter->setPen(QPen(QColor(0, 0, 255, 150)));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, baseline-mLetterCapHeight, labelData.totalBounds.width(), baseline-mLetterCapHeight));
painter->restore();
*/
// reset painter settings to what it was before:
painter->setTransform(oldTransform);
painter->setFont(oldFont);
painter->setPen(oldPen);
}
/*! \internal
This is a \ref placeTickLabel helper function.
Transforms the passed \a text and \a font to a tickLabelData structure that can then be further
processed by \ref getTickLabelDrawOffset and \ref drawTickLabel. It splits the text into base and
exponent if necessary (member substituteExponent) and calculates appropriate bounding boxes.
*/
QCPLabelPainterPrivate::LabelData QCPLabelPainterPrivate::getTickLabelData(const QFont &font, const QColor &color, double rotation, AnchorSide side, const QString &text) const
{
LabelData result;
result.rotation = rotation;
result.side = side;
result.color = color;
// determine whether beautiful decimal powers should be used
bool useBeautifulPowers = false;
int ePos = -1; // first index of exponent part, text before that will be basePart, text until eLast will be expPart
int eLast = -1; // last index of exponent part, rest of text after this will be suffixPart
if (mSubstituteExponent)
{
ePos = text.indexOf(QLatin1Char('e'));
if (ePos > 0 && text.at(ePos-1).isDigit())
{
eLast = ePos;
while (eLast+1 < text.size() && (text.at(eLast+1) == QLatin1Char('+') || text.at(eLast+1) == QLatin1Char('-') || text.at(eLast+1).isDigit()))
++eLast;
if (eLast > ePos) // only if also to right of 'e' is a digit/+/- interpret it as beautifiable power
useBeautifulPowers = true;
}
}
// calculate text bounding rects and do string preparation for beautiful decimal powers:
result.baseFont = font;
if (result.baseFont.pointSizeF() > 0) // might return -1 if specified with setPixelSize, in that case we can't do correction in next line
result.baseFont.setPointSizeF(result.baseFont.pointSizeF()+0.05); // QFontMetrics.boundingRect has a bug for exact point sizes that make the results oscillate due to internal rounding
QFontMetrics baseFontMetrics(result.baseFont);
if (useBeautifulPowers)
{
// split text into parts of number/symbol that will be drawn normally and part that will be drawn as exponent:
result.basePart = text.left(ePos);
result.suffixPart = text.mid(eLast+1); // also drawn normally but after exponent
// in log scaling, we want to turn "1*10^n" into "10^n", else add multiplication sign and decimal base:
if (mAbbreviateDecimalPowers && result.basePart == QLatin1String("1"))
result.basePart = QLatin1String("10");
else
result.basePart += QString(mMultiplicationSymbol) + QLatin1String("10");
result.expPart = text.mid(ePos+1, eLast-ePos);
// clip "+" and leading zeros off expPart:
while (result.expPart.length() > 2 && result.expPart.at(1) == QLatin1Char('0')) // length > 2 so we leave one zero when numberFormatChar is 'e'
result.expPart.remove(1, 1);
if (!result.expPart.isEmpty() && result.expPart.at(0) == QLatin1Char('+'))
result.expPart.remove(0, 1);
// prepare smaller font for exponent:
result.expFont = font;
if (result.expFont.pointSize() > 0)
result.expFont.setPointSize(result.expFont.pointSize()*0.75);
else
result.expFont.setPixelSize(result.expFont.pixelSize()*0.75);
// calculate bounding rects of base part(s), exponent part and total one:
result.baseBounds = baseFontMetrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, result.basePart);
result.expBounds = QFontMetrics(result.expFont).boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, result.expPart);
if (!result.suffixPart.isEmpty())
result.suffixBounds = QFontMetrics(result.baseFont).boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, result.suffixPart);
result.totalBounds = result.baseBounds.adjusted(0, 0, result.expBounds.width()+result.suffixBounds.width()+2, 0); // +2 consists of the 1 pixel spacing between base and exponent (see drawTickLabel) and an extra pixel to include AA
} else // useBeautifulPowers == false
{
result.basePart = text;
result.totalBounds = baseFontMetrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignHCenter, result.basePart);
}
result.totalBounds.moveTopLeft(QPoint(0, 0));
applyAnchorTransform(result);
result.rotatedTotalBounds = result.transform.mapRect(result.totalBounds);
return result;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::applyAnchorTransform(LabelData &labelData) const
{
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(labelData.rotation))
labelData.transform.rotate(labelData.rotation); // rotates effectively clockwise (due to flipped y axis of painter vs widget coordinate system)
// from now on we translate in rotated label-local coordinate system.
// shift origin of coordinate system to appropriate point on label:
labelData.transform.translate(0, -labelData.totalBounds.height()+mLetterDescent+mLetterCapHeight); // shifts origin to true top of capital (or number) characters
if (labelData.side == asLeft || labelData.side == asRight) // anchor is centered vertically
labelData.transform.translate(0, -mLetterCapHeight/2.0);
else if (labelData.side == asTop || labelData.side == asBottom) // anchor is centered horizontally
labelData.transform.translate(-labelData.totalBounds.width()/2.0, 0);
if (labelData.side == asTopRight || labelData.side == asRight || labelData.side == asBottomRight) // anchor is at right
labelData.transform.translate(-labelData.totalBounds.width(), 0);
if (labelData.side == asBottomLeft || labelData.side == asBottom || labelData.side == asBottomRight) // anchor is at bottom (no elseif!)
labelData.transform.translate(0, -mLetterCapHeight);
}
/*! \internal
Simulates the steps done by \ref placeTickLabel by calculating bounding boxes of the text label
to be drawn, depending on number format etc. Since only the largest tick label is wanted for the
margin calculation, the passed \a tickLabelsSize is only expanded, if it's currently set to a
smaller width/height.
*/
/*
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::getMaxTickLabelSize(const QFont &font, const QString &text, QSize *tickLabelsSize) const
{
// note: this function must return the same tick label sizes as the placeTickLabel function.
QSize finalSize;
if (mParentPlot->plottingHints().testFlag(QCP::phCacheLabels) && mLabelCache.contains(text)) // label caching enabled and have cached label
{
const CachedLabel *cachedLabel = mLabelCache.object(text);
finalSize = cachedLabel->pixmap.size()/mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio();
} else // label caching disabled or no label with this text cached:
{
// TODO: LabelData labelData = getTickLabelData(font, text);
// TODO: finalSize = labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.size();
}
// expand passed tickLabelsSize if current tick label is larger:
if (finalSize.width() > tickLabelsSize->width())
tickLabelsSize->setWidth(finalSize.width());
if (finalSize.height() > tickLabelsSize->height())
tickLabelsSize->setHeight(finalSize.height());
}
*/
QCPLabelPainterPrivate::CachedLabel *QCPLabelPainterPrivate::createCachedLabel(const LabelData &labelData) const
{
CachedLabel *result = new CachedLabel;
// allocate pixmap with the correct size and pixel ratio:
if (!qFuzzyCompare(1.0, mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio()))
{
result->pixmap = QPixmap(labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.size()*mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio());
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
# ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_FLOAT
result->pixmap.setDevicePixelRatio(mParentPlot->devicePixelRatioF());
# else
result->pixmap.setDevicePixelRatio(mParentPlot->devicePixelRatio());
# endif
#endif
} else
result->pixmap = QPixmap(labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.size());
result->pixmap.fill(Qt::transparent);
// draw the label into the pixmap
// offset is between label anchor and topleft of cache pixmap, so pixmap can be drawn at pos+offset to make the label anchor appear at pos.
// We use rotatedTotalBounds.topLeft() because rotatedTotalBounds is in a coordinate system where the label anchor is at (0, 0)
result->offset = labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.topLeft();
QCPPainter cachePainter(&result->pixmap);
drawText(&cachePainter, -result->offset, labelData);
return result;
}
QByteArray QCPLabelPainterPrivate::cacheKey(const QString &text, const QColor &color, double rotation, AnchorSide side) const
{
return text.toUtf8()+
QByteArray::number(color.red()+256*color.green()+65536*color.blue(), 36)+
QByteArray::number(color.alpha()+256*(int)side, 36)+
QByteArray::number((int)(rotation*100)%36000, 36);
}
QCPLabelPainterPrivate::AnchorSide QCPLabelPainterPrivate::skewedAnchorSide(const QPointF &tickPos, double sideExpandHorz, double sideExpandVert) const
{
QCPVector2D anchorNormal = QCPVector2D(tickPos-mAnchorReference);
if (mAnchorReferenceType == artTangent)
anchorNormal = anchorNormal.perpendicular();
const double radius = anchorNormal.length();
const double sideHorz = sideExpandHorz*radius;
const double sideVert = sideExpandVert*radius;
if (anchorNormal.x() > sideHorz)
{
if (anchorNormal.y() > sideVert) return asTopLeft;
else if (anchorNormal.y() < -sideVert) return asBottomLeft;
else return asLeft;
} else if (anchorNormal.x() < -sideHorz)
{
if (anchorNormal.y() > sideVert) return asTopRight;
else if (anchorNormal.y() < -sideVert) return asBottomRight;
else return asRight;
} else
{
if (anchorNormal.y() > 0) return asTop;
else return asBottom;
}
return asBottom; // should never be reached
}
QCPLabelPainterPrivate::AnchorSide QCPLabelPainterPrivate::rotationCorrectedSide(AnchorSide side, double rotation) const
{
AnchorSide result = side;
const bool rotateClockwise = rotation > 0;
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(rotation))
{
if (!qFuzzyCompare(qAbs(rotation), 90)) // avoid graphical collision with anchor tangent (e.g. axis line) when rotating, so change anchor side appropriately:
{
if (side == asTop) result = rotateClockwise ? asLeft : asRight;
else if (side == asBottom) result = rotateClockwise ? asRight : asLeft;
else if (side == asTopLeft) result = rotateClockwise ? asLeft : asTop;
else if (side == asTopRight) result = rotateClockwise ? asTop : asRight;
else if (side == asBottomLeft) result = rotateClockwise ? asBottom : asLeft;
else if (side == asBottomRight) result = rotateClockwise ? asRight : asBottom;
} else // for full rotation by +/-90 degrees, other sides are more appropriate for centering on anchor:
{
if (side == asLeft) result = rotateClockwise ? asBottom : asTop;
else if (side == asRight) result = rotateClockwise ? asTop : asBottom;
else if (side == asTop) result = rotateClockwise ? asLeft : asRight;
else if (side == asBottom) result = rotateClockwise ? asRight : asLeft;
else if (side == asTopLeft) result = rotateClockwise ? asBottomLeft : asTopRight;
else if (side == asTopRight) result = rotateClockwise ? asTopLeft : asBottomRight;
else if (side == asBottomLeft) result = rotateClockwise ? asBottomRight : asTopLeft;
else if (side == asBottomRight) result = rotateClockwise ? asTopRight : asBottomLeft;
}
}
return result;
}
void QCPLabelPainterPrivate::analyzeFontMetrics()
{
const QFontMetrics fm(mFont);
mLetterCapHeight = fm.tightBoundingRect(QLatin1String("8")).height(); // this method is slow, that's why we query it only upon font change
mLetterDescent = fm.descent();
}
/* end of 'src/axis/labelpainter.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/axisticker.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 18688 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisTicker
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisTicker
\brief The base class tick generator used by QCPAxis to create tick positions and tick labels
Each QCPAxis has an internal QCPAxisTicker (or a subclass) in order to generate tick positions
and tick labels for the current axis range. The ticker of an axis can be set via \ref
QCPAxis::setTicker. Since that method takes a <tt>QSharedPointer<QCPAxisTicker></tt>, multiple
axes can share the same ticker instance.
This base class generates normal tick coordinates and numeric labels for linear axes. It picks a
reasonable tick step (the separation between ticks) which results in readable tick labels. The
number of ticks that should be approximately generated can be set via \ref setTickCount.
Depending on the current tick step strategy (\ref setTickStepStrategy), the algorithm either
sacrifices readability to better match the specified tick count (\ref
QCPAxisTicker::tssMeetTickCount) or relaxes the tick count in favor of better tick steps (\ref
QCPAxisTicker::tssReadability), which is the default.
The following more specialized axis ticker subclasses are available, see details in the
respective class documentation:
<center>
<table>
<tr><td style="text-align:right; padding: 0 1em">QCPAxisTickerFixed</td><td>\image html axisticker-fixed.png</td></tr>
<tr><td style="text-align:right; padding: 0 1em">QCPAxisTickerLog</td><td>\image html axisticker-log.png</td></tr>
<tr><td style="text-align:right; padding: 0 1em">QCPAxisTickerPi</td><td>\image html axisticker-pi.png</td></tr>
<tr><td style="text-align:right; padding: 0 1em">QCPAxisTickerText</td><td>\image html axisticker-text.png</td></tr>
<tr><td style="text-align:right; padding: 0 1em">QCPAxisTickerDateTime</td><td>\image html axisticker-datetime.png</td></tr>
<tr><td style="text-align:right; padding: 0 1em">QCPAxisTickerTime</td><td>\image html axisticker-time.png
\image html axisticker-time2.png</td></tr>
</table>
</center>
\section axisticker-subclassing Creating own axis tickers
Creating own axis tickers can be achieved very easily by sublassing QCPAxisTicker and
reimplementing some or all of the available virtual methods.
In the simplest case you might wish to just generate different tick steps than the other tickers,
so you only reimplement the method \ref getTickStep. If you additionally want control over the
string that will be shown as tick label, reimplement \ref getTickLabel.
If you wish to have complete control, you can generate the tick vectors and tick label vectors
yourself by reimplementing \ref createTickVector and \ref createLabelVector. The default
implementations use the previously mentioned virtual methods \ref getTickStep and \ref
getTickLabel, but your reimplementations don't necessarily need to do so. For example in the case
of unequal tick steps, the method \ref getTickStep loses its usefulness and can be ignored.
The sub tick count between major ticks can be controlled with \ref getSubTickCount. Full sub tick
placement control is obtained by reimplementing \ref createSubTickVector.
See the documentation of all these virtual methods in QCPAxisTicker for detailed information
about the parameters and expected return values.
*/
/*!
Constructs the ticker and sets reasonable default values. Axis tickers are commonly created
managed by a QSharedPointer, which then can be passed to QCPAxis::setTicker.
*/
QCPAxisTicker::QCPAxisTicker() :
mTickStepStrategy(tssReadability),
mTickCount(5),
mTickOrigin(0)
{
}
QCPAxisTicker::~QCPAxisTicker()
{
}
/*!
Sets which strategy the axis ticker follows when choosing the size of the tick step. For the
available strategies, see \ref TickStepStrategy.
*/
void QCPAxisTicker::setTickStepStrategy(QCPAxisTicker::TickStepStrategy strategy)
{
mTickStepStrategy = strategy;
}
/*!
Sets how many ticks this ticker shall aim to generate across the axis range. Note that \a count
is not guaranteed to be matched exactly, as generating readable tick intervals may conflict with
the requested number of ticks.
Whether the readability has priority over meeting the requested \a count can be specified with
\ref setTickStepStrategy.
*/
void QCPAxisTicker::setTickCount(int count)
{
if (count > 0)
mTickCount = count;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "tick count must be greater than zero:" << count;
}
/*!
Sets the mathematical coordinate (or "offset") of the zeroth tick. This tick coordinate is just a
concept and doesn't need to be inside the currently visible axis range.
By default \a origin is zero, which for example yields ticks {-5, 0, 5, 10, 15,...} when the tick
step is five. If \a origin is now set to 1 instead, the correspondingly generated ticks would be
{-4, 1, 6, 11, 16,...}.
*/
void QCPAxisTicker::setTickOrigin(double origin)
{
mTickOrigin = origin;
}
/*!
This is the method called by QCPAxis in order to actually generate tick coordinates (\a ticks),
tick label strings (\a tickLabels) and sub tick coordinates (\a subTicks).
The ticks are generated for the specified \a range. The generated labels typically follow the
specified \a locale, \a formatChar and number \a precision, however this might be different (or
even irrelevant) for certain QCPAxisTicker subclasses.
The output parameter \a ticks is filled with the generated tick positions in axis coordinates.
The output parameters \a subTicks and \a tickLabels are optional (set them to \c nullptr if not
needed) and are respectively filled with sub tick coordinates, and tick label strings belonging
to \a ticks by index.
*/
void QCPAxisTicker::generate(const QCPRange &range, const QLocale &locale, QChar formatChar, int precision, QVector<double> &ticks, QVector<double> *subTicks, QVector<QString> *tickLabels)
{
// generate (major) ticks:
double tickStep = getTickStep(range);
ticks = createTickVector(tickStep, range);
trimTicks(range, ticks, true); // trim ticks to visible range plus one outer tick on each side (incase a subclass createTickVector creates more)
// generate sub ticks between major ticks:
if (subTicks)
{
if (!ticks.isEmpty())
{
*subTicks = createSubTickVector(getSubTickCount(tickStep), ticks);
trimTicks(range, *subTicks, false);
} else
*subTicks = QVector<double>();
}
// finally trim also outliers (no further clipping happens in axis drawing):
trimTicks(range, ticks, false);
// generate labels for visible ticks if requested:
if (tickLabels)
*tickLabels = createLabelVector(ticks, locale, formatChar, precision);
}
/*! \internal
Takes the entire currently visible axis range and returns a sensible tick step in
order to provide readable tick labels as well as a reasonable number of tick counts (see \ref
setTickCount, \ref setTickStepStrategy).
If a QCPAxisTicker subclass only wants a different tick step behaviour than the default
implementation, it should reimplement this method. See \ref cleanMantissa for a possible helper
function.
*/
double QCPAxisTicker::getTickStep(const QCPRange &range)
{
double exactStep = range.size()/double(mTickCount+1e-10); // mTickCount ticks on average, the small addition is to prevent jitter on exact integers
return cleanMantissa(exactStep);
}
/*! \internal
Takes the \a tickStep, i.e. the distance between two consecutive ticks, and returns
an appropriate number of sub ticks for that specific tick step.
Note that a returned sub tick count of e.g. 4 will split each tick interval into 5 sections.
*/
int QCPAxisTicker::getSubTickCount(double tickStep)
{
int result = 1; // default to 1, if no proper value can be found
// separate integer and fractional part of mantissa:
double epsilon = 0.01;
double intPartf;
int intPart;
double fracPart = modf(getMantissa(tickStep), &intPartf);
intPart = int(intPartf);
// handle cases with (almost) integer mantissa:
if (fracPart < epsilon || 1.0-fracPart < epsilon)
{
if (1.0-fracPart < epsilon)
++intPart;
switch (intPart)
{
case 1: result = 4; break; // 1.0 -> 0.2 substep
case 2: result = 3; break; // 2.0 -> 0.5 substep
case 3: result = 2; break; // 3.0 -> 1.0 substep
case 4: result = 3; break; // 4.0 -> 1.0 substep
case 5: result = 4; break; // 5.0 -> 1.0 substep
case 6: result = 2; break; // 6.0 -> 2.0 substep
case 7: result = 6; break; // 7.0 -> 1.0 substep
case 8: result = 3; break; // 8.0 -> 2.0 substep
case 9: result = 2; break; // 9.0 -> 3.0 substep
}
} else
{
// handle cases with significantly fractional mantissa:
if (qAbs(fracPart-0.5) < epsilon) // *.5 mantissa
{
switch (intPart)
{
case 1: result = 2; break; // 1.5 -> 0.5 substep
case 2: result = 4; break; // 2.5 -> 0.5 substep
case 3: result = 4; break; // 3.5 -> 0.7 substep
case 4: result = 2; break; // 4.5 -> 1.5 substep
case 5: result = 4; break; // 5.5 -> 1.1 substep (won't occur with default getTickStep from here on)
case 6: result = 4; break; // 6.5 -> 1.3 substep
case 7: result = 2; break; // 7.5 -> 2.5 substep
case 8: result = 4; break; // 8.5 -> 1.7 substep
case 9: result = 4; break; // 9.5 -> 1.9 substep
}
}
// if mantissa fraction isn't 0.0 or 0.5, don't bother finding good sub tick marks, leave default
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
This method returns the tick label string as it should be printed under the \a tick coordinate.
If a textual number is returned, it should respect the provided \a locale, \a formatChar and \a
precision.
If the returned value contains exponentials of the form "2e5" and beautifully typeset powers is
enabled in the QCPAxis number format (\ref QCPAxis::setNumberFormat), the exponential part will
be formatted accordingly using multiplication symbol and superscript during rendering of the
label automatically.
*/
QString QCPAxisTicker::getTickLabel(double tick, const QLocale &locale, QChar formatChar, int precision)
{
return locale.toString(tick, formatChar.toLatin1(), precision);
}
/*! \internal
Returns a vector containing all coordinates of sub ticks that should be drawn. It generates \a
subTickCount sub ticks between each tick pair given in \a ticks.
If a QCPAxisTicker subclass needs maximal control over the generated sub ticks, it should
reimplement this method. Depending on the purpose of the subclass it doesn't necessarily need to
base its result on \a subTickCount or \a ticks.
*/
QVector<double> QCPAxisTicker::createSubTickVector(int subTickCount, const QVector<double> &ticks)
{
QVector<double> result;
if (subTickCount <= 0 || ticks.size() < 2)
return result;
result.reserve((ticks.size()-1)*subTickCount);
for (int i=1; i<ticks.size(); ++i)
{
double subTickStep = (ticks.at(i)-ticks.at(i-1))/double(subTickCount+1);
for (int k=1; k<=subTickCount; ++k)
result.append(ticks.at(i-1) + k*subTickStep);
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns a vector containing all coordinates of ticks that should be drawn. The default
implementation generates ticks with a spacing of \a tickStep (mathematically starting at the tick
step origin, see \ref setTickOrigin) distributed over the passed \a range.
In order for the axis ticker to generate proper sub ticks, it is necessary that the first and
last tick coordinates returned by this method are just below/above the provided \a range.
Otherwise the outer intervals won't contain any sub ticks.
If a QCPAxisTicker subclass needs maximal control over the generated ticks, it should reimplement
this method. Depending on the purpose of the subclass it doesn't necessarily need to base its
result on \a tickStep, e.g. when the ticks are spaced unequally like in the case of
QCPAxisTickerLog.
*/
QVector<double> QCPAxisTicker::createTickVector(double tickStep, const QCPRange &range)
{
QVector<double> result;
// Generate tick positions according to tickStep:
qint64 firstStep = qint64(floor((range.lower-mTickOrigin)/tickStep)); // do not use qFloor here, or we'll lose 64 bit precision
qint64 lastStep = qint64(ceil((range.upper-mTickOrigin)/tickStep)); // do not use qCeil here, or we'll lose 64 bit precision
int tickcount = int(lastStep-firstStep+1);
if (tickcount < 0) tickcount = 0;
result.resize(tickcount);
for (int i=0; i<tickcount; ++i)
result[i] = mTickOrigin + (firstStep+i)*tickStep;
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns a vector containing all tick label strings corresponding to the tick coordinates provided
in \a ticks. The default implementation calls \ref getTickLabel to generate the respective
strings.
It is possible but uncommon for QCPAxisTicker subclasses to reimplement this method, as
reimplementing \ref getTickLabel often achieves the intended result easier.
*/
QVector<QString> QCPAxisTicker::createLabelVector(const QVector<double> &ticks, const QLocale &locale, QChar formatChar, int precision)
{
QVector<QString> result;
result.reserve(ticks.size());
foreach (double tickCoord, ticks)
result.append(getTickLabel(tickCoord, locale, formatChar, precision));
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Removes tick coordinates from \a ticks which lie outside the specified \a range. If \a
keepOneOutlier is true, it preserves one tick just outside the range on both sides, if present.
The passed \a ticks must be sorted in ascending order.
*/
void QCPAxisTicker::trimTicks(const QCPRange &range, QVector<double> &ticks, bool keepOneOutlier) const
{
bool lowFound = false;
bool highFound = false;
int lowIndex = 0;
int highIndex = -1;
for (int i=0; i < ticks.size(); ++i)
{
if (ticks.at(i) >= range.lower)
{
lowFound = true;
lowIndex = i;
break;
}
}
for (int i=ticks.size()-1; i >= 0; --i)
{
if (ticks.at(i) <= range.upper)
{
highFound = true;
highIndex = i;
break;
}
}
if (highFound && lowFound)
{
int trimFront = qMax(0, lowIndex-(keepOneOutlier ? 1 : 0));
int trimBack = qMax(0, ticks.size()-(keepOneOutlier ? 2 : 1)-highIndex);
if (trimFront > 0 || trimBack > 0)
ticks = ticks.mid(trimFront, ticks.size()-trimFront-trimBack);
} else // all ticks are either all below or all above the range
ticks.clear();
}
/*! \internal
Returns the coordinate contained in \a candidates which is closest to the provided \a target.
This method assumes \a candidates is not empty and sorted in ascending order.
*/
double QCPAxisTicker::pickClosest(double target, const QVector<double> &candidates) const
{
if (candidates.size() == 1)
return candidates.first();
QVector<double>::const_iterator it = std::lower_bound(candidates.constBegin(), candidates.constEnd(), target);
if (it == candidates.constEnd())
return *(it-1);
else if (it == candidates.constBegin())
return *it;
else
return target-*(it-1) < *it-target ? *(it-1) : *it;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the decimal mantissa of \a input. Optionally, if \a magnitude is not set to zero, it also
returns the magnitude of \a input as a power of 10.
For example, an input of 142.6 will return a mantissa of 1.426 and a magnitude of 100.
*/
double QCPAxisTicker::getMantissa(double input, double *magnitude) const
{
const double mag = qPow(10.0, qFloor(qLn(input)/qLn(10.0)));
if (magnitude) *magnitude = mag;
return input/mag;
}
/*! \internal
Returns a number that is close to \a input but has a clean, easier human readable mantissa. How
strongly the mantissa is altered, and thus how strong the result deviates from the original \a
input, depends on the current tick step strategy (see \ref setTickStepStrategy).
*/
double QCPAxisTicker::cleanMantissa(double input) const
{
double magnitude;
const double mantissa = getMantissa(input, &magnitude);
switch (mTickStepStrategy)
{
case tssReadability:
{
return pickClosest(mantissa, QVector<double>() << 1.0 << 2.0 << 2.5 << 5.0 << 10.0)*magnitude;
}
case tssMeetTickCount:
{
// this gives effectively a mantissa of 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, 3.0, 3.5, 4.0, 4.5, 5.0, 6.0, 8.0, 10.0
if (mantissa <= 5.0)
return int(mantissa*2)/2.0*magnitude; // round digit after decimal point to 0.5
else
return int(mantissa/2.0)*2.0*magnitude; // round to first digit in multiples of 2
}
}
return input;
}
/* end of 'src/axis/axisticker.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/axistickerdatetime.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 18829 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisTickerDateTime
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisTickerDateTime
\brief Specialized axis ticker for calendar dates and times as axis ticks
\image html axisticker-datetime.png
This QCPAxisTicker subclass generates ticks that correspond to real calendar dates and times. The
plot axis coordinate is interpreted as Unix Time, so seconds since Epoch (January 1, 1970, 00:00
UTC). This is also used for example by QDateTime in the <tt>toTime_t()/setTime_t()</tt> methods
with a precision of one second. Since Qt 4.7, millisecond accuracy can be obtained from QDateTime
by using <tt>QDateTime::fromMSecsSinceEpoch()/1000.0</tt>. The static methods \ref dateTimeToKey
and \ref keyToDateTime conveniently perform this conversion achieving a precision of one
millisecond on all Qt versions.
The format of the date/time display in the tick labels is controlled with \ref setDateTimeFormat.
If a different time spec or time zone shall be used for the tick label appearance, see \ref
setDateTimeSpec or \ref setTimeZone, respectively.
This ticker produces unequal tick spacing in order to provide intuitive date and time-of-day
ticks. For example, if the axis range spans a few years such that there is one tick per year,
ticks will be positioned on 1. January of every year. This is intuitive but, due to leap years,
will result in slightly unequal tick intervals (visually unnoticeable). The same can be seen in
the image above: even though the number of days varies month by month, this ticker generates
ticks on the same day of each month.
If you would like to change the date/time that is used as a (mathematical) starting date for the
ticks, use the \ref setTickOrigin(const QDateTime &origin) method overload, which takes a
QDateTime. If you pass 15. July, 9:45 to this method, the yearly ticks will end up on 15. July at
9:45 of every year.
The ticker can be created and assigned to an axis like this:
\snippet documentation/doc-image-generator/mainwindow.cpp axistickerdatetime-creation
\note If you rather wish to display relative times in terms of days, hours, minutes, seconds and
milliseconds, and are not interested in the intricacies of real calendar dates with months and
(leap) years, have a look at QCPAxisTickerTime instead.
*/
/*!
Constructs the ticker and sets reasonable default values. Axis tickers are commonly created
managed by a QSharedPointer, which then can be passed to QCPAxis::setTicker.
*/
QCPAxisTickerDateTime::QCPAxisTickerDateTime() :
mDateTimeFormat(QLatin1String("hh:mm:ss\ndd.MM.yy")),
mDateTimeSpec(Qt::LocalTime),
mDateStrategy(dsNone)
{
setTickCount(4);
}
/*!
Sets the format in which dates and times are displayed as tick labels. For details about the \a
format string, see the documentation of QDateTime::toString().
Typical expressions are
<table>
<tr><td>\c d</td><td>The day as a number without a leading zero (1 to 31)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c dd</td><td>The day as a number with a leading zero (01 to 31)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c ddd</td><td>The abbreviated localized day name (e.g. 'Mon' to 'Sun'). Uses the system locale to localize the name, i.e. QLocale::system().</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c dddd</td><td>The long localized day name (e.g. 'Monday' to 'Sunday'). Uses the system locale to localize the name, i.e. QLocale::system().</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c M</td><td>The month as a number without a leading zero (1 to 12)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c MM</td><td>The month as a number with a leading zero (01 to 12)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c MMM</td><td>The abbreviated localized month name (e.g. 'Jan' to 'Dec'). Uses the system locale to localize the name, i.e. QLocale::system().</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c MMMM</td><td>The long localized month name (e.g. 'January' to 'December'). Uses the system locale to localize the name, i.e. QLocale::system().</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c yy</td><td>The year as a two digit number (00 to 99)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c yyyy</td><td>The year as a four digit number. If the year is negative, a minus sign is prepended, making five characters.</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c h</td><td>The hour without a leading zero (0 to 23 or 1 to 12 if AM/PM display)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c hh</td><td>The hour with a leading zero (00 to 23 or 01 to 12 if AM/PM display)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c H</td><td>The hour without a leading zero (0 to 23, even with AM/PM display)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c HH</td><td>The hour with a leading zero (00 to 23, even with AM/PM display)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c m</td><td>The minute without a leading zero (0 to 59)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c mm</td><td>The minute with a leading zero (00 to 59)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c s</td><td>The whole second, without any leading zero (0 to 59)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c ss</td><td>The whole second, with a leading zero where applicable (00 to 59)</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c z</td><td>The fractional part of the second, to go after a decimal point, without trailing zeroes (0 to 999). Thus "s.z" reports the seconds to full available (millisecond) precision without trailing zeroes.</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c zzz</td><td>The fractional part of the second, to millisecond precision, including trailing zeroes where applicable (000 to 999).</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c AP or \c A</td><td>Use AM/PM display. A/AP will be replaced by an upper-case version of either QLocale::amText() or QLocale::pmText().</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c ap or \c a</td><td>Use am/pm display. a/ap will be replaced by a lower-case version of either QLocale::amText() or QLocale::pmText().</td></tr>
<tr><td>\c t</td><td>The timezone (for example "CEST")</td></tr>
</table>
Newlines can be inserted with \c "\n", literal strings (even when containing above expressions)
by encapsulating them using single-quotes. A literal single quote can be generated by using two
consecutive single quotes in the format.
\see setDateTimeSpec, setTimeZone
*/
void QCPAxisTickerDateTime::setDateTimeFormat(const QString &format)
{
mDateTimeFormat = format;
}
/*!
Sets the time spec that is used for creating the tick labels from corresponding dates/times.
The default value of QDateTime objects (and also QCPAxisTickerDateTime) is
<tt>Qt::LocalTime</tt>. However, if the displayed tick labels shall be given in UTC, set \a spec
to <tt>Qt::UTC</tt>.
Tick labels corresponding to other time zones can be achieved with \ref setTimeZone (which sets
\a spec to \c Qt::TimeZone internally). Note that if \a spec is afterwards set to not be \c
Qt::TimeZone again, the \ref setTimeZone setting will be ignored accordingly.
\see setDateTimeFormat, setTimeZone
*/
void QCPAxisTickerDateTime::setDateTimeSpec(Qt::TimeSpec spec)
{
mDateTimeSpec = spec;
}
# if QT_VERSION >= QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 2, 0)
/*!
Sets the time zone that is used for creating the tick labels from corresponding dates/times. The
time spec (\ref setDateTimeSpec) is set to \c Qt::TimeZone.
\see setDateTimeFormat, setTimeZone
*/
void QCPAxisTickerDateTime::setTimeZone(const QTimeZone &zone)
{
mTimeZone = zone;
mDateTimeSpec = Qt::TimeZone;
}
#endif
/*!
Sets the tick origin (see \ref QCPAxisTicker::setTickOrigin) in seconds since Epoch (1. Jan 1970,
00:00 UTC). For the date time ticker it might be more intuitive to use the overload which
directly takes a QDateTime, see \ref setTickOrigin(const QDateTime &origin).
This is useful to define the month/day/time recurring at greater tick interval steps. For
example, If you pass 15. July, 9:45 to this method and the tick interval happens to be one tick
per year, the ticks will end up on 15. July at 9:45 of every year.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerDateTime::setTickOrigin(double origin)
{
QCPAxisTicker::setTickOrigin(origin);
}
/*!
Sets the tick origin (see \ref QCPAxisTicker::setTickOrigin) as a QDateTime \a origin.
This is useful to define the month/day/time recurring at greater tick interval steps. For
example, If you pass 15. July, 9:45 to this method and the tick interval happens to be one tick
per year, the ticks will end up on 15. July at 9:45 of every year.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerDateTime::setTickOrigin(const QDateTime &origin)
{
setTickOrigin(dateTimeToKey(origin));
}
/*! \internal
Returns a sensible tick step with intervals appropriate for a date-time-display, such as weekly,
monthly, bi-monthly, etc.
Note that this tick step isn't used exactly when generating the tick vector in \ref
createTickVector, but only as a guiding value requiring some correction for each individual tick
interval. Otherwise this would lead to unintuitive date displays, e.g. jumping between first day
in the month to the last day in the previous month from tick to tick, due to the non-uniform
length of months. The same problem arises with leap years.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
double QCPAxisTickerDateTime::getTickStep(const QCPRange &range)
{
double result = range.size()/double(mTickCount+1e-10); // mTickCount ticks on average, the small addition is to prevent jitter on exact integers
mDateStrategy = dsNone; // leaving it at dsNone means tick coordinates will not be tuned in any special way in createTickVector
if (result < 1) // ideal tick step is below 1 second -> use normal clean mantissa algorithm in units of seconds
{
result = cleanMantissa(result);
} else if (result < 86400*30.4375*12) // below a year
{
result = pickClosest(result, QVector<double>()
<< 1 << 2.5 << 5 << 10 << 15 << 30 << 60 << 2.5*60 << 5*60 << 10*60 << 15*60 << 30*60 << 60*60 // second, minute, hour range
<< 3600*2 << 3600*3 << 3600*6 << 3600*12 << 3600*24 // hour to day range
<< 86400*2 << 86400*5 << 86400*7 << 86400*14 << 86400*30.4375 << 86400*30.4375*2 << 86400*30.4375*3 << 86400*30.4375*6 << 86400*30.4375*12); // day, week, month range (avg. days per month includes leap years)
if (result > 86400*30.4375-1) // month tick intervals or larger
mDateStrategy = dsUniformDayInMonth;
else if (result > 3600*24-1) // day tick intervals or larger
mDateStrategy = dsUniformTimeInDay;
} else // more than a year, go back to normal clean mantissa algorithm but in units of years
{
const double secondsPerYear = 86400*30.4375*12; // average including leap years
result = cleanMantissa(result/secondsPerYear)*secondsPerYear;
mDateStrategy = dsUniformDayInMonth;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns a sensible sub tick count with intervals appropriate for a date-time-display, such as weekly,
monthly, bi-monthly, etc.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
int QCPAxisTickerDateTime::getSubTickCount(double tickStep)
{
int result = QCPAxisTicker::getSubTickCount(tickStep);
switch (qRound(tickStep)) // hand chosen subticks for specific minute/hour/day/week/month range (as specified in getTickStep)
{
case 5*60: result = 4; break;
case 10*60: result = 1; break;
case 15*60: result = 2; break;
case 30*60: result = 1; break;
case 60*60: result = 3; break;
case 3600*2: result = 3; break;
case 3600*3: result = 2; break;
case 3600*6: result = 1; break;
case 3600*12: result = 3; break;
case 3600*24: result = 3; break;
case 86400*2: result = 1; break;
case 86400*5: result = 4; break;
case 86400*7: result = 6; break;
case 86400*14: result = 1; break;
case int(86400*30.4375+0.5): result = 3; break;
case int(86400*30.4375*2+0.5): result = 1; break;
case int(86400*30.4375*3+0.5): result = 2; break;
case int(86400*30.4375*6+0.5): result = 5; break;
case int(86400*30.4375*12+0.5): result = 3; break;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Generates a date/time tick label for tick coordinate \a tick, based on the currently set format
(\ref setDateTimeFormat), time spec (\ref setDateTimeSpec), and possibly time zone (\ref
setTimeZone).
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
QString QCPAxisTickerDateTime::getTickLabel(double tick, const QLocale &locale, QChar formatChar, int precision)
{
Q_UNUSED(precision)
Q_UNUSED(formatChar)
# if QT_VERSION >= QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 2, 0)
if (mDateTimeSpec == Qt::TimeZone)
return locale.toString(keyToDateTime(tick).toTimeZone(mTimeZone), mDateTimeFormat);
else
return locale.toString(keyToDateTime(tick).toTimeSpec(mDateTimeSpec), mDateTimeFormat);
# else
return locale.toString(keyToDateTime(tick).toTimeSpec(mDateTimeSpec), mDateTimeFormat);
# endif
}
/*! \internal
Uses the passed \a tickStep as a guiding value and applies corrections in order to obtain
non-uniform tick intervals but intuitive tick labels, e.g. falling on the same day of each month.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
QVector<double> QCPAxisTickerDateTime::createTickVector(double tickStep, const QCPRange &range)
{
QVector<double> result = QCPAxisTicker::createTickVector(tickStep, range);
if (!result.isEmpty())
{
if (mDateStrategy == dsUniformTimeInDay)
{
QDateTime uniformDateTime = keyToDateTime(mTickOrigin); // the time of this datetime will be set for all other ticks, if possible
QDateTime tickDateTime;
for (int i=0; i<result.size(); ++i)
{
tickDateTime = keyToDateTime(result.at(i));
tickDateTime.setTime(uniformDateTime.time());
result[i] = dateTimeToKey(tickDateTime);
}
} else if (mDateStrategy == dsUniformDayInMonth)
{
QDateTime uniformDateTime = keyToDateTime(mTickOrigin); // this day (in month) and time will be set for all other ticks, if possible
QDateTime tickDateTime;
for (int i=0; i<result.size(); ++i)
{
tickDateTime = keyToDateTime(result.at(i));
tickDateTime.setTime(uniformDateTime.time());
int thisUniformDay = uniformDateTime.date().day() <= tickDateTime.date().daysInMonth() ? uniformDateTime.date().day() : tickDateTime.date().daysInMonth(); // don't exceed month (e.g. try to set day 31 in February)
if (thisUniformDay-tickDateTime.date().day() < -15) // with leap years involved, date month may jump backwards or forwards, and needs to be corrected before setting day
tickDateTime = tickDateTime.addMonths(1);
else if (thisUniformDay-tickDateTime.date().day() > 15) // with leap years involved, date month may jump backwards or forwards, and needs to be corrected before setting day
tickDateTime = tickDateTime.addMonths(-1);
tickDateTime.setDate(QDate(tickDateTime.date().year(), tickDateTime.date().month(), thisUniformDay));
result[i] = dateTimeToKey(tickDateTime);
}
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
A convenience method which turns \a key (in seconds since Epoch 1. Jan 1970, 00:00 UTC) into a
QDateTime object. This can be used to turn axis coordinates to actual QDateTimes.
The accuracy achieved by this method is one millisecond, irrespective of the used Qt version (it
works around the lack of a QDateTime::fromMSecsSinceEpoch in Qt 4.6)
\see dateTimeToKey
*/
QDateTime QCPAxisTickerDateTime::keyToDateTime(double key)
{
# if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(4, 7, 0)
return QDateTime::fromTime_t(key).addMSecs((key-(qint64)key)*1000);
# else
return QDateTime::fromMSecsSinceEpoch(qint64(key*1000.0));
# endif
}
/*! \overload
A convenience method which turns a QDateTime object into a double value that corresponds to
seconds since Epoch (1. Jan 1970, 00:00 UTC). This is the format used as axis coordinates by
QCPAxisTickerDateTime.
The accuracy achieved by this method is one millisecond, irrespective of the used Qt version (it
works around the lack of a QDateTime::toMSecsSinceEpoch in Qt 4.6)
\see keyToDateTime
*/
double QCPAxisTickerDateTime::dateTimeToKey(const QDateTime &dateTime)
{
# if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(4, 7, 0)
return dateTime.toTime_t()+dateTime.time().msec()/1000.0;
# else
return dateTime.toMSecsSinceEpoch()/1000.0;
# endif
}
/*! \overload
A convenience method which turns a QDate object into a double value that corresponds to seconds
since Epoch (1. Jan 1970, 00:00 UTC). This is the format used
as axis coordinates by QCPAxisTickerDateTime.
The returned value will be the start of the passed day of \a date, interpreted in the given \a
timeSpec.
\see keyToDateTime
*/
double QCPAxisTickerDateTime::dateTimeToKey(const QDate &date, Qt::TimeSpec timeSpec)
{
# if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(4, 7, 0)
return QDateTime(date, QTime(0, 0), timeSpec).toTime_t();
# elif QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 14, 0)
return QDateTime(date, QTime(0, 0), timeSpec).toMSecsSinceEpoch()/1000.0;
# else
return date.startOfDay(timeSpec).toMSecsSinceEpoch()/1000.0;
# endif
}
/* end of 'src/axis/axistickerdatetime.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/axistickertime.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 11745 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisTickerTime
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisTickerTime
\brief Specialized axis ticker for time spans in units of milliseconds to days
\image html axisticker-time.png
This QCPAxisTicker subclass generates ticks that corresponds to time intervals.
The format of the time display in the tick labels is controlled with \ref setTimeFormat and \ref
setFieldWidth. The time coordinate is in the unit of seconds with respect to the time coordinate
zero. Unlike with QCPAxisTickerDateTime, the ticks don't correspond to a specific calendar date
and time.
The time can be displayed in milliseconds, seconds, minutes, hours and days. Depending on the
largest available unit in the format specified with \ref setTimeFormat, any time spans above will
be carried in that largest unit. So for example if the format string is "%m:%s" and a tick at
coordinate value 7815 (being 2 hours, 10 minutes and 15 seconds) is created, the resulting tick
label will show "130:15" (130 minutes, 15 seconds). If the format string is "%h:%m:%s", the hour
unit will be used and the label will thus be "02:10:15". Negative times with respect to the axis
zero will carry a leading minus sign.
The ticker can be created and assigned to an axis like this:
\snippet documentation/doc-image-generator/mainwindow.cpp axistickertime-creation
Here is an example of a time axis providing time information in days, hours and minutes. Due to
the axis range spanning a few days and the wanted tick count (\ref setTickCount), the ticker
decided to use tick steps of 12 hours:
\image html axisticker-time2.png
The format string for this example is
\snippet documentation/doc-image-generator/mainwindow.cpp axistickertime-creation-2
\note If you rather wish to display calendar dates and times, have a look at QCPAxisTickerDateTime
instead.
*/
/*!
Constructs the ticker and sets reasonable default values. Axis tickers are commonly created
managed by a QSharedPointer, which then can be passed to QCPAxis::setTicker.
*/
QCPAxisTickerTime::QCPAxisTickerTime() :
mTimeFormat(QLatin1String("%h:%m:%s")),
mSmallestUnit(tuSeconds),
mBiggestUnit(tuHours)
{
setTickCount(4);
mFieldWidth[tuMilliseconds] = 3;
mFieldWidth[tuSeconds] = 2;
mFieldWidth[tuMinutes] = 2;
mFieldWidth[tuHours] = 2;
mFieldWidth[tuDays] = 1;
mFormatPattern[tuMilliseconds] = QLatin1String("%z");
mFormatPattern[tuSeconds] = QLatin1String("%s");
mFormatPattern[tuMinutes] = QLatin1String("%m");
mFormatPattern[tuHours] = QLatin1String("%h");
mFormatPattern[tuDays] = QLatin1String("%d");
}
/*!
Sets the format that will be used to display time in the tick labels.
The available patterns are:
- %%z for milliseconds
- %%s for seconds
- %%m for minutes
- %%h for hours
- %%d for days
The field width (zero padding) can be controlled for each unit with \ref setFieldWidth.
The largest unit that appears in \a format will carry all the remaining time of a certain tick
coordinate, even if it overflows the natural limit of the unit. For example, if %%m is the
largest unit it might become larger than 59 in order to consume larger time values. If on the
other hand %%h is available, the minutes will wrap around to zero after 59 and the time will
carry to the hour digit.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerTime::setTimeFormat(const QString &format)
{
mTimeFormat = format;
// determine smallest and biggest unit in format, to optimize unit replacement and allow biggest
// unit to consume remaining time of a tick value and grow beyond its modulo (e.g. min > 59)
mSmallestUnit = tuMilliseconds;
mBiggestUnit = tuMilliseconds;
bool hasSmallest = false;
for (int i = tuMilliseconds; i <= tuDays; ++i)
{
TimeUnit unit = static_cast<TimeUnit>(i);
if (mTimeFormat.contains(mFormatPattern.value(unit)))
{
if (!hasSmallest)
{
mSmallestUnit = unit;
hasSmallest = true;
}
mBiggestUnit = unit;
}
}
}
/*!
Sets the field widh of the specified \a unit to be \a width digits, when displayed in the tick
label. If the number for the specific unit is shorter than \a width, it will be padded with an
according number of zeros to the left in order to reach the field width.
\see setTimeFormat
*/
void QCPAxisTickerTime::setFieldWidth(QCPAxisTickerTime::TimeUnit unit, int width)
{
mFieldWidth[unit] = qMax(width, 1);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the tick step appropriate for time displays, depending on the provided \a range and the
smallest available time unit in the current format (\ref setTimeFormat). For example if the unit
of seconds isn't available in the format, this method will not generate steps (like 2.5 minutes)
that require sub-minute precision to be displayed correctly.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
double QCPAxisTickerTime::getTickStep(const QCPRange &range)
{
double result = range.size()/double(mTickCount+1e-10); // mTickCount ticks on average, the small addition is to prevent jitter on exact integers
if (result < 1) // ideal tick step is below 1 second -> use normal clean mantissa algorithm in units of seconds
{
if (mSmallestUnit == tuMilliseconds)
result = qMax(cleanMantissa(result), 0.001); // smallest tick step is 1 millisecond
else // have no milliseconds available in format, so stick with 1 second tickstep
result = 1.0;
} else if (result < 3600*24) // below a day
{
// the filling of availableSteps seems a bit contorted but it fills in a sorted fashion and thus saves a post-fill sorting run
QVector<double> availableSteps;
// seconds range:
if (mSmallestUnit <= tuSeconds)
availableSteps << 1;
if (mSmallestUnit == tuMilliseconds)
availableSteps << 2.5; // only allow half second steps if milliseconds are there to display it
else if (mSmallestUnit == tuSeconds)
availableSteps << 2;
if (mSmallestUnit <= tuSeconds)
availableSteps << 5 << 10 << 15 << 30;
// minutes range:
if (mSmallestUnit <= tuMinutes)
availableSteps << 1*60;
if (mSmallestUnit <= tuSeconds)
availableSteps << 2.5*60; // only allow half minute steps if seconds are there to display it
else if (mSmallestUnit == tuMinutes)
availableSteps << 2*60;
if (mSmallestUnit <= tuMinutes)
availableSteps << 5*60 << 10*60 << 15*60 << 30*60;
// hours range:
if (mSmallestUnit <= tuHours)
availableSteps << 1*3600 << 2*3600 << 3*3600 << 6*3600 << 12*3600 << 24*3600;
// pick available step that is most appropriate to approximate ideal step:
result = pickClosest(result, availableSteps);
} else // more than a day, go back to normal clean mantissa algorithm but in units of days
{
const double secondsPerDay = 3600*24;
result = cleanMantissa(result/secondsPerDay)*secondsPerDay;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the sub tick count appropriate for the provided \a tickStep and time displays.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
int QCPAxisTickerTime::getSubTickCount(double tickStep)
{
int result = QCPAxisTicker::getSubTickCount(tickStep);
switch (qRound(tickStep)) // hand chosen subticks for specific minute/hour/day range (as specified in getTickStep)
{
case 5*60: result = 4; break;
case 10*60: result = 1; break;
case 15*60: result = 2; break;
case 30*60: result = 1; break;
case 60*60: result = 3; break;
case 3600*2: result = 3; break;
case 3600*3: result = 2; break;
case 3600*6: result = 1; break;
case 3600*12: result = 3; break;
case 3600*24: result = 3; break;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the tick label corresponding to the provided \a tick and the configured format and field
widths (\ref setTimeFormat, \ref setFieldWidth).
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
QString QCPAxisTickerTime::getTickLabel(double tick, const QLocale &locale, QChar formatChar, int precision)
{
Q_UNUSED(precision)
Q_UNUSED(formatChar)
Q_UNUSED(locale)
bool negative = tick < 0;
if (negative) tick *= -1;
double values[tuDays+1]; // contains the msec/sec/min/... value with its respective modulo (e.g. minute 0..59)
double restValues[tuDays+1]; // contains the msec/sec/min/... value as if it's the largest available unit and thus consumes the remaining time
restValues[tuMilliseconds] = tick*1000;
values[tuMilliseconds] = modf(restValues[tuMilliseconds]/1000, &restValues[tuSeconds])*1000;
values[tuSeconds] = modf(restValues[tuSeconds]/60, &restValues[tuMinutes])*60;
values[tuMinutes] = modf(restValues[tuMinutes]/60, &restValues[tuHours])*60;
values[tuHours] = modf(restValues[tuHours]/24, &restValues[tuDays])*24;
// no need to set values[tuDays] because days are always a rest value (there is no higher unit so it consumes all remaining time)
QString result = mTimeFormat;
for (int i = mSmallestUnit; i <= mBiggestUnit; ++i)
{
TimeUnit iUnit = static_cast<TimeUnit>(i);
replaceUnit(result, iUnit, qRound(iUnit == mBiggestUnit ? restValues[iUnit] : values[iUnit]));
}
if (negative)
result.prepend(QLatin1Char('-'));
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Replaces all occurrences of the format pattern belonging to \a unit in \a text with the specified
\a value, using the field width as specified with \ref setFieldWidth for the \a unit.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerTime::replaceUnit(QString &text, QCPAxisTickerTime::TimeUnit unit, int value) const
{
QString valueStr = QString::number(value);
while (valueStr.size() < mFieldWidth.value(unit))
valueStr.prepend(QLatin1Char('0'));
text.replace(mFormatPattern.value(unit), valueStr);
}
/* end of 'src/axis/axistickertime.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/axistickerfixed.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 5575 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisTickerFixed
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisTickerFixed
\brief Specialized axis ticker with a fixed tick step
\image html axisticker-fixed.png
This QCPAxisTicker subclass generates ticks with a fixed tick step set with \ref setTickStep. It
is also possible to allow integer multiples and integer powers of the specified tick step with
\ref setScaleStrategy.
A typical application of this ticker is to make an axis only display integers, by setting the
tick step of the ticker to 1.0 and the scale strategy to \ref ssMultiples.
Another case is when a certain number has a special meaning and axis ticks should only appear at
multiples of that value. In this case you might also want to consider \ref QCPAxisTickerPi
because despite the name it is not limited to only pi symbols/values.
The ticker can be created and assigned to an axis like this:
\snippet documentation/doc-image-generator/mainwindow.cpp axistickerfixed-creation
*/
/*!
Constructs the ticker and sets reasonable default values. Axis tickers are commonly created
managed by a QSharedPointer, which then can be passed to QCPAxis::setTicker.
*/
QCPAxisTickerFixed::QCPAxisTickerFixed() :
mTickStep(1.0),
mScaleStrategy(ssNone)
{
}
/*!
Sets the fixed tick interval to \a step.
The axis ticker will only use this tick step when generating axis ticks. This might cause a very
high tick density and overlapping labels if the axis range is zoomed out. Using \ref
setScaleStrategy it is possible to relax the fixed step and also allow multiples or powers of \a
step. This will enable the ticker to reduce the number of ticks to a reasonable amount (see \ref
setTickCount).
*/
void QCPAxisTickerFixed::setTickStep(double step)
{
if (step > 0)
mTickStep = step;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "tick step must be greater than zero:" << step;
}
/*!
Sets whether the specified tick step (\ref setTickStep) is absolutely fixed or whether
modifications may be applied to it before calculating the finally used tick step, such as
permitting multiples or powers. See \ref ScaleStrategy for details.
The default strategy is \ref ssNone, which means the tick step is absolutely fixed.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerFixed::setScaleStrategy(QCPAxisTickerFixed::ScaleStrategy strategy)
{
mScaleStrategy = strategy;
}
/*! \internal
Determines the actually used tick step from the specified tick step and scale strategy (\ref
setTickStep, \ref setScaleStrategy).
This method either returns the specified tick step exactly, or, if the scale strategy is not \ref
ssNone, a modification of it to allow varying the number of ticks in the current axis range.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
double QCPAxisTickerFixed::getTickStep(const QCPRange &range)
{
switch (mScaleStrategy)
{
case ssNone:
{
return mTickStep;
}
case ssMultiples:
{
double exactStep = range.size()/double(mTickCount+1e-10); // mTickCount ticks on average, the small addition is to prevent jitter on exact integers
if (exactStep < mTickStep)
return mTickStep;
else
return qint64(cleanMantissa(exactStep/mTickStep)+0.5)*mTickStep;
}
case ssPowers:
{
double exactStep = range.size()/double(mTickCount+1e-10); // mTickCount ticks on average, the small addition is to prevent jitter on exact integers
return qPow(mTickStep, int(qLn(exactStep)/qLn(mTickStep)+0.5));
}
}
return mTickStep;
}
/* end of 'src/axis/axistickerfixed.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/axistickertext.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 8742 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisTickerText
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisTickerText
\brief Specialized axis ticker which allows arbitrary labels at specified coordinates
\image html axisticker-text.png
This QCPAxisTicker subclass generates ticks which can be directly specified by the user as
coordinates and associated strings. They can be passed as a whole with \ref setTicks or one at a
time with \ref addTick. Alternatively you can directly access the internal storage via \ref ticks
and modify the tick/label data there.
This is useful for cases where the axis represents categories rather than numerical values.
If you are updating the ticks of this ticker regularly and in a dynamic fasion (e.g. dependent on
the axis range), it is a sign that you should probably create an own ticker by subclassing
QCPAxisTicker, instead of using this one.
The ticker can be created and assigned to an axis like this:
\snippet documentation/doc-image-generator/mainwindow.cpp axistickertext-creation
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QMap<double, QString> &QCPAxisTickerText::ticks()
Returns a non-const reference to the internal map which stores the tick coordinates and their
labels.
You can access the map directly in order to add, remove or manipulate ticks, as an alternative to
using the methods provided by QCPAxisTickerText, such as \ref setTicks and \ref addTick.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs the ticker and sets reasonable default values. Axis tickers are commonly created
managed by a QSharedPointer, which then can be passed to QCPAxis::setTicker.
*/
QCPAxisTickerText::QCPAxisTickerText() :
mSubTickCount(0)
{
}
/*! \overload
Sets the ticks that shall appear on the axis. The map key of \a ticks corresponds to the axis
coordinate, and the map value is the string that will appear as tick label.
An alternative to manipulate ticks is to directly access the internal storage with the \ref ticks
getter.
\see addTicks, addTick, clear
*/
void QCPAxisTickerText::setTicks(const QMap<double, QString> &ticks)
{
mTicks = ticks;
}
/*! \overload
Sets the ticks that shall appear on the axis. The entries of \a positions correspond to the axis
coordinates, and the entries of \a labels are the respective strings that will appear as tick
labels.
\see addTicks, addTick, clear
*/
void QCPAxisTickerText::setTicks(const QVector<double> &positions, const QVector<QString> &labels)
{
clear();
addTicks(positions, labels);
}
/*!
Sets the number of sub ticks that shall appear between ticks. For QCPAxisTickerText, there is no
automatic sub tick count calculation. So if sub ticks are needed, they must be configured with this
method.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerText::setSubTickCount(int subTicks)
{
if (subTicks >= 0)
mSubTickCount = subTicks;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "sub tick count can't be negative:" << subTicks;
}
/*!
Clears all ticks.
An alternative to manipulate ticks is to directly access the internal storage with the \ref ticks
getter.
\see setTicks, addTicks, addTick
*/
void QCPAxisTickerText::clear()
{
mTicks.clear();
}
/*!
Adds a single tick to the axis at the given axis coordinate \a position, with the provided tick \a
label.
\see addTicks, setTicks, clear
*/
void QCPAxisTickerText::addTick(double position, const QString &label)
{
mTicks.insert(position, label);
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided \a ticks to the ones already existing. The map key of \a ticks corresponds to
the axis coordinate, and the map value is the string that will appear as tick label.
An alternative to manipulate ticks is to directly access the internal storage with the \ref ticks
getter.
\see addTick, setTicks, clear
*/
void QCPAxisTickerText::addTicks(const QMap<double, QString> &ticks)
{
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 15, 0)
mTicks.unite(ticks);
#else
mTicks.insert(ticks);
#endif
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided ticks to the ones already existing. The entries of \a positions correspond to
the axis coordinates, and the entries of \a labels are the respective strings that will appear as
tick labels.
An alternative to manipulate ticks is to directly access the internal storage with the \ref ticks
getter.
\see addTick, setTicks, clear
*/
void QCPAxisTickerText::addTicks(const QVector<double> &positions, const QVector<QString> &labels)
{
if (positions.size() != labels.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed unequal length vectors for positions and labels:" << positions.size() << labels.size();
int n = qMin(positions.size(), labels.size());
for (int i=0; i<n; ++i)
mTicks.insert(positions.at(i), labels.at(i));
}
/*!
Since the tick coordinates are provided externally, this method implementation does nothing.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
double QCPAxisTickerText::getTickStep(const QCPRange &range)
{
// text axis ticker has manual tick positions, so doesn't need this method
Q_UNUSED(range)
return 1.0;
}
/*!
Returns the sub tick count that was configured with \ref setSubTickCount.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
int QCPAxisTickerText::getSubTickCount(double tickStep)
{
Q_UNUSED(tickStep)
return mSubTickCount;
}
/*!
Returns the tick label which corresponds to the key \a tick in the internal tick storage. Since
the labels are provided externally, \a locale, \a formatChar, and \a precision are ignored.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
QString QCPAxisTickerText::getTickLabel(double tick, const QLocale &locale, QChar formatChar, int precision)
{
Q_UNUSED(locale)
Q_UNUSED(formatChar)
Q_UNUSED(precision)
return mTicks.value(tick);
}
/*!
Returns the externally provided tick coordinates which are in the specified \a range. If
available, one tick above and below the range is provided in addition, to allow possible sub tick
calculation. The parameter \a tickStep is ignored.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
QVector<double> QCPAxisTickerText::createTickVector(double tickStep, const QCPRange &range)
{
Q_UNUSED(tickStep)
QVector<double> result;
if (mTicks.isEmpty())
return result;
QMap<double, QString>::const_iterator start = mTicks.lowerBound(range.lower);
QMap<double, QString>::const_iterator end = mTicks.upperBound(range.upper);
// this method should try to give one tick outside of range so proper subticks can be generated:
if (start != mTicks.constBegin()) --start;
if (end != mTicks.constEnd()) ++end;
for (QMap<double, QString>::const_iterator it = start; it != end; ++it)
result.append(it.key());
return result;
}
/* end of 'src/axis/axistickertext.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/axistickerpi.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 11177 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisTickerPi
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisTickerPi
\brief Specialized axis ticker to display ticks in units of an arbitrary constant, for example pi
\image html axisticker-pi.png
This QCPAxisTicker subclass generates ticks that are expressed with respect to a given symbolic
constant with a numerical value specified with \ref setPiValue and an appearance in the tick
labels specified with \ref setPiSymbol.
Ticks may be generated at fractions of the symbolic constant. How these fractions appear in the
tick label can be configured with \ref setFractionStyle.
The ticker can be created and assigned to an axis like this:
\snippet documentation/doc-image-generator/mainwindow.cpp axistickerpi-creation
*/
/*!
Constructs the ticker and sets reasonable default values. Axis tickers are commonly created
managed by a QSharedPointer, which then can be passed to QCPAxis::setTicker.
*/
QCPAxisTickerPi::QCPAxisTickerPi() :
mPiSymbol(QLatin1String(" ")+QChar(0x03C0)),
mPiValue(M_PI),
mPeriodicity(0),
mFractionStyle(fsUnicodeFractions),
mPiTickStep(0)
{
setTickCount(4);
}
/*!
Sets how the symbol part (which is always a suffix to the number) shall appear in the axis tick
label.
If a space shall appear between the number and the symbol, make sure the space is contained in \a
symbol.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerPi::setPiSymbol(QString symbol)
{
mPiSymbol = symbol;
}
/*!
Sets the numerical value that the symbolic constant has.
This will be used to place the appropriate fractions of the symbol at the respective axis
coordinates.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerPi::setPiValue(double pi)
{
mPiValue = pi;
}
/*!
Sets whether the axis labels shall appear periodicly and if so, at which multiplicity of the
symbolic constant.
To disable periodicity, set \a multiplesOfPi to zero.
For example, an axis that identifies 0 with 2pi would set \a multiplesOfPi to two.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerPi::setPeriodicity(int multiplesOfPi)
{
mPeriodicity = qAbs(multiplesOfPi);
}
/*!
Sets how the numerical/fractional part preceding the symbolic constant is displayed in tick
labels. See \ref FractionStyle for the various options.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerPi::setFractionStyle(QCPAxisTickerPi::FractionStyle style)
{
mFractionStyle = style;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the tick step, using the constant's value (\ref setPiValue) as base unit. In consequence
the numerical/fractional part preceding the symbolic constant is made to have a readable
mantissa.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
double QCPAxisTickerPi::getTickStep(const QCPRange &range)
{
mPiTickStep = range.size()/mPiValue/double(mTickCount+1e-10); // mTickCount ticks on average, the small addition is to prevent jitter on exact integers
mPiTickStep = cleanMantissa(mPiTickStep);
return mPiTickStep*mPiValue;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the sub tick count, using the constant's value (\ref setPiValue) as base unit. In
consequence the sub ticks divide the numerical/fractional part preceding the symbolic constant
reasonably, and not the total tick coordinate.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
int QCPAxisTickerPi::getSubTickCount(double tickStep)
{
return QCPAxisTicker::getSubTickCount(tickStep/mPiValue);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the tick label as a fractional/numerical part and a symbolic string as suffix. The
formatting of the fraction is done according to the specified \ref setFractionStyle. The appended
symbol is specified with \ref setPiSymbol.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
QString QCPAxisTickerPi::getTickLabel(double tick, const QLocale &locale, QChar formatChar, int precision)
{
double tickInPis = tick/mPiValue;
if (mPeriodicity > 0)
tickInPis = fmod(tickInPis, mPeriodicity);
if (mFractionStyle != fsFloatingPoint && mPiTickStep > 0.09 && mPiTickStep < 50)
{
// simply construct fraction from decimal like 1.234 -> 1234/1000 and then simplify fraction, smaller digits are irrelevant due to mPiTickStep conditional above
int denominator = 1000;
int numerator = qRound(tickInPis*denominator);
simplifyFraction(numerator, denominator);
if (qAbs(numerator) == 1 && denominator == 1)
return (numerator < 0 ? QLatin1String("-") : QLatin1String("")) + mPiSymbol.trimmed();
else if (numerator == 0)
return QLatin1String("0");
else
return fractionToString(numerator, denominator) + mPiSymbol;
} else
{
if (qFuzzyIsNull(tickInPis))
return QLatin1String("0");
else if (qFuzzyCompare(qAbs(tickInPis), 1.0))
return (tickInPis < 0 ? QLatin1String("-") : QLatin1String("")) + mPiSymbol.trimmed();
else
return QCPAxisTicker::getTickLabel(tickInPis, locale, formatChar, precision) + mPiSymbol;
}
}
/*! \internal
Takes the fraction given by \a numerator and \a denominator and modifies the values to make sure
the fraction is in irreducible form, i.e. numerator and denominator don't share any common
factors which could be cancelled.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerPi::simplifyFraction(int &numerator, int &denominator) const
{
if (numerator == 0 || denominator == 0)
return;
int num = numerator;
int denom = denominator;
while (denom != 0) // euclidean gcd algorithm
{
int oldDenom = denom;
denom = num % denom;
num = oldDenom;
}
// num is now gcd of numerator and denominator
numerator /= num;
denominator /= num;
}
/*! \internal
Takes the fraction given by \a numerator and \a denominator and returns a string representation.
The result depends on the configured fraction style (\ref setFractionStyle).
This method is used to format the numerical/fractional part when generating tick labels. It
simplifies the passed fraction to an irreducible form using \ref simplifyFraction and factors out
any integer parts of the fraction (e.g. "10/4" becomes "2 1/2").
*/
QString QCPAxisTickerPi::fractionToString(int numerator, int denominator) const
{
if (denominator == 0)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "called with zero denominator";
return QString();
}
if (mFractionStyle == fsFloatingPoint) // should never be the case when calling this function
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "shouldn't be called with fraction style fsDecimal";
return QString::number(numerator/double(denominator)); // failsafe
}
int sign = numerator*denominator < 0 ? -1 : 1;
numerator = qAbs(numerator);
denominator = qAbs(denominator);
if (denominator == 1)
{
return QString::number(sign*numerator);
} else
{
int integerPart = numerator/denominator;
int remainder = numerator%denominator;
if (remainder == 0)
{
return QString::number(sign*integerPart);
} else
{
if (mFractionStyle == fsAsciiFractions)
{
return QString(QLatin1String("%1%2%3/%4"))
.arg(sign == -1 ? QLatin1String("-") : QLatin1String(""))
.arg(integerPart > 0 ? QString::number(integerPart)+QLatin1String(" ") : QString(QLatin1String("")))
.arg(remainder)
.arg(denominator);
} else if (mFractionStyle == fsUnicodeFractions)
{
return QString(QLatin1String("%1%2%3"))
.arg(sign == -1 ? QLatin1String("-") : QLatin1String(""))
.arg(integerPart > 0 ? QString::number(integerPart) : QLatin1String(""))
.arg(unicodeFraction(remainder, denominator));
}
}
}
return QString();
}
/*! \internal
Returns the unicode string representation of the fraction given by \a numerator and \a
denominator. This is the representation used in \ref fractionToString when the fraction style
(\ref setFractionStyle) is \ref fsUnicodeFractions.
This method doesn't use the single-character common fractions but builds each fraction from a
superscript unicode number, the unicode fraction character, and a subscript unicode number.
*/
QString QCPAxisTickerPi::unicodeFraction(int numerator, int denominator) const
{
return unicodeSuperscript(numerator)+QChar(0x2044)+unicodeSubscript(denominator);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the unicode string representing \a number as superscript. This is used to build
unicode fractions in \ref unicodeFraction.
*/
QString QCPAxisTickerPi::unicodeSuperscript(int number) const
{
if (number == 0)
return QString(QChar(0x2070));
QString result;
while (number > 0)
{
const int digit = number%10;
switch (digit)
{
case 1: { result.prepend(QChar(0x00B9)); break; }
case 2: { result.prepend(QChar(0x00B2)); break; }
case 3: { result.prepend(QChar(0x00B3)); break; }
default: { result.prepend(QChar(0x2070+digit)); break; }
}
number /= 10;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the unicode string representing \a number as subscript. This is used to build unicode
fractions in \ref unicodeFraction.
*/
QString QCPAxisTickerPi::unicodeSubscript(int number) const
{
if (number == 0)
return QString(QChar(0x2080));
QString result;
while (number > 0)
{
result.prepend(QChar(0x2080+number%10));
number /= 10;
}
return result;
}
/* end of 'src/axis/axistickerpi.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/axistickerlog.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 7890 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisTickerLog
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisTickerLog
\brief Specialized axis ticker suited for logarithmic axes
\image html axisticker-log.png
This QCPAxisTicker subclass generates ticks with unequal tick intervals suited for logarithmic
axis scales. The ticks are placed at powers of the specified log base (\ref setLogBase).
Especially in the case of a log base equal to 10 (the default), it might be desirable to have
tick labels in the form of powers of ten without mantissa display. To achieve this, set the
number precision (\ref QCPAxis::setNumberPrecision) to zero and the number format (\ref
QCPAxis::setNumberFormat) to scientific (exponential) display with beautifully typeset decimal
powers, so a format string of <tt>"eb"</tt>. This will result in the following axis tick labels:
\image html axisticker-log-powers.png
The ticker can be created and assigned to an axis like this:
\snippet documentation/doc-image-generator/mainwindow.cpp axistickerlog-creation
Note that the nature of logarithmic ticks imply that there exists a smallest possible tick step,
corresponding to one multiplication by the log base. If the user zooms in further than that, no
new ticks would appear, leading to very sparse or even no axis ticks on the axis. To prevent this
situation, this ticker falls back to regular tick generation if the axis range would be covered
by too few logarithmically placed ticks.
*/
/*!
Constructs the ticker and sets reasonable default values. Axis tickers are commonly created
managed by a QSharedPointer, which then can be passed to QCPAxis::setTicker.
*/
QCPAxisTickerLog::QCPAxisTickerLog() :
mLogBase(10.0),
mSubTickCount(8), // generates 10 intervals
mLogBaseLnInv(1.0/qLn(mLogBase))
{
}
/*!
Sets the logarithm base used for tick coordinate generation. The ticks will be placed at integer
powers of \a base.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerLog::setLogBase(double base)
{
if (base > 0)
{
mLogBase = base;
mLogBaseLnInv = 1.0/qLn(mLogBase);
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "log base has to be greater than zero:" << base;
}
/*!
Sets the number of sub ticks in a tick interval. Within each interval, the sub ticks are spaced
linearly to provide a better visual guide, so the sub tick density increases toward the higher
tick.
Note that \a subTicks is the number of sub ticks (not sub intervals) in one tick interval. So in
the case of logarithm base 10 an intuitive sub tick spacing would be achieved with eight sub
ticks (the default). This means e.g. between the ticks 10 and 100 there will be eight ticks,
namely at 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80 and 90.
*/
void QCPAxisTickerLog::setSubTickCount(int subTicks)
{
if (subTicks >= 0)
mSubTickCount = subTicks;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "sub tick count can't be negative:" << subTicks;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the sub tick count specified in \ref setSubTickCount. For QCPAxisTickerLog, there is no
automatic sub tick count calculation necessary.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
int QCPAxisTickerLog::getSubTickCount(double tickStep)
{
Q_UNUSED(tickStep)
return mSubTickCount;
}
/*! \internal
Creates ticks with a spacing given by the logarithm base and an increasing integer power in the
provided \a range. The step in which the power increases tick by tick is chosen in order to keep
the total number of ticks as close as possible to the tick count (\ref setTickCount).
The parameter \a tickStep is ignored for the normal logarithmic ticker generation. Only when
zoomed in very far such that not enough logarithmically placed ticks would be visible, this
function falls back to the regular QCPAxisTicker::createTickVector, which then uses \a tickStep.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
QVector<double> QCPAxisTickerLog::createTickVector(double tickStep, const QCPRange &range)
{
QVector<double> result;
if (range.lower > 0 && range.upper > 0) // positive range
{
const double baseTickCount = qLn(range.upper/range.lower)*mLogBaseLnInv;
if (baseTickCount < 1.6) // if too few log ticks would be visible in axis range, fall back to regular tick vector generation
return QCPAxisTicker::createTickVector(tickStep, range);
const double exactPowerStep = baseTickCount/double(mTickCount+1e-10);
const double newLogBase = qPow(mLogBase, qMax(int(cleanMantissa(exactPowerStep)), 1));
double currentTick = qPow(newLogBase, qFloor(qLn(range.lower)/qLn(newLogBase)));
result.append(currentTick);
while (currentTick < range.upper && currentTick > 0) // currentMag might be zero for ranges ~1e-300, just cancel in that case
{
currentTick *= newLogBase;
result.append(currentTick);
}
} else if (range.lower < 0 && range.upper < 0) // negative range
{
const double baseTickCount = qLn(range.lower/range.upper)*mLogBaseLnInv;
if (baseTickCount < 1.6) // if too few log ticks would be visible in axis range, fall back to regular tick vector generation
return QCPAxisTicker::createTickVector(tickStep, range);
const double exactPowerStep = baseTickCount/double(mTickCount+1e-10);
const double newLogBase = qPow(mLogBase, qMax(int(cleanMantissa(exactPowerStep)), 1));
double currentTick = -qPow(newLogBase, qCeil(qLn(-range.lower)/qLn(newLogBase)));
result.append(currentTick);
while (currentTick < range.upper && currentTick < 0) // currentMag might be zero for ranges ~1e-300, just cancel in that case
{
currentTick /= newLogBase;
result.append(currentTick);
}
} else // invalid range for logarithmic scale, because lower and upper have different sign
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid range for logarithmic plot: " << range.lower << ".." << range.upper;
}
return result;
}
/* end of 'src/axis/axistickerlog.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/axis/axis.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 99883 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPGrid
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPGrid
\brief Responsible for drawing the grid of a QCPAxis.
This class is tightly bound to QCPAxis. Every axis owns a grid instance and uses it to draw the
grid lines, sub grid lines and zero-line. You can interact with the grid of an axis via \ref
QCPAxis::grid. Normally, you don't need to create an instance of QCPGrid yourself.
The axis and grid drawing was split into two classes to allow them to be placed on different
layers (both QCPAxis and QCPGrid inherit from QCPLayerable). Thus it is possible to have the grid
in the background and the axes in the foreground, and any plottables/items in between. This
described situation is the default setup, see the QCPLayer documentation.
*/
/*!
Creates a QCPGrid instance and sets default values.
You shouldn't instantiate grids on their own, since every QCPAxis brings its own QCPGrid.
*/
QCPGrid::QCPGrid(QCPAxis *parentAxis) :
QCPLayerable(parentAxis->parentPlot(), QString(), parentAxis),
mSubGridVisible{},
mAntialiasedSubGrid{},
mAntialiasedZeroLine{},
mParentAxis(parentAxis)
{
// warning: this is called in QCPAxis constructor, so parentAxis members should not be accessed/called
setParent(parentAxis);
setPen(QPen(QColor(200,200,200), 0, Qt::DotLine));
setSubGridPen(QPen(QColor(220,220,220), 0, Qt::DotLine));
setZeroLinePen(QPen(QColor(200,200,200), 0, Qt::SolidLine));
setSubGridVisible(false);
setAntialiased(false);
setAntialiasedSubGrid(false);
setAntialiasedZeroLine(false);
}
/*!
Sets whether grid lines at sub tick marks are drawn.
\see setSubGridPen
*/
void QCPGrid::setSubGridVisible(bool visible)
{
mSubGridVisible = visible;
}
/*!
Sets whether sub grid lines are drawn antialiased.
*/
void QCPGrid::setAntialiasedSubGrid(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiasedSubGrid = enabled;
}
/*!
Sets whether zero lines are drawn antialiased.
*/
void QCPGrid::setAntialiasedZeroLine(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiasedZeroLine = enabled;
}
/*!
Sets the pen with which (major) grid lines are drawn.
*/
void QCPGrid::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen with which sub grid lines are drawn.
*/
void QCPGrid::setSubGridPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSubGridPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen with which zero lines are drawn.
Zero lines are lines at value coordinate 0 which may be drawn with a different pen than other grid
lines. To disable zero lines and just draw normal grid lines at zero, set \a pen to Qt::NoPen.
*/
void QCPGrid::setZeroLinePen(const QPen &pen)
{
mZeroLinePen = pen;
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing the major grid lines.
This is the antialiasing state the painter passed to the \ref draw method is in by default.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\see setAntialiased
*/
void QCPGrid::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeGrid);
}
/*! \internal
Draws grid lines and sub grid lines at the positions of (sub) ticks of the parent axis, spanning
over the complete axis rect. Also draws the zero line, if appropriate (\ref setZeroLinePen).
*/
void QCPGrid::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (!mParentAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid parent axis"; return; }
if (mParentAxis->subTicks() && mSubGridVisible)
drawSubGridLines(painter);
drawGridLines(painter);
}
/*! \internal
Draws the main grid lines and possibly a zero line with the specified painter.
This is a helper function called by \ref draw.
*/
void QCPGrid::drawGridLines(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
if (!mParentAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid parent axis"; return; }
const int tickCount = mParentAxis->mTickVector.size();
double t; // helper variable, result of coordinate-to-pixel transforms
if (mParentAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
// draw zeroline:
int zeroLineIndex = -1;
if (mZeroLinePen.style() != Qt::NoPen && mParentAxis->mRange.lower < 0 && mParentAxis->mRange.upper > 0)
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedZeroLine, QCP::aeZeroLine);
painter->setPen(mZeroLinePen);
double epsilon = mParentAxis->range().size()*1E-6; // for comparing double to zero
for (int i=0; i<tickCount; ++i)
{
if (qAbs(mParentAxis->mTickVector.at(i)) < epsilon)
{
zeroLineIndex = i;
t = mParentAxis->coordToPixel(mParentAxis->mTickVector.at(i)); // x
painter->drawLine(QLineF(t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->bottom(), t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->top()));
break;
}
}
}
// draw grid lines:
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setPen(mPen);
for (int i=0; i<tickCount; ++i)
{
if (i == zeroLineIndex) continue; // don't draw a gridline on top of the zeroline
t = mParentAxis->coordToPixel(mParentAxis->mTickVector.at(i)); // x
painter->drawLine(QLineF(t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->bottom(), t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->top()));
}
} else
{
// draw zeroline:
int zeroLineIndex = -1;
if (mZeroLinePen.style() != Qt::NoPen && mParentAxis->mRange.lower < 0 && mParentAxis->mRange.upper > 0)
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedZeroLine, QCP::aeZeroLine);
painter->setPen(mZeroLinePen);
double epsilon = mParentAxis->mRange.size()*1E-6; // for comparing double to zero
for (int i=0; i<tickCount; ++i)
{
if (qAbs(mParentAxis->mTickVector.at(i)) < epsilon)
{
zeroLineIndex = i;
t = mParentAxis->coordToPixel(mParentAxis->mTickVector.at(i)); // y
painter->drawLine(QLineF(mParentAxis->mAxisRect->left(), t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->right(), t));
break;
}
}
}
// draw grid lines:
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setPen(mPen);
for (int i=0; i<tickCount; ++i)
{
if (i == zeroLineIndex) continue; // don't draw a gridline on top of the zeroline
t = mParentAxis->coordToPixel(mParentAxis->mTickVector.at(i)); // y
painter->drawLine(QLineF(mParentAxis->mAxisRect->left(), t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->right(), t));
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws the sub grid lines with the specified painter.
This is a helper function called by \ref draw.
*/
void QCPGrid::drawSubGridLines(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
if (!mParentAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid parent axis"; return; }
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedSubGrid, QCP::aeSubGrid);
double t; // helper variable, result of coordinate-to-pixel transforms
painter->setPen(mSubGridPen);
if (mParentAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
foreach (double tickCoord, mParentAxis->mSubTickVector)
{
t = mParentAxis->coordToPixel(tickCoord); // x
painter->drawLine(QLineF(t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->bottom(), t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->top()));
}
} else
{
foreach (double tickCoord, mParentAxis->mSubTickVector)
{
t = mParentAxis->coordToPixel(tickCoord); // y
painter->drawLine(QLineF(mParentAxis->mAxisRect->left(), t, mParentAxis->mAxisRect->right(), t));
}
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxis
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxis
\brief Manages a single axis inside a QCustomPlot.
Usually doesn't need to be instantiated externally. Access %QCustomPlot's default four axes via
QCustomPlot::xAxis (bottom), QCustomPlot::yAxis (left), QCustomPlot::xAxis2 (top) and
QCustomPlot::yAxis2 (right).
Axes are always part of an axis rect, see QCPAxisRect.
\image html AxisNamesOverview.png
<center>Naming convention of axis parts</center>
\n
\image html AxisRectSpacingOverview.png
<center>Overview of the spacings and paddings that define the geometry of an axis. The dashed gray line
on the left represents the QCustomPlot widget border.</center>
Each axis holds an instance of QCPAxisTicker which is used to generate the tick coordinates and
tick labels. You can access the currently installed \ref ticker or set a new one (possibly one of
the specialized subclasses, or your own subclass) via \ref setTicker. For details, see the
documentation of QCPAxisTicker.
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn Qt::Orientation QCPAxis::orientation() const
Returns the orientation of this axis. The axis orientation (horizontal or vertical) is deduced
from the axis type (left, top, right or bottom).
\see orientation(AxisType type), pixelOrientation
*/
/*! \fn QCPGrid *QCPAxis::grid() const
Returns the \ref QCPGrid instance belonging to this axis. Access it to set details about the way the
grid is displayed.
*/
/*! \fn static Qt::Orientation QCPAxis::orientation(AxisType type)
Returns the orientation of the specified axis type
\see orientation(), pixelOrientation
*/
/*! \fn int QCPAxis::pixelOrientation() const
Returns which direction points towards higher coordinate values/keys, in pixel space.
This method returns either 1 or -1. If it returns 1, then going in the positive direction along
the orientation of the axis in pixels corresponds to going from lower to higher axis coordinates.
On the other hand, if this method returns -1, going to smaller pixel values corresponds to going
from lower to higher axis coordinates.
For example, this is useful to easily shift axis coordinates by a certain amount given in pixels,
without having to care about reversed or vertically aligned axes:
\code
double newKey = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(oldKey)+10*keyAxis->pixelOrientation());
\endcode
\a newKey will then contain a key that is ten pixels towards higher keys, starting from \a oldKey.
*/
/*! \fn QSharedPointer<QCPAxisTicker> QCPAxis::ticker() const
Returns a modifiable shared pointer to the currently installed axis ticker. The axis ticker is
responsible for generating the tick positions and tick labels of this axis. You can access the
\ref QCPAxisTicker with this method and modify basic properties such as the approximate tick count
(\ref QCPAxisTicker::setTickCount).
You can gain more control over the axis ticks by setting a different \ref QCPAxisTicker subclass, see
the documentation there. A new axis ticker can be set with \ref setTicker.
Since the ticker is stored in the axis as a shared pointer, multiple axes may share the same axis
ticker simply by passing the same shared pointer to multiple axes.
\see setTicker
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/* start of documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPAxis::rangeChanged(const QCPRange &newRange)
This signal is emitted when the range of this axis has changed. You can connect it to the \ref
setRange slot of another axis to communicate the new range to the other axis, in order for it to
be synchronized.
You may also manipulate/correct the range with \ref setRange in a slot connected to this signal.
This is useful if for example a maximum range span shall not be exceeded, or if the lower/upper
range shouldn't go beyond certain values (see \ref QCPRange::bounded). For example, the following
slot would limit the x axis to ranges between 0 and 10:
\code
customPlot->xAxis->setRange(newRange.bounded(0, 10))
\endcode
*/
/*! \fn void QCPAxis::rangeChanged(const QCPRange &newRange, const QCPRange &oldRange)
\overload
Additionally to the new range, this signal also provides the previous range held by the axis as
\a oldRange.
*/
/*! \fn void QCPAxis::scaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType scaleType);
This signal is emitted when the scale type changes, by calls to \ref setScaleType
*/
/*! \fn void QCPAxis::selectionChanged(QCPAxis::SelectableParts selection)
This signal is emitted when the selection state of this axis has changed, either by user interaction
or by a direct call to \ref setSelectedParts.
*/
/*! \fn void QCPAxis::selectableChanged(const QCPAxis::SelectableParts &parts);
This signal is emitted when the selectability changes, by calls to \ref setSelectableParts
*/
/* end of documentation of signals */
/*!
Constructs an Axis instance of Type \a type for the axis rect \a parent.
Usually it isn't necessary to instantiate axes directly, because you can let QCustomPlot create
them for you with \ref QCPAxisRect::addAxis. If you want to use own QCPAxis-subclasses however,
create them manually and then inject them also via \ref QCPAxisRect::addAxis.
*/
QCPAxis::QCPAxis(QCPAxisRect *parent, AxisType type) :
QCPLayerable(parent->parentPlot(), QString(), parent),
// axis base:
mAxisType(type),
mAxisRect(parent),
mPadding(5),
mOrientation(orientation(type)),
mSelectableParts(spAxis | spTickLabels | spAxisLabel),
mSelectedParts(spNone),
mBasePen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedBasePen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
// axis label:
mLabel(),
mLabelFont(mParentPlot->font()),
mSelectedLabelFont(QFont(mLabelFont.family(), mLabelFont.pointSize(), QFont::Bold)),
mLabelColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedLabelColor(Qt::blue),
// tick labels:
mTickLabels(true),
mTickLabelFont(mParentPlot->font()),
mSelectedTickLabelFont(QFont(mTickLabelFont.family(), mTickLabelFont.pointSize(), QFont::Bold)),
mTickLabelColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedTickLabelColor(Qt::blue),
mNumberPrecision(6),
mNumberFormatChar('g'),
mNumberBeautifulPowers(true),
// ticks and subticks:
mTicks(true),
mSubTicks(true),
mTickPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedTickPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
mSubTickPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedSubTickPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
// scale and range:
mRange(0, 5),
mRangeReversed(false),
mScaleType(stLinear),
// internal members:
mGrid(new QCPGrid(this)),
mAxisPainter(new QCPAxisPainterPrivate(parent->parentPlot())),
mTicker(new QCPAxisTicker),
mCachedMarginValid(false),
mCachedMargin(0),
mDragging(false)
{
setParent(parent);
mGrid->setVisible(false);
setAntialiased(false);
setLayer(mParentPlot->currentLayer()); // it's actually on that layer already, but we want it in front of the grid, so we place it on there again
if (type == atTop)
{
setTickLabelPadding(3);
setLabelPadding(6);
} else if (type == atRight)
{
setTickLabelPadding(7);
setLabelPadding(12);
} else if (type == atBottom)
{
setTickLabelPadding(3);
setLabelPadding(3);
} else if (type == atLeft)
{
setTickLabelPadding(5);
setLabelPadding(10);
}
}
QCPAxis::~QCPAxis()
{
delete mAxisPainter;
delete mGrid; // delete grid here instead of via parent ~QObject for better defined deletion order
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPAxis::tickLabelPadding() const
{
return mAxisPainter->tickLabelPadding;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
double QCPAxis::tickLabelRotation() const
{
return mAxisPainter->tickLabelRotation;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
QCPAxis::LabelSide QCPAxis::tickLabelSide() const
{
return mAxisPainter->tickLabelSide;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
QString QCPAxis::numberFormat() const
{
QString result;
result.append(mNumberFormatChar);
if (mNumberBeautifulPowers)
{
result.append(QLatin1Char('b'));
if (mAxisPainter->numberMultiplyCross)
result.append(QLatin1Char('c'));
}
return result;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPAxis::tickLengthIn() const
{
return mAxisPainter->tickLengthIn;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPAxis::tickLengthOut() const
{
return mAxisPainter->tickLengthOut;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPAxis::subTickLengthIn() const
{
return mAxisPainter->subTickLengthIn;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPAxis::subTickLengthOut() const
{
return mAxisPainter->subTickLengthOut;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPAxis::labelPadding() const
{
return mAxisPainter->labelPadding;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPAxis::offset() const
{
return mAxisPainter->offset;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
QCPLineEnding QCPAxis::lowerEnding() const
{
return mAxisPainter->lowerEnding;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
QCPLineEnding QCPAxis::upperEnding() const
{
return mAxisPainter->upperEnding;
}
/*!
Sets whether the axis uses a linear scale or a logarithmic scale.
Note that this method controls the coordinate transformation. For logarithmic scales, you will
likely also want to use a logarithmic tick spacing and labeling, which can be achieved by setting
the axis ticker to an instance of \ref QCPAxisTickerLog :
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpaxisticker-log-creation
See the documentation of \ref QCPAxisTickerLog about the details of logarithmic axis tick
creation.
\ref setNumberPrecision
*/
void QCPAxis::setScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType type)
{
if (mScaleType != type)
{
mScaleType = type;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
setRange(mRange.sanitizedForLogScale());
mCachedMarginValid = false;
emit scaleTypeChanged(mScaleType);
}
}
/*!
Sets the range of the axis.
This slot may be connected with the \ref rangeChanged signal of another axis so this axis
is always synchronized with the other axis range, when it changes.
To invert the direction of an axis, use \ref setRangeReversed.
*/
void QCPAxis::setRange(const QCPRange &range)
{
if (range.lower == mRange.lower && range.upper == mRange.upper)
return;
if (!QCPRange::validRange(range)) return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
{
mRange = range.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
{
mRange = range.sanitizedForLinScale();
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets whether the user can (de-)select the parts in \a selectable by clicking on the QCustomPlot surface.
(When \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains iSelectAxes.)
However, even when \a selectable is set to a value not allowing the selection of a specific part,
it is still possible to set the selection of this part manually, by calling \ref setSelectedParts
directly.
\see SelectablePart, setSelectedParts
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectableParts(const SelectableParts &selectable)
{
if (mSelectableParts != selectable)
{
mSelectableParts = selectable;
emit selectableChanged(mSelectableParts);
}
}
/*!
Sets the selected state of the respective axis parts described by \ref SelectablePart. When a part
is selected, it uses a different pen/font.
The entire selection mechanism for axes is handled automatically when \ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains iSelectAxes. You only need to call this function when you
wish to change the selection state manually.
This function can change the selection state of a part, independent of the \ref setSelectableParts setting.
emits the \ref selectionChanged signal when \a selected is different from the previous selection state.
\see SelectablePart, setSelectableParts, selectTest, setSelectedBasePen, setSelectedTickPen, setSelectedSubTickPen,
setSelectedTickLabelFont, setSelectedLabelFont, setSelectedTickLabelColor, setSelectedLabelColor
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectedParts(const SelectableParts &selected)
{
if (mSelectedParts != selected)
{
mSelectedParts = selected;
emit selectionChanged(mSelectedParts);
}
}
/*!
\overload
Sets the lower and upper bound of the axis range.
To invert the direction of an axis, use \ref setRangeReversed.
There is also a slot to set a range, see \ref setRange(const QCPRange &range).
*/
void QCPAxis::setRange(double lower, double upper)
{
if (lower == mRange.lower && upper == mRange.upper)
return;
if (!QCPRange::validRange(lower, upper)) return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.lower = lower;
mRange.upper = upper;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
\overload
Sets the range of the axis.
The \a position coordinate indicates together with the \a alignment parameter, where the new
range will be positioned. \a size defines the size of the new axis range. \a alignment may be
Qt::AlignLeft, Qt::AlignRight or Qt::AlignCenter. This will cause the left border, right border,
or center of the range to be aligned with \a position. Any other values of \a alignment will
default to Qt::AlignCenter.
*/
void QCPAxis::setRange(double position, double size, Qt::AlignmentFlag alignment)
{
if (alignment == Qt::AlignLeft)
setRange(position, position+size);
else if (alignment == Qt::AlignRight)
setRange(position-size, position);
else // alignment == Qt::AlignCenter
setRange(position-size/2.0, position+size/2.0);
}
/*!
Sets the lower bound of the axis range. The upper bound is not changed.
\see setRange
*/
void QCPAxis::setRangeLower(double lower)
{
if (mRange.lower == lower)
return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.lower = lower;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets the upper bound of the axis range. The lower bound is not changed.
\see setRange
*/
void QCPAxis::setRangeUpper(double upper)
{
if (mRange.upper == upper)
return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.upper = upper;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets whether the axis range (direction) is displayed reversed. Normally, the values on horizontal
axes increase left to right, on vertical axes bottom to top. When \a reversed is set to true, the
direction of increasing values is inverted.
Note that the range and data interface stays the same for reversed axes, e.g. the \a lower part
of the \ref setRange interface will still reference the mathematically smaller number than the \a
upper part.
*/
void QCPAxis::setRangeReversed(bool reversed)
{
mRangeReversed = reversed;
}
/*!
The axis ticker is responsible for generating the tick positions and tick labels. See the
documentation of QCPAxisTicker for details on how to work with axis tickers.
You can change the tick positioning/labeling behaviour of this axis by setting a different
QCPAxisTicker subclass using this method. If you only wish to modify the currently installed axis
ticker, access it via \ref ticker.
Since the ticker is stored in the axis as a shared pointer, multiple axes may share the same axis
ticker simply by passing the same shared pointer to multiple axes.
\see ticker
*/
void QCPAxis::setTicker(QSharedPointer<QCPAxisTicker> ticker)
{
if (ticker)
mTicker = ticker;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can not set nullptr as axis ticker";
// no need to invalidate margin cache here because produced tick labels are checked for changes in setupTickVector
}
/*!
Sets whether tick marks are displayed.
Note that setting \a show to false does not imply that tick labels are invisible, too. To achieve
that, see \ref setTickLabels.
\see setSubTicks
*/
void QCPAxis::setTicks(bool show)
{
if (mTicks != show)
{
mTicks = show;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets whether tick labels are displayed. Tick labels are the numbers drawn next to tick marks.
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLabels(bool show)
{
if (mTickLabels != show)
{
mTickLabels = show;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
if (!mTickLabels)
mTickVectorLabels.clear();
}
}
/*!
Sets the distance between the axis base line (including any outward ticks) and the tick labels.
\see setLabelPadding, setPadding
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLabelPadding(int padding)
{
if (mAxisPainter->tickLabelPadding != padding)
{
mAxisPainter->tickLabelPadding = padding;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the font of the tick labels.
\see setTickLabels, setTickLabelColor
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (font != mTickLabelFont)
{
mTickLabelFont = font;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the color of the tick labels.
\see setTickLabels, setTickLabelFont
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mTickLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the rotation of the tick labels. If \a degrees is zero, the labels are drawn normally. Else,
the tick labels are drawn rotated by \a degrees clockwise. The specified angle is bound to values
from -90 to 90 degrees.
If \a degrees is exactly -90, 0 or 90, the tick labels are centered on the tick coordinate. For
other angles, the label is drawn with an offset such that it seems to point toward or away from
the tick mark.
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLabelRotation(double degrees)
{
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(degrees-mAxisPainter->tickLabelRotation))
{
mAxisPainter->tickLabelRotation = qBound(-90.0, degrees, 90.0);
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets whether the tick labels (numbers) shall appear inside or outside the axis rect.
The usual and default setting is \ref lsOutside. Very compact plots sometimes require tick labels
to be inside the axis rect, to save space. If \a side is set to \ref lsInside, the tick labels
appear on the inside are additionally clipped to the axis rect.
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLabelSide(LabelSide side)
{
mAxisPainter->tickLabelSide = side;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
/*!
Sets the number format for the numbers in tick labels. This \a formatCode is an extended version
of the format code used e.g. by QString::number() and QLocale::toString(). For reference about
that, see the "Argument Formats" section in the detailed description of the QString class.
\a formatCode is a string of one, two or three characters.
<b>The first character</b> is identical to
the normal format code used by Qt. In short, this means: 'e'/'E' scientific format, 'f' fixed
format, 'g'/'G' scientific or fixed, whichever is shorter. For the 'e', 'E', and 'f' formats,
the precision set by \ref setNumberPrecision represents the number of digits after the decimal
point. For the 'g' and 'G' formats, the precision represents the maximum number of significant
digits, trailing zeroes are omitted.
<b>The second and third characters</b> are optional and specific to QCustomPlot:\n
If the first char was 'e' or 'g', numbers are/might be displayed in the scientific format, e.g.
"5.5e9", which is ugly in a plot. So when the second char of \a formatCode is set to 'b' (for
"beautiful"), those exponential numbers are formatted in a more natural way, i.e. "5.5
[multiplication sign] 10 [superscript] 9". By default, the multiplication sign is a centered dot.
If instead a cross should be shown (as is usual in the USA), the third char of \a formatCode can
be set to 'c'. The inserted multiplication signs are the UTF-8 characters 215 (0xD7) for the
cross and 183 (0xB7) for the dot.
Examples for \a formatCode:
\li \c g normal format code behaviour. If number is small, fixed format is used, if number is large,
normal scientific format is used
\li \c gb If number is small, fixed format is used, if number is large, scientific format is used with
beautifully typeset decimal powers and a dot as multiplication sign
\li \c ebc All numbers are in scientific format with beautifully typeset decimal power and a cross as
multiplication sign
\li \c fb illegal format code, since fixed format doesn't support (or need) beautifully typeset decimal
powers. Format code will be reduced to 'f'.
\li \c hello illegal format code, since first char is not 'e', 'E', 'f', 'g' or 'G'. Current format
code will not be changed.
*/
void QCPAxis::setNumberFormat(const QString &formatCode)
{
if (formatCode.isEmpty())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Passed formatCode is empty";
return;
}
mCachedMarginValid = false;
// interpret first char as number format char:
QString allowedFormatChars(QLatin1String("eEfgG"));
if (allowedFormatChars.contains(formatCode.at(0)))
{
mNumberFormatChar = QLatin1Char(formatCode.at(0).toLatin1());
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (first char not in 'eEfgG'):" << formatCode;
return;
}
if (formatCode.length() < 2)
{
mNumberBeautifulPowers = false;
mAxisPainter->numberMultiplyCross = false;
return;
}
// interpret second char as indicator for beautiful decimal powers:
if (formatCode.at(1) == QLatin1Char('b') && (mNumberFormatChar == QLatin1Char('e') || mNumberFormatChar == QLatin1Char('g')))
{
mNumberBeautifulPowers = true;
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (second char not 'b' or first char neither 'e' nor 'g'):" << formatCode;
return;
}
if (formatCode.length() < 3)
{
mAxisPainter->numberMultiplyCross = false;
return;
}
// interpret third char as indicator for dot or cross multiplication symbol:
if (formatCode.at(2) == QLatin1Char('c'))
{
mAxisPainter->numberMultiplyCross = true;
} else if (formatCode.at(2) == QLatin1Char('d'))
{
mAxisPainter->numberMultiplyCross = false;
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (third char neither 'c' nor 'd'):" << formatCode;
return;
}
}
/*!
Sets the precision of the tick label numbers. See QLocale::toString(double i, char f, int prec)
for details. The effect of precisions are most notably for number Formats starting with 'e', see
\ref setNumberFormat
*/
void QCPAxis::setNumberPrecision(int precision)
{
if (mNumberPrecision != precision)
{
mNumberPrecision = precision;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the ticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the ticks will reach inside the
plot and \a outside is the length they will reach outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than
zero, the tick labels and axis label will increase their distance to the axis accordingly, so
they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setSubTickLength, setTickLengthIn, setTickLengthOut
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLength(int inside, int outside)
{
setTickLengthIn(inside);
setTickLengthOut(outside);
}
/*!
Sets the length of the inward ticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the ticks will reach
inside the plot.
\see setTickLengthOut, setTickLength, setSubTickLength
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLengthIn(int inside)
{
if (mAxisPainter->tickLengthIn != inside)
{
mAxisPainter->tickLengthIn = inside;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the outward ticks in pixels. \a outside is the length the ticks will reach
outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than zero, the tick labels and axis label will
increase their distance to the axis accordingly, so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setTickLengthIn, setTickLength, setSubTickLength
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickLengthOut(int outside)
{
if (mAxisPainter->tickLengthOut != outside)
{
mAxisPainter->tickLengthOut = outside;
mCachedMarginValid = false; // only outside tick length can change margin
}
}
/*!
Sets whether sub tick marks are displayed.
Sub ticks are only potentially visible if (major) ticks are also visible (see \ref setTicks)
\see setTicks
*/
void QCPAxis::setSubTicks(bool show)
{
if (mSubTicks != show)
{
mSubTicks = show;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the subticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the subticks will reach inside
the plot and \a outside is the length they will reach outside the plot. If \a outside is greater
than zero, the tick labels and axis label will increase their distance to the axis accordingly,
so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setTickLength, setSubTickLengthIn, setSubTickLengthOut
*/
void QCPAxis::setSubTickLength(int inside, int outside)
{
setSubTickLengthIn(inside);
setSubTickLengthOut(outside);
}
/*!
Sets the length of the inward subticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the subticks will reach inside
the plot.
\see setSubTickLengthOut, setSubTickLength, setTickLength
*/
void QCPAxis::setSubTickLengthIn(int inside)
{
if (mAxisPainter->subTickLengthIn != inside)
{
mAxisPainter->subTickLengthIn = inside;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the outward subticks in pixels. \a outside is the length the subticks will reach
outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than zero, the tick labels will increase their
distance to the axis accordingly, so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setSubTickLengthIn, setSubTickLength, setTickLength
*/
void QCPAxis::setSubTickLengthOut(int outside)
{
if (mAxisPainter->subTickLengthOut != outside)
{
mAxisPainter->subTickLengthOut = outside;
mCachedMarginValid = false; // only outside tick length can change margin
}
}
/*!
Sets the pen, the axis base line is drawn with.
\see setTickPen, setSubTickPen
*/
void QCPAxis::setBasePen(const QPen &pen)
{
mBasePen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen, tick marks will be drawn with.
\see setTickLength, setBasePen
*/
void QCPAxis::setTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen, subtick marks will be drawn with.
\see setSubTickCount, setSubTickLength, setBasePen
*/
void QCPAxis::setSubTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSubTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the font of the axis label.
\see setLabelColor
*/
void QCPAxis::setLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (mLabelFont != font)
{
mLabelFont = font;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the color of the axis label.
\see setLabelFont
*/
void QCPAxis::setLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the text of the axis label that will be shown below/above or next to the axis, depending on
its orientation. To disable axis labels, pass an empty string as \a str.
*/
void QCPAxis::setLabel(const QString &str)
{
if (mLabel != str)
{
mLabel = str;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the distance between the tick labels and the axis label.
\see setTickLabelPadding, setPadding
*/
void QCPAxis::setLabelPadding(int padding)
{
if (mAxisPainter->labelPadding != padding)
{
mAxisPainter->labelPadding = padding;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the padding of the axis.
When \ref QCPAxisRect::setAutoMargins is enabled, the padding is the additional outer most space,
that is left blank.
The axis padding has no meaning if \ref QCPAxisRect::setAutoMargins is disabled.
\see setLabelPadding, setTickLabelPadding
*/
void QCPAxis::setPadding(int padding)
{
if (mPadding != padding)
{
mPadding = padding;
mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the offset the axis has to its axis rect side.
If an axis rect side has multiple axes and automatic margin calculation is enabled for that side,
only the offset of the inner most axis has meaning (even if it is set to be invisible). The
offset of the other, outer axes is controlled automatically, to place them at appropriate
positions.
*/
void QCPAxis::setOffset(int offset)
{
mAxisPainter->offset = offset;
}
/*!
Sets the font that is used for tick labels when they are selected.
\see setTickLabelFont, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectedTickLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (font != mSelectedTickLabelFont)
{
mSelectedTickLabelFont = font;
// don't set mCachedMarginValid to false here because margin calculation is always done with non-selected fonts
}
}
/*!
Sets the font that is used for the axis label when it is selected.
\see setLabelFont, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectedLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
mSelectedLabelFont = font;
// don't set mCachedMarginValid to false here because margin calculation is always done with non-selected fonts
}
/*!
Sets the color that is used for tick labels when they are selected.
\see setTickLabelColor, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectedTickLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
if (color != mSelectedTickLabelColor)
{
mSelectedTickLabelColor = color;
}
}
/*!
Sets the color that is used for the axis label when it is selected.
\see setLabelColor, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectedLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mSelectedLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the axis base line when selected.
\see setBasePen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectedBasePen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedBasePen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the (major) ticks when selected.
\see setTickPen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectedTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the subticks when selected.
\see setSubTickPen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAxis::setSelectedSubTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedSubTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the style for the lower axis ending. See the documentation of QCPLineEnding for available
styles.
For horizontal axes, this method refers to the left ending, for vertical axes the bottom ending.
Note that this meaning does not change when the axis range is reversed with \ref
setRangeReversed.
\see setUpperEnding
*/
void QCPAxis::setLowerEnding(const QCPLineEnding &ending)
{
mAxisPainter->lowerEnding = ending;
}
/*!
Sets the style for the upper axis ending. See the documentation of QCPLineEnding for available
styles.
For horizontal axes, this method refers to the right ending, for vertical axes the top ending.
Note that this meaning does not change when the axis range is reversed with \ref
setRangeReversed.
\see setLowerEnding
*/
void QCPAxis::setUpperEnding(const QCPLineEnding &ending)
{
mAxisPainter->upperEnding = ending;
}
/*!
If the scale type (\ref setScaleType) is \ref stLinear, \a diff is added to the lower and upper
bounds of the range. The range is simply moved by \a diff.
If the scale type is \ref stLogarithmic, the range bounds are multiplied by \a diff. This
corresponds to an apparent "linear" move in logarithmic scaling by a distance of log(diff).
*/
void QCPAxis::moveRange(double diff)
{
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
mRange.lower += diff;
mRange.upper += diff;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
mRange.lower *= diff;
mRange.upper *= diff;
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Scales the range of this axis by \a factor around the center of the current axis range. For
example, if \a factor is 2.0, then the axis range will double its size, and the point at the axis
range center won't have changed its position in the QCustomPlot widget (i.e. coordinates around
the center will have moved symmetrically closer).
If you wish to scale around a different coordinate than the current axis range center, use the
overload \ref scaleRange(double factor, double center).
*/
void QCPAxis::scaleRange(double factor)
{
scaleRange(factor, range().center());
}
/*! \overload
Scales the range of this axis by \a factor around the coordinate \a center. For example, if \a
factor is 2.0, \a center is 1.0, then the axis range will double its size, and the point at
coordinate 1.0 won't have changed its position in the QCustomPlot widget (i.e. coordinates
around 1.0 will have moved symmetrically closer to 1.0).
\see scaleRange(double factor)
*/
void QCPAxis::scaleRange(double factor, double center)
{
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
QCPRange newRange;
newRange.lower = (mRange.lower-center)*factor + center;
newRange.upper = (mRange.upper-center)*factor + center;
if (QCPRange::validRange(newRange))
mRange = newRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
if ((mRange.upper < 0 && center < 0) || (mRange.upper > 0 && center > 0)) // make sure center has same sign as range
{
QCPRange newRange;
newRange.lower = qPow(mRange.lower/center, factor)*center;
newRange.upper = qPow(mRange.upper/center, factor)*center;
if (QCPRange::validRange(newRange))
mRange = newRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Center of scaling operation doesn't lie in same logarithmic sign domain as range:" << center;
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Scales the range of this axis to have a certain scale \a ratio to \a otherAxis. The scaling will
be done around the center of the current axis range.
For example, if \a ratio is 1, this axis is the \a yAxis and \a otherAxis is \a xAxis, graphs
plotted with those axes will appear in a 1:1 aspect ratio, independent of the aspect ratio the
axis rect has.
This is an operation that changes the range of this axis once, it doesn't fix the scale ratio
indefinitely. Note that calling this function in the constructor of the QCustomPlot's parent
won't have the desired effect, since the widget dimensions aren't defined yet, and a resizeEvent
will follow.
*/
void QCPAxis::setScaleRatio(const QCPAxis *otherAxis, double ratio)
{
int otherPixelSize, ownPixelSize;
if (otherAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
otherPixelSize = otherAxis->axisRect()->width();
else
otherPixelSize = otherAxis->axisRect()->height();
if (orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
ownPixelSize = axisRect()->width();
else
ownPixelSize = axisRect()->height();
double newRangeSize = ratio*otherAxis->range().size()*ownPixelSize/double(otherPixelSize);
setRange(range().center(), newRangeSize, Qt::AlignCenter);
}
/*!
Changes the axis range such that all plottables associated with this axis are fully visible in
that dimension.
\see QCPAbstractPlottable::rescaleAxes, QCustomPlot::rescaleAxes
*/
void QCPAxis::rescale(bool onlyVisiblePlottables)
{
QCPRange newRange;
bool haveRange = false;
foreach (QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable, plottables())
{
if (!plottable->realVisibility() && onlyVisiblePlottables)
continue;
QCPRange plottableRange;
bool currentFoundRange;
QCP::SignDomain signDomain = QCP::sdBoth;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
signDomain = (mRange.upper < 0 ? QCP::sdNegative : QCP::sdPositive);
if (plottable->keyAxis() == this)
plottableRange = plottable->getKeyRange(currentFoundRange, signDomain);
else
plottableRange = plottable->getValueRange(currentFoundRange, signDomain);
if (currentFoundRange)
{
if (!haveRange)
newRange = plottableRange;
else
newRange.expand(plottableRange);
haveRange = true;
}
}
if (haveRange)
{
if (!QCPRange::validRange(newRange)) // likely due to range being zero (plottable has only constant data in this axis dimension), shift current range to at least center the plottable
{
double center = (newRange.lower+newRange.upper)*0.5; // upper and lower should be equal anyway, but just to make sure, incase validRange returned false for other reason
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
newRange.lower = center-mRange.size()/2.0;
newRange.upper = center+mRange.size()/2.0;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
newRange.lower = center/qSqrt(mRange.upper/mRange.lower);
newRange.upper = center*qSqrt(mRange.upper/mRange.lower);
}
}
setRange(newRange);
}
}
/*!
Transforms \a value, in pixel coordinates of the QCustomPlot widget, to axis coordinates.
*/
double QCPAxis::pixelToCoord(double value) const
{
if (orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return (value-mAxisRect->left())/double(mAxisRect->width())*mRange.size()+mRange.lower;
else
return -(value-mAxisRect->left())/double(mAxisRect->width())*mRange.size()+mRange.upper;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return qPow(mRange.upper/mRange.lower, (value-mAxisRect->left())/double(mAxisRect->width()))*mRange.lower;
else
return qPow(mRange.upper/mRange.lower, (mAxisRect->left()-value)/double(mAxisRect->width()))*mRange.upper;
}
} else // orientation() == Qt::Vertical
{
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return (mAxisRect->bottom()-value)/double(mAxisRect->height())*mRange.size()+mRange.lower;
else
return -(mAxisRect->bottom()-value)/double(mAxisRect->height())*mRange.size()+mRange.upper;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return qPow(mRange.upper/mRange.lower, (mAxisRect->bottom()-value)/double(mAxisRect->height()))*mRange.lower;
else
return qPow(mRange.upper/mRange.lower, (value-mAxisRect->bottom())/double(mAxisRect->height()))*mRange.upper;
}
}
}
/*!
Transforms \a value, in coordinates of the axis, to pixel coordinates of the QCustomPlot widget.
*/
double QCPAxis::coordToPixel(double value) const
{
if (orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return (value-mRange.lower)/mRange.size()*mAxisRect->width()+mAxisRect->left();
else
return (mRange.upper-value)/mRange.size()*mAxisRect->width()+mAxisRect->left();
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
if (value >= 0.0 && mRange.upper < 0.0) // invalid value for logarithmic scale, just draw it outside visible range
return !mRangeReversed ? mAxisRect->right()+200 : mAxisRect->left()-200;
else if (value <= 0.0 && mRange.upper >= 0.0) // invalid value for logarithmic scale, just draw it outside visible range
return !mRangeReversed ? mAxisRect->left()-200 : mAxisRect->right()+200;
else
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return qLn(value/mRange.lower)/qLn(mRange.upper/mRange.lower)*mAxisRect->width()+mAxisRect->left();
else
return qLn(mRange.upper/value)/qLn(mRange.upper/mRange.lower)*mAxisRect->width()+mAxisRect->left();
}
}
} else // orientation() == Qt::Vertical
{
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return mAxisRect->bottom()-(value-mRange.lower)/mRange.size()*mAxisRect->height();
else
return mAxisRect->bottom()-(mRange.upper-value)/mRange.size()*mAxisRect->height();
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
if (value >= 0.0 && mRange.upper < 0.0) // invalid value for logarithmic scale, just draw it outside visible range
return !mRangeReversed ? mAxisRect->top()-200 : mAxisRect->bottom()+200;
else if (value <= 0.0 && mRange.upper >= 0.0) // invalid value for logarithmic scale, just draw it outside visible range
return !mRangeReversed ? mAxisRect->bottom()+200 : mAxisRect->top()-200;
else
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return mAxisRect->bottom()-qLn(value/mRange.lower)/qLn(mRange.upper/mRange.lower)*mAxisRect->height();
else
return mAxisRect->bottom()-qLn(mRange.upper/value)/qLn(mRange.upper/mRange.lower)*mAxisRect->height();
}
}
}
}
/*!
Returns the part of the axis that is hit by \a pos (in pixels). The return value of this function
is independent of the user-selectable parts defined with \ref setSelectableParts. Further, this
function does not change the current selection state of the axis.
If the axis is not visible (\ref setVisible), this function always returns \ref spNone.
\see setSelectedParts, setSelectableParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
QCPAxis::SelectablePart QCPAxis::getPartAt(const QPointF &pos) const
{
if (!mVisible)
return spNone;
if (mAxisPainter->axisSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spAxis;
else if (mAxisPainter->tickLabelsSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spTickLabels;
else if (mAxisPainter->labelSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spAxisLabel;
else
return spNone;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPAxis::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
if (!mParentPlot) return -1;
SelectablePart part = getPartAt(pos);
if ((onlySelectable && !mSelectableParts.testFlag(part)) || part == spNone)
return -1;
if (details)
details->setValue(part);
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
/*!
Returns a list of all the plottables that have this axis as key or value axis.
If you are only interested in plottables of type QCPGraph, see \ref graphs.
\see graphs, items
*/
QList<QCPAbstractPlottable*> QCPAxis::plottables() const
{
QList<QCPAbstractPlottable*> result;
if (!mParentPlot) return result;
foreach (QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable, mParentPlot->mPlottables)
{
if (plottable->keyAxis() == this || plottable->valueAxis() == this)
result.append(plottable);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a list of all the graphs that have this axis as key or value axis.
\see plottables, items
*/
QList<QCPGraph*> QCPAxis::graphs() const
{
QList<QCPGraph*> result;
if (!mParentPlot) return result;
foreach (QCPGraph *graph, mParentPlot->mGraphs)
{
if (graph->keyAxis() == this || graph->valueAxis() == this)
result.append(graph);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a list of all the items that are associated with this axis. An item is considered
associated with an axis if at least one of its positions uses the axis as key or value axis.
\see plottables, graphs
*/
QList<QCPAbstractItem*> QCPAxis::items() const
{
QList<QCPAbstractItem*> result;
if (!mParentPlot) return result;
foreach (QCPAbstractItem *item, mParentPlot->mItems)
{
foreach (QCPItemPosition *position, item->positions())
{
if (position->keyAxis() == this || position->valueAxis() == this)
{
result.append(item);
break;
}
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Transforms a margin side to the logically corresponding axis type. (QCP::msLeft to
QCPAxis::atLeft, QCP::msRight to QCPAxis::atRight, etc.)
*/
QCPAxis::AxisType QCPAxis::marginSideToAxisType(QCP::MarginSide side)
{
switch (side)
{
case QCP::msLeft: return atLeft;
case QCP::msRight: return atRight;
case QCP::msTop: return atTop;
case QCP::msBottom: return atBottom;
default: break;
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid margin side passed:" << static_cast<int>(side);
return atLeft;
}
/*!
Returns the axis type that describes the opposite axis of an axis with the specified \a type.
*/
QCPAxis::AxisType QCPAxis::opposite(QCPAxis::AxisType type)
{
switch (type)
{
case atLeft: return atRight;
case atRight: return atLeft;
case atBottom: return atTop;
case atTop: return atBottom;
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid axis type";
return atLeft;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAxis::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
SelectablePart part = details.value<SelectablePart>();
if (mSelectableParts.testFlag(part))
{
SelectableParts selBefore = mSelectedParts;
setSelectedParts(additive ? mSelectedParts^part : part);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelectedParts != selBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAxis::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
SelectableParts selBefore = mSelectedParts;
setSelectedParts(mSelectedParts & ~mSelectableParts);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelectedParts != selBefore;
}
/*! \internal
This mouse event reimplementation provides the functionality to let the user drag individual axes
exclusively, by startig the drag on top of the axis.
For the axis to accept this event and perform the single axis drag, the parent \ref QCPAxisRect
must be configured accordingly, i.e. it must allow range dragging in the orientation of this axis
(\ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeDrag) and this axis must be a draggable axis (\ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes)
\seebaseclassmethod
\note The dragging of possibly multiple axes at once by starting the drag anywhere in the axis
rect is handled by the axis rect's mouse event, e.g. \ref QCPAxisRect::mousePressEvent.
*/
void QCPAxis::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (!mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeDrag) ||
!mAxisRect->rangeDrag().testFlag(orientation()) ||
!mAxisRect->rangeDragAxes(orientation()).contains(this))
{
event->ignore();
return;
}
if (event->buttons() & Qt::LeftButton)
{
mDragging = true;
// initialize antialiasing backup in case we start dragging:
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
{
mAADragBackup = mParentPlot->antialiasedElements();
mNotAADragBackup = mParentPlot->notAntialiasedElements();
}
// Mouse range dragging interaction:
if (mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeDrag))
mDragStartRange = mRange;
}
}
/*! \internal
This mouse event reimplementation provides the functionality to let the user drag individual axes
exclusively, by startig the drag on top of the axis.
\seebaseclassmethod
\note The dragging of possibly multiple axes at once by starting the drag anywhere in the axis
rect is handled by the axis rect's mouse event, e.g. \ref QCPAxisRect::mousePressEvent.
\see QCPAxis::mousePressEvent
*/
void QCPAxis::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
if (mDragging)
{
const double startPixel = orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? startPos.x() : startPos.y();
const double currentPixel = orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? event->pos().x() : event->pos().y();
if (mScaleType == QCPAxis::stLinear)
{
const double diff = pixelToCoord(startPixel) - pixelToCoord(currentPixel);
setRange(mDragStartRange.lower+diff, mDragStartRange.upper+diff);
} else if (mScaleType == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
{
const double diff = pixelToCoord(startPixel) / pixelToCoord(currentPixel);
setRange(mDragStartRange.lower*diff, mDragStartRange.upper*diff);
}
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
mParentPlot->setNotAntialiasedElements(QCP::aeAll);
mParentPlot->replot(QCustomPlot::rpQueuedReplot);
}
}
/*! \internal
This mouse event reimplementation provides the functionality to let the user drag individual axes
exclusively, by startig the drag on top of the axis.
\seebaseclassmethod
\note The dragging of possibly multiple axes at once by starting the drag anywhere in the axis
rect is handled by the axis rect's mouse event, e.g. \ref QCPAxisRect::mousePressEvent.
\see QCPAxis::mousePressEvent
*/
void QCPAxis::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
Q_UNUSED(startPos)
mDragging = false;
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
{
mParentPlot->setAntialiasedElements(mAADragBackup);
mParentPlot->setNotAntialiasedElements(mNotAADragBackup);
}
}
/*! \internal
This mouse event reimplementation provides the functionality to let the user zoom individual axes
exclusively, by performing the wheel event on top of the axis.
For the axis to accept this event and perform the single axis zoom, the parent \ref QCPAxisRect
must be configured accordingly, i.e. it must allow range zooming in the orientation of this axis
(\ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoom) and this axis must be a zoomable axis (\ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomAxes)
\seebaseclassmethod
\note The zooming of possibly multiple axes at once by performing the wheel event anywhere in the
axis rect is handled by the axis rect's mouse event, e.g. \ref QCPAxisRect::wheelEvent.
*/
void QCPAxis::wheelEvent(QWheelEvent *event)
{
// Mouse range zooming interaction:
if (!mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeZoom) ||
!mAxisRect->rangeZoom().testFlag(orientation()) ||
!mAxisRect->rangeZoomAxes(orientation()).contains(this))
{
event->ignore();
return;
}
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 0, 0)
const double delta = event->delta();
#else
const double delta = event->angleDelta().y();
#endif
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 14, 0)
const QPointF pos = event->pos();
#else
const QPointF pos = event->position();
#endif
const double wheelSteps = delta/120.0; // a single step delta is +/-120 usually
const double factor = qPow(mAxisRect->rangeZoomFactor(orientation()), wheelSteps);
scaleRange(factor, pixelToCoord(orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? pos.x() : pos.y()));
mParentPlot->replot();
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing axis lines.
This is the antialiasing state the painter passed to the \ref draw method is in by default.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\seebaseclassmethod
\see setAntialiased
*/
void QCPAxis::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeAxes);
}
/*! \internal
Draws the axis with the specified \a painter, using the internal QCPAxisPainterPrivate instance.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPAxis::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QVector<double> subTickPositions; // the final coordToPixel transformed vector passed to QCPAxisPainter
QVector<double> tickPositions; // the final coordToPixel transformed vector passed to QCPAxisPainter
QVector<QString> tickLabels; // the final vector passed to QCPAxisPainter
tickPositions.reserve(mTickVector.size());
tickLabels.reserve(mTickVector.size());
subTickPositions.reserve(mSubTickVector.size());
if (mTicks)
{
for (int i=0; i<mTickVector.size(); ++i)
{
tickPositions.append(coordToPixel(mTickVector.at(i)));
if (mTickLabels)
tickLabels.append(mTickVectorLabels.at(i));
}
if (mSubTicks)
{
const int subTickCount = mSubTickVector.size();
for (int i=0; i<subTickCount; ++i)
subTickPositions.append(coordToPixel(mSubTickVector.at(i)));
}
}
// transfer all properties of this axis to QCPAxisPainterPrivate which it needs to draw the axis.
// Note that some axis painter properties are already set by direct feed-through with QCPAxis setters
mAxisPainter->type = mAxisType;
mAxisPainter->basePen = getBasePen();
mAxisPainter->labelFont = getLabelFont();
mAxisPainter->labelColor = getLabelColor();
mAxisPainter->label = mLabel;
mAxisPainter->substituteExponent = mNumberBeautifulPowers;
mAxisPainter->tickPen = getTickPen();
mAxisPainter->subTickPen = getSubTickPen();
mAxisPainter->tickLabelFont = getTickLabelFont();
mAxisPainter->tickLabelColor = getTickLabelColor();
mAxisPainter->axisRect = mAxisRect->rect();
mAxisPainter->viewportRect = mParentPlot->viewport();
mAxisPainter->abbreviateDecimalPowers = mScaleType == stLogarithmic;
mAxisPainter->reversedEndings = mRangeReversed;
mAxisPainter->tickPositions = tickPositions;
mAxisPainter->tickLabels = tickLabels;
mAxisPainter->subTickPositions = subTickPositions;
mAxisPainter->draw(painter);
}
/*! \internal
Prepares the internal tick vector, sub tick vector and tick label vector. This is done by calling
QCPAxisTicker::generate on the currently installed ticker.
If a change in the label text/count is detected, the cached axis margin is invalidated to make
sure the next margin calculation recalculates the label sizes and returns an up-to-date value.
*/
void QCPAxis::setupTickVectors()
{
if (!mParentPlot) return;
if ((!mTicks && !mTickLabels && !mGrid->visible()) || mRange.size() <= 0) return;
QVector<QString> oldLabels = mTickVectorLabels;
mTicker->generate(mRange, mParentPlot->locale(), mNumberFormatChar, mNumberPrecision, mTickVector, mSubTicks ? &mSubTickVector : nullptr, mTickLabels ? &mTickVectorLabels : nullptr);
mCachedMarginValid &= mTickVectorLabels == oldLabels; // if labels have changed, margin might have changed, too
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the axis base line. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedBasePen or mBasePen.
*/
QPen QCPAxis::getBasePen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedBasePen : mBasePen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the (major) ticks. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickPen or mTickPen.
*/
QPen QCPAxis::getTickPen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedTickPen : mTickPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the subticks. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedSubTickPen or mSubTickPen.
*/
QPen QCPAxis::getSubTickPen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedSubTickPen : mSubTickPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the font that is used to draw the tick labels. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickLabelFont or mTickLabelFont.
*/
QFont QCPAxis::getTickLabelFont() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spTickLabels) ? mSelectedTickLabelFont : mTickLabelFont;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the font that is used to draw the axis label. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedLabelFont or mLabelFont.
*/
QFont QCPAxis::getLabelFont() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxisLabel) ? mSelectedLabelFont : mLabelFont;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the color that is used to draw the tick labels. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickLabelColor or mTickLabelColor.
*/
QColor QCPAxis::getTickLabelColor() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spTickLabels) ? mSelectedTickLabelColor : mTickLabelColor;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the color that is used to draw the axis label. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedLabelColor or mLabelColor.
*/
QColor QCPAxis::getLabelColor() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxisLabel) ? mSelectedLabelColor : mLabelColor;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the appropriate outward margin for this axis. It is needed if \ref
QCPAxisRect::setAutoMargins is set to true on the parent axis rect. An axis with axis type \ref
atLeft will return an appropriate left margin, \ref atBottom will return an appropriate bottom
margin and so forth. For the calculation, this function goes through similar steps as \ref draw,
so changing one function likely requires the modification of the other one as well.
The margin consists of the outward tick length, tick label padding, tick label size, label
padding, label size, and padding.
The margin is cached internally, so repeated calls while leaving the axis range, fonts, etc.
unchanged are very fast.
*/
int QCPAxis::calculateMargin()
{
if (!mVisible) // if not visible, directly return 0, don't cache 0 because we can't react to setVisible in QCPAxis
return 0;
if (mCachedMarginValid)
return mCachedMargin;
// run through similar steps as QCPAxis::draw, and calculate margin needed to fit axis and its labels
int margin = 0;
QVector<double> tickPositions; // the final coordToPixel transformed vector passed to QCPAxisPainter
QVector<QString> tickLabels; // the final vector passed to QCPAxisPainter
tickPositions.reserve(mTickVector.size());
tickLabels.reserve(mTickVector.size());
if (mTicks)
{
for (int i=0; i<mTickVector.size(); ++i)
{
tickPositions.append(coordToPixel(mTickVector.at(i)));
if (mTickLabels)
tickLabels.append(mTickVectorLabels.at(i));
}
}
// transfer all properties of this axis to QCPAxisPainterPrivate which it needs to calculate the size.
// Note that some axis painter properties are already set by direct feed-through with QCPAxis setters
mAxisPainter->type = mAxisType;
mAxisPainter->labelFont = getLabelFont();
mAxisPainter->label = mLabel;
mAxisPainter->tickLabelFont = mTickLabelFont;
mAxisPainter->axisRect = mAxisRect->rect();
mAxisPainter->viewportRect = mParentPlot->viewport();
mAxisPainter->tickPositions = tickPositions;
mAxisPainter->tickLabels = tickLabels;
margin += mAxisPainter->size();
margin += mPadding;
mCachedMargin = margin;
mCachedMarginValid = true;
return margin;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCP::Interaction QCPAxis::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectAxes;
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisPainterPrivate
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisPainterPrivate
\internal
\brief (Private)
This is a private class and not part of the public QCustomPlot interface.
It is used by QCPAxis to do the low-level drawing of axis backbone, tick marks, tick labels and
axis label. It also buffers the labels to reduce replot times. The parameters are configured by
directly accessing the public member variables.
*/
/*!
Constructs a QCPAxisPainterPrivate instance. Make sure to not create a new instance on every
redraw, to utilize the caching mechanisms.
*/
QCPAxisPainterPrivate::QCPAxisPainterPrivate(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
type(QCPAxis::atLeft),
basePen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
lowerEnding(QCPLineEnding::esNone),
upperEnding(QCPLineEnding::esNone),
labelPadding(0),
tickLabelPadding(0),
tickLabelRotation(0),
tickLabelSide(QCPAxis::lsOutside),
substituteExponent(true),
numberMultiplyCross(false),
tickLengthIn(5),
tickLengthOut(0),
subTickLengthIn(2),
subTickLengthOut(0),
tickPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
subTickPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
offset(0),
abbreviateDecimalPowers(false),
reversedEndings(false),
mParentPlot(parentPlot),
mLabelCache(16) // cache at most 16 (tick) labels
{
}
QCPAxisPainterPrivate::~QCPAxisPainterPrivate()
{
}
/*! \internal
Draws the axis with the specified \a painter.
The selection boxes (mAxisSelectionBox, mTickLabelsSelectionBox, mLabelSelectionBox) are set
here, too.
*/
void QCPAxisPainterPrivate::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QByteArray newHash = generateLabelParameterHash();
if (newHash != mLabelParameterHash)
{
mLabelCache.clear();
mLabelParameterHash = newHash;
}
QPoint origin;
switch (type)
{
case QCPAxis::atLeft: origin = axisRect.bottomLeft() +QPoint(-offset, 0); break;
case QCPAxis::atRight: origin = axisRect.bottomRight()+QPoint(+offset, 0); break;
case QCPAxis::atTop: origin = axisRect.topLeft() +QPoint(0, -offset); break;
case QCPAxis::atBottom: origin = axisRect.bottomLeft() +QPoint(0, +offset); break;
}
double xCor = 0, yCor = 0; // paint system correction, for pixel exact matches (affects baselines and ticks of top/right axes)
switch (type)
{
case QCPAxis::atTop: yCor = -1; break;
case QCPAxis::atRight: xCor = 1; break;
default: break;
}
int margin = 0;
// draw baseline:
QLineF baseLine;
painter->setPen(basePen);
if (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal)
baseLine.setPoints(origin+QPointF(xCor, yCor), origin+QPointF(axisRect.width()+xCor, yCor));
else
baseLine.setPoints(origin+QPointF(xCor, yCor), origin+QPointF(xCor, -axisRect.height()+yCor));
if (reversedEndings)
baseLine = QLineF(baseLine.p2(), baseLine.p1()); // won't make a difference for line itself, but for line endings later
painter->drawLine(baseLine);
// draw ticks:
if (!tickPositions.isEmpty())
{
painter->setPen(tickPen);
int tickDir = (type == QCPAxis::atBottom || type == QCPAxis::atRight) ? -1 : 1; // direction of ticks ("inward" is right for left axis and left for right axis)
if (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal)
{
foreach (double tickPos, tickPositions)
painter->drawLine(QLineF(tickPos+xCor, origin.y()-tickLengthOut*tickDir+yCor, tickPos+xCor, origin.y()+tickLengthIn*tickDir+yCor));
} else
{
foreach (double tickPos, tickPositions)
painter->drawLine(QLineF(origin.x()-tickLengthOut*tickDir+xCor, tickPos+yCor, origin.x()+tickLengthIn*tickDir+xCor, tickPos+yCor));
}
}
// draw subticks:
if (!subTickPositions.isEmpty())
{
painter->setPen(subTickPen);
// direction of ticks ("inward" is right for left axis and left for right axis)
int tickDir = (type == QCPAxis::atBottom || type == QCPAxis::atRight) ? -1 : 1;
if (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal)
{
foreach (double subTickPos, subTickPositions)
painter->drawLine(QLineF(subTickPos+xCor, origin.y()-subTickLengthOut*tickDir+yCor, subTickPos+xCor, origin.y()+subTickLengthIn*tickDir+yCor));
} else
{
foreach (double subTickPos, subTickPositions)
painter->drawLine(QLineF(origin.x()-subTickLengthOut*tickDir+xCor, subTickPos+yCor, origin.x()+subTickLengthIn*tickDir+xCor, subTickPos+yCor));
}
}
margin += qMax(0, qMax(tickLengthOut, subTickLengthOut));
// draw axis base endings:
bool antialiasingBackup = painter->antialiasing();
painter->setAntialiasing(true); // always want endings to be antialiased, even if base and ticks themselves aren't
painter->setBrush(QBrush(basePen.color()));
QCPVector2D baseLineVector(baseLine.dx(), baseLine.dy());
if (lowerEnding.style() != QCPLineEnding::esNone)
lowerEnding.draw(painter, QCPVector2D(baseLine.p1())-baseLineVector.normalized()*lowerEnding.realLength()*(lowerEnding.inverted()?-1:1), -baseLineVector);
if (upperEnding.style() != QCPLineEnding::esNone)
upperEnding.draw(painter, QCPVector2D(baseLine.p2())+baseLineVector.normalized()*upperEnding.realLength()*(upperEnding.inverted()?-1:1), baseLineVector);
painter->setAntialiasing(antialiasingBackup);
// tick labels:
QRect oldClipRect;
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsInside) // if using inside labels, clip them to the axis rect
{
oldClipRect = painter->clipRegion().boundingRect();
painter->setClipRect(axisRect);
}
QSize tickLabelsSize(0, 0); // size of largest tick label, for offset calculation of axis label
if (!tickLabels.isEmpty())
{
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
margin += tickLabelPadding;
painter->setFont(tickLabelFont);
painter->setPen(QPen(tickLabelColor));
const int maxLabelIndex = qMin(tickPositions.size(), tickLabels.size());
int distanceToAxis = margin;
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsInside)
distanceToAxis = -(qMax(tickLengthIn, subTickLengthIn)+tickLabelPadding);
for (int i=0; i<maxLabelIndex; ++i)
placeTickLabel(painter, tickPositions.at(i), distanceToAxis, tickLabels.at(i), &tickLabelsSize);
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
margin += (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal) ? tickLabelsSize.height() : tickLabelsSize.width();
}
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsInside)
painter->setClipRect(oldClipRect);
// axis label:
QRect labelBounds;
if (!label.isEmpty())
{
margin += labelPadding;
painter->setFont(labelFont);
painter->setPen(QPen(labelColor));
labelBounds = painter->fontMetrics().boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, label);
if (type == QCPAxis::atLeft)
{
QTransform oldTransform = painter->transform();
painter->translate((origin.x()-margin-labelBounds.height()), origin.y());
painter->rotate(-90);
painter->drawText(0, 0, axisRect.height(), labelBounds.height(), Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignCenter, label);
painter->setTransform(oldTransform);
}
else if (type == QCPAxis::atRight)
{
QTransform oldTransform = painter->transform();
painter->translate((origin.x()+margin+labelBounds.height()), origin.y()-axisRect.height());
painter->rotate(90);
painter->drawText(0, 0, axisRect.height(), labelBounds.height(), Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignCenter, label);
painter->setTransform(oldTransform);
}
else if (type == QCPAxis::atTop)
painter->drawText(origin.x(), origin.y()-margin-labelBounds.height(), axisRect.width(), labelBounds.height(), Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignCenter, label);
else if (type == QCPAxis::atBottom)
painter->drawText(origin.x(), origin.y()+margin, axisRect.width(), labelBounds.height(), Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignCenter, label);
}
// set selection boxes:
int selectionTolerance = 0;
if (mParentPlot)
selectionTolerance = mParentPlot->selectionTolerance();
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "mParentPlot is null";
int selAxisOutSize = qMax(qMax(tickLengthOut, subTickLengthOut), selectionTolerance);
int selAxisInSize = selectionTolerance;
int selTickLabelSize;
int selTickLabelOffset;
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
{
selTickLabelSize = (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal ? tickLabelsSize.height() : tickLabelsSize.width());
selTickLabelOffset = qMax(tickLengthOut, subTickLengthOut)+tickLabelPadding;
} else
{
selTickLabelSize = -(QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal ? tickLabelsSize.height() : tickLabelsSize.width());
selTickLabelOffset = -(qMax(tickLengthIn, subTickLengthIn)+tickLabelPadding);
}
int selLabelSize = labelBounds.height();
int selLabelOffset = qMax(tickLengthOut, subTickLengthOut)+(!tickLabels.isEmpty() && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside ? tickLabelPadding+selTickLabelSize : 0)+labelPadding;
if (type == QCPAxis::atLeft)
{
mAxisSelectionBox.setCoords(origin.x()-selAxisOutSize, axisRect.top(), origin.x()+selAxisInSize, axisRect.bottom());
mTickLabelsSelectionBox.setCoords(origin.x()-selTickLabelOffset-selTickLabelSize, axisRect.top(), origin.x()-selTickLabelOffset, axisRect.bottom());
mLabelSelectionBox.setCoords(origin.x()-selLabelOffset-selLabelSize, axisRect.top(), origin.x()-selLabelOffset, axisRect.bottom());
} else if (type == QCPAxis::atRight)
{
mAxisSelectionBox.setCoords(origin.x()-selAxisInSize, axisRect.top(), origin.x()+selAxisOutSize, axisRect.bottom());
mTickLabelsSelectionBox.setCoords(origin.x()+selTickLabelOffset+selTickLabelSize, axisRect.top(), origin.x()+selTickLabelOffset, axisRect.bottom());
mLabelSelectionBox.setCoords(origin.x()+selLabelOffset+selLabelSize, axisRect.top(), origin.x()+selLabelOffset, axisRect.bottom());
} else if (type == QCPAxis::atTop)
{
mAxisSelectionBox.setCoords(axisRect.left(), origin.y()-selAxisOutSize, axisRect.right(), origin.y()+selAxisInSize);
mTickLabelsSelectionBox.setCoords(axisRect.left(), origin.y()-selTickLabelOffset-selTickLabelSize, axisRect.right(), origin.y()-selTickLabelOffset);
mLabelSelectionBox.setCoords(axisRect.left(), origin.y()-selLabelOffset-selLabelSize, axisRect.right(), origin.y()-selLabelOffset);
} else if (type == QCPAxis::atBottom)
{
mAxisSelectionBox.setCoords(axisRect.left(), origin.y()-selAxisInSize, axisRect.right(), origin.y()+selAxisOutSize);
mTickLabelsSelectionBox.setCoords(axisRect.left(), origin.y()+selTickLabelOffset+selTickLabelSize, axisRect.right(), origin.y()+selTickLabelOffset);
mLabelSelectionBox.setCoords(axisRect.left(), origin.y()+selLabelOffset+selLabelSize, axisRect.right(), origin.y()+selLabelOffset);
}
mAxisSelectionBox = mAxisSelectionBox.normalized();
mTickLabelsSelectionBox = mTickLabelsSelectionBox.normalized();
mLabelSelectionBox = mLabelSelectionBox.normalized();
// draw hitboxes for debug purposes:
//painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
//painter->drawRects(QVector<QRect>() << mAxisSelectionBox << mTickLabelsSelectionBox << mLabelSelectionBox);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the size ("margin" in QCPAxisRect context, so measured perpendicular to the axis backbone
direction) needed to fit the axis.
*/
int QCPAxisPainterPrivate::size()
{
int result = 0;
QByteArray newHash = generateLabelParameterHash();
if (newHash != mLabelParameterHash)
{
mLabelCache.clear();
mLabelParameterHash = newHash;
}
// get length of tick marks pointing outwards:
if (!tickPositions.isEmpty())
result += qMax(0, qMax(tickLengthOut, subTickLengthOut));
// calculate size of tick labels:
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
{
QSize tickLabelsSize(0, 0);
if (!tickLabels.isEmpty())
{
foreach (const QString &tickLabel, tickLabels)
getMaxTickLabelSize(tickLabelFont, tickLabel, &tickLabelsSize);
result += QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal ? tickLabelsSize.height() : tickLabelsSize.width();
result += tickLabelPadding;
}
}
// calculate size of axis label (only height needed, because left/right labels are rotated by 90 degrees):
if (!label.isEmpty())
{
QFontMetrics fontMetrics(labelFont);
QRect bounds;
bounds = fontMetrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignHCenter | Qt::AlignVCenter, label);
result += bounds.height() + labelPadding;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Clears the internal label cache. Upon the next \ref draw, all labels will be created new. This
method is called automatically in \ref draw, if any parameters have changed that invalidate the
cached labels, such as font, color, etc.
*/
void QCPAxisPainterPrivate::clearCache()
{
mLabelCache.clear();
}
/*! \internal
Returns a hash that allows uniquely identifying whether the label parameters have changed such
that the cached labels must be refreshed (\ref clearCache). It is used in \ref draw. If the
return value of this method hasn't changed since the last redraw, the respective label parameters
haven't changed and cached labels may be used.
*/
QByteArray QCPAxisPainterPrivate::generateLabelParameterHash() const
{
QByteArray result;
result.append(QByteArray::number(mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio()));
result.append(QByteArray::number(tickLabelRotation));
result.append(QByteArray::number(int(tickLabelSide)));
result.append(QByteArray::number(int(substituteExponent)));
result.append(QByteArray::number(int(numberMultiplyCross)));
result.append(tickLabelColor.name().toLatin1()+QByteArray::number(tickLabelColor.alpha(), 16));
result.append(tickLabelFont.toString().toLatin1());
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Draws a single tick label with the provided \a painter, utilizing the internal label cache to
significantly speed up drawing of labels that were drawn in previous calls. The tick label is
always bound to an axis, the distance to the axis is controllable via \a distanceToAxis in
pixels. The pixel position in the axis direction is passed in the \a position parameter. Hence
for the bottom axis, \a position would indicate the horizontal pixel position (not coordinate),
at which the label should be drawn.
In order to later draw the axis label in a place that doesn't overlap with the tick labels, the
largest tick label size is needed. This is acquired by passing a \a tickLabelsSize to the \ref
drawTickLabel calls during the process of drawing all tick labels of one axis. In every call, \a
tickLabelsSize is expanded, if the drawn label exceeds the value \a tickLabelsSize currently
holds.
The label is drawn with the font and pen that are currently set on the \a painter. To draw
superscripted powers, the font is temporarily made smaller by a fixed factor (see \ref
getTickLabelData).
*/
void QCPAxisPainterPrivate::placeTickLabel(QCPPainter *painter, double position, int distanceToAxis, const QString &text, QSize *tickLabelsSize)
{
// warning: if you change anything here, also adapt getMaxTickLabelSize() accordingly!
if (text.isEmpty()) return;
QSize finalSize;
QPointF labelAnchor;
switch (type)
{
case QCPAxis::atLeft: labelAnchor = QPointF(axisRect.left()-distanceToAxis-offset, position); break;
case QCPAxis::atRight: labelAnchor = QPointF(axisRect.right()+distanceToAxis+offset, position); break;
case QCPAxis::atTop: labelAnchor = QPointF(position, axisRect.top()-distanceToAxis-offset); break;
case QCPAxis::atBottom: labelAnchor = QPointF(position, axisRect.bottom()+distanceToAxis+offset); break;
}
if (mParentPlot->plottingHints().testFlag(QCP::phCacheLabels) && !painter->modes().testFlag(QCPPainter::pmNoCaching)) // label caching enabled
{
CachedLabel *cachedLabel = mLabelCache.take(text); // attempt to get label from cache
if (!cachedLabel) // no cached label existed, create it
{
cachedLabel = new CachedLabel;
TickLabelData labelData = getTickLabelData(painter->font(), text);
cachedLabel->offset = getTickLabelDrawOffset(labelData)+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.topLeft();
if (!qFuzzyCompare(1.0, mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio()))
{
cachedLabel->pixmap = QPixmap(labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.size()*mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio());
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
# ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_FLOAT
cachedLabel->pixmap.setDevicePixelRatio(mParentPlot->devicePixelRatioF());
# else
cachedLabel->pixmap.setDevicePixelRatio(mParentPlot->devicePixelRatio());
# endif
#endif
} else
cachedLabel->pixmap = QPixmap(labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.size());
cachedLabel->pixmap.fill(Qt::transparent);
QCPPainter cachePainter(&cachedLabel->pixmap);
cachePainter.setPen(painter->pen());
drawTickLabel(&cachePainter, -labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.topLeft().x(), -labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.topLeft().y(), labelData);
}
// if label would be partly clipped by widget border on sides, don't draw it (only for outside tick labels):
bool labelClippedByBorder = false;
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
{
if (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal)
labelClippedByBorder = labelAnchor.x()+cachedLabel->offset.x()+cachedLabel->pixmap.width()/mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio() > viewportRect.right() || labelAnchor.x()+cachedLabel->offset.x() < viewportRect.left();
else
labelClippedByBorder = labelAnchor.y()+cachedLabel->offset.y()+cachedLabel->pixmap.height()/mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio() > viewportRect.bottom() || labelAnchor.y()+cachedLabel->offset.y() < viewportRect.top();
}
if (!labelClippedByBorder)
{
painter->drawPixmap(labelAnchor+cachedLabel->offset, cachedLabel->pixmap);
finalSize = cachedLabel->pixmap.size()/mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio();
}
mLabelCache.insert(text, cachedLabel); // return label to cache or insert for the first time if newly created
} else // label caching disabled, draw text directly on surface:
{
TickLabelData labelData = getTickLabelData(painter->font(), text);
QPointF finalPosition = labelAnchor + getTickLabelDrawOffset(labelData);
// if label would be partly clipped by widget border on sides, don't draw it (only for outside tick labels):
bool labelClippedByBorder = false;
if (tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside)
{
if (QCPAxis::orientation(type) == Qt::Horizontal)
labelClippedByBorder = finalPosition.x()+(labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.width()+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.left()) > viewportRect.right() || finalPosition.x()+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.left() < viewportRect.left();
else
labelClippedByBorder = finalPosition.y()+(labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.height()+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.top()) > viewportRect.bottom() || finalPosition.y()+labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.top() < viewportRect.top();
}
if (!labelClippedByBorder)
{
drawTickLabel(painter, finalPosition.x(), finalPosition.y(), labelData);
finalSize = labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.size();
}
}
// expand passed tickLabelsSize if current tick label is larger:
if (finalSize.width() > tickLabelsSize->width())
tickLabelsSize->setWidth(finalSize.width());
if (finalSize.height() > tickLabelsSize->height())
tickLabelsSize->setHeight(finalSize.height());
}
/*! \internal
This is a \ref placeTickLabel helper function.
Draws the tick label specified in \a labelData with \a painter at the pixel positions \a x and \a
y. This function is used by \ref placeTickLabel to create new tick labels for the cache, or to
directly draw the labels on the QCustomPlot surface when label caching is disabled, i.e. when
QCP::phCacheLabels plotting hint is not set.
*/
void QCPAxisPainterPrivate::drawTickLabel(QCPPainter *painter, double x, double y, const TickLabelData &labelData) const
{
// backup painter settings that we're about to change:
QTransform oldTransform = painter->transform();
QFont oldFont = painter->font();
// transform painter to position/rotation:
painter->translate(x, y);
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(tickLabelRotation))
painter->rotate(tickLabelRotation);
// draw text:
if (!labelData.expPart.isEmpty()) // indicator that beautiful powers must be used
{
painter->setFont(labelData.baseFont);
painter->drawText(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, labelData.basePart);
if (!labelData.suffixPart.isEmpty())
painter->drawText(labelData.baseBounds.width()+1+labelData.expBounds.width(), 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, labelData.suffixPart);
painter->setFont(labelData.expFont);
painter->drawText(labelData.baseBounds.width()+1, 0, labelData.expBounds.width(), labelData.expBounds.height(), Qt::TextDontClip, labelData.expPart);
} else
{
painter->setFont(labelData.baseFont);
painter->drawText(0, 0, labelData.totalBounds.width(), labelData.totalBounds.height(), Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignHCenter, labelData.basePart);
}
// reset painter settings to what it was before:
painter->setTransform(oldTransform);
painter->setFont(oldFont);
}
/*! \internal
This is a \ref placeTickLabel helper function.
Transforms the passed \a text and \a font to a tickLabelData structure that can then be further
processed by \ref getTickLabelDrawOffset and \ref drawTickLabel. It splits the text into base and
exponent if necessary (member substituteExponent) and calculates appropriate bounding boxes.
*/
QCPAxisPainterPrivate::TickLabelData QCPAxisPainterPrivate::getTickLabelData(const QFont &font, const QString &text) const
{
TickLabelData result;
// determine whether beautiful decimal powers should be used
bool useBeautifulPowers = false;
int ePos = -1; // first index of exponent part, text before that will be basePart, text until eLast will be expPart
int eLast = -1; // last index of exponent part, rest of text after this will be suffixPart
if (substituteExponent)
{
ePos = text.indexOf(QLatin1Char('e'));
if (ePos > 0 && text.at(ePos-1).isDigit())
{
eLast = ePos;
while (eLast+1 < text.size() && (text.at(eLast+1) == QLatin1Char('+') || text.at(eLast+1) == QLatin1Char('-') || text.at(eLast+1).isDigit()))
++eLast;
if (eLast > ePos) // only if also to right of 'e' is a digit/+/- interpret it as beautifiable power
useBeautifulPowers = true;
}
}
// calculate text bounding rects and do string preparation for beautiful decimal powers:
result.baseFont = font;
if (result.baseFont.pointSizeF() > 0) // might return -1 if specified with setPixelSize, in that case we can't do correction in next line
result.baseFont.setPointSizeF(result.baseFont.pointSizeF()+0.05); // QFontMetrics.boundingRect has a bug for exact point sizes that make the results oscillate due to internal rounding
if (useBeautifulPowers)
{
// split text into parts of number/symbol that will be drawn normally and part that will be drawn as exponent:
result.basePart = text.left(ePos);
result.suffixPart = text.mid(eLast+1); // also drawn normally but after exponent
// in log scaling, we want to turn "1*10^n" into "10^n", else add multiplication sign and decimal base:
if (abbreviateDecimalPowers && result.basePart == QLatin1String("1"))
result.basePart = QLatin1String("10");
else
result.basePart += (numberMultiplyCross ? QString(QChar(215)) : QString(QChar(183))) + QLatin1String("10");
result.expPart = text.mid(ePos+1, eLast-ePos);
// clip "+" and leading zeros off expPart:
while (result.expPart.length() > 2 && result.expPart.at(1) == QLatin1Char('0')) // length > 2 so we leave one zero when numberFormatChar is 'e'
result.expPart.remove(1, 1);
if (!result.expPart.isEmpty() && result.expPart.at(0) == QLatin1Char('+'))
result.expPart.remove(0, 1);
// prepare smaller font for exponent:
result.expFont = font;
if (result.expFont.pointSize() > 0)
result.expFont.setPointSize(int(result.expFont.pointSize()*0.75));
else
result.expFont.setPixelSize(int(result.expFont.pixelSize()*0.75));
// calculate bounding rects of base part(s), exponent part and total one:
result.baseBounds = QFontMetrics(result.baseFont).boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, result.basePart);
result.expBounds = QFontMetrics(result.expFont).boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, result.expPart);
if (!result.suffixPart.isEmpty())
result.suffixBounds = QFontMetrics(result.baseFont).boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, result.suffixPart);
result.totalBounds = result.baseBounds.adjusted(0, 0, result.expBounds.width()+result.suffixBounds.width()+2, 0); // +2 consists of the 1 pixel spacing between base and exponent (see drawTickLabel) and an extra pixel to include AA
} else // useBeautifulPowers == false
{
result.basePart = text;
result.totalBounds = QFontMetrics(result.baseFont).boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip | Qt::AlignHCenter, result.basePart);
}
result.totalBounds.moveTopLeft(QPoint(0, 0)); // want bounding box aligned top left at origin, independent of how it was created, to make further processing simpler
// calculate possibly different bounding rect after rotation:
result.rotatedTotalBounds = result.totalBounds;
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(tickLabelRotation))
{
QTransform transform;
transform.rotate(tickLabelRotation);
result.rotatedTotalBounds = transform.mapRect(result.rotatedTotalBounds);
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
This is a \ref placeTickLabel helper function.
Calculates the offset at which the top left corner of the specified tick label shall be drawn.
The offset is relative to a point right next to the tick the label belongs to.
This function is thus responsible for e.g. centering tick labels under ticks and positioning them
appropriately when they are rotated.
*/
QPointF QCPAxisPainterPrivate::getTickLabelDrawOffset(const TickLabelData &labelData) const
{
/*
calculate label offset from base point at tick (non-trivial, for best visual appearance): short
explanation for bottom axis: The anchor, i.e. the point in the label that is placed
horizontally under the corresponding tick is always on the label side that is closer to the
axis (e.g. the left side of the text when we're rotating clockwise). On that side, the height
is halved and the resulting point is defined the anchor. This way, a 90 degree rotated text
will be centered under the tick (i.e. displaced horizontally by half its height). At the same
time, a 45 degree rotated text will "point toward" its tick, as is typical for rotated tick
labels.
*/
bool doRotation = !qFuzzyIsNull(tickLabelRotation);
bool flip = qFuzzyCompare(qAbs(tickLabelRotation), 90.0); // perfect +/-90 degree flip. Indicates vertical label centering on vertical axes.
double radians = tickLabelRotation/180.0*M_PI;
double x = 0;
double y = 0;
if ((type == QCPAxis::atLeft && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside) || (type == QCPAxis::atRight && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsInside)) // Anchor at right side of tick label
{
if (doRotation)
{
if (tickLabelRotation > 0)
{
x = -qCos(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.width();
y = flip ? -labelData.totalBounds.width()/2.0 : -qSin(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.width()-qCos(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
} else
{
x = -qCos(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.width()-qSin(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height();
y = flip ? +labelData.totalBounds.width()/2.0 : +qSin(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.width()-qCos(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
}
} else
{
x = -labelData.totalBounds.width();
y = -labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
}
} else if ((type == QCPAxis::atRight && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside) || (type == QCPAxis::atLeft && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsInside)) // Anchor at left side of tick label
{
if (doRotation)
{
if (tickLabelRotation > 0)
{
x = +qSin(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height();
y = flip ? -labelData.totalBounds.width()/2.0 : -qCos(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
} else
{
x = 0;
y = flip ? +labelData.totalBounds.width()/2.0 : -qCos(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
}
} else
{
x = 0;
y = -labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
}
} else if ((type == QCPAxis::atTop && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside) || (type == QCPAxis::atBottom && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsInside)) // Anchor at bottom side of tick label
{
if (doRotation)
{
if (tickLabelRotation > 0)
{
x = -qCos(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.width()+qSin(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
y = -qSin(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.width()-qCos(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height();
} else
{
x = -qSin(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
y = -qCos(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height();
}
} else
{
x = -labelData.totalBounds.width()/2.0;
y = -labelData.totalBounds.height();
}
} else if ((type == QCPAxis::atBottom && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsOutside) || (type == QCPAxis::atTop && tickLabelSide == QCPAxis::lsInside)) // Anchor at top side of tick label
{
if (doRotation)
{
if (tickLabelRotation > 0)
{
x = +qSin(radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
y = 0;
} else
{
x = -qCos(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.width()-qSin(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.height()/2.0;
y = +qSin(-radians)*labelData.totalBounds.width();
}
} else
{
x = -labelData.totalBounds.width()/2.0;
y = 0;
}
}
return {x, y};
}
/*! \internal
Simulates the steps done by \ref placeTickLabel by calculating bounding boxes of the text label
to be drawn, depending on number format etc. Since only the largest tick label is wanted for the
margin calculation, the passed \a tickLabelsSize is only expanded, if it's currently set to a
smaller width/height.
*/
void QCPAxisPainterPrivate::getMaxTickLabelSize(const QFont &font, const QString &text, QSize *tickLabelsSize) const
{
// note: this function must return the same tick label sizes as the placeTickLabel function.
QSize finalSize;
if (mParentPlot->plottingHints().testFlag(QCP::phCacheLabels) && mLabelCache.contains(text)) // label caching enabled and have cached label
{
const CachedLabel *cachedLabel = mLabelCache.object(text);
finalSize = cachedLabel->pixmap.size()/mParentPlot->bufferDevicePixelRatio();
} else // label caching disabled or no label with this text cached:
{
TickLabelData labelData = getTickLabelData(font, text);
finalSize = labelData.rotatedTotalBounds.size();
}
// expand passed tickLabelsSize if current tick label is larger:
if (finalSize.width() > tickLabelsSize->width())
tickLabelsSize->setWidth(finalSize.width());
if (finalSize.height() > tickLabelsSize->height())
tickLabelsSize->setHeight(finalSize.height());
}
/* end of 'src/axis/axis.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/scatterstyle.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 17466 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPScatterStyle
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPScatterStyle
\brief Represents the visual appearance of scatter points
This class holds information about shape, color and size of scatter points. In plottables like
QCPGraph it is used to store how scatter points shall be drawn. For example, \ref
QCPGraph::setScatterStyle takes a QCPScatterStyle instance.
A scatter style consists of a shape (\ref setShape), a line color (\ref setPen) and possibly a
fill (\ref setBrush), if the shape provides a fillable area. Further, the size of the shape can
be controlled with \ref setSize.
\section QCPScatterStyle-defining Specifying a scatter style
You can set all these configurations either by calling the respective functions on an instance:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpscatterstyle-creation-1
Or you can use one of the various constructors that take different parameter combinations, making
it easy to specify a scatter style in a single call, like so:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpscatterstyle-creation-2
\section QCPScatterStyle-undefinedpen Leaving the color/pen up to the plottable
There are two constructors which leave the pen undefined: \ref QCPScatterStyle() and \ref
QCPScatterStyle(ScatterShape shape, double size). If those constructors are used, a call to \ref
isPenDefined will return false. It leads to scatter points that inherit the pen from the
plottable that uses the scatter style. Thus, if such a scatter style is passed to QCPGraph, the line
color of the graph (\ref QCPGraph::setPen) will be used by the scatter points. This makes
it very convenient to set up typical scatter settings:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpscatterstyle-shortcreation
Notice that it wasn't even necessary to explicitly call a QCPScatterStyle constructor. This works
because QCPScatterStyle provides a constructor that can transform a \ref ScatterShape directly
into a QCPScatterStyle instance (that's the \ref QCPScatterStyle(ScatterShape shape, double size)
constructor with a default for \a size). In those cases, C++ allows directly supplying a \ref
ScatterShape, where actually a QCPScatterStyle is expected.
\section QCPScatterStyle-custompath-and-pixmap Custom shapes and pixmaps
QCPScatterStyle supports drawing custom shapes and arbitrary pixmaps as scatter points.
For custom shapes, you can provide a QPainterPath with the desired shape to the \ref
setCustomPath function or call the constructor that takes a painter path. The scatter shape will
automatically be set to \ref ssCustom.
For pixmaps, you call \ref setPixmap with the desired QPixmap. Alternatively you can use the
constructor that takes a QPixmap. The scatter shape will automatically be set to \ref ssPixmap.
Note that \ref setSize does not influence the appearance of the pixmap.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn bool QCPScatterStyle::isNone() const
Returns whether the scatter shape is \ref ssNone.
\see setShape
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPScatterStyle::isPenDefined() const
Returns whether a pen has been defined for this scatter style.
The pen is undefined if a constructor is called that does not carry \a pen as parameter. Those
are \ref QCPScatterStyle() and \ref QCPScatterStyle(ScatterShape shape, double size). If the pen
is undefined, the pen of the respective plottable will be used for drawing scatters.
If a pen was defined for this scatter style instance, and you now wish to undefine the pen, call
\ref undefinePen.
\see setPen
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a new QCPScatterStyle instance with size set to 6. No shape, pen or brush is defined.
Since the pen is undefined (\ref isPenDefined returns false), the scatter color will be inherited
from the plottable that uses this scatter style.
*/
QCPScatterStyle::QCPScatterStyle() :
mSize(6),
mShape(ssNone),
mPen(Qt::NoPen),
mBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mPenDefined(false)
{
}
/*!
Creates a new QCPScatterStyle instance with shape set to \a shape and size to \a size. No pen or
brush is defined.
Since the pen is undefined (\ref isPenDefined returns false), the scatter color will be inherited
from the plottable that uses this scatter style.
*/
QCPScatterStyle::QCPScatterStyle(ScatterShape shape, double size) :
mSize(size),
mShape(shape),
mPen(Qt::NoPen),
mBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mPenDefined(false)
{
}
/*!
Creates a new QCPScatterStyle instance with shape set to \a shape, the pen color set to \a color,
and size to \a size. No brush is defined, i.e. the scatter point will not be filled.
*/
QCPScatterStyle::QCPScatterStyle(ScatterShape shape, const QColor &color, double size) :
mSize(size),
mShape(shape),
mPen(QPen(color)),
mBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mPenDefined(true)
{
}
/*!
Creates a new QCPScatterStyle instance with shape set to \a shape, the pen color set to \a color,
the brush color to \a fill (with a solid pattern), and size to \a size.
*/
QCPScatterStyle::QCPScatterStyle(ScatterShape shape, const QColor &color, const QColor &fill, double size) :
mSize(size),
mShape(shape),
mPen(QPen(color)),
mBrush(QBrush(fill)),
mPenDefined(true)
{
}
/*!
Creates a new QCPScatterStyle instance with shape set to \a shape, the pen set to \a pen, the
brush to \a brush, and size to \a size.
\warning In some cases it might be tempting to directly use a pen style like <tt>Qt::NoPen</tt> as \a pen
and a color like <tt>Qt::blue</tt> as \a brush. Notice however, that the corresponding call\n
<tt>QCPScatterStyle(QCPScatterShape::ssCircle, Qt::NoPen, Qt::blue, 5)</tt>\n
doesn't necessarily lead C++ to use this constructor in some cases, but might mistake
<tt>Qt::NoPen</tt> for a QColor and use the
\ref QCPScatterStyle(ScatterShape shape, const QColor &color, const QColor &fill, double size)
constructor instead (which will lead to an unexpected look of the scatter points). To prevent
this, be more explicit with the parameter types. For example, use <tt>QBrush(Qt::blue)</tt>
instead of just <tt>Qt::blue</tt>, to clearly point out to the compiler that this constructor is
wanted.
*/
QCPScatterStyle::QCPScatterStyle(ScatterShape shape, const QPen &pen, const QBrush &brush, double size) :
mSize(size),
mShape(shape),
mPen(pen),
mBrush(brush),
mPenDefined(pen.style() != Qt::NoPen)
{
}
/*!
Creates a new QCPScatterStyle instance which will show the specified \a pixmap. The scatter shape
is set to \ref ssPixmap.
*/
QCPScatterStyle::QCPScatterStyle(const QPixmap &pixmap) :
mSize(5),
mShape(ssPixmap),
mPen(Qt::NoPen),
mBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mPixmap(pixmap),
mPenDefined(false)
{
}
/*!
Creates a new QCPScatterStyle instance with a custom shape that is defined via \a customPath. The
scatter shape is set to \ref ssCustom.
The custom shape line will be drawn with \a pen and filled with \a brush. The size has a slightly
different meaning than for built-in scatter points: The custom path will be drawn scaled by a
factor of \a size/6.0. Since the default \a size is 6, the custom path will appear in its
original size by default. To for example double the size of the path, set \a size to 12.
*/
QCPScatterStyle::QCPScatterStyle(const QPainterPath &customPath, const QPen &pen, const QBrush &brush, double size) :
mSize(size),
mShape(ssCustom),
mPen(pen),
mBrush(brush),
mCustomPath(customPath),
mPenDefined(pen.style() != Qt::NoPen)
{
}
/*!
Copies the specified \a properties from the \a other scatter style to this scatter style.
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::setFromOther(const QCPScatterStyle &other, ScatterProperties properties)
{
if (properties.testFlag(spPen))
{
setPen(other.pen());
if (!other.isPenDefined())
undefinePen();
}
if (properties.testFlag(spBrush))
setBrush(other.brush());
if (properties.testFlag(spSize))
setSize(other.size());
if (properties.testFlag(spShape))
{
setShape(other.shape());
if (other.shape() == ssPixmap)
setPixmap(other.pixmap());
else if (other.shape() == ssCustom)
setCustomPath(other.customPath());
}
}
/*!
Sets the size (pixel diameter) of the drawn scatter points to \a size.
\see setShape
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::setSize(double size)
{
mSize = size;
}
/*!
Sets the shape to \a shape.
Note that the calls \ref setPixmap and \ref setCustomPath automatically set the shape to \ref
ssPixmap and \ref ssCustom, respectively.
\see setSize
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::setShape(QCPScatterStyle::ScatterShape shape)
{
mShape = shape;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw scatter points to \a pen.
If the pen was previously undefined (see \ref isPenDefined), the pen is considered defined after
a call to this function, even if \a pen is <tt>Qt::NoPen</tt>. If you have defined a pen
previously by calling this function and now wish to undefine the pen, call \ref undefinePen.
\see setBrush
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPenDefined = true;
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to fill scatter points to \a brush. Note that not all scatter
shapes have fillable areas. For example, \ref ssPlus does not while \ref ssCircle does.
\see setPen
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the pixmap that will be drawn as scatter point to \a pixmap.
Note that \ref setSize does not influence the appearance of the pixmap.
The scatter shape is automatically set to \ref ssPixmap.
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::setPixmap(const QPixmap &pixmap)
{
setShape(ssPixmap);
mPixmap = pixmap;
}
/*!
Sets the custom shape that will be drawn as scatter point to \a customPath.
The scatter shape is automatically set to \ref ssCustom.
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::setCustomPath(const QPainterPath &customPath)
{
setShape(ssCustom);
mCustomPath = customPath;
}
/*!
Sets this scatter style to have an undefined pen (see \ref isPenDefined for what an undefined pen
implies).
A call to \ref setPen will define a pen.
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::undefinePen()
{
mPenDefined = false;
}
/*!
Applies the pen and the brush of this scatter style to \a painter. If this scatter style has an
undefined pen (\ref isPenDefined), sets the pen of \a painter to \a defaultPen instead.
This function is used by plottables (or any class that wants to draw scatters) just before a
number of scatters with this style shall be drawn with the \a painter.
\see drawShape
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::applyTo(QCPPainter *painter, const QPen &defaultPen) const
{
painter->setPen(mPenDefined ? mPen : defaultPen);
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
}
/*!
Draws the scatter shape with \a painter at position \a pos.
This function does not modify the pen or the brush on the painter, as \ref applyTo is meant to be
called before scatter points are drawn with \ref drawShape.
\see applyTo
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::drawShape(QCPPainter *painter, const QPointF &pos) const
{
drawShape(painter, pos.x(), pos.y());
}
/*! \overload
Draws the scatter shape with \a painter at position \a x and \a y.
*/
void QCPScatterStyle::drawShape(QCPPainter *painter, double x, double y) const
{
double w = mSize/2.0;
switch (mShape)
{
case ssNone: break;
case ssDot:
{
painter->drawLine(QPointF(x, y), QPointF(x+0.0001, y));
break;
}
case ssCross:
{
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w, y-w, x+w, y+w));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w, y+w, x+w, y-w));
break;
}
case ssPlus:
{
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w, y, x+w, y));
painter->drawLine(QLineF( x, y+w, x, y-w));
break;
}
case ssCircle:
{
painter->drawEllipse(QPointF(x , y), w, w);
break;
}
case ssDisc:
{
QBrush b = painter->brush();
painter->setBrush(painter->pen().color());
painter->drawEllipse(QPointF(x , y), w, w);
painter->setBrush(b);
break;
}
case ssSquare:
{
painter->drawRect(QRectF(x-w, y-w, mSize, mSize));
break;
}
case ssDiamond:
{
QPointF lineArray[4] = {QPointF(x-w, y),
QPointF( x, y-w),
QPointF(x+w, y),
QPointF( x, y+w)};
painter->drawPolygon(lineArray, 4);
break;
}
case ssStar:
{
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w, y, x+w, y));
painter->drawLine(QLineF( x, y+w, x, y-w));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w*0.707, y-w*0.707, x+w*0.707, y+w*0.707));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w*0.707, y+w*0.707, x+w*0.707, y-w*0.707));
break;
}
case ssTriangle:
{
QPointF lineArray[3] = {QPointF(x-w, y+0.755*w),
QPointF(x+w, y+0.755*w),
QPointF( x, y-0.977*w)};
painter->drawPolygon(lineArray, 3);
break;
}
case ssTriangleInverted:
{
QPointF lineArray[3] = {QPointF(x-w, y-0.755*w),
QPointF(x+w, y-0.755*w),
QPointF( x, y+0.977*w)};
painter->drawPolygon(lineArray, 3);
break;
}
case ssCrossSquare:
{
painter->drawRect(QRectF(x-w, y-w, mSize, mSize));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w, y-w, x+w*0.95, y+w*0.95));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w, y+w*0.95, x+w*0.95, y-w));
break;
}
case ssPlusSquare:
{
painter->drawRect(QRectF(x-w, y-w, mSize, mSize));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w, y, x+w*0.95, y));
painter->drawLine(QLineF( x, y+w, x, y-w));
break;
}
case ssCrossCircle:
{
painter->drawEllipse(QPointF(x, y), w, w);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w*0.707, y-w*0.707, x+w*0.670, y+w*0.670));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w*0.707, y+w*0.670, x+w*0.670, y-w*0.707));
break;
}
case ssPlusCircle:
{
painter->drawEllipse(QPointF(x, y), w, w);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x-w, y, x+w, y));
painter->drawLine(QLineF( x, y+w, x, y-w));
break;
}
case ssPeace:
{
painter->drawEllipse(QPointF(x, y), w, w);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x, y-w, x, y+w));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x, y, x-w*0.707, y+w*0.707));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(x, y, x+w*0.707, y+w*0.707));
break;
}
case ssPixmap:
{
const double widthHalf = mPixmap.width()*0.5;
const double heightHalf = mPixmap.height()*0.5;
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(4, 8, 0)
const QRectF clipRect = painter->clipRegion().boundingRect().adjusted(-widthHalf, -heightHalf, widthHalf, heightHalf);
#else
const QRectF clipRect = painter->clipBoundingRect().adjusted(-widthHalf, -heightHalf, widthHalf, heightHalf);
#endif
if (clipRect.contains(x, y))
painter->drawPixmap(qRound(x-widthHalf), qRound(y-heightHalf), mPixmap);
break;
}
case ssCustom:
{
QTransform oldTransform = painter->transform();
painter->translate(x, y);
painter->scale(mSize/6.0, mSize/6.0);
painter->drawPath(mCustomPath);
painter->setTransform(oldTransform);
break;
}
}
}
/* end of 'src/scatterstyle.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/plottable.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 38818 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPSelectionDecorator
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPSelectionDecorator
\brief Controls how a plottable's data selection is drawn
Each \ref QCPAbstractPlottable instance has one \ref QCPSelectionDecorator (accessible via \ref
QCPAbstractPlottable::selectionDecorator) and uses it when drawing selected segments of its data.
The selection decorator controls both pen (\ref setPen) and brush (\ref setBrush), as well as the
scatter style (\ref setScatterStyle) if the plottable draws scatters. Since a \ref
QCPScatterStyle is itself composed of different properties such as color shape and size, the
decorator allows specifying exactly which of those properties shall be used for the selected data
point, via \ref setUsedScatterProperties.
A \ref QCPSelectionDecorator subclass instance can be passed to a plottable via \ref
QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelectionDecorator, allowing greater customizability of the appearance
of selected segments.
Use \ref copyFrom to easily transfer the settings of one decorator to another one. This is
especially useful since plottables take ownership of the passed selection decorator, and thus the
same decorator instance can not be passed to multiple plottables.
Selection decorators can also themselves perform drawing operations by reimplementing \ref
drawDecoration, which is called by the plottable's draw method. The base class \ref
QCPSelectionDecorator does not make use of this however. For example, \ref
QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket draws brackets around selected data segments.
*/
/*!
Creates a new QCPSelectionDecorator instance with default values
*/
QCPSelectionDecorator::QCPSelectionDecorator() :
mPen(QColor(80, 80, 255), 2.5),
mBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mUsedScatterProperties(QCPScatterStyle::spNone),
mPlottable(nullptr)
{
}
QCPSelectionDecorator::~QCPSelectionDecorator()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used by the parent plottable to draw selected data segments.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecorator::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used by the parent plottable to draw selected data segments.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecorator::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the scatter style that will be used by the parent plottable to draw scatters in selected
data segments.
\a usedProperties specifies which parts of the passed \a scatterStyle will be used by the
plottable. The used properties can also be changed via \ref setUsedScatterProperties.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecorator::setScatterStyle(const QCPScatterStyle &scatterStyle, QCPScatterStyle::ScatterProperties usedProperties)
{
mScatterStyle = scatterStyle;
setUsedScatterProperties(usedProperties);
}
/*!
Use this method to define which properties of the scatter style (set via \ref setScatterStyle)
will be used for selected data segments. All properties of the scatter style that are not
specified in \a properties will remain as specified in the plottable's original scatter style.
\see QCPScatterStyle::ScatterProperty
*/
void QCPSelectionDecorator::setUsedScatterProperties(const QCPScatterStyle::ScatterProperties &properties)
{
mUsedScatterProperties = properties;
}
/*!
Sets the pen of \a painter to the pen of this selection decorator.
\see applyBrush, getFinalScatterStyle
*/
void QCPSelectionDecorator::applyPen(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
painter->setPen(mPen);
}
/*!
Sets the brush of \a painter to the brush of this selection decorator.
\see applyPen, getFinalScatterStyle
*/
void QCPSelectionDecorator::applyBrush(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
}
/*!
Returns the scatter style that the parent plottable shall use for selected scatter points. The
plottable's original (unselected) scatter style must be passed as \a unselectedStyle. Depending
on the setting of \ref setUsedScatterProperties, the returned scatter style is a mixture of this
selecion decorator's scatter style (\ref setScatterStyle), and \a unselectedStyle.
\see applyPen, applyBrush, setScatterStyle
*/
QCPScatterStyle QCPSelectionDecorator::getFinalScatterStyle(const QCPScatterStyle &unselectedStyle) const
{
QCPScatterStyle result(unselectedStyle);
result.setFromOther(mScatterStyle, mUsedScatterProperties);
// if style shall inherit pen from plottable (has no own pen defined), give it the selected
// plottable pen explicitly, so it doesn't use the unselected plottable pen when used in the
// plottable:
if (!result.isPenDefined())
result.setPen(mPen);
return result;
}
/*!
Copies all properties (e.g. color, fill, scatter style) of the \a other selection decorator to
this selection decorator.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecorator::copyFrom(const QCPSelectionDecorator *other)
{
setPen(other->pen());
setBrush(other->brush());
setScatterStyle(other->scatterStyle(), other->usedScatterProperties());
}
/*!
This method is called by all plottables' draw methods to allow custom selection decorations to be
drawn. Use the passed \a painter to perform the drawing operations. \a selection carries the data
selection for which the decoration shall be drawn.
The default base class implementation of \ref QCPSelectionDecorator has no special decoration, so
this method does nothing.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecorator::drawDecoration(QCPPainter *painter, QCPDataSelection selection)
{
Q_UNUSED(painter)
Q_UNUSED(selection)
}
/*! \internal
This method is called as soon as a selection decorator is associated with a plottable, by a call
to \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelectionDecorator. This way the selection decorator can obtain a pointer to the plottable that uses it (e.g. to access
data points via the \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::interface1D interface).
If the selection decorator was already added to a different plottable before, this method aborts
the registration and returns false.
*/
bool QCPSelectionDecorator::registerWithPlottable(QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable)
{
if (!mPlottable)
{
mPlottable = plottable;
return true;
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "This selection decorator is already registered with plottable:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(mPlottable);
return false;
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAbstractPlottable
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAbstractPlottable
\brief The abstract base class for all data representing objects in a plot.
It defines a very basic interface like name, pen, brush, visibility etc. Since this class is
abstract, it can't be instantiated. Use one of the subclasses or create a subclass yourself to
create new ways of displaying data (see "Creating own plottables" below). Plottables that display
one-dimensional data (i.e. data points have a single key dimension and one or multiple values at
each key) are based off of the template subclass \ref QCPAbstractPlottable1D, see details
there.
All further specifics are in the subclasses, for example:
\li A normal graph with possibly a line and/or scatter points \ref QCPGraph
(typically created with \ref QCustomPlot::addGraph)
\li A parametric curve: \ref QCPCurve
\li A bar chart: \ref QCPBars
\li A statistical box plot: \ref QCPStatisticalBox
\li A color encoded two-dimensional map: \ref QCPColorMap
\li An OHLC/Candlestick chart: \ref QCPFinancial
\section plottables-subclassing Creating own plottables
Subclassing directly from QCPAbstractPlottable is only recommended if you wish to display
two-dimensional data like \ref QCPColorMap, i.e. two logical key dimensions and one (or more)
data dimensions. If you want to display data with only one logical key dimension, you should
rather derive from \ref QCPAbstractPlottable1D.
If subclassing QCPAbstractPlottable directly, these are the pure virtual functions you must
implement:
\li \ref selectTest
\li \ref draw
\li \ref drawLegendIcon
\li \ref getKeyRange
\li \ref getValueRange
See the documentation of those functions for what they need to do.
For drawing your plot, you can use the \ref coordsToPixels functions to translate a point in plot
coordinates to pixel coordinates. This function is quite convenient, because it takes the
orientation of the key and value axes into account for you (x and y are swapped when the key axis
is vertical and the value axis horizontal). If you are worried about performance (i.e. you need
to translate many points in a loop like QCPGraph), you can directly use \ref
QCPAxis::coordToPixel. However, you must then take care about the orientation of the axis
yourself.
Here are some important members you inherit from QCPAbstractPlottable:
<table>
<tr>
<td>QCustomPlot *\b mParentPlot</td>
<td>A pointer to the parent QCustomPlot instance. The parent plot is inferred from the axes that are passed in the constructor.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>QString \b mName</td>
<td>The name of the plottable.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>QPen \b mPen</td>
<td>The generic pen of the plottable. You should use this pen for the most prominent data representing lines in the plottable
(e.g QCPGraph uses this pen for its graph lines and scatters)</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>QBrush \b mBrush</td>
<td>The generic brush of the plottable. You should use this brush for the most prominent fillable structures in the plottable
(e.g. QCPGraph uses this brush to control filling under the graph)</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>QPointer<\ref QCPAxis> \b mKeyAxis, \b mValueAxis</td>
<td>The key and value axes this plottable is attached to. Call their QCPAxis::coordToPixel functions to translate coordinates
to pixels in either the key or value dimension. Make sure to check whether the pointer is \c nullptr before using it. If one of
the axes is null, don't draw the plottable.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>\ref QCPSelectionDecorator \b mSelectionDecorator</td>
<td>The currently set selection decorator which specifies how selected data of the plottable shall be drawn and decorated.
When drawing your data, you must consult this decorator for the appropriate pen/brush before drawing unselected/selected data segments.
Finally, you should call its \ref QCPSelectionDecorator::drawDecoration method at the end of your \ref draw implementation.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>\ref QCP::SelectionType \b mSelectable</td>
<td>In which composition, if at all, this plottable's data may be selected. Enforcing this setting on the data selection is done
by QCPAbstractPlottable automatically.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>\ref QCPDataSelection \b mSelection</td>
<td>Holds the current selection state of the plottable's data, i.e. the selected data ranges (\ref QCPDataRange).</td>
</tr>
</table>
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPSelectionDecorator *QCPAbstractPlottable::selectionDecorator() const
Provides access to the selection decorator of this plottable. The selection decorator controls
how selected data ranges are drawn (e.g. their pen color and fill), see \ref
QCPSelectionDecorator for details.
If you wish to use an own \ref QCPSelectionDecorator subclass, pass an instance of it to \ref
setSelectionDecorator.
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPAbstractPlottable::selected() const
Returns true if there are any data points of the plottable currently selected. Use \ref selection
to retrieve the current \ref QCPDataSelection.
*/
/*! \fn QCPDataSelection QCPAbstractPlottable::selection() const
Returns a \ref QCPDataSelection encompassing all the data points that are currently selected on
this plottable.
\see selected, setSelection, setSelectable
*/
/*! \fn virtual QCPPlottableInterface1D *QCPAbstractPlottable::interface1D()
If this plottable is a one-dimensional plottable, i.e. it implements the \ref
QCPPlottableInterface1D, returns the \a this pointer with that type. Otherwise (e.g. in the case
of a \ref QCPColorMap) returns zero.
You can use this method to gain read access to data coordinates while holding a pointer to the
abstract base class only.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/* start of documentation of pure virtual functions */
/*! \fn void QCPAbstractPlottable::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRect &rect) const = 0
\internal
called by QCPLegend::draw (via QCPPlottableLegendItem::draw) to create a graphical representation
of this plottable inside \a rect, next to the plottable name.
The passed \a painter has its cliprect set to \a rect, so painting outside of \a rect won't
appear outside the legend icon border.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange QCPAbstractPlottable::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const = 0
Returns the coordinate range that all data in this plottable span in the key axis dimension. For
logarithmic plots, one can set \a inSignDomain to either \ref QCP::sdNegative or \ref
QCP::sdPositive in order to restrict the returned range to that sign domain. E.g. when only
negative range is wanted, set \a inSignDomain to \ref QCP::sdNegative and all positive points
will be ignored for range calculation. For no restriction, just set \a inSignDomain to \ref
QCP::sdBoth (default). \a foundRange is an output parameter that indicates whether a range could
be found or not. If this is false, you shouldn't use the returned range (e.g. no points in data).
Note that \a foundRange is not the same as \ref QCPRange::validRange, since the range returned by
this function may have size zero (e.g. when there is only one data point). In this case \a
foundRange would return true, but the returned range is not a valid range in terms of \ref
QCPRange::validRange.
\see rescaleAxes, getValueRange
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange QCPAbstractPlottable::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const = 0
Returns the coordinate range that the data points in the specified key range (\a inKeyRange) span
in the value axis dimension. For logarithmic plots, one can set \a inSignDomain to either \ref
QCP::sdNegative or \ref QCP::sdPositive in order to restrict the returned range to that sign
domain. E.g. when only negative range is wanted, set \a inSignDomain to \ref QCP::sdNegative and
all positive points will be ignored for range calculation. For no restriction, just set \a
inSignDomain to \ref QCP::sdBoth (default). \a foundRange is an output parameter that indicates
whether a range could be found or not. If this is false, you shouldn't use the returned range
(e.g. no points in data).
If \a inKeyRange has both lower and upper bound set to zero (is equal to <tt>QCPRange()</tt>),
all data points are considered, without any restriction on the keys.
Note that \a foundRange is not the same as \ref QCPRange::validRange, since the range returned by
this function may have size zero (e.g. when there is only one data point). In this case \a
foundRange would return true, but the returned range is not a valid range in terms of \ref
QCPRange::validRange.
\see rescaleAxes, getKeyRange
*/
/* end of documentation of pure virtual functions */
/* start of documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPAbstractPlottable::selectionChanged(bool selected)
This signal is emitted when the selection state of this plottable has changed, either by user
interaction or by a direct call to \ref setSelection. The parameter \a selected indicates whether
there are any points selected or not.
\see selectionChanged(const QCPDataSelection &selection)
*/
/*! \fn void QCPAbstractPlottable::selectionChanged(const QCPDataSelection &selection)
This signal is emitted when the selection state of this plottable has changed, either by user
interaction or by a direct call to \ref setSelection. The parameter \a selection holds the
currently selected data ranges.
\see selectionChanged(bool selected)
*/
/*! \fn void QCPAbstractPlottable::selectableChanged(QCP::SelectionType selectable);
This signal is emitted when the selectability of this plottable has changed.
\see setSelectable
*/
/* end of documentation of signals */
/*!
Constructs an abstract plottable which uses \a keyAxis as its key axis ("x") and \a valueAxis as
its value axis ("y"). \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in the same QCustomPlot instance
and have perpendicular orientations. If either of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding
message is printed to the debug output (qDebug), the construction is not aborted, though.
Since QCPAbstractPlottable is an abstract class that defines the basic interface to plottables,
it can't be directly instantiated.
You probably want one of the subclasses like \ref QCPGraph or \ref QCPCurve instead.
*/
QCPAbstractPlottable::QCPAbstractPlottable(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis) :
QCPLayerable(keyAxis->parentPlot(), QString(), keyAxis->axisRect()),
mName(),
mAntialiasedFill(true),
mAntialiasedScatters(true),
mPen(Qt::black),
mBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mKeyAxis(keyAxis),
mValueAxis(valueAxis),
mSelectable(QCP::stWhole),
mSelectionDecorator(nullptr)
{
if (keyAxis->parentPlot() != valueAxis->parentPlot())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Parent plot of keyAxis is not the same as that of valueAxis.";
if (keyAxis->orientation() == valueAxis->orientation())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "keyAxis and valueAxis must be orthogonal to each other.";
mParentPlot->registerPlottable(this);
setSelectionDecorator(new QCPSelectionDecorator);
}
QCPAbstractPlottable::~QCPAbstractPlottable()
{
if (mSelectionDecorator)
{
delete mSelectionDecorator;
mSelectionDecorator = nullptr;
}
}
/*!
The name is the textual representation of this plottable as it is displayed in the legend
(\ref QCPLegend). It may contain any UTF-8 characters, including newlines.
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setName(const QString &name)
{
mName = name;
}
/*!
Sets whether fills of this plottable are drawn antialiased or not.
Note that this setting may be overridden by \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setAntialiasedFill(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiasedFill = enabled;
}
/*!
Sets whether the scatter symbols of this plottable are drawn antialiased or not.
Note that this setting may be overridden by \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setAntialiasedScatters(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiasedScatters = enabled;
}
/*!
The pen is used to draw basic lines that make up the plottable representation in the
plot.
For example, the \ref QCPGraph subclass draws its graph lines with this pen.
\see setBrush
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
The brush is used to draw basic fills of the plottable representation in the
plot. The Fill can be a color, gradient or texture, see the usage of QBrush.
For example, the \ref QCPGraph subclass draws the fill under the graph with this brush, when
it's not set to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setPen
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
The key axis of a plottable can be set to any axis of a QCustomPlot, as long as it is orthogonal
to the plottable's value axis. This function performs no checks to make sure this is the case.
The typical mathematical choice is to use the x-axis (QCustomPlot::xAxis) as key axis and the
y-axis (QCustomPlot::yAxis) as value axis.
Normally, the key and value axes are set in the constructor of the plottable (or \ref
QCustomPlot::addGraph when working with QCPGraphs through the dedicated graph interface).
\see setValueAxis
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setKeyAxis(QCPAxis *axis)
{
mKeyAxis = axis;
}
/*!
The value axis of a plottable can be set to any axis of a QCustomPlot, as long as it is
orthogonal to the plottable's key axis. This function performs no checks to make sure this is the
case. The typical mathematical choice is to use the x-axis (QCustomPlot::xAxis) as key axis and
the y-axis (QCustomPlot::yAxis) as value axis.
Normally, the key and value axes are set in the constructor of the plottable (or \ref
QCustomPlot::addGraph when working with QCPGraphs through the dedicated graph interface).
\see setKeyAxis
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setValueAxis(QCPAxis *axis)
{
mValueAxis = axis;
}
/*!
Sets which data ranges of this plottable are selected. Selected data ranges are drawn differently
(e.g. color) in the plot. This can be controlled via the selection decorator (see \ref
selectionDecorator).
The entire selection mechanism for plottables is handled automatically when \ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains iSelectPlottables. You only need to call this function when
you wish to change the selection state programmatically.
Using \ref setSelectable you can further specify for each plottable whether and to which
granularity it is selectable. If \a selection is not compatible with the current \ref
QCP::SelectionType set via \ref setSelectable, the resulting selection will be adjusted
accordingly (see \ref QCPDataSelection::enforceType).
emits the \ref selectionChanged signal when \a selected is different from the previous selection state.
\see setSelectable, selectTest
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelection(QCPDataSelection selection)
{
selection.enforceType(mSelectable);
if (mSelection != selection)
{
mSelection = selection;
emit selectionChanged(selected());
emit selectionChanged(mSelection);
}
}
/*!
Use this method to set an own QCPSelectionDecorator (subclass) instance. This allows you to
customize the visual representation of selected data ranges further than by using the default
QCPSelectionDecorator.
The plottable takes ownership of the \a decorator.
The currently set decorator can be accessed via \ref selectionDecorator.
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelectionDecorator(QCPSelectionDecorator *decorator)
{
if (decorator)
{
if (decorator->registerWithPlottable(this))
{
delete mSelectionDecorator; // delete old decorator if necessary
mSelectionDecorator = decorator;
}
} else if (mSelectionDecorator) // just clear decorator
{
delete mSelectionDecorator;
mSelectionDecorator = nullptr;
}
}
/*!
Sets whether and to which granularity this plottable can be selected.
A selection can happen by clicking on the QCustomPlot surface (When \ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains \ref QCP::iSelectPlottables), by dragging a selection rect
(When \ref QCustomPlot::setSelectionRectMode is \ref QCP::srmSelect), or programmatically by
calling \ref setSelection.
\see setSelection, QCP::SelectionType
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelectable(QCP::SelectionType selectable)
{
if (mSelectable != selectable)
{
mSelectable = selectable;
QCPDataSelection oldSelection = mSelection;
mSelection.enforceType(mSelectable);
emit selectableChanged(mSelectable);
if (mSelection != oldSelection)
{
emit selectionChanged(selected());
emit selectionChanged(mSelection);
}
}
}
/*!
Convenience function for transforming a key/value pair to pixels on the QCustomPlot surface,
taking the orientations of the axes associated with this plottable into account (e.g. whether key
represents x or y).
\a key and \a value are transformed to the coodinates in pixels and are written to \a x and \a y.
\see pixelsToCoords, QCPAxis::coordToPixel
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::coordsToPixels(double key, double value, double &x, double &y) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
x = keyAxis->coordToPixel(key);
y = valueAxis->coordToPixel(value);
} else
{
y = keyAxis->coordToPixel(key);
x = valueAxis->coordToPixel(value);
}
}
/*! \overload
Transforms the given \a key and \a value to pixel coordinates and returns them in a QPointF.
*/
const QPointF QCPAbstractPlottable::coordsToPixels(double key, double value) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return QPointF(); }
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
return QPointF(keyAxis->coordToPixel(key), valueAxis->coordToPixel(value));
else
return QPointF(valueAxis->coordToPixel(value), keyAxis->coordToPixel(key));
}
/*!
Convenience function for transforming a x/y pixel pair on the QCustomPlot surface to plot coordinates,
taking the orientations of the axes associated with this plottable into account (e.g. whether key
represents x or y).
\a x and \a y are transformed to the plot coodinates and are written to \a key and \a value.
\see coordsToPixels, QCPAxis::coordToPixel
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::pixelsToCoords(double x, double y, double &key, double &value) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
key = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(x);
value = valueAxis->pixelToCoord(y);
} else
{
key = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(y);
value = valueAxis->pixelToCoord(x);
}
}
/*! \overload
Returns the pixel input \a pixelPos as plot coordinates \a key and \a value.
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::pixelsToCoords(const QPointF &pixelPos, double &key, double &value) const
{
pixelsToCoords(pixelPos.x(), pixelPos.y(), key, value);
}
/*!
Rescales the key and value axes associated with this plottable to contain all displayed data, so
the whole plottable is visible. If the scaling of an axis is logarithmic, rescaleAxes will make
sure not to rescale to an illegal range i.e. a range containing different signs and/or zero.
Instead it will stay in the current sign domain and ignore all parts of the plottable that lie
outside of that domain.
\a onlyEnlarge makes sure the ranges are only expanded, never reduced. So it's possible to show
multiple plottables in their entirety by multiple calls to rescaleAxes where the first call has
\a onlyEnlarge set to false (the default), and all subsequent set to true.
\see rescaleKeyAxis, rescaleValueAxis, QCustomPlot::rescaleAxes, QCPAxis::rescale
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::rescaleAxes(bool onlyEnlarge) const
{
rescaleKeyAxis(onlyEnlarge);
rescaleValueAxis(onlyEnlarge);
}
/*!
Rescales the key axis of the plottable so the whole plottable is visible.
See \ref rescaleAxes for detailed behaviour.
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::rescaleKeyAxis(bool onlyEnlarge) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key axis"; return; }
QCP::SignDomain signDomain = QCP::sdBoth;
if (keyAxis->scaleType() == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
signDomain = (keyAxis->range().upper < 0 ? QCP::sdNegative : QCP::sdPositive);
bool foundRange;
QCPRange newRange = getKeyRange(foundRange, signDomain);
if (foundRange)
{
if (onlyEnlarge)
newRange.expand(keyAxis->range());
if (!QCPRange::validRange(newRange)) // likely due to range being zero (plottable has only constant data in this axis dimension), shift current range to at least center the plottable
{
double center = (newRange.lower+newRange.upper)*0.5; // upper and lower should be equal anyway, but just to make sure, incase validRange returned false for other reason
if (keyAxis->scaleType() == QCPAxis::stLinear)
{
newRange.lower = center-keyAxis->range().size()/2.0;
newRange.upper = center+keyAxis->range().size()/2.0;
} else // scaleType() == stLogarithmic
{
newRange.lower = center/qSqrt(keyAxis->range().upper/keyAxis->range().lower);
newRange.upper = center*qSqrt(keyAxis->range().upper/keyAxis->range().lower);
}
}
keyAxis->setRange(newRange);
}
}
/*!
Rescales the value axis of the plottable so the whole plottable is visible. If \a inKeyRange is
set to true, only the data points which are in the currently visible key axis range are
considered.
Returns true if the axis was actually scaled. This might not be the case if this plottable has an
invalid range, e.g. because it has no data points.
See \ref rescaleAxes for detailed behaviour.
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::rescaleValueAxis(bool onlyEnlarge, bool inKeyRange) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
QCP::SignDomain signDomain = QCP::sdBoth;
if (valueAxis->scaleType() == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
signDomain = (valueAxis->range().upper < 0 ? QCP::sdNegative : QCP::sdPositive);
bool foundRange;
QCPRange newRange = getValueRange(foundRange, signDomain, inKeyRange ? keyAxis->range() : QCPRange());
if (foundRange)
{
if (onlyEnlarge)
newRange.expand(valueAxis->range());
if (!QCPRange::validRange(newRange)) // likely due to range being zero (plottable has only constant data in this axis dimension), shift current range to at least center the plottable
{
double center = (newRange.lower+newRange.upper)*0.5; // upper and lower should be equal anyway, but just to make sure, incase validRange returned false for other reason
if (valueAxis->scaleType() == QCPAxis::stLinear)
{
newRange.lower = center-valueAxis->range().size()/2.0;
newRange.upper = center+valueAxis->range().size()/2.0;
} else // scaleType() == stLogarithmic
{
newRange.lower = center/qSqrt(valueAxis->range().upper/valueAxis->range().lower);
newRange.upper = center*qSqrt(valueAxis->range().upper/valueAxis->range().lower);
}
}
valueAxis->setRange(newRange);
}
}
/*! \overload
Adds this plottable to the specified \a legend.
Creates a QCPPlottableLegendItem which is inserted into the legend. Returns true on success, i.e.
when the legend exists and a legend item associated with this plottable isn't already in the
legend.
If the plottable needs a more specialized representation in the legend, you can create a
corresponding subclass of \ref QCPPlottableLegendItem and add it to the legend manually instead
of calling this method.
\see removeFromLegend, QCPLegend::addItem
*/
bool QCPAbstractPlottable::addToLegend(QCPLegend *legend)
{
if (!legend)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed legend is null";
return false;
}
if (legend->parentPlot() != mParentPlot)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed legend isn't in the same QCustomPlot as this plottable";
return false;
}
if (!legend->hasItemWithPlottable(this))
{
legend->addItem(new QCPPlottableLegendItem(legend, this));
return true;
} else
return false;
}
/*! \overload
Adds this plottable to the legend of the parent QCustomPlot (\ref QCustomPlot::legend).
\see removeFromLegend
*/
bool QCPAbstractPlottable::addToLegend()
{
if (!mParentPlot || !mParentPlot->legend)
return false;
else
return addToLegend(mParentPlot->legend);
}
/*! \overload
Removes the plottable from the specifed \a legend. This means the \ref QCPPlottableLegendItem
that is associated with this plottable is removed.
Returns true on success, i.e. if the legend exists and a legend item associated with this
plottable was found and removed.
\see addToLegend, QCPLegend::removeItem
*/
bool QCPAbstractPlottable::removeFromLegend(QCPLegend *legend) const
{
if (!legend)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed legend is null";
return false;
}
if (QCPPlottableLegendItem *lip = legend->itemWithPlottable(this))
return legend->removeItem(lip);
else
return false;
}
/*! \overload
Removes the plottable from the legend of the parent QCustomPlot.
\see addToLegend
*/
bool QCPAbstractPlottable::removeFromLegend() const
{
if (!mParentPlot || !mParentPlot->legend)
return false;
else
return removeFromLegend(mParentPlot->legend);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QRect QCPAbstractPlottable::clipRect() const
{
if (mKeyAxis && mValueAxis)
return mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->rect() & mValueAxis.data()->axisRect()->rect();
else
return {};
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCP::Interaction QCPAbstractPlottable::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectPlottables;
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing plottable lines.
This is the antialiasing state the painter passed to the \ref draw method is in by default.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\seebaseclassmethod
\see setAntialiased, applyFillAntialiasingHint, applyScattersAntialiasingHint
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aePlottables);
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing plottable fills.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\see setAntialiased, applyDefaultAntialiasingHint, applyScattersAntialiasingHint
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::applyFillAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedFill, QCP::aeFills);
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing plottable scatter points.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\see setAntialiased, applyFillAntialiasingHint, applyDefaultAntialiasingHint
*/
void QCPAbstractPlottable::applyScattersAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedScatters, QCP::aeScatters);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAbstractPlottable::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
if (mSelectable != QCP::stNone)
{
QCPDataSelection newSelection = details.value<QCPDataSelection>();
QCPDataSelection selectionBefore = mSelection;
if (additive)
{
if (mSelectable == QCP::stWhole) // in whole selection mode, we toggle to no selection even if currently unselected point was hit
{
if (selected())
setSelection(QCPDataSelection());
else
setSelection(newSelection);
} else // in all other selection modes we toggle selections of homogeneously selected/unselected segments
{
if (mSelection.contains(newSelection)) // if entire newSelection is already selected, toggle selection
setSelection(mSelection-newSelection);
else
setSelection(mSelection+newSelection);
}
} else
setSelection(newSelection);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelection != selectionBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAbstractPlottable::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
if (mSelectable != QCP::stNone)
{
QCPDataSelection selectionBefore = mSelection;
setSelection(QCPDataSelection());
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelection != selectionBefore;
}
}
/* end of 'src/plottable.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/item.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 49486 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemAnchor
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemAnchor
\brief An anchor of an item to which positions can be attached to.
An item (QCPAbstractItem) may have one or more anchors. Unlike QCPItemPosition, an anchor doesn't
control anything on its item, but provides a way to tie other items via their positions to the
anchor.
For example, a QCPItemRect is defined by its positions \a topLeft and \a bottomRight.
Additionally it has various anchors like \a top, \a topRight or \a bottomLeft etc. So you can
attach the \a start (which is a QCPItemPosition) of a QCPItemLine to one of the anchors by
calling QCPItemPosition::setParentAnchor on \a start, passing the wanted anchor of the
QCPItemRect. This way the start of the line will now always follow the respective anchor location
on the rect item.
Note that QCPItemPosition derives from QCPItemAnchor, so every position can also serve as an
anchor to other positions.
To learn how to provide anchors in your own item subclasses, see the subclassing section of the
QCPAbstractItem documentation.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn virtual QCPItemPosition *QCPItemAnchor::toQCPItemPosition()
Returns \c nullptr if this instance is merely a QCPItemAnchor, and a valid pointer of type
QCPItemPosition* if it actually is a QCPItemPosition (which is a subclass of QCPItemAnchor).
This safe downcast functionality could also be achieved with a dynamic_cast. However, QCustomPlot avoids
dynamic_cast to work with projects that don't have RTTI support enabled (e.g. -fno-rtti flag with
gcc compiler).
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a new QCPItemAnchor. You shouldn't create QCPItemAnchor instances directly, even if
you want to make a new item subclass. Use \ref QCPAbstractItem::createAnchor instead, as
explained in the subclassing section of the QCPAbstractItem documentation.
*/
QCPItemAnchor::QCPItemAnchor(QCustomPlot *parentPlot, QCPAbstractItem *parentItem, const QString &name, int anchorId) :
mName(name),
mParentPlot(parentPlot),
mParentItem(parentItem),
mAnchorId(anchorId)
{
}
QCPItemAnchor::~QCPItemAnchor()
{
// unregister as parent at children:
foreach (QCPItemPosition *child, mChildrenX.values())
{
if (child->parentAnchorX() == this)
child->setParentAnchorX(nullptr); // this acts back on this anchor and child removes itself from mChildrenX
}
foreach (QCPItemPosition *child, mChildrenY.values())
{
if (child->parentAnchorY() == this)
child->setParentAnchorY(nullptr); // this acts back on this anchor and child removes itself from mChildrenY
}
}
/*!
Returns the final absolute pixel position of the QCPItemAnchor on the QCustomPlot surface.
The pixel information is internally retrieved via QCPAbstractItem::anchorPixelPosition of the
parent item, QCPItemAnchor is just an intermediary.
*/
QPointF QCPItemAnchor::pixelPosition() const
{
if (mParentItem)
{
if (mAnchorId > -1)
{
return mParentItem->anchorPixelPosition(mAnchorId);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no valid anchor id set:" << mAnchorId;
return {};
}
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no parent item set";
return {};
}
}
/*! \internal
Adds \a pos to the childX list of this anchor, which keeps track of which children use this
anchor as parent anchor for the respective coordinate. This is necessary to notify the children
prior to destruction of the anchor.
Note that this function does not change the parent setting in \a pos.
*/
void QCPItemAnchor::addChildX(QCPItemPosition *pos)
{
if (!mChildrenX.contains(pos))
mChildrenX.insert(pos);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "provided pos is child already" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(pos);
}
/*! \internal
Removes \a pos from the childX list of this anchor.
Note that this function does not change the parent setting in \a pos.
*/
void QCPItemAnchor::removeChildX(QCPItemPosition *pos)
{
if (!mChildrenX.remove(pos))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "provided pos isn't child" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(pos);
}
/*! \internal
Adds \a pos to the childY list of this anchor, which keeps track of which children use this
anchor as parent anchor for the respective coordinate. This is necessary to notify the children
prior to destruction of the anchor.
Note that this function does not change the parent setting in \a pos.
*/
void QCPItemAnchor::addChildY(QCPItemPosition *pos)
{
if (!mChildrenY.contains(pos))
mChildrenY.insert(pos);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "provided pos is child already" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(pos);
}
/*! \internal
Removes \a pos from the childY list of this anchor.
Note that this function does not change the parent setting in \a pos.
*/
void QCPItemAnchor::removeChildY(QCPItemPosition *pos)
{
if (!mChildrenY.remove(pos))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "provided pos isn't child" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(pos);
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemPosition
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemPosition
\brief Manages the position of an item.
Every item has at least one public QCPItemPosition member pointer which provides ways to position the
item on the QCustomPlot surface. Some items have multiple positions, for example QCPItemRect has two:
\a topLeft and \a bottomRight.
QCPItemPosition has a type (\ref PositionType) that can be set with \ref setType. This type
defines how coordinates passed to \ref setCoords are to be interpreted, e.g. as absolute pixel
coordinates, as plot coordinates of certain axes (\ref QCPItemPosition::setAxes), as fractions of
the axis rect (\ref QCPItemPosition::setAxisRect), etc. For more advanced plots it is also
possible to assign different types per X/Y coordinate of the position (see \ref setTypeX, \ref
setTypeY). This way an item could be positioned for example at a fixed pixel distance from the
top in the Y direction, while following a plot coordinate in the X direction.
A QCPItemPosition may have a parent QCPItemAnchor, see \ref setParentAnchor. This way you can tie
multiple items together. If the QCPItemPosition has a parent, its coordinates (\ref setCoords)
are considered to be absolute pixels in the reference frame of the parent anchor, where (0, 0)
means directly ontop of the parent anchor. For example, You could attach the \a start position of
a QCPItemLine to the \a bottom anchor of a QCPItemText to make the starting point of the line
always be centered under the text label, no matter where the text is moved to. For more advanced
plots, it is possible to assign different parent anchors per X/Y coordinate of the position, see
\ref setParentAnchorX, \ref setParentAnchorY. This way an item could follow another item in the X
direction but stay at a fixed position in the Y direction. Or even follow item A in X, and item B
in Y.
Note that every QCPItemPosition inherits from QCPItemAnchor and thus can itself be used as parent
anchor for other positions.
To set the apparent pixel position on the QCustomPlot surface directly, use \ref setPixelPosition. This
works no matter what type this QCPItemPosition is or what parent-child situation it is in, as \ref
setPixelPosition transforms the coordinates appropriately, to make the position appear at the specified
pixel values.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPItemPosition::PositionType *QCPItemPosition::type() const
Returns the current position type.
If different types were set for X and Y (\ref setTypeX, \ref setTypeY), this method returns the
type of the X coordinate. In that case rather use \a typeX() and \a typeY().
\see setType
*/
/*! \fn QCPItemAnchor *QCPItemPosition::parentAnchor() const
Returns the current parent anchor.
If different parent anchors were set for X and Y (\ref setParentAnchorX, \ref setParentAnchorY),
this method returns the parent anchor of the Y coordinate. In that case rather use \a
parentAnchorX() and \a parentAnchorY().
\see setParentAnchor
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a new QCPItemPosition. You shouldn't create QCPItemPosition instances directly, even if
you want to make a new item subclass. Use \ref QCPAbstractItem::createPosition instead, as
explained in the subclassing section of the QCPAbstractItem documentation.
*/
QCPItemPosition::QCPItemPosition(QCustomPlot *parentPlot, QCPAbstractItem *parentItem, const QString &name) :
QCPItemAnchor(parentPlot, parentItem, name),
mPositionTypeX(ptAbsolute),
mPositionTypeY(ptAbsolute),
mKey(0),
mValue(0),
mParentAnchorX(nullptr),
mParentAnchorY(nullptr)
{
}
QCPItemPosition::~QCPItemPosition()
{
// unregister as parent at children:
// Note: this is done in ~QCPItemAnchor again, but it's important QCPItemPosition does it itself, because only then
// the setParentAnchor(0) call the correct QCPItemPosition::pixelPosition function instead of QCPItemAnchor::pixelPosition
foreach (QCPItemPosition *child, mChildrenX.values())
{
if (child->parentAnchorX() == this)
child->setParentAnchorX(nullptr); // this acts back on this anchor and child removes itself from mChildrenX
}
foreach (QCPItemPosition *child, mChildrenY.values())
{
if (child->parentAnchorY() == this)
child->setParentAnchorY(nullptr); // this acts back on this anchor and child removes itself from mChildrenY
}
// unregister as child in parent:
if (mParentAnchorX)
mParentAnchorX->removeChildX(this);
if (mParentAnchorY)
mParentAnchorY->removeChildY(this);
}
/* can't make this a header inline function, because QPointer breaks with forward declared types, see QTBUG-29588 */
QCPAxisRect *QCPItemPosition::axisRect() const
{
return mAxisRect.data();
}
/*!
Sets the type of the position. The type defines how the coordinates passed to \ref setCoords
should be handled and how the QCPItemPosition should behave in the plot.
The possible values for \a type can be separated in two main categories:
\li The position is regarded as a point in plot coordinates. This corresponds to \ref ptPlotCoords
and requires two axes that define the plot coordinate system. They can be specified with \ref setAxes.
By default, the QCustomPlot's x- and yAxis are used.
\li The position is fixed on the QCustomPlot surface, i.e. independent of axis ranges. This
corresponds to all other types, i.e. \ref ptAbsolute, \ref ptViewportRatio and \ref
ptAxisRectRatio. They differ only in the way the absolute position is described, see the
documentation of \ref PositionType for details. For \ref ptAxisRectRatio, note that you can specify
the axis rect with \ref setAxisRect. By default this is set to the main axis rect.
Note that the position type \ref ptPlotCoords is only available (and sensible) when the position
has no parent anchor (\ref setParentAnchor).
If the type is changed, the apparent pixel position on the plot is preserved. This means
the coordinates as retrieved with coords() and set with \ref setCoords may change in the process.
This method sets the type for both X and Y directions. It is also possible to set different types
for X and Y, see \ref setTypeX, \ref setTypeY.
*/
void QCPItemPosition::setType(QCPItemPosition::PositionType type)
{
setTypeX(type);
setTypeY(type);
}
/*!
This method sets the position type of the X coordinate to \a type.
For a detailed description of what a position type is, see the documentation of \ref setType.
\see setType, setTypeY
*/
void QCPItemPosition::setTypeX(QCPItemPosition::PositionType type)
{
if (mPositionTypeX != type)
{
// if switching from or to coordinate type that isn't valid (e.g. because axes or axis rect
// were deleted), don't try to recover the pixelPosition() because it would output a qDebug warning.
bool retainPixelPosition = true;
if ((mPositionTypeX == ptPlotCoords || type == ptPlotCoords) && (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis))
retainPixelPosition = false;
if ((mPositionTypeX == ptAxisRectRatio || type == ptAxisRectRatio) && (!mAxisRect))
retainPixelPosition = false;
QPointF pixel;
if (retainPixelPosition)
pixel = pixelPosition();
mPositionTypeX = type;
if (retainPixelPosition)
setPixelPosition(pixel);
}
}
/*!
This method sets the position type of the Y coordinate to \a type.
For a detailed description of what a position type is, see the documentation of \ref setType.
\see setType, setTypeX
*/
void QCPItemPosition::setTypeY(QCPItemPosition::PositionType type)
{
if (mPositionTypeY != type)
{
// if switching from or to coordinate type that isn't valid (e.g. because axes or axis rect
// were deleted), don't try to recover the pixelPosition() because it would output a qDebug warning.
bool retainPixelPosition = true;
if ((mPositionTypeY == ptPlotCoords || type == ptPlotCoords) && (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis))
retainPixelPosition = false;
if ((mPositionTypeY == ptAxisRectRatio || type == ptAxisRectRatio) && (!mAxisRect))
retainPixelPosition = false;
QPointF pixel;
if (retainPixelPosition)
pixel = pixelPosition();
mPositionTypeY = type;
if (retainPixelPosition)
setPixelPosition(pixel);
}
}
/*!
Sets the parent of this QCPItemPosition to \a parentAnchor. This means the position will now
follow any position changes of the anchor. The local coordinate system of positions with a parent
anchor always is absolute pixels, with (0, 0) being exactly on top of the parent anchor. (Hence
the type shouldn't be set to \ref ptPlotCoords for positions with parent anchors.)
if \a keepPixelPosition is true, the current pixel position of the QCPItemPosition is preserved
during reparenting. If it's set to false, the coordinates are set to (0, 0), i.e. the position
will be exactly on top of the parent anchor.
To remove this QCPItemPosition from any parent anchor, set \a parentAnchor to \c nullptr.
If the QCPItemPosition previously had no parent and the type is \ref ptPlotCoords, the type is
set to \ref ptAbsolute, to keep the position in a valid state.
This method sets the parent anchor for both X and Y directions. It is also possible to set
different parents for X and Y, see \ref setParentAnchorX, \ref setParentAnchorY.
*/
bool QCPItemPosition::setParentAnchor(QCPItemAnchor *parentAnchor, bool keepPixelPosition)
{
bool successX = setParentAnchorX(parentAnchor, keepPixelPosition);
bool successY = setParentAnchorY(parentAnchor, keepPixelPosition);
return successX && successY;
}
/*!
This method sets the parent anchor of the X coordinate to \a parentAnchor.
For a detailed description of what a parent anchor is, see the documentation of \ref setParentAnchor.
\see setParentAnchor, setParentAnchorY
*/
bool QCPItemPosition::setParentAnchorX(QCPItemAnchor *parentAnchor, bool keepPixelPosition)
{
// make sure self is not assigned as parent:
if (parentAnchor == this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't set self as parent anchor" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(parentAnchor);
return false;
}
// make sure no recursive parent-child-relationships are created:
QCPItemAnchor *currentParent = parentAnchor;
while (currentParent)
{
if (QCPItemPosition *currentParentPos = currentParent->toQCPItemPosition())
{
// is a QCPItemPosition, might have further parent, so keep iterating
if (currentParentPos == this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't create recursive parent-child-relationship" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(parentAnchor);
return false;
}
currentParent = currentParentPos->parentAnchorX();
} else
{
// is a QCPItemAnchor, can't have further parent. Now make sure the parent items aren't the
// same, to prevent a position being child of an anchor which itself depends on the position,
// because they're both on the same item:
if (currentParent->mParentItem == mParentItem)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't set parent to be an anchor which itself depends on this position" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(parentAnchor);
return false;
}
break;
}
}
// if previously no parent set and PosType is still ptPlotCoords, set to ptAbsolute:
if (!mParentAnchorX && mPositionTypeX == ptPlotCoords)
setTypeX(ptAbsolute);
// save pixel position:
QPointF pixelP;
if (keepPixelPosition)
pixelP = pixelPosition();
// unregister at current parent anchor:
if (mParentAnchorX)
mParentAnchorX->removeChildX(this);
// register at new parent anchor:
if (parentAnchor)
parentAnchor->addChildX(this);
mParentAnchorX = parentAnchor;
// restore pixel position under new parent:
if (keepPixelPosition)
setPixelPosition(pixelP);
else
setCoords(0, coords().y());
return true;
}
/*!
This method sets the parent anchor of the Y coordinate to \a parentAnchor.
For a detailed description of what a parent anchor is, see the documentation of \ref setParentAnchor.
\see setParentAnchor, setParentAnchorX
*/
bool QCPItemPosition::setParentAnchorY(QCPItemAnchor *parentAnchor, bool keepPixelPosition)
{
// make sure self is not assigned as parent:
if (parentAnchor == this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't set self as parent anchor" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(parentAnchor);
return false;
}
// make sure no recursive parent-child-relationships are created:
QCPItemAnchor *currentParent = parentAnchor;
while (currentParent)
{
if (QCPItemPosition *currentParentPos = currentParent->toQCPItemPosition())
{
// is a QCPItemPosition, might have further parent, so keep iterating
if (currentParentPos == this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't create recursive parent-child-relationship" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(parentAnchor);
return false;
}
currentParent = currentParentPos->parentAnchorY();
} else
{
// is a QCPItemAnchor, can't have further parent. Now make sure the parent items aren't the
// same, to prevent a position being child of an anchor which itself depends on the position,
// because they're both on the same item:
if (currentParent->mParentItem == mParentItem)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't set parent to be an anchor which itself depends on this position" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(parentAnchor);
return false;
}
break;
}
}
// if previously no parent set and PosType is still ptPlotCoords, set to ptAbsolute:
if (!mParentAnchorY && mPositionTypeY == ptPlotCoords)
setTypeY(ptAbsolute);
// save pixel position:
QPointF pixelP;
if (keepPixelPosition)
pixelP = pixelPosition();
// unregister at current parent anchor:
if (mParentAnchorY)
mParentAnchorY->removeChildY(this);
// register at new parent anchor:
if (parentAnchor)
parentAnchor->addChildY(this);
mParentAnchorY = parentAnchor;
// restore pixel position under new parent:
if (keepPixelPosition)
setPixelPosition(pixelP);
else
setCoords(coords().x(), 0);
return true;
}
/*!
Sets the coordinates of this QCPItemPosition. What the coordinates mean, is defined by the type
(\ref setType, \ref setTypeX, \ref setTypeY).
For example, if the type is \ref ptAbsolute, \a key and \a value mean the x and y pixel position
on the QCustomPlot surface. In that case the origin (0, 0) is in the top left corner of the
QCustomPlot viewport. If the type is \ref ptPlotCoords, \a key and \a value mean a point in the
plot coordinate system defined by the axes set by \ref setAxes. By default those are the
QCustomPlot's xAxis and yAxis. See the documentation of \ref setType for other available
coordinate types and their meaning.
If different types were configured for X and Y (\ref setTypeX, \ref setTypeY), \a key and \a
value must also be provided in the different coordinate systems. Here, the X type refers to \a
key, and the Y type refers to \a value.
\see setPixelPosition
*/
void QCPItemPosition::setCoords(double key, double value)
{
mKey = key;
mValue = value;
}
/*! \overload
Sets the coordinates as a QPointF \a pos where pos.x has the meaning of \a key and pos.y the
meaning of \a value of the \ref setCoords(double key, double value) method.
*/
void QCPItemPosition::setCoords(const QPointF &pos)
{
setCoords(pos.x(), pos.y());
}
/*!
Returns the final absolute pixel position of the QCPItemPosition on the QCustomPlot surface. It
includes all effects of type (\ref setType) and possible parent anchors (\ref setParentAnchor).
\see setPixelPosition
*/
QPointF QCPItemPosition::pixelPosition() const
{
QPointF result;
// determine X:
switch (mPositionTypeX)
{
case ptAbsolute:
{
result.rx() = mKey;
if (mParentAnchorX)
result.rx() += mParentAnchorX->pixelPosition().x();
break;
}
case ptViewportRatio:
{
result.rx() = mKey*mParentPlot->viewport().width();
if (mParentAnchorX)
result.rx() += mParentAnchorX->pixelPosition().x();
else
result.rx() += mParentPlot->viewport().left();
break;
}
case ptAxisRectRatio:
{
if (mAxisRect)
{
result.rx() = mKey*mAxisRect.data()->width();
if (mParentAnchorX)
result.rx() += mParentAnchorX->pixelPosition().x();
else
result.rx() += mAxisRect.data()->left();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item position type x is ptAxisRectRatio, but no axis rect was defined";
break;
}
case ptPlotCoords:
{
if (mKeyAxis && mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
result.rx() = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(mKey);
else if (mValueAxis && mValueAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
result.rx() = mValueAxis.data()->coordToPixel(mValue);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item position type x is ptPlotCoords, but no axes were defined";
break;
}
}
// determine Y:
switch (mPositionTypeY)
{
case ptAbsolute:
{
result.ry() = mValue;
if (mParentAnchorY)
result.ry() += mParentAnchorY->pixelPosition().y();
break;
}
case ptViewportRatio:
{
result.ry() = mValue*mParentPlot->viewport().height();
if (mParentAnchorY)
result.ry() += mParentAnchorY->pixelPosition().y();
else
result.ry() += mParentPlot->viewport().top();
break;
}
case ptAxisRectRatio:
{
if (mAxisRect)
{
result.ry() = mValue*mAxisRect.data()->height();
if (mParentAnchorY)
result.ry() += mParentAnchorY->pixelPosition().y();
else
result.ry() += mAxisRect.data()->top();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item position type y is ptAxisRectRatio, but no axis rect was defined";
break;
}
case ptPlotCoords:
{
if (mKeyAxis && mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
result.ry() = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(mKey);
else if (mValueAxis && mValueAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
result.ry() = mValueAxis.data()->coordToPixel(mValue);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item position type y is ptPlotCoords, but no axes were defined";
break;
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
When \ref setType is \ref ptPlotCoords, this function may be used to specify the axes the
coordinates set with \ref setCoords relate to. By default they are set to the initial xAxis and
yAxis of the QCustomPlot.
*/
void QCPItemPosition::setAxes(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis)
{
mKeyAxis = keyAxis;
mValueAxis = valueAxis;
}
/*!
When \ref setType is \ref ptAxisRectRatio, this function may be used to specify the axis rect the
coordinates set with \ref setCoords relate to. By default this is set to the main axis rect of
the QCustomPlot.
*/
void QCPItemPosition::setAxisRect(QCPAxisRect *axisRect)
{
mAxisRect = axisRect;
}
/*!
Sets the apparent pixel position. This works no matter what type (\ref setType) this
QCPItemPosition is or what parent-child situation it is in, as coordinates are transformed
appropriately, to make the position finally appear at the specified pixel values.
Only if the type is \ref ptAbsolute and no parent anchor is set, this function's effect is
identical to that of \ref setCoords.
\see pixelPosition, setCoords
*/
void QCPItemPosition::setPixelPosition(const QPointF &pixelPosition)
{
double x = pixelPosition.x();
double y = pixelPosition.y();
switch (mPositionTypeX)
{
case ptAbsolute:
{
if (mParentAnchorX)
x -= mParentAnchorX->pixelPosition().x();
break;
}
case ptViewportRatio:
{
if (mParentAnchorX)
x -= mParentAnchorX->pixelPosition().x();
else
x -= mParentPlot->viewport().left();
x /= double(mParentPlot->viewport().width());
break;
}
case ptAxisRectRatio:
{
if (mAxisRect)
{
if (mParentAnchorX)
x -= mParentAnchorX->pixelPosition().x();
else
x -= mAxisRect.data()->left();
x /= double(mAxisRect.data()->width());
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item position type x is ptAxisRectRatio, but no axis rect was defined";
break;
}
case ptPlotCoords:
{
if (mKeyAxis && mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
x = mKeyAxis.data()->pixelToCoord(x);
else if (mValueAxis && mValueAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
y = mValueAxis.data()->pixelToCoord(x);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item position type x is ptPlotCoords, but no axes were defined";
break;
}
}
switch (mPositionTypeY)
{
case ptAbsolute:
{
if (mParentAnchorY)
y -= mParentAnchorY->pixelPosition().y();
break;
}
case ptViewportRatio:
{
if (mParentAnchorY)
y -= mParentAnchorY->pixelPosition().y();
else
y -= mParentPlot->viewport().top();
y /= double(mParentPlot->viewport().height());
break;
}
case ptAxisRectRatio:
{
if (mAxisRect)
{
if (mParentAnchorY)
y -= mParentAnchorY->pixelPosition().y();
else
y -= mAxisRect.data()->top();
y /= double(mAxisRect.data()->height());
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item position type y is ptAxisRectRatio, but no axis rect was defined";
break;
}
case ptPlotCoords:
{
if (mKeyAxis && mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
x = mKeyAxis.data()->pixelToCoord(y);
else if (mValueAxis && mValueAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
y = mValueAxis.data()->pixelToCoord(y);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item position type y is ptPlotCoords, but no axes were defined";
break;
}
}
setCoords(x, y);
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAbstractItem
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAbstractItem
\brief The abstract base class for all items in a plot.
In QCustomPlot, items are supplemental graphical elements that are neither plottables
(QCPAbstractPlottable) nor axes (QCPAxis). While plottables are always tied to two axes and thus
plot coordinates, items can also be placed in absolute coordinates independent of any axes. Each
specific item has at least one QCPItemPosition member which controls the positioning. Some items
are defined by more than one coordinate and thus have two or more QCPItemPosition members (For
example, QCPItemRect has \a topLeft and \a bottomRight).
This abstract base class defines a very basic interface like visibility and clipping. Since this
class is abstract, it can't be instantiated. Use one of the subclasses or create a subclass
yourself to create new items.
The built-in items are:
<table>
<tr><td>QCPItemLine</td><td>A line defined by a start and an end point. May have different ending styles on each side (e.g. arrows).</td></tr>
<tr><td>QCPItemStraightLine</td><td>A straight line defined by a start and a direction point. Unlike QCPItemLine, the straight line is infinitely long and has no endings.</td></tr>
<tr><td>QCPItemCurve</td><td>A curve defined by start, end and two intermediate control points. May have different ending styles on each side (e.g. arrows).</td></tr>
<tr><td>QCPItemRect</td><td>A rectangle</td></tr>
<tr><td>QCPItemEllipse</td><td>An ellipse</td></tr>
<tr><td>QCPItemPixmap</td><td>An arbitrary pixmap</td></tr>
<tr><td>QCPItemText</td><td>A text label</td></tr>
<tr><td>QCPItemBracket</td><td>A bracket which may be used to reference/highlight certain parts in the plot.</td></tr>
<tr><td>QCPItemTracer</td><td>An item that can be attached to a QCPGraph and sticks to its data points, given a key coordinate.</td></tr>
</table>
\section items-clipping Clipping
Items are by default clipped to the main axis rect (they are only visible inside the axis rect).
To make an item visible outside that axis rect, disable clipping via \ref setClipToAxisRect
"setClipToAxisRect(false)".
On the other hand if you want the item to be clipped to a different axis rect, specify it via
\ref setClipAxisRect. This clipAxisRect property of an item is only used for clipping behaviour, and
in principle is independent of the coordinate axes the item might be tied to via its position
members (\ref QCPItemPosition::setAxes). However, it is common that the axis rect for clipping
also contains the axes used for the item positions.
\section items-using Using items
First you instantiate the item you want to use and add it to the plot:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpitemline-creation-1
by default, the positions of the item are bound to the x- and y-Axis of the plot. So we can just
set the plot coordinates where the line should start/end:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpitemline-creation-2
If we don't want the line to be positioned in plot coordinates but a different coordinate system,
e.g. absolute pixel positions on the QCustomPlot surface, we need to change the position type like this:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpitemline-creation-3
Then we can set the coordinates, this time in pixels:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpitemline-creation-4
and make the line visible on the entire QCustomPlot, by disabling clipping to the axis rect:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpitemline-creation-5
For more advanced plots, it is even possible to set different types and parent anchors per X/Y
coordinate of an item position, using for example \ref QCPItemPosition::setTypeX or \ref
QCPItemPosition::setParentAnchorX. For details, see the documentation of \ref QCPItemPosition.
\section items-subclassing Creating own items
To create an own item, you implement a subclass of QCPAbstractItem. These are the pure
virtual functions, you must implement:
\li \ref selectTest
\li \ref draw
See the documentation of those functions for what they need to do.
\subsection items-positioning Allowing the item to be positioned
As mentioned, item positions are represented by QCPItemPosition members. Let's assume the new item shall
have only one point as its position (as opposed to two like a rect or multiple like a polygon). You then add
a public member of type QCPItemPosition like so:
\code QCPItemPosition * const myPosition;\endcode
the const makes sure the pointer itself can't be modified from the user of your new item (the QCPItemPosition
instance it points to, can be modified, of course).
The initialization of this pointer is made easy with the \ref createPosition function. Just assign
the return value of this function to each QCPItemPosition in the constructor of your item. \ref createPosition
takes a string which is the name of the position, typically this is identical to the variable name.
For example, the constructor of QCPItemExample could look like this:
\code
QCPItemExample::QCPItemExample(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
myPosition(createPosition("myPosition"))
{
// other constructor code
}
\endcode
\subsection items-drawing The draw function
To give your item a visual representation, reimplement the \ref draw function and use the passed
QCPPainter to draw the item. You can retrieve the item position in pixel coordinates from the
position member(s) via \ref QCPItemPosition::pixelPosition.
To optimize performance you should calculate a bounding rect first (don't forget to take the pen
width into account), check whether it intersects the \ref clipRect, and only draw the item at all
if this is the case.
\subsection items-selection The selectTest function
Your implementation of the \ref selectTest function may use the helpers \ref
QCPVector2D::distanceSquaredToLine and \ref rectDistance. With these, the implementation of the
selection test becomes significantly simpler for most items. See the documentation of \ref
selectTest for what the function parameters mean and what the function should return.
\subsection anchors Providing anchors
Providing anchors (QCPItemAnchor) starts off like adding a position. First you create a public
member, e.g.
\code QCPItemAnchor * const bottom;\endcode
and create it in the constructor with the \ref createAnchor function, assigning it a name and an
anchor id (an integer enumerating all anchors on the item, you may create an own enum for this).
Since anchors can be placed anywhere, relative to the item's position(s), your item needs to
provide the position of every anchor with the reimplementation of the \ref anchorPixelPosition(int
anchorId) function.
In essence the QCPItemAnchor is merely an intermediary that itself asks your item for the pixel
position when anything attached to the anchor needs to know the coordinates.
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QList<QCPItemPosition*> QCPAbstractItem::positions() const
Returns all positions of the item in a list.
\see anchors, position
*/
/*! \fn QList<QCPItemAnchor*> QCPAbstractItem::anchors() const
Returns all anchors of the item in a list. Note that since a position (QCPItemPosition) is always
also an anchor, the list will also contain the positions of this item.
\see positions, anchor
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/* start documentation of pure virtual functions */
/*! \fn void QCPAbstractItem::draw(QCPPainter *painter) = 0
\internal
Draws this item with the provided \a painter.
The cliprect of the provided painter is set to the rect returned by \ref clipRect before this
function is called. The clipRect depends on the clipping settings defined by \ref
setClipToAxisRect and \ref setClipAxisRect.
*/
/* end documentation of pure virtual functions */
/* start documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPAbstractItem::selectionChanged(bool selected)
This signal is emitted when the selection state of this item has changed, either by user interaction
or by a direct call to \ref setSelected.
*/
/* end documentation of signals */
/*!
Base class constructor which initializes base class members.
*/
QCPAbstractItem::QCPAbstractItem(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPLayerable(parentPlot),
mClipToAxisRect(false),
mSelectable(true),
mSelected(false)
{
parentPlot->registerItem(this);
QList<QCPAxisRect*> rects = parentPlot->axisRects();
if (!rects.isEmpty())
{
setClipToAxisRect(true);
setClipAxisRect(rects.first());
}
}
QCPAbstractItem::~QCPAbstractItem()
{
// don't delete mPositions because every position is also an anchor and thus in mAnchors
qDeleteAll(mAnchors);
}
/* can't make this a header inline function, because QPointer breaks with forward declared types, see QTBUG-29588 */
QCPAxisRect *QCPAbstractItem::clipAxisRect() const
{
return mClipAxisRect.data();
}
/*!
Sets whether the item shall be clipped to an axis rect or whether it shall be visible on the
entire QCustomPlot. The axis rect can be set with \ref setClipAxisRect.
\see setClipAxisRect
*/
void QCPAbstractItem::setClipToAxisRect(bool clip)
{
mClipToAxisRect = clip;
if (mClipToAxisRect)
setParentLayerable(mClipAxisRect.data());
}
/*!
Sets the clip axis rect. It defines the rect that will be used to clip the item when \ref
setClipToAxisRect is set to true.
\see setClipToAxisRect
*/
void QCPAbstractItem::setClipAxisRect(QCPAxisRect *rect)
{
mClipAxisRect = rect;
if (mClipToAxisRect)
setParentLayerable(mClipAxisRect.data());
}
/*!
Sets whether the user can (de-)select this item by clicking on the QCustomPlot surface.
(When \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains QCustomPlot::iSelectItems.)
However, even when \a selectable was set to false, it is possible to set the selection manually,
by calling \ref setSelected.
\see QCustomPlot::setInteractions, setSelected
*/
void QCPAbstractItem::setSelectable(bool selectable)
{
if (mSelectable != selectable)
{
mSelectable = selectable;
emit selectableChanged(mSelectable);
}
}
/*!
Sets whether this item is selected or not. When selected, it might use a different visual
appearance (e.g. pen and brush), this depends on the specific item though.
The entire selection mechanism for items is handled automatically when \ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains QCustomPlot::iSelectItems. You only need to call this
function when you wish to change the selection state manually.
This function can change the selection state even when \ref setSelectable was set to false.
emits the \ref selectionChanged signal when \a selected is different from the previous selection state.
\see setSelectable, selectTest
*/
void QCPAbstractItem::setSelected(bool selected)
{
if (mSelected != selected)
{
mSelected = selected;
emit selectionChanged(mSelected);
}
}
/*!
Returns the QCPItemPosition with the specified \a name. If this item doesn't have a position by
that name, returns \c nullptr.
This function provides an alternative way to access item positions. Normally, you access
positions direcly by their member pointers (which typically have the same variable name as \a
name).
\see positions, anchor
*/
QCPItemPosition *QCPAbstractItem::position(const QString &name) const
{
foreach (QCPItemPosition *position, mPositions)
{
if (position->name() == name)
return position;
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "position with name not found:" << name;
return nullptr;
}
/*!
Returns the QCPItemAnchor with the specified \a name. If this item doesn't have an anchor by
that name, returns \c nullptr.
This function provides an alternative way to access item anchors. Normally, you access
anchors direcly by their member pointers (which typically have the same variable name as \a
name).
\see anchors, position
*/
QCPItemAnchor *QCPAbstractItem::anchor(const QString &name) const
{
foreach (QCPItemAnchor *anchor, mAnchors)
{
if (anchor->name() == name)
return anchor;
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "anchor with name not found:" << name;
return nullptr;
}
/*!
Returns whether this item has an anchor with the specified \a name.
Note that you can check for positions with this function, too. This is because every position is
also an anchor (QCPItemPosition inherits from QCPItemAnchor).
\see anchor, position
*/
bool QCPAbstractItem::hasAnchor(const QString &name) const
{
foreach (QCPItemAnchor *anchor, mAnchors)
{
if (anchor->name() == name)
return true;
}
return false;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the rect the visual representation of this item is clipped to. This depends on the
current setting of \ref setClipToAxisRect as well as the axis rect set with \ref setClipAxisRect.
If the item is not clipped to an axis rect, QCustomPlot's viewport rect is returned.
\see draw
*/
QRect QCPAbstractItem::clipRect() const
{
if (mClipToAxisRect && mClipAxisRect)
return mClipAxisRect.data()->rect();
else
return mParentPlot->viewport();
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing item lines.
This is the antialiasing state the painter passed to the \ref draw method is in by default.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\see setAntialiased
*/
void QCPAbstractItem::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeItems);
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function which returns the selectTest value for a specified \a rect and a specified
click position \a pos. \a filledRect defines whether a click inside the rect should also be
considered a hit or whether only the rect border is sensitive to hits.
This function may be used to help with the implementation of the \ref selectTest function for
specific items.
For example, if your item consists of four rects, call this function four times, once for each
rect, in your \ref selectTest reimplementation. Finally, return the minimum (non -1) of all four
returned values.
*/
double QCPAbstractItem::rectDistance(const QRectF &rect, const QPointF &pos, bool filledRect) const
{
double result = -1;
// distance to border:
const QList<QLineF> lines = QList<QLineF>() << QLineF(rect.topLeft(), rect.topRight()) << QLineF(rect.bottomLeft(), rect.bottomRight())
<< QLineF(rect.topLeft(), rect.bottomLeft()) << QLineF(rect.topRight(), rect.bottomRight());
const QCPVector2D posVec(pos);
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
foreach (const QLineF &line, lines)
{
double distSqr = posVec.distanceSquaredToLine(line.p1(), line.p2());
if (distSqr < minDistSqr)
minDistSqr = distSqr;
}
result = qSqrt(minDistSqr);
// filled rect, allow click inside to count as hit:
if (filledRect && result > mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99)
{
if (rect.contains(pos))
result = mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pixel position of the anchor with Id \a anchorId. This function must be reimplemented in
item subclasses if they want to provide anchors (QCPItemAnchor).
For example, if the item has two anchors with id 0 and 1, this function takes one of these anchor
ids and returns the respective pixel points of the specified anchor.
\see createAnchor
*/
QPointF QCPAbstractItem::anchorPixelPosition(int anchorId) const
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "called on item which shouldn't have any anchors (this method not reimplemented). anchorId" << anchorId;
return {};
}
/*! \internal
Creates a QCPItemPosition, registers it with this item and returns a pointer to it. The specified
\a name must be a unique string that is usually identical to the variable name of the position
member (This is needed to provide the name-based \ref position access to positions).
Don't delete positions created by this function manually, as the item will take care of it.
Use this function in the constructor (initialization list) of the specific item subclass to
create each position member. Don't create QCPItemPositions with \b new yourself, because they
won't be registered with the item properly.
\see createAnchor
*/
QCPItemPosition *QCPAbstractItem::createPosition(const QString &name)
{
if (hasAnchor(name))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "anchor/position with name exists already:" << name;
QCPItemPosition *newPosition = new QCPItemPosition(mParentPlot, this, name);
mPositions.append(newPosition);
mAnchors.append(newPosition); // every position is also an anchor
newPosition->setAxes(mParentPlot->xAxis, mParentPlot->yAxis);
newPosition->setType(QCPItemPosition::ptPlotCoords);
if (mParentPlot->axisRect())
newPosition->setAxisRect(mParentPlot->axisRect());
newPosition->setCoords(0, 0);
return newPosition;
}
/*! \internal
Creates a QCPItemAnchor, registers it with this item and returns a pointer to it. The specified
\a name must be a unique string that is usually identical to the variable name of the anchor
member (This is needed to provide the name based \ref anchor access to anchors).
The \a anchorId must be a number identifying the created anchor. It is recommended to create an
enum (e.g. "AnchorIndex") for this on each item that uses anchors. This id is used by the anchor
to identify itself when it calls QCPAbstractItem::anchorPixelPosition. That function then returns
the correct pixel coordinates for the passed anchor id.
Don't delete anchors created by this function manually, as the item will take care of it.
Use this function in the constructor (initialization list) of the specific item subclass to
create each anchor member. Don't create QCPItemAnchors with \b new yourself, because then they
won't be registered with the item properly.
\see createPosition
*/
QCPItemAnchor *QCPAbstractItem::createAnchor(const QString &name, int anchorId)
{
if (hasAnchor(name))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "anchor/position with name exists already:" << name;
QCPItemAnchor *newAnchor = new QCPItemAnchor(mParentPlot, this, name, anchorId);
mAnchors.append(newAnchor);
return newAnchor;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAbstractItem::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (mSelectable)
{
bool selBefore = mSelected;
setSelected(additive ? !mSelected : true);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelected != selBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAbstractItem::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
if (mSelectable)
{
bool selBefore = mSelected;
setSelected(false);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelected != selBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCP::Interaction QCPAbstractItem::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectItems;
}
/* end of 'src/item.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/core.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 127198 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCustomPlot
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCustomPlot
\brief The central class of the library. This is the QWidget which displays the plot and
interacts with the user.
For tutorials on how to use QCustomPlot, see the website\n
http://www.qcustomplot.com/
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPSelectionRect *QCustomPlot::selectionRect() const
Allows access to the currently used QCPSelectionRect instance (or subclass thereof), that is used
to handle and draw selection rect interactions (see \ref setSelectionRectMode).
\see setSelectionRect
*/
/*! \fn QCPLayoutGrid *QCustomPlot::plotLayout() const
Returns the top level layout of this QCustomPlot instance. It is a \ref QCPLayoutGrid, initially containing just
one cell with the main QCPAxisRect inside.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/* start of documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::mouseDoubleClick(QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when the QCustomPlot receives a mouse double click event.
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::mousePress(QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when the QCustomPlot receives a mouse press event.
It is emitted before QCustomPlot handles any other mechanism like range dragging. So a slot
connected to this signal can still influence the behaviour e.g. with \ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeDrag or \ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes.
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::mouseMove(QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when the QCustomPlot receives a mouse move event.
It is emitted before QCustomPlot handles any other mechanism like range dragging. So a slot
connected to this signal can still influence the behaviour e.g. with \ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeDrag or \ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes.
\warning It is discouraged to change the drag-axes with \ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes here,
because the dragging starting point was saved the moment the mouse was pressed. Thus it only has
a meaning for the range drag axes that were set at that moment. If you want to change the drag
axes, consider doing this in the \ref mousePress signal instead.
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::mouseRelease(QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when the QCustomPlot receives a mouse release event.
It is emitted before QCustomPlot handles any other mechanisms like object selection. So a
slot connected to this signal can still influence the behaviour e.g. with \ref setInteractions or
\ref QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelectable.
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::mouseWheel(QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when the QCustomPlot receives a mouse wheel event.
It is emitted before QCustomPlot handles any other mechanisms like range zooming. So a slot
connected to this signal can still influence the behaviour e.g. with \ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoom, \ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomAxes or \ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomFactor.
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::plottableClick(QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable, int dataIndex, QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when a plottable is clicked.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the click and \a plottable is the plottable that received
the click. The parameter \a dataIndex indicates the data point that was closest to the click
position.
\see plottableDoubleClick
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::plottableDoubleClick(QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable, int dataIndex, QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when a plottable is double clicked.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the click and \a plottable is the plottable that received
the click. The parameter \a dataIndex indicates the data point that was closest to the click
position.
\see plottableClick
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::itemClick(QCPAbstractItem *item, QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when an item is clicked.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the click and \a item is the item that received the
click.
\see itemDoubleClick
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::itemDoubleClick(QCPAbstractItem *item, QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when an item is double clicked.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the click and \a item is the item that received the
click.
\see itemClick
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::axisClick(QCPAxis *axis, QCPAxis::SelectablePart part, QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when an axis is clicked.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the click, \a axis is the axis that received the click and
\a part indicates the part of the axis that was clicked.
\see axisDoubleClick
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::axisDoubleClick(QCPAxis *axis, QCPAxis::SelectablePart part, QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when an axis is double clicked.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the click, \a axis is the axis that received the click and
\a part indicates the part of the axis that was clicked.
\see axisClick
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::legendClick(QCPLegend *legend, QCPAbstractLegendItem *item, QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when a legend (item) is clicked.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the click, \a legend is the legend that received the
click and \a item is the legend item that received the click. If only the legend and no item is
clicked, \a item is \c nullptr. This happens for a click inside the legend padding or the space
between two items.
\see legendDoubleClick
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::legendDoubleClick(QCPLegend *legend, QCPAbstractLegendItem *item, QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when a legend (item) is double clicked.
\a event is the mouse event that caused the click, \a legend is the legend that received the
click and \a item is the legend item that received the click. If only the legend and no item is
clicked, \a item is \c nullptr. This happens for a click inside the legend padding or the space
between two items.
\see legendClick
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::selectionChangedByUser()
This signal is emitted after the user has changed the selection in the QCustomPlot, e.g. by
clicking. It is not emitted when the selection state of an object has changed programmatically by
a direct call to <tt>setSelected()</tt>/<tt>setSelection()</tt> on an object or by calling \ref
deselectAll.
In addition to this signal, selectable objects also provide individual signals, for example \ref
QCPAxis::selectionChanged or \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::selectionChanged. Note that those signals
are emitted even if the selection state is changed programmatically.
See the documentation of \ref setInteractions for details about the selection mechanism.
\see selectedPlottables, selectedGraphs, selectedItems, selectedAxes, selectedLegends
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::beforeReplot()
This signal is emitted immediately before a replot takes place (caused by a call to the slot \ref
replot).
It is safe to mutually connect the replot slot with this signal on two QCustomPlots to make them
replot synchronously, it won't cause an infinite recursion.
\see replot, afterReplot, afterLayout
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::afterLayout()
This signal is emitted immediately after the layout step has been completed, which occurs right
before drawing the plot. This is typically during a call to \ref replot, and in such cases this
signal is emitted in between the signals \ref beforeReplot and \ref afterReplot. Unlike those
signals however, this signal is also emitted during off-screen painting, such as when calling
\ref toPixmap or \ref savePdf.
The layout step queries all layouts and layout elements in the plot for their proposed size and
arranges the objects accordingly as preparation for the subsequent drawing step. Through this
signal, you have the opportunity to update certain things in your plot that depend crucially on
the exact dimensions/positioning of layout elements such as axes and axis rects.
\warning However, changing any parameters of this QCustomPlot instance which would normally
affect the layouting (e.g. axis range order of magnitudes, tick label sizes, etc.) will not issue
a second run of the layout step. It will propagate directly to the draw step and may cause
graphical inconsistencies such as overlapping objects, if sizes or positions have changed.
\see updateLayout, beforeReplot, afterReplot
*/
/*! \fn void QCustomPlot::afterReplot()
This signal is emitted immediately after a replot has taken place (caused by a call to the slot \ref
replot).
It is safe to mutually connect the replot slot with this signal on two QCustomPlots to make them
replot synchronously, it won't cause an infinite recursion.
\see replot, beforeReplot, afterLayout
*/
/* end of documentation of signals */
/* start of documentation of public members */
/*! \var QCPAxis *QCustomPlot::xAxis
A pointer to the primary x Axis (bottom) of the main axis rect of the plot.
QCustomPlot offers convenient pointers to the axes (\ref xAxis, \ref yAxis, \ref xAxis2, \ref
yAxis2) and the \ref legend. They make it very easy working with plots that only have a single
axis rect and at most one axis at each axis rect side. If you use \link thelayoutsystem the
layout system\endlink to add multiple axis rects or multiple axes to one side, use the \ref
QCPAxisRect::axis interface to access the new axes. If one of the four default axes or the
default legend is removed due to manipulation of the layout system (e.g. by removing the main
axis rect), the corresponding pointers become \c nullptr.
If an axis convenience pointer is currently \c nullptr and a new axis rect or a corresponding
axis is added in the place of the main axis rect, QCustomPlot resets the convenience pointers to
the according new axes. Similarly the \ref legend convenience pointer will be reset if a legend
is added after the main legend was removed before.
*/
/*! \var QCPAxis *QCustomPlot::yAxis
A pointer to the primary y Axis (left) of the main axis rect of the plot.
QCustomPlot offers convenient pointers to the axes (\ref xAxis, \ref yAxis, \ref xAxis2, \ref
yAxis2) and the \ref legend. They make it very easy working with plots that only have a single
axis rect and at most one axis at each axis rect side. If you use \link thelayoutsystem the
layout system\endlink to add multiple axis rects or multiple axes to one side, use the \ref
QCPAxisRect::axis interface to access the new axes. If one of the four default axes or the
default legend is removed due to manipulation of the layout system (e.g. by removing the main
axis rect), the corresponding pointers become \c nullptr.
If an axis convenience pointer is currently \c nullptr and a new axis rect or a corresponding
axis is added in the place of the main axis rect, QCustomPlot resets the convenience pointers to
the according new axes. Similarly the \ref legend convenience pointer will be reset if a legend
is added after the main legend was removed before.
*/
/*! \var QCPAxis *QCustomPlot::xAxis2
A pointer to the secondary x Axis (top) of the main axis rect of the plot. Secondary axes are
invisible by default. Use QCPAxis::setVisible to change this (or use \ref
QCPAxisRect::setupFullAxesBox).
QCustomPlot offers convenient pointers to the axes (\ref xAxis, \ref yAxis, \ref xAxis2, \ref
yAxis2) and the \ref legend. They make it very easy working with plots that only have a single
axis rect and at most one axis at each axis rect side. If you use \link thelayoutsystem the
layout system\endlink to add multiple axis rects or multiple axes to one side, use the \ref
QCPAxisRect::axis interface to access the new axes. If one of the four default axes or the
default legend is removed due to manipulation of the layout system (e.g. by removing the main
axis rect), the corresponding pointers become \c nullptr.
If an axis convenience pointer is currently \c nullptr and a new axis rect or a corresponding
axis is added in the place of the main axis rect, QCustomPlot resets the convenience pointers to
the according new axes. Similarly the \ref legend convenience pointer will be reset if a legend
is added after the main legend was removed before.
*/
/*! \var QCPAxis *QCustomPlot::yAxis2
A pointer to the secondary y Axis (right) of the main axis rect of the plot. Secondary axes are
invisible by default. Use QCPAxis::setVisible to change this (or use \ref
QCPAxisRect::setupFullAxesBox).
QCustomPlot offers convenient pointers to the axes (\ref xAxis, \ref yAxis, \ref xAxis2, \ref
yAxis2) and the \ref legend. They make it very easy working with plots that only have a single
axis rect and at most one axis at each axis rect side. If you use \link thelayoutsystem the
layout system\endlink to add multiple axis rects or multiple axes to one side, use the \ref
QCPAxisRect::axis interface to access the new axes. If one of the four default axes or the
default legend is removed due to manipulation of the layout system (e.g. by removing the main
axis rect), the corresponding pointers become \c nullptr.
If an axis convenience pointer is currently \c nullptr and a new axis rect or a corresponding
axis is added in the place of the main axis rect, QCustomPlot resets the convenience pointers to
the according new axes. Similarly the \ref legend convenience pointer will be reset if a legend
is added after the main legend was removed before.
*/
/*! \var QCPLegend *QCustomPlot::legend
A pointer to the default legend of the main axis rect. The legend is invisible by default. Use
QCPLegend::setVisible to change this.
QCustomPlot offers convenient pointers to the axes (\ref xAxis, \ref yAxis, \ref xAxis2, \ref
yAxis2) and the \ref legend. They make it very easy working with plots that only have a single
axis rect and at most one axis at each axis rect side. If you use \link thelayoutsystem the
layout system\endlink to add multiple legends to the plot, use the layout system interface to
access the new legend. For example, legends can be placed inside an axis rect's \ref
QCPAxisRect::insetLayout "inset layout", and must then also be accessed via the inset layout. If
the default legend is removed due to manipulation of the layout system (e.g. by removing the main
axis rect), the corresponding pointer becomes \c nullptr.
If an axis convenience pointer is currently \c nullptr and a new axis rect or a corresponding
axis is added in the place of the main axis rect, QCustomPlot resets the convenience pointers to
the according new axes. Similarly the \ref legend convenience pointer will be reset if a legend
is added after the main legend was removed before.
*/
/* end of documentation of public members */
/*!
Constructs a QCustomPlot and sets reasonable default values.
*/
QCustomPlot::QCustomPlot(QWidget *parent) :
QWidget(parent),
xAxis(nullptr),
yAxis(nullptr),
xAxis2(nullptr),
yAxis2(nullptr),
legend(nullptr),
mBufferDevicePixelRatio(1.0), // will be adapted to primary screen below
mPlotLayout(nullptr),
mAutoAddPlottableToLegend(true),
mAntialiasedElements(QCP::aeNone),
mNotAntialiasedElements(QCP::aeNone),
mInteractions(QCP::iNone),
mSelectionTolerance(8),
mNoAntialiasingOnDrag(false),
mBackgroundBrush(Qt::white, Qt::SolidPattern),
mBackgroundScaled(true),
mBackgroundScaledMode(Qt::KeepAspectRatioByExpanding),
mCurrentLayer(nullptr),
mPlottingHints(QCP::phCacheLabels|QCP::phImmediateRefresh),
mMultiSelectModifier(Qt::ControlModifier),
mSelectionRectMode(QCP::srmNone),
mSelectionRect(nullptr),
mOpenGl(false),
mMouseHasMoved(false),
mMouseEventLayerable(nullptr),
mMouseSignalLayerable(nullptr),
mReplotting(false),
mReplotQueued(false),
mReplotTime(0),
mReplotTimeAverage(0),
mOpenGlMultisamples(16),
mOpenGlAntialiasedElementsBackup(QCP::aeNone),
mOpenGlCacheLabelsBackup(true)
{
setAttribute(Qt::WA_NoMousePropagation);
setAttribute(Qt::WA_OpaquePaintEvent);
setFocusPolicy(Qt::ClickFocus);
setMouseTracking(true);
QLocale currentLocale = locale();
currentLocale.setNumberOptions(QLocale::OmitGroupSeparator);
setLocale(currentLocale);
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
# ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_FLOAT
setBufferDevicePixelRatio(QWidget::devicePixelRatioF());
# else
setBufferDevicePixelRatio(QWidget::devicePixelRatio());
# endif
#endif
mOpenGlAntialiasedElementsBackup = mAntialiasedElements;
mOpenGlCacheLabelsBackup = mPlottingHints.testFlag(QCP::phCacheLabels);
// create initial layers:
mLayers.append(new QCPLayer(this, QLatin1String("background")));
mLayers.append(new QCPLayer(this, QLatin1String("grid")));
mLayers.append(new QCPLayer(this, QLatin1String("main")));
mLayers.append(new QCPLayer(this, QLatin1String("axes")));
mLayers.append(new QCPLayer(this, QLatin1String("legend")));
mLayers.append(new QCPLayer(this, QLatin1String("overlay")));
updateLayerIndices();
setCurrentLayer(QLatin1String("main"));
layer(QLatin1String("overlay"))->setMode(QCPLayer::lmBuffered);
// create initial layout, axis rect and legend:
mPlotLayout = new QCPLayoutGrid;
mPlotLayout->initializeParentPlot(this);
mPlotLayout->setParent(this); // important because if parent is QWidget, QCPLayout::sizeConstraintsChanged will call QWidget::updateGeometry
mPlotLayout->setLayer(QLatin1String("main"));
QCPAxisRect *defaultAxisRect = new QCPAxisRect(this, true);
mPlotLayout->addElement(0, 0, defaultAxisRect);
xAxis = defaultAxisRect->axis(QCPAxis::atBottom);
yAxis = defaultAxisRect->axis(QCPAxis::atLeft);
xAxis2 = defaultAxisRect->axis(QCPAxis::atTop);
yAxis2 = defaultAxisRect->axis(QCPAxis::atRight);
legend = new QCPLegend;
legend->setVisible(false);
defaultAxisRect->insetLayout()->addElement(legend, Qt::AlignRight|Qt::AlignTop);
defaultAxisRect->insetLayout()->setMargins(QMargins(12, 12, 12, 12));
defaultAxisRect->setLayer(QLatin1String("background"));
xAxis->setLayer(QLatin1String("axes"));
yAxis->setLayer(QLatin1String("axes"));
xAxis2->setLayer(QLatin1String("axes"));
yAxis2->setLayer(QLatin1String("axes"));
xAxis->grid()->setLayer(QLatin1String("grid"));
yAxis->grid()->setLayer(QLatin1String("grid"));
xAxis2->grid()->setLayer(QLatin1String("grid"));
yAxis2->grid()->setLayer(QLatin1String("grid"));
legend->setLayer(QLatin1String("legend"));
// create selection rect instance:
mSelectionRect = new QCPSelectionRect(this);
mSelectionRect->setLayer(QLatin1String("overlay"));
setViewport(rect()); // needs to be called after mPlotLayout has been created
replot(rpQueuedReplot);
}
QCustomPlot::~QCustomPlot()
{
clearPlottables();
clearItems();
if (mPlotLayout)
{
delete mPlotLayout;
mPlotLayout = nullptr;
}
mCurrentLayer = nullptr;
qDeleteAll(mLayers); // don't use removeLayer, because it would prevent the last layer to be removed
mLayers.clear();
}
/*!
Sets which elements are forcibly drawn antialiased as an \a or combination of QCP::AntialiasedElement.
This overrides the antialiasing settings for whole element groups, normally controlled with the
\a setAntialiasing function on the individual elements. If an element is neither specified in
\ref setAntialiasedElements nor in \ref setNotAntialiasedElements, the antialiasing setting on
each individual element instance is used.
For example, if \a antialiasedElements contains \ref QCP::aePlottables, all plottables will be
drawn antialiased, no matter what the specific QCPAbstractPlottable::setAntialiased value was set
to.
if an element in \a antialiasedElements is already set in \ref setNotAntialiasedElements, it is
removed from there.
\see setNotAntialiasedElements
*/
void QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements(const QCP::AntialiasedElements &antialiasedElements)
{
mAntialiasedElements = antialiasedElements;
// make sure elements aren't in mNotAntialiasedElements and mAntialiasedElements simultaneously:
if ((mNotAntialiasedElements & mAntialiasedElements) != 0)
mNotAntialiasedElements |= ~mAntialiasedElements;
}
/*!
Sets whether the specified \a antialiasedElement is forcibly drawn antialiased.
See \ref setAntialiasedElements for details.
\see setNotAntialiasedElement
*/
void QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElement(QCP::AntialiasedElement antialiasedElement, bool enabled)
{
if (!enabled && mAntialiasedElements.testFlag(antialiasedElement))
mAntialiasedElements &= ~antialiasedElement;
else if (enabled && !mAntialiasedElements.testFlag(antialiasedElement))
mAntialiasedElements |= antialiasedElement;
// make sure elements aren't in mNotAntialiasedElements and mAntialiasedElements simultaneously:
if ((mNotAntialiasedElements & mAntialiasedElements) != 0)
mNotAntialiasedElements |= ~mAntialiasedElements;
}
/*!
Sets which elements are forcibly drawn not antialiased as an \a or combination of
QCP::AntialiasedElement.
This overrides the antialiasing settings for whole element groups, normally controlled with the
\a setAntialiasing function on the individual elements. If an element is neither specified in
\ref setAntialiasedElements nor in \ref setNotAntialiasedElements, the antialiasing setting on
each individual element instance is used.
For example, if \a notAntialiasedElements contains \ref QCP::aePlottables, no plottables will be
drawn antialiased, no matter what the specific QCPAbstractPlottable::setAntialiased value was set
to.
if an element in \a notAntialiasedElements is already set in \ref setAntialiasedElements, it is
removed from there.
\see setAntialiasedElements
*/
void QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements(const QCP::AntialiasedElements ¬AntialiasedElements)
{
mNotAntialiasedElements = notAntialiasedElements;
// make sure elements aren't in mNotAntialiasedElements and mAntialiasedElements simultaneously:
if ((mNotAntialiasedElements & mAntialiasedElements) != 0)
mAntialiasedElements |= ~mNotAntialiasedElements;
}
/*!
Sets whether the specified \a notAntialiasedElement is forcibly drawn not antialiased.
See \ref setNotAntialiasedElements for details.
\see setAntialiasedElement
*/
void QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElement(QCP::AntialiasedElement notAntialiasedElement, bool enabled)
{
if (!enabled && mNotAntialiasedElements.testFlag(notAntialiasedElement))
mNotAntialiasedElements &= ~notAntialiasedElement;
else if (enabled && !mNotAntialiasedElements.testFlag(notAntialiasedElement))
mNotAntialiasedElements |= notAntialiasedElement;
// make sure elements aren't in mNotAntialiasedElements and mAntialiasedElements simultaneously:
if ((mNotAntialiasedElements & mAntialiasedElements) != 0)
mAntialiasedElements |= ~mNotAntialiasedElements;
}
/*!
If set to true, adding a plottable (e.g. a graph) to the QCustomPlot automatically also adds the
plottable to the legend (QCustomPlot::legend).
\see addGraph, QCPLegend::addItem
*/
void QCustomPlot::setAutoAddPlottableToLegend(bool on)
{
mAutoAddPlottableToLegend = on;
}
/*!
Sets the possible interactions of this QCustomPlot as an or-combination of \ref QCP::Interaction
enums. There are the following types of interactions:
<b>Axis range manipulation</b> is controlled via \ref QCP::iRangeDrag and \ref QCP::iRangeZoom. When the
respective interaction is enabled, the user may drag axes ranges and zoom with the mouse wheel.
For details how to control which axes the user may drag/zoom and in what orientations, see \ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeDrag, \ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoom, \ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes,
\ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomAxes.
<b>Plottable data selection</b> is controlled by \ref QCP::iSelectPlottables. If \ref
QCP::iSelectPlottables is set, the user may select plottables (graphs, curves, bars,...) and
their data by clicking on them or in their vicinity (\ref setSelectionTolerance). Whether the
user can actually select a plottable and its data can further be restricted with the \ref
QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelectable method on the specific plottable. For details, see the
special page about the \ref dataselection "data selection mechanism". To retrieve a list of all
currently selected plottables, call \ref selectedPlottables. If you're only interested in
QCPGraphs, you may use the convenience function \ref selectedGraphs.
<b>Item selection</b> is controlled by \ref QCP::iSelectItems. If \ref QCP::iSelectItems is set, the user
may select items (QCPItemLine, QCPItemText,...) by clicking on them or in their vicinity. To find
out whether a specific item is selected, call QCPAbstractItem::selected(). To retrieve a list of
all currently selected items, call \ref selectedItems.
<b>Axis selection</b> is controlled with \ref QCP::iSelectAxes. If \ref QCP::iSelectAxes is set, the user
may select parts of the axes by clicking on them. What parts exactly (e.g. Axis base line, tick
labels, axis label) are selectable can be controlled via \ref QCPAxis::setSelectableParts for
each axis. To retrieve a list of all axes that currently contain selected parts, call \ref
selectedAxes. Which parts of an axis are selected, can be retrieved with QCPAxis::selectedParts().
<b>Legend selection</b> is controlled with \ref QCP::iSelectLegend. If this is set, the user may
select the legend itself or individual items by clicking on them. What parts exactly are
selectable can be controlled via \ref QCPLegend::setSelectableParts. To find out whether the
legend or any of its child items are selected, check the value of QCPLegend::selectedParts. To
find out which child items are selected, call \ref QCPLegend::selectedItems.
<b>All other selectable elements</b> The selection of all other selectable objects (e.g.
QCPTextElement, or your own layerable subclasses) is controlled with \ref QCP::iSelectOther. If set, the
user may select those objects by clicking on them. To find out which are currently selected, you
need to check their selected state explicitly.
If the selection state has changed by user interaction, the \ref selectionChangedByUser signal is
emitted. Each selectable object additionally emits an individual selectionChanged signal whenever
their selection state has changed, i.e. not only by user interaction.
To allow multiple objects to be selected by holding the selection modifier (\ref
setMultiSelectModifier), set the flag \ref QCP::iMultiSelect.
\note In addition to the selection mechanism presented here, QCustomPlot always emits
corresponding signals, when an object is clicked or double clicked. see \ref plottableClick and
\ref plottableDoubleClick for example.
\see setInteraction, setSelectionTolerance
*/
void QCustomPlot::setInteractions(const QCP::Interactions &interactions)
{
mInteractions = interactions;
}
/*!
Sets the single \a interaction of this QCustomPlot to \a enabled.
For details about the interaction system, see \ref setInteractions.
\see setInteractions
*/
void QCustomPlot::setInteraction(const QCP::Interaction &interaction, bool enabled)
{
if (!enabled && mInteractions.testFlag(interaction))
mInteractions &= ~interaction;
else if (enabled && !mInteractions.testFlag(interaction))
mInteractions |= interaction;
}
/*!
Sets the tolerance that is used to decide whether a click selects an object (e.g. a plottable) or
not.
If the user clicks in the vicinity of the line of e.g. a QCPGraph, it's only regarded as a
potential selection when the minimum distance between the click position and the graph line is
smaller than \a pixels. Objects that are defined by an area (e.g. QCPBars) only react to clicks
directly inside the area and ignore this selection tolerance. In other words, it only has meaning
for parts of objects that are too thin to exactly hit with a click and thus need such a
tolerance.
\see setInteractions, QCPLayerable::selectTest
*/
void QCustomPlot::setSelectionTolerance(int pixels)
{
mSelectionTolerance = pixels;
}
/*!
Sets whether antialiasing is disabled for this QCustomPlot while the user is dragging axes
ranges. If many objects, especially plottables, are drawn antialiased, this greatly improves
performance during dragging. Thus it creates a more responsive user experience. As soon as the
user stops dragging, the last replot is done with normal antialiasing, to restore high image
quality.
\see setAntialiasedElements, setNotAntialiasedElements
*/
void QCustomPlot::setNoAntialiasingOnDrag(bool enabled)
{
mNoAntialiasingOnDrag = enabled;
}
/*!
Sets the plotting hints for this QCustomPlot instance as an \a or combination of QCP::PlottingHint.
\see setPlottingHint
*/
void QCustomPlot::setPlottingHints(const QCP::PlottingHints &hints)
{
mPlottingHints = hints;
}
/*!
Sets the specified plotting \a hint to \a enabled.
\see setPlottingHints
*/
void QCustomPlot::setPlottingHint(QCP::PlottingHint hint, bool enabled)
{
QCP::PlottingHints newHints = mPlottingHints;
if (!enabled)
newHints &= ~hint;
else
newHints |= hint;
if (newHints != mPlottingHints)
setPlottingHints(newHints);
}
/*!
Sets the keyboard modifier that will be recognized as multi-select-modifier.
If \ref QCP::iMultiSelect is specified in \ref setInteractions, the user may select multiple
objects (or data points) by clicking on them one after the other while holding down \a modifier.
By default the multi-select-modifier is set to Qt::ControlModifier.
\see setInteractions
*/
void QCustomPlot::setMultiSelectModifier(Qt::KeyboardModifier modifier)
{
mMultiSelectModifier = modifier;
}
/*!
Sets how QCustomPlot processes mouse click-and-drag interactions by the user.
If \a mode is \ref QCP::srmNone, the mouse drag is forwarded to the underlying objects. For
example, QCPAxisRect may process a mouse drag by dragging axis ranges, see \ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeDrag. If \a mode is not \ref QCP::srmNone, the current selection rect (\ref
selectionRect) becomes activated and allows e.g. rect zooming and data point selection.
If you wish to provide your user both with axis range dragging and data selection/range zooming,
use this method to switch between the modes just before the interaction is processed, e.g. in
reaction to the \ref mousePress or \ref mouseMove signals. For example you could check whether
the user is holding a certain keyboard modifier, and then decide which \a mode shall be set.
If a selection rect interaction is currently active, and \a mode is set to \ref QCP::srmNone, the
interaction is canceled (\ref QCPSelectionRect::cancel). Switching between any of the other modes
will keep the selection rect active. Upon completion of the interaction, the behaviour is as
defined by the currently set \a mode, not the mode that was set when the interaction started.
\see setInteractions, setSelectionRect, QCPSelectionRect
*/
void QCustomPlot::setSelectionRectMode(QCP::SelectionRectMode mode)
{
if (mSelectionRect)
{
if (mode == QCP::srmNone)
mSelectionRect->cancel(); // when switching to none, we immediately want to abort a potentially active selection rect
// disconnect old connections:
if (mSelectionRectMode == QCP::srmSelect)
disconnect(mSelectionRect, SIGNAL(accepted(QRect,QMouseEvent*)), this, SLOT(processRectSelection(QRect,QMouseEvent*)));
else if (mSelectionRectMode == QCP::srmZoom)
disconnect(mSelectionRect, SIGNAL(accepted(QRect,QMouseEvent*)), this, SLOT(processRectZoom(QRect,QMouseEvent*)));
// establish new ones:
if (mode == QCP::srmSelect)
connect(mSelectionRect, SIGNAL(accepted(QRect,QMouseEvent*)), this, SLOT(processRectSelection(QRect,QMouseEvent*)));
else if (mode == QCP::srmZoom)
connect(mSelectionRect, SIGNAL(accepted(QRect,QMouseEvent*)), this, SLOT(processRectZoom(QRect,QMouseEvent*)));
}
mSelectionRectMode = mode;
}
/*!
Sets the \ref QCPSelectionRect instance that QCustomPlot will use if \a mode is not \ref
QCP::srmNone and the user performs a click-and-drag interaction. QCustomPlot takes ownership of
the passed \a selectionRect. It can be accessed later via \ref selectionRect.
This method is useful if you wish to replace the default QCPSelectionRect instance with an
instance of a QCPSelectionRect subclass, to introduce custom behaviour of the selection rect.
\see setSelectionRectMode
*/
void QCustomPlot::setSelectionRect(QCPSelectionRect *selectionRect)
{
delete mSelectionRect;
mSelectionRect = selectionRect;
if (mSelectionRect)
{
// establish connections with new selection rect:
if (mSelectionRectMode == QCP::srmSelect)
connect(mSelectionRect, SIGNAL(accepted(QRect,QMouseEvent*)), this, SLOT(processRectSelection(QRect,QMouseEvent*)));
else if (mSelectionRectMode == QCP::srmZoom)
connect(mSelectionRect, SIGNAL(accepted(QRect,QMouseEvent*)), this, SLOT(processRectZoom(QRect,QMouseEvent*)));
}
}
/*!
\warning This is still an experimental feature and its performance depends on the system that it
runs on. Having multiple QCustomPlot widgets in one application with enabled OpenGL rendering
might cause context conflicts on some systems.
This method allows to enable OpenGL plot rendering, for increased plotting performance of
graphically demanding plots (thick lines, translucent fills, etc.).
If \a enabled is set to true, QCustomPlot will try to initialize OpenGL and, if successful,
continue plotting with hardware acceleration. The parameter \a multisampling controls how many
samples will be used per pixel, it essentially controls the antialiasing quality. If \a
multisampling is set too high for the current graphics hardware, the maximum allowed value will
be used.
You can test whether switching to OpenGL rendering was successful by checking whether the
according getter \a QCustomPlot::openGl() returns true. If the OpenGL initialization fails,
rendering continues with the regular software rasterizer, and an according qDebug output is
generated.
If switching to OpenGL was successful, this method disables label caching (\ref setPlottingHint
"setPlottingHint(QCP::phCacheLabels, false)") and turns on QCustomPlot's antialiasing override
for all elements (\ref setAntialiasedElements "setAntialiasedElements(QCP::aeAll)"), leading to a
higher quality output. The antialiasing override allows for pixel-grid aligned drawing in the
OpenGL paint device. As stated before, in OpenGL rendering the actual antialiasing of the plot is
controlled with \a multisampling. If \a enabled is set to false, the antialiasing/label caching
settings are restored to what they were before OpenGL was enabled, if they weren't altered in the
meantime.
\note OpenGL support is only enabled if QCustomPlot is compiled with the macro \c QCUSTOMPLOT_USE_OPENGL
defined. This define must be set before including the QCustomPlot header both during compilation
of the QCustomPlot library as well as when compiling your application. It is best to just include
the line <tt>DEFINES += QCUSTOMPLOT_USE_OPENGL</tt> in the respective qmake project files.
\note If you are using a Qt version before 5.0, you must also add the module "opengl" to your \c
QT variable in the qmake project files. For Qt versions 5.0 and higher, QCustomPlot switches to a
newer OpenGL interface which is already in the "gui" module.
*/
void QCustomPlot::setOpenGl(bool enabled, int multisampling)
{
mOpenGlMultisamples = qMax(0, multisampling);
#ifdef QCUSTOMPLOT_USE_OPENGL
mOpenGl = enabled;
if (mOpenGl)
{
if (setupOpenGl())
{
// backup antialiasing override and labelcaching setting so we can restore upon disabling OpenGL
mOpenGlAntialiasedElementsBackup = mAntialiasedElements;
mOpenGlCacheLabelsBackup = mPlottingHints.testFlag(QCP::phCacheLabels);
// set antialiasing override to antialias all (aligns gl pixel grid properly), and disable label caching (would use software rasterizer for pixmap caches):
setAntialiasedElements(QCP::aeAll);
setPlottingHint(QCP::phCacheLabels, false);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Failed to enable OpenGL, continuing plotting without hardware acceleration.";
mOpenGl = false;
}
} else
{
// restore antialiasing override and labelcaching to what it was before enabling OpenGL, if nobody changed it in the meantime:
if (mAntialiasedElements == QCP::aeAll)
setAntialiasedElements(mOpenGlAntialiasedElementsBackup);
if (!mPlottingHints.testFlag(QCP::phCacheLabels))
setPlottingHint(QCP::phCacheLabels, mOpenGlCacheLabelsBackup);
freeOpenGl();
}
// recreate all paint buffers:
mPaintBuffers.clear();
setupPaintBuffers();
#else
Q_UNUSED(enabled)
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "QCustomPlot can't use OpenGL because QCUSTOMPLOT_USE_OPENGL was not defined during compilation (add 'DEFINES += QCUSTOMPLOT_USE_OPENGL' to your qmake .pro file)";
#endif
}
/*!
Sets the viewport of this QCustomPlot. Usually users of QCustomPlot don't need to change the
viewport manually.
The viewport is the area in which the plot is drawn. All mechanisms, e.g. margin calculation take
the viewport to be the outer border of the plot. The viewport normally is the rect() of the
QCustomPlot widget, i.e. a rect with top left (0, 0) and size of the QCustomPlot widget.
Don't confuse the viewport with the axis rect (QCustomPlot::axisRect). An axis rect is typically
an area enclosed by four axes, where the graphs/plottables are drawn in. The viewport is larger
and contains also the axes themselves, their tick numbers, their labels, or even additional axis
rects, color scales and other layout elements.
This function is used to allow arbitrary size exports with \ref toPixmap, \ref savePng, \ref
savePdf, etc. by temporarily changing the viewport size.
*/
void QCustomPlot::setViewport(const QRect &rect)
{
mViewport = rect;
if (mPlotLayout)
mPlotLayout->setOuterRect(mViewport);
}
/*!
Sets the device pixel ratio used by the paint buffers of this QCustomPlot instance.
Normally, this doesn't need to be set manually, because it is initialized with the regular \a
QWidget::devicePixelRatio which is configured by Qt to fit the display device (e.g. 1 for normal
displays, 2 for High-DPI displays).
Device pixel ratios are supported by Qt only for Qt versions since 5.4. If this method is called
when QCustomPlot is being used with older Qt versions, outputs an according qDebug message and
leaves the internal buffer device pixel ratio at 1.0.
*/
void QCustomPlot::setBufferDevicePixelRatio(double ratio)
{
if (!qFuzzyCompare(ratio, mBufferDevicePixelRatio))
{
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
mBufferDevicePixelRatio = ratio;
foreach (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> buffer, mPaintBuffers)
buffer->setDevicePixelRatio(mBufferDevicePixelRatio);
// Note: axis label cache has devicePixelRatio as part of cache hash, so no need to manually clear cache here
#else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Device pixel ratios not supported for Qt versions before 5.4";
mBufferDevicePixelRatio = 1.0;
#endif
}
}
/*!
Sets \a pm as the viewport background pixmap (see \ref setViewport). The pixmap is always drawn
below all other objects in the plot.
For cases where the provided pixmap doesn't have the same size as the viewport, scaling can be
enabled with \ref setBackgroundScaled and the scaling mode (whether and how the aspect ratio is
preserved) can be set with \ref setBackgroundScaledMode. To set all these options in one call,
consider using the overloaded version of this function.
If a background brush was set with \ref setBackground(const QBrush &brush), the viewport will
first be filled with that brush, before drawing the background pixmap. This can be useful for
background pixmaps with translucent areas.
\see setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCustomPlot::setBackground(const QPixmap &pm)
{
mBackgroundPixmap = pm;
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = QPixmap();
}
/*!
Sets the background brush of the viewport (see \ref setViewport).
Before drawing everything else, the background is filled with \a brush. If a background pixmap
was set with \ref setBackground(const QPixmap &pm), this brush will be used to fill the viewport
before the background pixmap is drawn. This can be useful for background pixmaps with translucent
areas.
Set \a brush to Qt::NoBrush or Qt::Transparent to leave background transparent. This can be
useful for exporting to image formats which support transparency, e.g. \ref savePng.
\see setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCustomPlot::setBackground(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBackgroundBrush = brush;
}
/*! \overload
Allows setting the background pixmap of the viewport, whether it shall be scaled and how it
shall be scaled in one call.
\see setBackground(const QPixmap &pm), setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCustomPlot::setBackground(const QPixmap &pm, bool scaled, Qt::AspectRatioMode mode)
{
mBackgroundPixmap = pm;
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = QPixmap();
mBackgroundScaled = scaled;
mBackgroundScaledMode = mode;
}
/*!
Sets whether the viewport background pixmap shall be scaled to fit the viewport. If \a scaled is
set to true, control whether and how the aspect ratio of the original pixmap is preserved with
\ref setBackgroundScaledMode.
Note that the scaled version of the original pixmap is buffered, so there is no performance
penalty on replots. (Except when the viewport dimensions are changed continuously.)
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCustomPlot::setBackgroundScaled(bool scaled)
{
mBackgroundScaled = scaled;
}
/*!
If scaling of the viewport background pixmap is enabled (\ref setBackgroundScaled), use this
function to define whether and how the aspect ratio of the original pixmap is preserved.
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaled
*/
void QCustomPlot::setBackgroundScaledMode(Qt::AspectRatioMode mode)
{
mBackgroundScaledMode = mode;
}
/*!
Returns the plottable with \a index. If the index is invalid, returns \c nullptr.
There is an overloaded version of this function with no parameter which returns the last added
plottable, see QCustomPlot::plottable()
\see plottableCount
*/
QCPAbstractPlottable *QCustomPlot::plottable(int index)
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mPlottables.size())
{
return mPlottables.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/*! \overload
Returns the last plottable that was added to the plot. If there are no plottables in the plot,
returns \c nullptr.
\see plottableCount
*/
QCPAbstractPlottable *QCustomPlot::plottable()
{
if (!mPlottables.isEmpty())
{
return mPlottables.last();
} else
return nullptr;
}
/*!
Removes the specified plottable from the plot and deletes it. If necessary, the corresponding
legend item is also removed from the default legend (QCustomPlot::legend).
Returns true on success.
\see clearPlottables
*/
bool QCustomPlot::removePlottable(QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable)
{
if (!mPlottables.contains(plottable))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "plottable not in list:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(plottable);
return false;
}
// remove plottable from legend:
plottable->removeFromLegend();
// special handling for QCPGraphs to maintain the simple graph interface:
if (QCPGraph *graph = qobject_cast<QCPGraph*>(plottable))
mGraphs.removeOne(graph);
// remove plottable:
delete plottable;
mPlottables.removeOne(plottable);
return true;
}
/*! \overload
Removes and deletes the plottable by its \a index.
*/
bool QCustomPlot::removePlottable(int index)
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mPlottables.size())
return removePlottable(mPlottables[index]);
else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << index;
return false;
}
}
/*!
Removes all plottables from the plot and deletes them. Corresponding legend items are also
removed from the default legend (QCustomPlot::legend).
Returns the number of plottables removed.
\see removePlottable
*/
int QCustomPlot::clearPlottables()
{
int c = mPlottables.size();
for (int i=c-1; i >= 0; --i)
removePlottable(mPlottables[i]);
return c;
}
/*!
Returns the number of currently existing plottables in the plot
\see plottable
*/
int QCustomPlot::plottableCount() const
{
return mPlottables.size();
}
/*!
Returns a list of the selected plottables. If no plottables are currently selected, the list is empty.
There is a convenience function if you're only interested in selected graphs, see \ref selectedGraphs.
\see setInteractions, QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelectable, QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelection
*/
QList<QCPAbstractPlottable*> QCustomPlot::selectedPlottables() const
{
QList<QCPAbstractPlottable*> result;
foreach (QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable, mPlottables)
{
if (plottable->selected())
result.append(plottable);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns any plottable at the pixel position \a pos. Since it can capture all plottables, the
return type is the abstract base class of all plottables, QCPAbstractPlottable.
For details, and if you wish to specify a certain plottable type (e.g. QCPGraph), see the
template method plottableAt<PlottableType>()
\see plottableAt<PlottableType>(), itemAt, layoutElementAt
*/
QCPAbstractPlottable *QCustomPlot::plottableAt(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, int *dataIndex) const
{
return plottableAt<QCPAbstractPlottable>(pos, onlySelectable, dataIndex);
}
/*!
Returns whether this QCustomPlot instance contains the \a plottable.
*/
bool QCustomPlot::hasPlottable(QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable) const
{
return mPlottables.contains(plottable);
}
/*!
Returns the graph with \a index. If the index is invalid, returns \c nullptr.
There is an overloaded version of this function with no parameter which returns the last created
graph, see QCustomPlot::graph()
\see graphCount, addGraph
*/
QCPGraph *QCustomPlot::graph(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mGraphs.size())
{
return mGraphs.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/*! \overload
Returns the last graph, that was created with \ref addGraph. If there are no graphs in the plot,
returns \c nullptr.
\see graphCount, addGraph
*/
QCPGraph *QCustomPlot::graph() const
{
if (!mGraphs.isEmpty())
{
return mGraphs.last();
} else
return nullptr;
}
/*!
Creates a new graph inside the plot. If \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis are left unspecified (0), the
bottom (xAxis) is used as key and the left (yAxis) is used as value axis. If specified, \a
keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in this QCustomPlot.
\a keyAxis will be used as key axis (typically "x") and \a valueAxis as value axis (typically
"y") for the graph.
Returns a pointer to the newly created graph, or \c nullptr if adding the graph failed.
\see graph, graphCount, removeGraph, clearGraphs
*/
QCPGraph *QCustomPlot::addGraph(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis)
{
if (!keyAxis) keyAxis = xAxis;
if (!valueAxis) valueAxis = yAxis;
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't use default QCustomPlot xAxis or yAxis, because at least one is invalid (has been deleted)";
return nullptr;
}
if (keyAxis->parentPlot() != this || valueAxis->parentPlot() != this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed keyAxis or valueAxis doesn't have this QCustomPlot as parent";
return nullptr;
}
QCPGraph *newGraph = new QCPGraph(keyAxis, valueAxis);
newGraph->setName(QLatin1String("Graph ")+QString::number(mGraphs.size()));
return newGraph;
}
/*!
Removes the specified \a graph from the plot and deletes it. If necessary, the corresponding
legend item is also removed from the default legend (QCustomPlot::legend). If any other graphs in
the plot have a channel fill set towards the removed graph, the channel fill property of those
graphs is reset to \c nullptr (no channel fill).
Returns true on success.
\see clearGraphs
*/
bool QCustomPlot::removeGraph(QCPGraph *graph)
{
return removePlottable(graph);
}
/*! \overload
Removes and deletes the graph by its \a index.
*/
bool QCustomPlot::removeGraph(int index)
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mGraphs.size())
return removeGraph(mGraphs[index]);
else
return false;
}
/*!
Removes all graphs from the plot and deletes them. Corresponding legend items are also removed
from the default legend (QCustomPlot::legend).
Returns the number of graphs removed.
\see removeGraph
*/
int QCustomPlot::clearGraphs()
{
int c = mGraphs.size();
for (int i=c-1; i >= 0; --i)
removeGraph(mGraphs[i]);
return c;
}
/*!
Returns the number of currently existing graphs in the plot
\see graph, addGraph
*/
int QCustomPlot::graphCount() const
{
return mGraphs.size();
}
/*!
Returns a list of the selected graphs. If no graphs are currently selected, the list is empty.
If you are not only interested in selected graphs but other plottables like QCPCurve, QCPBars,
etc., use \ref selectedPlottables.
\see setInteractions, selectedPlottables, QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelectable, QCPAbstractPlottable::setSelection
*/
QList<QCPGraph*> QCustomPlot::selectedGraphs() const
{
QList<QCPGraph*> result;
foreach (QCPGraph *graph, mGraphs)
{
if (graph->selected())
result.append(graph);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns the item with \a index. If the index is invalid, returns \c nullptr.
There is an overloaded version of this function with no parameter which returns the last added
item, see QCustomPlot::item()
\see itemCount
*/
QCPAbstractItem *QCustomPlot::item(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mItems.size())
{
return mItems.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/*! \overload
Returns the last item that was added to this plot. If there are no items in the plot,
returns \c nullptr.
\see itemCount
*/
QCPAbstractItem *QCustomPlot::item() const
{
if (!mItems.isEmpty())
{
return mItems.last();
} else
return nullptr;
}
/*!
Removes the specified item from the plot and deletes it.
Returns true on success.
\see clearItems
*/
bool QCustomPlot::removeItem(QCPAbstractItem *item)
{
if (mItems.contains(item))
{
delete item;
mItems.removeOne(item);
return true;
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "item not in list:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(item);
return false;
}
}
/*! \overload
Removes and deletes the item by its \a index.
*/
bool QCustomPlot::removeItem(int index)
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mItems.size())
return removeItem(mItems[index]);
else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << index;
return false;
}
}
/*!
Removes all items from the plot and deletes them.
Returns the number of items removed.
\see removeItem
*/
int QCustomPlot::clearItems()
{
int c = mItems.size();
for (int i=c-1; i >= 0; --i)
removeItem(mItems[i]);
return c;
}
/*!
Returns the number of currently existing items in the plot
\see item
*/
int QCustomPlot::itemCount() const
{
return mItems.size();
}
/*!
Returns a list of the selected items. If no items are currently selected, the list is empty.
\see setInteractions, QCPAbstractItem::setSelectable, QCPAbstractItem::setSelected
*/
QList<QCPAbstractItem*> QCustomPlot::selectedItems() const
{
QList<QCPAbstractItem*> result;
foreach (QCPAbstractItem *item, mItems)
{
if (item->selected())
result.append(item);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns the item at the pixel position \a pos. Since it can capture all items, the
return type is the abstract base class of all items, QCPAbstractItem.
For details, and if you wish to specify a certain item type (e.g. QCPItemLine), see the
template method itemAt<ItemType>()
\see itemAt<ItemType>(), plottableAt, layoutElementAt
*/
QCPAbstractItem *QCustomPlot::itemAt(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable) const
{
return itemAt<QCPAbstractItem>(pos, onlySelectable);
}
/*!
Returns whether this QCustomPlot contains the \a item.
\see item
*/
bool QCustomPlot::hasItem(QCPAbstractItem *item) const
{
return mItems.contains(item);
}
/*!
Returns the layer with the specified \a name. If there is no layer with the specified name, \c
nullptr is returned.
Layer names are case-sensitive.
\see addLayer, moveLayer, removeLayer
*/
QCPLayer *QCustomPlot::layer(const QString &name) const
{
foreach (QCPLayer *layer, mLayers)
{
if (layer->name() == name)
return layer;
}
return nullptr;
}
/*! \overload
Returns the layer by \a index. If the index is invalid, \c nullptr is returned.
\see addLayer, moveLayer, removeLayer
*/
QCPLayer *QCustomPlot::layer(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mLayers.size())
{
return mLayers.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/*!
Returns the layer that is set as current layer (see \ref setCurrentLayer).
*/
QCPLayer *QCustomPlot::currentLayer() const
{
return mCurrentLayer;
}
/*!
Sets the layer with the specified \a name to be the current layer. All layerables (\ref
QCPLayerable), e.g. plottables and items, are created on the current layer.
Returns true on success, i.e. if there is a layer with the specified \a name in the QCustomPlot.
Layer names are case-sensitive.
\see addLayer, moveLayer, removeLayer, QCPLayerable::setLayer
*/
bool QCustomPlot::setCurrentLayer(const QString &name)
{
if (QCPLayer *newCurrentLayer = layer(name))
{
return setCurrentLayer(newCurrentLayer);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "layer with name doesn't exist:" << name;
return false;
}
}
/*! \overload
Sets the provided \a layer to be the current layer.
Returns true on success, i.e. when \a layer is a valid layer in the QCustomPlot.
\see addLayer, moveLayer, removeLayer
*/
bool QCustomPlot::setCurrentLayer(QCPLayer *layer)
{
if (!mLayers.contains(layer))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "layer not a layer of this QCustomPlot:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(layer);
return false;
}
mCurrentLayer = layer;
return true;
}
/*!
Returns the number of currently existing layers in the plot
\see layer, addLayer
*/
int QCustomPlot::layerCount() const
{
return mLayers.size();
}
/*!
Adds a new layer to this QCustomPlot instance. The new layer will have the name \a name, which
must be unique. Depending on \a insertMode, it is positioned either below or above \a otherLayer.
Returns true on success, i.e. if there is no other layer named \a name and \a otherLayer is a
valid layer inside this QCustomPlot.
If \a otherLayer is 0, the highest layer in the QCustomPlot will be used.
For an explanation of what layers are in QCustomPlot, see the documentation of \ref QCPLayer.
\see layer, moveLayer, removeLayer
*/
bool QCustomPlot::addLayer(const QString &name, QCPLayer *otherLayer, QCustomPlot::LayerInsertMode insertMode)
{
if (!otherLayer)
otherLayer = mLayers.last();
if (!mLayers.contains(otherLayer))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "otherLayer not a layer of this QCustomPlot:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(otherLayer);
return false;
}
if (layer(name))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "A layer exists already with the name" << name;
return false;
}
QCPLayer *newLayer = new QCPLayer(this, name);
mLayers.insert(otherLayer->index() + (insertMode==limAbove ? 1:0), newLayer);
updateLayerIndices();
setupPaintBuffers(); // associates new layer with the appropriate paint buffer
return true;
}
/*!
Removes the specified \a layer and returns true on success.
All layerables (e.g. plottables and items) on the removed layer will be moved to the layer below
\a layer. If \a layer is the bottom layer, the layerables are moved to the layer above. In both
cases, the total rendering order of all layerables in the QCustomPlot is preserved.
If \a layer is the current layer (\ref setCurrentLayer), the layer below (or above, if bottom
layer) becomes the new current layer.
It is not possible to remove the last layer of the plot.
\see layer, addLayer, moveLayer
*/
bool QCustomPlot::removeLayer(QCPLayer *layer)
{
if (!mLayers.contains(layer))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "layer not a layer of this QCustomPlot:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(layer);
return false;
}
if (mLayers.size() < 2)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't remove last layer";
return false;
}
// append all children of this layer to layer below (if this is lowest layer, prepend to layer above)
int removedIndex = layer->index();
bool isFirstLayer = removedIndex==0;
QCPLayer *targetLayer = isFirstLayer ? mLayers.at(removedIndex+1) : mLayers.at(removedIndex-1);
QList<QCPLayerable*> children = layer->children();
if (isFirstLayer) // prepend in reverse order (such that relative order stays the same)
std::reverse(children.begin(), children.end());
foreach (QCPLayerable *child, children)
child->moveToLayer(targetLayer, isFirstLayer); // prepend if isFirstLayer, otherwise append
// if removed layer is current layer, change current layer to layer below/above:
if (layer == mCurrentLayer)
setCurrentLayer(targetLayer);
// invalidate the paint buffer that was responsible for this layer:
if (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> pb = layer->mPaintBuffer.toStrongRef())
pb->setInvalidated();
// remove layer:
delete layer;
mLayers.removeOne(layer);
updateLayerIndices();
return true;
}
/*!
Moves the specified \a layer either above or below \a otherLayer. Whether it's placed above or
below is controlled with \a insertMode.
Returns true on success, i.e. when both \a layer and \a otherLayer are valid layers in the
QCustomPlot.
\see layer, addLayer, moveLayer
*/
bool QCustomPlot::moveLayer(QCPLayer *layer, QCPLayer *otherLayer, QCustomPlot::LayerInsertMode insertMode)
{
if (!mLayers.contains(layer))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "layer not a layer of this QCustomPlot:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(layer);
return false;
}
if (!mLayers.contains(otherLayer))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "otherLayer not a layer of this QCustomPlot:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(otherLayer);
return false;
}
if (layer->index() > otherLayer->index())
mLayers.move(layer->index(), otherLayer->index() + (insertMode==limAbove ? 1:0));
else if (layer->index() < otherLayer->index())
mLayers.move(layer->index(), otherLayer->index() + (insertMode==limAbove ? 0:-1));
// invalidate the paint buffers that are responsible for the layers:
if (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> pb = layer->mPaintBuffer.toStrongRef())
pb->setInvalidated();
if (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> pb = otherLayer->mPaintBuffer.toStrongRef())
pb->setInvalidated();
updateLayerIndices();
return true;
}
/*!
Returns the number of axis rects in the plot.
All axis rects can be accessed via QCustomPlot::axisRect().
Initially, only one axis rect exists in the plot.
\see axisRect, axisRects
*/
int QCustomPlot::axisRectCount() const
{
return axisRects().size();
}
/*!
Returns the axis rect with \a index.
Initially, only one axis rect (with index 0) exists in the plot. If multiple axis rects were
added, all of them may be accessed with this function in a linear fashion (even when they are
nested in a layout hierarchy or inside other axis rects via QCPAxisRect::insetLayout).
The order of the axis rects is given by the fill order of the \ref QCPLayout that is holding
them. For example, if the axis rects are in the top level grid layout (accessible via \ref
QCustomPlot::plotLayout), they are ordered from left to right, top to bottom, if the layout's
default \ref QCPLayoutGrid::setFillOrder "setFillOrder" of \ref QCPLayoutGrid::foColumnsFirst
"foColumnsFirst" wasn't changed.
If you want to access axis rects by their row and column index, use the layout interface. For
example, use \ref QCPLayoutGrid::element of the top level grid layout, and \c qobject_cast the
returned layout element to \ref QCPAxisRect. (See also \ref thelayoutsystem.)
\see axisRectCount, axisRects, QCPLayoutGrid::setFillOrder
*/
QCPAxisRect *QCustomPlot::axisRect(int index) const
{
const QList<QCPAxisRect*> rectList = axisRects();
if (index >= 0 && index < rectList.size())
{
return rectList.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid axis rect index" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/*!
Returns all axis rects in the plot.
The order of the axis rects is given by the fill order of the \ref QCPLayout that is holding
them. For example, if the axis rects are in the top level grid layout (accessible via \ref
QCustomPlot::plotLayout), they are ordered from left to right, top to bottom, if the layout's
default \ref QCPLayoutGrid::setFillOrder "setFillOrder" of \ref QCPLayoutGrid::foColumnsFirst
"foColumnsFirst" wasn't changed.
\see axisRectCount, axisRect, QCPLayoutGrid::setFillOrder
*/
QList<QCPAxisRect*> QCustomPlot::axisRects() const
{
QList<QCPAxisRect*> result;
QStack<QCPLayoutElement*> elementStack;
if (mPlotLayout)
elementStack.push(mPlotLayout);
while (!elementStack.isEmpty())
{
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *element, elementStack.pop()->elements(false))
{
if (element)
{
elementStack.push(element);
if (QCPAxisRect *ar = qobject_cast<QCPAxisRect*>(element))
result.append(ar);
}
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns the layout element at pixel position \a pos. If there is no element at that position,
returns \c nullptr.
Only visible elements are used. If \ref QCPLayoutElement::setVisible on the element itself or on
any of its parent elements is set to false, it will not be considered.
\see itemAt, plottableAt
*/
QCPLayoutElement *QCustomPlot::layoutElementAt(const QPointF &pos) const
{
QCPLayoutElement *currentElement = mPlotLayout;
bool searchSubElements = true;
while (searchSubElements && currentElement)
{
searchSubElements = false;
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *subElement, currentElement->elements(false))
{
if (subElement && subElement->realVisibility() && subElement->selectTest(pos, false) >= 0)
{
currentElement = subElement;
searchSubElements = true;
break;
}
}
}
return currentElement;
}
/*!
Returns the layout element of type \ref QCPAxisRect at pixel position \a pos. This method ignores
other layout elements even if they are visually in front of the axis rect (e.g. a \ref
QCPLegend). If there is no axis rect at that position, returns \c nullptr.
Only visible axis rects are used. If \ref QCPLayoutElement::setVisible on the axis rect itself or
on any of its parent elements is set to false, it will not be considered.
\see layoutElementAt
*/
QCPAxisRect *QCustomPlot::axisRectAt(const QPointF &pos) const
{
QCPAxisRect *result = nullptr;
QCPLayoutElement *currentElement = mPlotLayout;
bool searchSubElements = true;
while (searchSubElements && currentElement)
{
searchSubElements = false;
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *subElement, currentElement->elements(false))
{
if (subElement && subElement->realVisibility() && subElement->selectTest(pos, false) >= 0)
{
currentElement = subElement;
searchSubElements = true;
if (QCPAxisRect *ar = qobject_cast<QCPAxisRect*>(currentElement))
result = ar;
break;
}
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns the axes that currently have selected parts, i.e. whose selection state is not \ref
QCPAxis::spNone.
\see selectedPlottables, selectedLegends, setInteractions, QCPAxis::setSelectedParts,
QCPAxis::setSelectableParts
*/
QList<QCPAxis*> QCustomPlot::selectedAxes() const
{
QList<QCPAxis*> result, allAxes;
foreach (QCPAxisRect *rect, axisRects())
allAxes << rect->axes();
foreach (QCPAxis *axis, allAxes)
{
if (axis->selectedParts() != QCPAxis::spNone)
result.append(axis);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns the legends that currently have selected parts, i.e. whose selection state is not \ref
QCPLegend::spNone.
\see selectedPlottables, selectedAxes, setInteractions, QCPLegend::setSelectedParts,
QCPLegend::setSelectableParts, QCPLegend::selectedItems
*/
QList<QCPLegend*> QCustomPlot::selectedLegends() const
{
QList<QCPLegend*> result;
QStack<QCPLayoutElement*> elementStack;
if (mPlotLayout)
elementStack.push(mPlotLayout);
while (!elementStack.isEmpty())
{
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *subElement, elementStack.pop()->elements(false))
{
if (subElement)
{
elementStack.push(subElement);
if (QCPLegend *leg = qobject_cast<QCPLegend*>(subElement))
{
if (leg->selectedParts() != QCPLegend::spNone)
result.append(leg);
}
}
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Deselects all layerables (plottables, items, axes, legends,...) of the QCustomPlot.
Since calling this function is not a user interaction, this does not emit the \ref
selectionChangedByUser signal. The individual selectionChanged signals are emitted though, if the
objects were previously selected.
\see setInteractions, selectedPlottables, selectedItems, selectedAxes, selectedLegends
*/
void QCustomPlot::deselectAll()
{
foreach (QCPLayer *layer, mLayers)
{
foreach (QCPLayerable *layerable, layer->children())
layerable->deselectEvent(nullptr);
}
}
/*!
Causes a complete replot into the internal paint buffer(s). Finally, the widget surface is
refreshed with the new buffer contents. This is the method that must be called to make changes to
the plot, e.g. on the axis ranges or data points of graphs, visible.
The parameter \a refreshPriority can be used to fine-tune the timing of the replot. For example
if your application calls \ref replot very quickly in succession (e.g. multiple independent
functions change some aspects of the plot and each wants to make sure the change gets replotted),
it is advisable to set \a refreshPriority to \ref QCustomPlot::rpQueuedReplot. This way, the
actual replotting is deferred to the next event loop iteration. Multiple successive calls of \ref
replot with this priority will only cause a single replot, avoiding redundant replots and
improving performance.
Under a few circumstances, QCustomPlot causes a replot by itself. Those are resize events of the
QCustomPlot widget and user interactions (object selection and range dragging/zooming).
Before the replot happens, the signal \ref beforeReplot is emitted. After the replot, \ref
afterReplot is emitted. It is safe to mutually connect the replot slot with any of those two
signals on two QCustomPlots to make them replot synchronously, it won't cause an infinite
recursion.
If a layer is in mode \ref QCPLayer::lmBuffered (\ref QCPLayer::setMode), it is also possible to
replot only that specific layer via \ref QCPLayer::replot. See the documentation there for
details.
\see replotTime
*/
void QCustomPlot::replot(QCustomPlot::RefreshPriority refreshPriority)
{
if (refreshPriority == QCustomPlot::rpQueuedReplot)
{
if (!mReplotQueued)
{
mReplotQueued = true;
QTimer::singleShot(0, this, SLOT(replot()));
}
return;
}
if (mReplotting) // incase signals loop back to replot slot
return;
mReplotting = true;
mReplotQueued = false;
emit beforeReplot();
# if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(4, 8, 0)
QTime replotTimer;
replotTimer.start();
# else
QElapsedTimer replotTimer;
replotTimer.start();
# endif
updateLayout();
// draw all layered objects (grid, axes, plottables, items, legend,...) into their buffers:
setupPaintBuffers();
foreach (QCPLayer *layer, mLayers)
layer->drawToPaintBuffer();
foreach (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> buffer, mPaintBuffers)
buffer->setInvalidated(false);
if ((refreshPriority == rpRefreshHint && mPlottingHints.testFlag(QCP::phImmediateRefresh)) || refreshPriority==rpImmediateRefresh)
repaint();
else
update();
# if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(4, 8, 0)
mReplotTime = replotTimer.elapsed();
# else
mReplotTime = replotTimer.nsecsElapsed()*1e-6;
# endif
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(mReplotTimeAverage))
mReplotTimeAverage = mReplotTimeAverage*0.9 + mReplotTime*0.1; // exponential moving average with a time constant of 10 last replots
else
mReplotTimeAverage = mReplotTime; // no previous replots to average with, so initialize with replot time
emit afterReplot();
mReplotting = false;
}
/*!
Returns the time in milliseconds that the last replot took. If \a average is set to true, an
exponential moving average over the last couple of replots is returned.
\see replot
*/
double QCustomPlot::replotTime(bool average) const
{
return average ? mReplotTimeAverage : mReplotTime;
}
/*!
Rescales the axes such that all plottables (like graphs) in the plot are fully visible.
if \a onlyVisiblePlottables is set to true, only the plottables that have their visibility set to true
(QCPLayerable::setVisible), will be used to rescale the axes.
\see QCPAbstractPlottable::rescaleAxes, QCPAxis::rescale
*/
void QCustomPlot::rescaleAxes(bool onlyVisiblePlottables)
{
QList<QCPAxis*> allAxes;
foreach (QCPAxisRect *rect, axisRects())
allAxes << rect->axes();
foreach (QCPAxis *axis, allAxes)
axis->rescale(onlyVisiblePlottables);
}
/*!
Saves a PDF with the vectorized plot to the file \a fileName. The axis ratio as well as the scale
of texts and lines will be derived from the specified \a width and \a height. This means, the
output will look like the normal on-screen output of a QCustomPlot widget with the corresponding
pixel width and height. If either \a width or \a height is zero, the exported image will have the
same dimensions as the QCustomPlot widget currently has.
Setting \a exportPen to \ref QCP::epNoCosmetic allows to disable the use of cosmetic pens when
drawing to the PDF file. Cosmetic pens are pens with numerical width 0, which are always drawn as
a one pixel wide line, no matter what zoom factor is set in the PDF-Viewer. For more information
about cosmetic pens, see the QPainter and QPen documentation.
The objects of the plot will appear in the current selection state. If you don't want any
selected objects to be painted in their selected look, deselect everything with \ref deselectAll
before calling this function.
Returns true on success.
\warning
\li If you plan on editing the exported PDF file with a vector graphics editor like Inkscape, it
is advised to set \a exportPen to \ref QCP::epNoCosmetic to avoid losing those cosmetic lines
(which might be quite many, because cosmetic pens are the default for e.g. axes and tick marks).
\li If calling this function inside the constructor of the parent of the QCustomPlot widget
(i.e. the MainWindow constructor, if QCustomPlot is inside the MainWindow), always provide
explicit non-zero widths and heights. If you leave \a width or \a height as 0 (default), this
function uses the current width and height of the QCustomPlot widget. However, in Qt, these
aren't defined yet inside the constructor, so you would get an image that has strange
widths/heights.
\a pdfCreator and \a pdfTitle may be used to set the according metadata fields in the resulting
PDF file.
\note On Android systems, this method does nothing and issues an according qDebug warning
message. This is also the case if for other reasons the define flag \c QT_NO_PRINTER is set.
\see savePng, saveBmp, saveJpg, saveRastered
*/
bool QCustomPlot::savePdf(const QString &fileName, int width, int height, QCP::ExportPen exportPen, const QString &pdfCreator, const QString &pdfTitle)
{
bool success = false;
#ifdef QT_NO_PRINTER
Q_UNUSED(fileName)
Q_UNUSED(exportPen)
Q_UNUSED(width)
Q_UNUSED(height)
Q_UNUSED(pdfCreator)
Q_UNUSED(pdfTitle)
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Qt was built without printer support (QT_NO_PRINTER). PDF not created.";
#else
int newWidth, newHeight;
if (width == 0 || height == 0)
{
newWidth = this->width();
newHeight = this->height();
} else
{
newWidth = width;
newHeight = height;
}
QPrinter printer(QPrinter::ScreenResolution);
printer.setOutputFileName(fileName);
printer.setOutputFormat(QPrinter::PdfFormat);
printer.setColorMode(QPrinter::Color);
printer.printEngine()->setProperty(QPrintEngine::PPK_Creator, pdfCreator);
printer.printEngine()->setProperty(QPrintEngine::PPK_DocumentName, pdfTitle);
QRect oldViewport = viewport();
setViewport(QRect(0, 0, newWidth, newHeight));
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 3, 0)
printer.setFullPage(true);
printer.setPaperSize(viewport().size(), QPrinter::DevicePixel);
#else
QPageLayout pageLayout;
pageLayout.setMode(QPageLayout::FullPageMode);
pageLayout.setOrientation(QPageLayout::Portrait);
pageLayout.setMargins(QMarginsF(0, 0, 0, 0));
pageLayout.setPageSize(QPageSize(viewport().size(), QPageSize::Point, QString(), QPageSize::ExactMatch));
printer.setPageLayout(pageLayout);
#endif
QCPPainter printpainter;
if (printpainter.begin(&printer))
{
printpainter.setMode(QCPPainter::pmVectorized);
printpainter.setMode(QCPPainter::pmNoCaching);
printpainter.setMode(QCPPainter::pmNonCosmetic, exportPen==QCP::epNoCosmetic);
printpainter.setWindow(mViewport);
if (mBackgroundBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush &&
mBackgroundBrush.color() != Qt::white &&
mBackgroundBrush.color() != Qt::transparent &&
mBackgroundBrush.color().alpha() > 0) // draw pdf background color if not white/transparent
printpainter.fillRect(viewport(), mBackgroundBrush);
draw(&printpainter);
printpainter.end();
success = true;
}
setViewport(oldViewport);
#endif // QT_NO_PRINTER
return success;
}
/*!
Saves a PNG image file to \a fileName on disc. The output plot will have the dimensions \a width
and \a height in pixels, multiplied by \a scale. If either \a width or \a height is zero, the
current width and height of the QCustomPlot widget is used instead. Line widths and texts etc.
are not scaled up when larger widths/heights are used. If you want that effect, use the \a scale
parameter.
For example, if you set both \a width and \a height to 100 and \a scale to 2, you will end up with an
image file of size 200*200 in which all graphical elements are scaled up by factor 2 (line widths,
texts, etc.). This scaling is not done by stretching a 100*100 image, the result will have full
200*200 pixel resolution.
If you use a high scaling factor, it is recommended to enable antialiasing for all elements by
temporarily setting \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements to \ref QCP::aeAll as this allows
QCustomPlot to place objects with sub-pixel accuracy.
image compression can be controlled with the \a quality parameter which must be between 0 and 100
or -1 to use the default setting.
The \a resolution will be written to the image file header and has no direct consequence for the
quality or the pixel size. However, if opening the image with a tool which respects the metadata,
it will be able to scale the image to match either a given size in real units of length (inch,
centimeters, etc.), or the target display DPI. You can specify in which units \a resolution is
given, by setting \a resolutionUnit. The \a resolution is converted to the format's expected
resolution unit internally.
Returns true on success. If this function fails, most likely the PNG format isn't supported by
the system, see Qt docs about QImageWriter::supportedImageFormats().
The objects of the plot will appear in the current selection state. If you don't want any selected
objects to be painted in their selected look, deselect everything with \ref deselectAll before calling
this function.
If you want the PNG to have a transparent background, call \ref setBackground(const QBrush &brush)
with no brush (Qt::NoBrush) or a transparent color (Qt::transparent), before saving.
\warning If calling this function inside the constructor of the parent of the QCustomPlot widget
(i.e. the MainWindow constructor, if QCustomPlot is inside the MainWindow), always provide
explicit non-zero widths and heights. If you leave \a width or \a height as 0 (default), this
function uses the current width and height of the QCustomPlot widget. However, in Qt, these
aren't defined yet inside the constructor, so you would get an image that has strange
widths/heights.
\see savePdf, saveBmp, saveJpg, saveRastered
*/
bool QCustomPlot::savePng(const QString &fileName, int width, int height, double scale, int quality, int resolution, QCP::ResolutionUnit resolutionUnit)
{
return saveRastered(fileName, width, height, scale, "PNG", quality, resolution, resolutionUnit);
}
/*!
Saves a JPEG image file to \a fileName on disc. The output plot will have the dimensions \a width
and \a height in pixels, multiplied by \a scale. If either \a width or \a height is zero, the
current width and height of the QCustomPlot widget is used instead. Line widths and texts etc.
are not scaled up when larger widths/heights are used. If you want that effect, use the \a scale
parameter.
For example, if you set both \a width and \a height to 100 and \a scale to 2, you will end up with an
image file of size 200*200 in which all graphical elements are scaled up by factor 2 (line widths,
texts, etc.). This scaling is not done by stretching a 100*100 image, the result will have full
200*200 pixel resolution.
If you use a high scaling factor, it is recommended to enable antialiasing for all elements by
temporarily setting \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements to \ref QCP::aeAll as this allows
QCustomPlot to place objects with sub-pixel accuracy.
image compression can be controlled with the \a quality parameter which must be between 0 and 100
or -1 to use the default setting.
The \a resolution will be written to the image file header and has no direct consequence for the
quality or the pixel size. However, if opening the image with a tool which respects the metadata,
it will be able to scale the image to match either a given size in real units of length (inch,
centimeters, etc.), or the target display DPI. You can specify in which units \a resolution is
given, by setting \a resolutionUnit. The \a resolution is converted to the format's expected
resolution unit internally.
Returns true on success. If this function fails, most likely the JPEG format isn't supported by
the system, see Qt docs about QImageWriter::supportedImageFormats().
The objects of the plot will appear in the current selection state. If you don't want any selected
objects to be painted in their selected look, deselect everything with \ref deselectAll before calling
this function.
\warning If calling this function inside the constructor of the parent of the QCustomPlot widget
(i.e. the MainWindow constructor, if QCustomPlot is inside the MainWindow), always provide
explicit non-zero widths and heights. If you leave \a width or \a height as 0 (default), this
function uses the current width and height of the QCustomPlot widget. However, in Qt, these
aren't defined yet inside the constructor, so you would get an image that has strange
widths/heights.
\see savePdf, savePng, saveBmp, saveRastered
*/
bool QCustomPlot::saveJpg(const QString &fileName, int width, int height, double scale, int quality, int resolution, QCP::ResolutionUnit resolutionUnit)
{
return saveRastered(fileName, width, height, scale, "JPG", quality, resolution, resolutionUnit);
}
/*!
Saves a BMP image file to \a fileName on disc. The output plot will have the dimensions \a width
and \a height in pixels, multiplied by \a scale. If either \a width or \a height is zero, the
current width and height of the QCustomPlot widget is used instead. Line widths and texts etc.
are not scaled up when larger widths/heights are used. If you want that effect, use the \a scale
parameter.
For example, if you set both \a width and \a height to 100 and \a scale to 2, you will end up with an
image file of size 200*200 in which all graphical elements are scaled up by factor 2 (line widths,
texts, etc.). This scaling is not done by stretching a 100*100 image, the result will have full
200*200 pixel resolution.
If you use a high scaling factor, it is recommended to enable antialiasing for all elements by
temporarily setting \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements to \ref QCP::aeAll as this allows
QCustomPlot to place objects with sub-pixel accuracy.
The \a resolution will be written to the image file header and has no direct consequence for the
quality or the pixel size. However, if opening the image with a tool which respects the metadata,
it will be able to scale the image to match either a given size in real units of length (inch,
centimeters, etc.), or the target display DPI. You can specify in which units \a resolution is
given, by setting \a resolutionUnit. The \a resolution is converted to the format's expected
resolution unit internally.
Returns true on success. If this function fails, most likely the BMP format isn't supported by
the system, see Qt docs about QImageWriter::supportedImageFormats().
The objects of the plot will appear in the current selection state. If you don't want any selected
objects to be painted in their selected look, deselect everything with \ref deselectAll before calling
this function.
\warning If calling this function inside the constructor of the parent of the QCustomPlot widget
(i.e. the MainWindow constructor, if QCustomPlot is inside the MainWindow), always provide
explicit non-zero widths and heights. If you leave \a width or \a height as 0 (default), this
function uses the current width and height of the QCustomPlot widget. However, in Qt, these
aren't defined yet inside the constructor, so you would get an image that has strange
widths/heights.
\see savePdf, savePng, saveJpg, saveRastered
*/
bool QCustomPlot::saveBmp(const QString &fileName, int width, int height, double scale, int resolution, QCP::ResolutionUnit resolutionUnit)
{
return saveRastered(fileName, width, height, scale, "BMP", -1, resolution, resolutionUnit);
}
/*! \internal
Returns a minimum size hint that corresponds to the minimum size of the top level layout
(\ref plotLayout). To prevent QCustomPlot from being collapsed to size/width zero, set a minimum
size (setMinimumSize) either on the whole QCustomPlot or on any layout elements inside the plot.
This is especially important, when placed in a QLayout where other components try to take in as
much space as possible (e.g. QMdiArea).
*/
QSize QCustomPlot::minimumSizeHint() const
{
return mPlotLayout->minimumOuterSizeHint();
}
/*! \internal
Returns a size hint that is the same as \ref minimumSizeHint.
*/
QSize QCustomPlot::sizeHint() const
{
return mPlotLayout->minimumOuterSizeHint();
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when the QCustomPlot widget needs repainting. This does not cause a \ref replot, but
draws the internal buffer on the widget surface.
*/
void QCustomPlot::paintEvent(QPaintEvent *event)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
QCPPainter painter(this);
if (painter.isActive())
{
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(6, 0, 0)
painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::HighQualityAntialiasing); // to make Antialiasing look good if using the OpenGL graphicssystem
#endif
if (mBackgroundBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush)
painter.fillRect(mViewport, mBackgroundBrush);
drawBackground(&painter);
foreach (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> buffer, mPaintBuffers)
buffer->draw(&painter);
}
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for a resize of the QCustomPlot widget. The viewport (which becomes the outer rect
of mPlotLayout) is resized appropriately. Finally a \ref replot is performed.
*/
void QCustomPlot::resizeEvent(QResizeEvent *event)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
// resize and repaint the buffer:
setViewport(rect());
replot(rpQueuedRefresh); // queued refresh is important here, to prevent painting issues in some contexts (e.g. MDI subwindow)
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when a double click occurs. Emits the \ref mouseDoubleClick signal, then
determines the layerable under the cursor and forwards the event to it. Finally, emits the
specialized signals when certain objecs are clicked (e.g. \ref plottableDoubleClick, \ref
axisDoubleClick, etc.).
\see mousePressEvent, mouseReleaseEvent
*/
void QCustomPlot::mouseDoubleClickEvent(QMouseEvent *event)
{
emit mouseDoubleClick(event);
mMouseHasMoved = false;
mMousePressPos = event->pos();
// determine layerable under the cursor (this event is called instead of the second press event in a double-click):
QList<QVariant> details;
QList<QCPLayerable*> candidates = layerableListAt(mMousePressPos, false, &details);
for (int i=0; i<candidates.size(); ++i)
{
event->accept(); // default impl of QCPLayerable's mouse events ignore the event, in that case propagate to next candidate in list
candidates.at(i)->mouseDoubleClickEvent(event, details.at(i));
if (event->isAccepted())
{
mMouseEventLayerable = candidates.at(i);
mMouseEventLayerableDetails = details.at(i);
break;
}
}
// emit specialized object double click signals:
if (!candidates.isEmpty())
{
if (QCPAbstractPlottable *ap = qobject_cast<QCPAbstractPlottable*>(candidates.first()))
{
int dataIndex = 0;
if (!details.first().value<QCPDataSelection>().isEmpty())
dataIndex = details.first().value<QCPDataSelection>().dataRange().begin();
emit plottableDoubleClick(ap, dataIndex, event);
} else if (QCPAxis *ax = qobject_cast<QCPAxis*>(candidates.first()))
emit axisDoubleClick(ax, details.first().value<QCPAxis::SelectablePart>(), event);
else if (QCPAbstractItem *ai = qobject_cast<QCPAbstractItem*>(candidates.first()))
emit itemDoubleClick(ai, event);
else if (QCPLegend *lg = qobject_cast<QCPLegend*>(candidates.first()))
emit legendDoubleClick(lg, nullptr, event);
else if (QCPAbstractLegendItem *li = qobject_cast<QCPAbstractLegendItem*>(candidates.first()))
emit legendDoubleClick(li->parentLegend(), li, event);
}
event->accept(); // in case QCPLayerable reimplementation manipulates event accepted state. In QWidget event system, QCustomPlot wants to accept the event.
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when a mouse button is pressed. Emits the mousePress signal.
If the current \ref setSelectionRectMode is not \ref QCP::srmNone, passes the event to the
selection rect. Otherwise determines the layerable under the cursor and forwards the event to it.
\see mouseMoveEvent, mouseReleaseEvent
*/
void QCustomPlot::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event)
{
emit mousePress(event);
// save some state to tell in releaseEvent whether it was a click:
mMouseHasMoved = false;
mMousePressPos = event->pos();
if (mSelectionRect && mSelectionRectMode != QCP::srmNone)
{
if (mSelectionRectMode != QCP::srmZoom || qobject_cast<QCPAxisRect*>(axisRectAt(mMousePressPos))) // in zoom mode only activate selection rect if on an axis rect
mSelectionRect->startSelection(event);
} else
{
// no selection rect interaction, prepare for click signal emission and forward event to layerable under the cursor:
QList<QVariant> details;
QList<QCPLayerable*> candidates = layerableListAt(mMousePressPos, false, &details);
if (!candidates.isEmpty())
{
mMouseSignalLayerable = candidates.first(); // candidate for signal emission is always topmost hit layerable (signal emitted in release event)
mMouseSignalLayerableDetails = details.first();
}
// forward event to topmost candidate which accepts the event:
for (int i=0; i<candidates.size(); ++i)
{
event->accept(); // default impl of QCPLayerable's mouse events call ignore() on the event, in that case propagate to next candidate in list
candidates.at(i)->mousePressEvent(event, details.at(i));
if (event->isAccepted())
{
mMouseEventLayerable = candidates.at(i);
mMouseEventLayerableDetails = details.at(i);
break;
}
}
}
event->accept(); // in case QCPLayerable reimplementation manipulates event accepted state. In QWidget event system, QCustomPlot wants to accept the event.
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when the cursor is moved. Emits the \ref mouseMove signal.
If the selection rect (\ref setSelectionRect) is currently active, the event is forwarded to it
in order to update the rect geometry.
Otherwise, if a layout element has mouse capture focus (a mousePressEvent happened on top of the
layout element before), the mouseMoveEvent is forwarded to that element.
\see mousePressEvent, mouseReleaseEvent
*/
void QCustomPlot::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *event)
{
emit mouseMove(event);
if (!mMouseHasMoved && (mMousePressPos-event->pos()).manhattanLength() > 3)
mMouseHasMoved = true; // moved too far from mouse press position, don't handle as click on mouse release
if (mSelectionRect && mSelectionRect->isActive())
mSelectionRect->moveSelection(event);
else if (mMouseEventLayerable) // call event of affected layerable:
mMouseEventLayerable->mouseMoveEvent(event, mMousePressPos);
event->accept(); // in case QCPLayerable reimplementation manipulates event accepted state. In QWidget event system, QCustomPlot wants to accept the event.
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when a mouse button is released. Emits the \ref mouseRelease signal.
If the mouse was moved less than a certain threshold in any direction since the \ref
mousePressEvent, it is considered a click which causes the selection mechanism (if activated via
\ref setInteractions) to possibly change selection states accordingly. Further, specialized mouse
click signals are emitted (e.g. \ref plottableClick, \ref axisClick, etc.)
If a layerable is the mouse capturer (a \ref mousePressEvent happened on top of the layerable
before), the \ref mouseReleaseEvent is forwarded to that element.
\see mousePressEvent, mouseMoveEvent
*/
void QCustomPlot::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event)
{
emit mouseRelease(event);
if (!mMouseHasMoved) // mouse hasn't moved (much) between press and release, so handle as click
{
if (mSelectionRect && mSelectionRect->isActive()) // a simple click shouldn't successfully finish a selection rect, so cancel it here
mSelectionRect->cancel();
if (event->button() == Qt::LeftButton)
processPointSelection(event);
// emit specialized click signals of QCustomPlot instance:
if (QCPAbstractPlottable *ap = qobject_cast<QCPAbstractPlottable*>(mMouseSignalLayerable))
{
int dataIndex = 0;
if (!mMouseSignalLayerableDetails.value<QCPDataSelection>().isEmpty())
dataIndex = mMouseSignalLayerableDetails.value<QCPDataSelection>().dataRange().begin();
emit plottableClick(ap, dataIndex, event);
} else if (QCPAxis *ax = qobject_cast<QCPAxis*>(mMouseSignalLayerable))
emit axisClick(ax, mMouseSignalLayerableDetails.value<QCPAxis::SelectablePart>(), event);
else if (QCPAbstractItem *ai = qobject_cast<QCPAbstractItem*>(mMouseSignalLayerable))
emit itemClick(ai, event);
else if (QCPLegend *lg = qobject_cast<QCPLegend*>(mMouseSignalLayerable))
emit legendClick(lg, nullptr, event);
else if (QCPAbstractLegendItem *li = qobject_cast<QCPAbstractLegendItem*>(mMouseSignalLayerable))
emit legendClick(li->parentLegend(), li, event);
mMouseSignalLayerable = nullptr;
}
if (mSelectionRect && mSelectionRect->isActive()) // Note: if a click was detected above, the selection rect is canceled there
{
// finish selection rect, the appropriate action will be taken via signal-slot connection:
mSelectionRect->endSelection(event);
} else
{
// call event of affected layerable:
if (mMouseEventLayerable)
{
mMouseEventLayerable->mouseReleaseEvent(event, mMousePressPos);
mMouseEventLayerable = nullptr;
}
}
if (noAntialiasingOnDrag())
replot(rpQueuedReplot);
event->accept(); // in case QCPLayerable reimplementation manipulates event accepted state. In QWidget event system, QCustomPlot wants to accept the event.
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for mouse wheel events. First, the \ref mouseWheel signal is emitted. Then
determines the affected layerable and forwards the event to it.
*/
void QCustomPlot::wheelEvent(QWheelEvent *event)
{
emit mouseWheel(event);
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 14, 0)
const QPointF pos = event->pos();
#else
const QPointF pos = event->position();
#endif
// forward event to layerable under cursor:
foreach (QCPLayerable *candidate, layerableListAt(pos, false))
{
event->accept(); // default impl of QCPLayerable's mouse events ignore the event, in that case propagate to next candidate in list
candidate->wheelEvent(event);
if (event->isAccepted())
break;
}
event->accept(); // in case QCPLayerable reimplementation manipulates event accepted state. In QWidget event system, QCustomPlot wants to accept the event.
}
/*! \internal
This function draws the entire plot, including background pixmap, with the specified \a painter.
It does not make use of the paint buffers like \ref replot, so this is the function typically
used by saving/exporting methods such as \ref savePdf or \ref toPainter.
Note that it does not fill the background with the background brush (as the user may specify with
\ref setBackground(const QBrush &brush)), this is up to the respective functions calling this
method.
*/
void QCustomPlot::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
updateLayout();
// draw viewport background pixmap:
drawBackground(painter);
// draw all layered objects (grid, axes, plottables, items, legend,...):
foreach (QCPLayer *layer, mLayers)
layer->draw(painter);
/* Debug code to draw all layout element rects
foreach (QCPLayoutElement *el, findChildren<QCPLayoutElement*>())
{
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
painter->setPen(QPen(QColor(0, 0, 0, 100), 0, Qt::DashLine));
painter->drawRect(el->rect());
painter->setPen(QPen(QColor(255, 0, 0, 100), 0, Qt::DashLine));
painter->drawRect(el->outerRect());
}
*/
}
/*! \internal
Performs the layout update steps defined by \ref QCPLayoutElement::UpdatePhase, by calling \ref
QCPLayoutElement::update on the main plot layout.
Here, the layout elements calculate their positions and margins, and prepare for the following
draw call.
*/
void QCustomPlot::updateLayout()
{
// run through layout phases:
mPlotLayout->update(QCPLayoutElement::upPreparation);
mPlotLayout->update(QCPLayoutElement::upMargins);
mPlotLayout->update(QCPLayoutElement::upLayout);
emit afterLayout();
}
/*! \internal
Draws the viewport background pixmap of the plot.
If a pixmap was provided via \ref setBackground, this function buffers the scaled version
depending on \ref setBackgroundScaled and \ref setBackgroundScaledMode and then draws it inside
the viewport with the provided \a painter. The scaled version is buffered in
mScaledBackgroundPixmap to prevent expensive rescaling at every redraw. It is only updated, when
the axis rect has changed in a way that requires a rescale of the background pixmap (this is
dependent on the \ref setBackgroundScaledMode), or when a differend axis background pixmap was
set.
Note that this function does not draw a fill with the background brush
(\ref setBackground(const QBrush &brush)) beneath the pixmap.
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCustomPlot::drawBackground(QCPPainter *painter)
{
// Note: background color is handled in individual replot/save functions
// draw background pixmap (on top of fill, if brush specified):
if (!mBackgroundPixmap.isNull())
{
if (mBackgroundScaled)
{
// check whether mScaledBackground needs to be updated:
QSize scaledSize(mBackgroundPixmap.size());
scaledSize.scale(mViewport.size(), mBackgroundScaledMode);
if (mScaledBackgroundPixmap.size() != scaledSize)
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = mBackgroundPixmap.scaled(mViewport.size(), mBackgroundScaledMode, Qt::SmoothTransformation);
painter->drawPixmap(mViewport.topLeft(), mScaledBackgroundPixmap, QRect(0, 0, mViewport.width(), mViewport.height()) & mScaledBackgroundPixmap.rect());
} else
{
painter->drawPixmap(mViewport.topLeft(), mBackgroundPixmap, QRect(0, 0, mViewport.width(), mViewport.height()));
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Goes through the layers and makes sure this QCustomPlot instance holds the correct number of
paint buffers and that they have the correct configuration (size, pixel ratio, etc.).
Allocations, reallocations and deletions of paint buffers are performed as necessary. It also
associates the paint buffers with the layers, so they draw themselves into the right buffer when
\ref QCPLayer::drawToPaintBuffer is called. This means it associates adjacent \ref
QCPLayer::lmLogical layers to a mutual paint buffer and creates dedicated paint buffers for
layers in \ref QCPLayer::lmBuffered mode.
This method uses \ref createPaintBuffer to create new paint buffers.
After this method, the paint buffers are empty (filled with \c Qt::transparent) and invalidated
(so an attempt to replot only a single buffered layer causes a full replot).
This method is called in every \ref replot call, prior to actually drawing the layers (into their
associated paint buffer). If the paint buffers don't need changing/reallocating, this method
basically leaves them alone and thus finishes very fast.
*/
void QCustomPlot::setupPaintBuffers()
{
int bufferIndex = 0;
if (mPaintBuffers.isEmpty())
mPaintBuffers.append(QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer>(createPaintBuffer()));
for (int layerIndex = 0; layerIndex < mLayers.size(); ++layerIndex)
{
QCPLayer *layer = mLayers.at(layerIndex);
if (layer->mode() == QCPLayer::lmLogical)
{
layer->mPaintBuffer = mPaintBuffers.at(bufferIndex).toWeakRef();
} else if (layer->mode() == QCPLayer::lmBuffered)
{
++bufferIndex;
if (bufferIndex >= mPaintBuffers.size())
mPaintBuffers.append(QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer>(createPaintBuffer()));
layer->mPaintBuffer = mPaintBuffers.at(bufferIndex).toWeakRef();
if (layerIndex < mLayers.size()-1 && mLayers.at(layerIndex+1)->mode() == QCPLayer::lmLogical) // not last layer, and next one is logical, so prepare another buffer for next layerables
{
++bufferIndex;
if (bufferIndex >= mPaintBuffers.size())
mPaintBuffers.append(QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer>(createPaintBuffer()));
}
}
}
// remove unneeded buffers:
while (mPaintBuffers.size()-1 > bufferIndex)
mPaintBuffers.removeLast();
// resize buffers to viewport size and clear contents:
foreach (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> buffer, mPaintBuffers)
{
buffer->setSize(viewport().size()); // won't do anything if already correct size
buffer->clear(Qt::transparent);
buffer->setInvalidated();
}
}
/*! \internal
This method is used by \ref setupPaintBuffers when it needs to create new paint buffers.
Depending on the current setting of \ref setOpenGl, and the current Qt version, different
backends (subclasses of \ref QCPAbstractPaintBuffer) are created, initialized with the proper
size and device pixel ratio, and returned.
*/
QCPAbstractPaintBuffer *QCustomPlot::createPaintBuffer()
{
if (mOpenGl)
{
#if defined(QCP_OPENGL_FBO)
return new QCPPaintBufferGlFbo(viewport().size(), mBufferDevicePixelRatio, mGlContext, mGlPaintDevice);
#elif defined(QCP_OPENGL_PBUFFER)
return new QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer(viewport().size(), mBufferDevicePixelRatio, mOpenGlMultisamples);
#else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL enabled even though no support for it compiled in, this shouldn't have happened. Falling back to pixmap paint buffer.";
return new QCPPaintBufferPixmap(viewport().size(), mBufferDevicePixelRatio);
#endif
} else
return new QCPPaintBufferPixmap(viewport().size(), mBufferDevicePixelRatio);
}
/*!
This method returns whether any of the paint buffers held by this QCustomPlot instance are
invalidated.
If any buffer is invalidated, a partial replot (\ref QCPLayer::replot) is not allowed and always
causes a full replot (\ref QCustomPlot::replot) of all layers. This is the case when for example
the layer order has changed, new layers were added or removed, layer modes were changed (\ref
QCPLayer::setMode), or layerables were added or removed.
\see QCPAbstractPaintBuffer::setInvalidated
*/
bool QCustomPlot::hasInvalidatedPaintBuffers()
{
foreach (QSharedPointer<QCPAbstractPaintBuffer> buffer, mPaintBuffers)
{
if (buffer->invalidated())
return true;
}
return false;
}
/*! \internal
When \ref setOpenGl is set to true, this method is used to initialize OpenGL (create a context,
surface, paint device).
Returns true on success.
If this method is successful, all paint buffers should be deleted and then reallocated by calling
\ref setupPaintBuffers, so the OpenGL-based paint buffer subclasses (\ref
QCPPaintBufferGlPbuffer, \ref QCPPaintBufferGlFbo) are used for subsequent replots.
\see freeOpenGl
*/
bool QCustomPlot::setupOpenGl()
{
#ifdef QCP_OPENGL_FBO
freeOpenGl();
QSurfaceFormat proposedSurfaceFormat;
proposedSurfaceFormat.setSamples(mOpenGlMultisamples);
#ifdef QCP_OPENGL_OFFSCREENSURFACE
QOffscreenSurface *surface = new QOffscreenSurface;
#else
QWindow *surface = new QWindow;
surface->setSurfaceType(QSurface::OpenGLSurface);
#endif
surface->setFormat(proposedSurfaceFormat);
surface->create();
mGlSurface = QSharedPointer<QSurface>(surface);
mGlContext = QSharedPointer<QOpenGLContext>(new QOpenGLContext);
mGlContext->setFormat(mGlSurface->format());
if (!mGlContext->create())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Failed to create OpenGL context";
mGlContext.clear();
mGlSurface.clear();
return false;
}
if (!mGlContext->makeCurrent(mGlSurface.data())) // context needs to be current to create paint device
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Failed to make opengl context current";
mGlContext.clear();
mGlSurface.clear();
return false;
}
if (!QOpenGLFramebufferObject::hasOpenGLFramebufferObjects())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "OpenGL of this system doesn't support frame buffer objects";
mGlContext.clear();
mGlSurface.clear();
return false;
}
mGlPaintDevice = QSharedPointer<QOpenGLPaintDevice>(new QOpenGLPaintDevice);
return true;
#elif defined(QCP_OPENGL_PBUFFER)
return QGLFormat::hasOpenGL();
#else
return false;
#endif
}
/*! \internal
When \ref setOpenGl is set to false, this method is used to deinitialize OpenGL (releases the
context and frees resources).
After OpenGL is disabled, all paint buffers should be deleted and then reallocated by calling
\ref setupPaintBuffers, so the standard software rendering paint buffer subclass (\ref
QCPPaintBufferPixmap) is used for subsequent replots.
\see setupOpenGl
*/
void QCustomPlot::freeOpenGl()
{
#ifdef QCP_OPENGL_FBO
mGlPaintDevice.clear();
mGlContext.clear();
mGlSurface.clear();
#endif
}
/*! \internal
This method is used by \ref QCPAxisRect::removeAxis to report removed axes to the QCustomPlot
so it may clear its QCustomPlot::xAxis, yAxis, xAxis2 and yAxis2 members accordingly.
*/
void QCustomPlot::axisRemoved(QCPAxis *axis)
{
if (xAxis == axis)
xAxis = nullptr;
if (xAxis2 == axis)
xAxis2 = nullptr;
if (yAxis == axis)
yAxis = nullptr;
if (yAxis2 == axis)
yAxis2 = nullptr;
// Note: No need to take care of range drag axes and range zoom axes, because they are stored in smart pointers
}
/*! \internal
This method is used by the QCPLegend destructor to report legend removal to the QCustomPlot so
it may clear its QCustomPlot::legend member accordingly.
*/
void QCustomPlot::legendRemoved(QCPLegend *legend)
{
if (this->legend == legend)
this->legend = nullptr;
}
/*! \internal
This slot is connected to the selection rect's \ref QCPSelectionRect::accepted signal when \ref
setSelectionRectMode is set to \ref QCP::srmSelect.
First, it determines which axis rect was the origin of the selection rect judging by the starting
point of the selection. Then it goes through the plottables (\ref QCPAbstractPlottable1D to be
precise) associated with that axis rect and finds the data points that are in \a rect. It does
this by querying their \ref QCPAbstractPlottable1D::selectTestRect method.
Then, the actual selection is done by calling the plottables' \ref
QCPAbstractPlottable::selectEvent, placing the found selected data points in the \a details
parameter as <tt>QVariant(\ref QCPDataSelection)</tt>. All plottables that weren't touched by \a
rect receive a \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::deselectEvent.
\see processRectZoom
*/
void QCustomPlot::processRectSelection(QRect rect, QMouseEvent *event)
{
typedef QPair<QCPAbstractPlottable*, QCPDataSelection> SelectionCandidate;
typedef QMultiMap<int, SelectionCandidate> SelectionCandidates; // map key is number of selected data points, so we have selections sorted by size
bool selectionStateChanged = false;
if (mInteractions.testFlag(QCP::iSelectPlottables))
{
SelectionCandidates potentialSelections;
QRectF rectF(rect.normalized());
if (QCPAxisRect *affectedAxisRect = axisRectAt(rectF.topLeft()))
{
// determine plottables that were hit by the rect and thus are candidates for selection:
foreach (QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable, affectedAxisRect->plottables())
{
if (QCPPlottableInterface1D *plottableInterface = plottable->interface1D())
{
QCPDataSelection dataSel = plottableInterface->selectTestRect(rectF, true);
if (!dataSel.isEmpty())
potentialSelections.insert(dataSel.dataPointCount(), SelectionCandidate(plottable, dataSel));
}
}
if (!mInteractions.testFlag(QCP::iMultiSelect))
{
// only leave plottable with most selected points in map, since we will only select a single plottable:
if (!potentialSelections.isEmpty())
{
SelectionCandidates::iterator it = potentialSelections.begin();
while (it != std::prev(potentialSelections.end())) // erase all except last element
it = potentialSelections.erase(it);
}
}
bool additive = event->modifiers().testFlag(mMultiSelectModifier);
// deselect all other layerables if not additive selection:
if (!additive)
{
// emit deselection except to those plottables who will be selected afterwards:
foreach (QCPLayer *layer, mLayers)
{
foreach (QCPLayerable *layerable, layer->children())
{
if ((potentialSelections.isEmpty() || potentialSelections.constBegin()->first != layerable) && mInteractions.testFlag(layerable->selectionCategory()))
{
bool selChanged = false;
layerable->deselectEvent(&selChanged);
selectionStateChanged |= selChanged;
}
}
}
}
// go through selections in reverse (largest selection first) and emit select events:
SelectionCandidates::const_iterator it = potentialSelections.constEnd();
while (it != potentialSelections.constBegin())
{
--it;
if (mInteractions.testFlag(it.value().first->selectionCategory()))
{
bool selChanged = false;
it.value().first->selectEvent(event, additive, QVariant::fromValue(it.value().second), &selChanged);
selectionStateChanged |= selChanged;
}
}
}
}
if (selectionStateChanged)
{
emit selectionChangedByUser();
replot(rpQueuedReplot);
} else if (mSelectionRect)
mSelectionRect->layer()->replot();
}
/*! \internal
This slot is connected to the selection rect's \ref QCPSelectionRect::accepted signal when \ref
setSelectionRectMode is set to \ref QCP::srmZoom.
It determines which axis rect was the origin of the selection rect judging by the starting point
of the selection, and then zooms the axes defined via \ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomAxes to the
provided \a rect (see \ref QCPAxisRect::zoom).
\see processRectSelection
*/
void QCustomPlot::processRectZoom(QRect rect, QMouseEvent *event)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
if (QCPAxisRect *axisRect = axisRectAt(rect.topLeft()))
{
QList<QCPAxis*> affectedAxes = QList<QCPAxis*>() << axisRect->rangeZoomAxes(Qt::Horizontal) << axisRect->rangeZoomAxes(Qt::Vertical);
affectedAxes.removeAll(static_cast<QCPAxis*>(nullptr));
axisRect->zoom(QRectF(rect), affectedAxes);
}
replot(rpQueuedReplot); // always replot to make selection rect disappear
}
/*! \internal
This method is called when a simple left mouse click was detected on the QCustomPlot surface.
It first determines the layerable that was hit by the click, and then calls its \ref
QCPLayerable::selectEvent. All other layerables receive a QCPLayerable::deselectEvent (unless the
multi-select modifier was pressed, see \ref setMultiSelectModifier).
In this method the hit layerable is determined a second time using \ref layerableAt (after the
one in \ref mousePressEvent), because we want \a onlySelectable set to true this time. This
implies that the mouse event grabber (mMouseEventLayerable) may be a different one from the
clicked layerable determined here. For example, if a non-selectable layerable is in front of a
selectable layerable at the click position, the front layerable will receive mouse events but the
selectable one in the back will receive the \ref QCPLayerable::selectEvent.
\see processRectSelection, QCPLayerable::selectTest
*/
void QCustomPlot::processPointSelection(QMouseEvent *event)
{
QVariant details;
QCPLayerable *clickedLayerable = layerableAt(event->pos(), true, &details);
bool selectionStateChanged = false;
bool additive = mInteractions.testFlag(QCP::iMultiSelect) && event->modifiers().testFlag(mMultiSelectModifier);
// deselect all other layerables if not additive selection:
if (!additive)
{
foreach (QCPLayer *layer, mLayers)
{
foreach (QCPLayerable *layerable, layer->children())
{
if (layerable != clickedLayerable && mInteractions.testFlag(layerable->selectionCategory()))
{
bool selChanged = false;
layerable->deselectEvent(&selChanged);
selectionStateChanged |= selChanged;
}
}
}
}
if (clickedLayerable && mInteractions.testFlag(clickedLayerable->selectionCategory()))
{
// a layerable was actually clicked, call its selectEvent:
bool selChanged = false;
clickedLayerable->selectEvent(event, additive, details, &selChanged);
selectionStateChanged |= selChanged;
}
if (selectionStateChanged)
{
emit selectionChangedByUser();
replot(rpQueuedReplot);
}
}
/*! \internal
Registers the specified plottable with this QCustomPlot and, if \ref setAutoAddPlottableToLegend
is enabled, adds it to the legend (QCustomPlot::legend). QCustomPlot takes ownership of the
plottable.
Returns true on success, i.e. when \a plottable isn't already in this plot and the parent plot of
\a plottable is this QCustomPlot.
This method is called automatically in the QCPAbstractPlottable base class constructor.
*/
bool QCustomPlot::registerPlottable(QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable)
{
if (mPlottables.contains(plottable))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "plottable already added to this QCustomPlot:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(plottable);
return false;
}
if (plottable->parentPlot() != this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "plottable not created with this QCustomPlot as parent:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(plottable);
return false;
}
mPlottables.append(plottable);
// possibly add plottable to legend:
if (mAutoAddPlottableToLegend)
plottable->addToLegend();
if (!plottable->layer()) // usually the layer is already set in the constructor of the plottable (via QCPLayerable constructor)
plottable->setLayer(currentLayer());
return true;
}
/*! \internal
In order to maintain the simplified graph interface of QCustomPlot, this method is called by the
QCPGraph constructor to register itself with this QCustomPlot's internal graph list. Returns true
on success, i.e. if \a graph is valid and wasn't already registered with this QCustomPlot.
This graph specific registration happens in addition to the call to \ref registerPlottable by the
QCPAbstractPlottable base class.
*/
bool QCustomPlot::registerGraph(QCPGraph *graph)
{
if (!graph)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed graph is zero";
return false;
}
if (mGraphs.contains(graph))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "graph already registered with this QCustomPlot";
return false;
}
mGraphs.append(graph);
return true;
}
/*! \internal
Registers the specified item with this QCustomPlot. QCustomPlot takes ownership of the item.
Returns true on success, i.e. when \a item wasn't already in the plot and the parent plot of \a
item is this QCustomPlot.
This method is called automatically in the QCPAbstractItem base class constructor.
*/
bool QCustomPlot::registerItem(QCPAbstractItem *item)
{
if (mItems.contains(item))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "item already added to this QCustomPlot:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(item);
return false;
}
if (item->parentPlot() != this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "item not created with this QCustomPlot as parent:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(item);
return false;
}
mItems.append(item);
if (!item->layer()) // usually the layer is already set in the constructor of the item (via QCPLayerable constructor)
item->setLayer(currentLayer());
return true;
}
/*! \internal
Assigns all layers their index (QCPLayer::mIndex) in the mLayers list. This method is thus called
after every operation that changes the layer indices, like layer removal, layer creation, layer
moving.
*/
void QCustomPlot::updateLayerIndices() const
{
for (int i=0; i<mLayers.size(); ++i)
mLayers.at(i)->mIndex = i;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the top-most layerable at pixel position \a pos. If \a onlySelectable is set to true,
only those layerables that are selectable will be considered. (Layerable subclasses communicate
their selectability via the QCPLayerable::selectTest method, by returning -1.)
\a selectionDetails is an output parameter that contains selection specifics of the affected
layerable. This is useful if the respective layerable shall be given a subsequent
QCPLayerable::selectEvent (like in \ref mouseReleaseEvent). \a selectionDetails usually contains
information about which part of the layerable was hit, in multi-part layerables (e.g.
QCPAxis::SelectablePart). If the layerable is a plottable, \a selectionDetails contains a \ref
QCPDataSelection instance with the single data point which is closest to \a pos.
\see layerableListAt, layoutElementAt, axisRectAt
*/
QCPLayerable *QCustomPlot::layerableAt(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *selectionDetails) const
{
QList<QVariant> details;
QList<QCPLayerable*> candidates = layerableListAt(pos, onlySelectable, selectionDetails ? &details : nullptr);
if (selectionDetails && !details.isEmpty())
*selectionDetails = details.first();
if (!candidates.isEmpty())
return candidates.first();
else
return nullptr;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the layerables at pixel position \a pos. If \a onlySelectable is set to true, only those
layerables that are selectable will be considered. (Layerable subclasses communicate their
selectability via the QCPLayerable::selectTest method, by returning -1.)
The returned list is sorted by the layerable/drawing order such that the layerable that appears
on top in the plot is at index 0 of the returned list. If you only need to know the top
layerable, rather use \ref layerableAt.
\a selectionDetails is an output parameter that contains selection specifics of the affected
layerable. This is useful if the respective layerable shall be given a subsequent
QCPLayerable::selectEvent (like in \ref mouseReleaseEvent). \a selectionDetails usually contains
information about which part of the layerable was hit, in multi-part layerables (e.g.
QCPAxis::SelectablePart). If the layerable is a plottable, \a selectionDetails contains a \ref
QCPDataSelection instance with the single data point which is closest to \a pos.
\see layerableAt, layoutElementAt, axisRectAt
*/
QList<QCPLayerable*> QCustomPlot::layerableListAt(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QList<QVariant> *selectionDetails) const
{
QList<QCPLayerable*> result;
for (int layerIndex=mLayers.size()-1; layerIndex>=0; --layerIndex)
{
const QList<QCPLayerable*> layerables = mLayers.at(layerIndex)->children();
for (int i=layerables.size()-1; i>=0; --i)
{
if (!layerables.at(i)->realVisibility())
continue;
QVariant details;
double dist = layerables.at(i)->selectTest(pos, onlySelectable, selectionDetails ? &details : nullptr);
if (dist >= 0 && dist < selectionTolerance())
{
result.append(layerables.at(i));
if (selectionDetails)
selectionDetails->append(details);
}
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Saves the plot to a rastered image file \a fileName in the image format \a format. The plot is
sized to \a width and \a height in pixels and scaled with \a scale. (width 100 and scale 2.0 lead
to a full resolution file with width 200.) If the \a format supports compression, \a quality may
be between 0 and 100 to control it.
Returns true on success. If this function fails, most likely the given \a format isn't supported
by the system, see Qt docs about QImageWriter::supportedImageFormats().
The \a resolution will be written to the image file header (if the file format supports this) and
has no direct consequence for the quality or the pixel size. However, if opening the image with a
tool which respects the metadata, it will be able to scale the image to match either a given size
in real units of length (inch, centimeters, etc.), or the target display DPI. You can specify in
which units \a resolution is given, by setting \a resolutionUnit. The \a resolution is converted
to the format's expected resolution unit internally.
\see saveBmp, saveJpg, savePng, savePdf
*/
bool QCustomPlot::saveRastered(const QString &fileName, int width, int height, double scale, const char *format, int quality, int resolution, QCP::ResolutionUnit resolutionUnit)
{
QImage buffer = toPixmap(width, height, scale).toImage();
int dotsPerMeter = 0;
switch (resolutionUnit)
{
case QCP::ruDotsPerMeter: dotsPerMeter = resolution; break;
case QCP::ruDotsPerCentimeter: dotsPerMeter = resolution*100; break;
case QCP::ruDotsPerInch: dotsPerMeter = int(resolution/0.0254); break;
}
buffer.setDotsPerMeterX(dotsPerMeter); // this is saved together with some image formats, e.g. PNG, and is relevant when opening image in other tools
buffer.setDotsPerMeterY(dotsPerMeter); // this is saved together with some image formats, e.g. PNG, and is relevant when opening image in other tools
if (!buffer.isNull())
return buffer.save(fileName, format, quality);
else
return false;
}
/*!
Renders the plot to a pixmap and returns it.
The plot is sized to \a width and \a height in pixels and scaled with \a scale. (width 100 and
scale 2.0 lead to a full resolution pixmap with width 200.)
\see toPainter, saveRastered, saveBmp, savePng, saveJpg, savePdf
*/
QPixmap QCustomPlot::toPixmap(int width, int height, double scale)
{
// this method is somewhat similar to toPainter. Change something here, and a change in toPainter might be necessary, too.
int newWidth, newHeight;
if (width == 0 || height == 0)
{
newWidth = this->width();
newHeight = this->height();
} else
{
newWidth = width;
newHeight = height;
}
int scaledWidth = qRound(scale*newWidth);
int scaledHeight = qRound(scale*newHeight);
QPixmap result(scaledWidth, scaledHeight);
result.fill(mBackgroundBrush.style() == Qt::SolidPattern ? mBackgroundBrush.color() : Qt::transparent); // if using non-solid pattern, make transparent now and draw brush pattern later
QCPPainter painter;
painter.begin(&result);
if (painter.isActive())
{
QRect oldViewport = viewport();
setViewport(QRect(0, 0, newWidth, newHeight));
painter.setMode(QCPPainter::pmNoCaching);
if (!qFuzzyCompare(scale, 1.0))
{
if (scale > 1.0) // for scale < 1 we always want cosmetic pens where possible, because else lines might disappear for very small scales
painter.setMode(QCPPainter::pmNonCosmetic);
painter.scale(scale, scale);
}
if (mBackgroundBrush.style() != Qt::SolidPattern && mBackgroundBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush) // solid fills were done a few lines above with QPixmap::fill
painter.fillRect(mViewport, mBackgroundBrush);
draw(&painter);
setViewport(oldViewport);
painter.end();
} else // might happen if pixmap has width or height zero
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Couldn't activate painter on pixmap";
return QPixmap();
}
return result;
}
/*!
Renders the plot using the passed \a painter.
The plot is sized to \a width and \a height in pixels. If the \a painter's scale is not 1.0, the resulting plot will
appear scaled accordingly.
\note If you are restricted to using a QPainter (instead of QCPPainter), create a temporary QPicture and open a QCPPainter
on it. Then call \ref toPainter with this QCPPainter. After ending the paint operation on the picture, draw it with
the QPainter. This will reproduce the painter actions the QCPPainter took, with a QPainter.
\see toPixmap
*/
void QCustomPlot::toPainter(QCPPainter *painter, int width, int height)
{
// this method is somewhat similar to toPixmap. Change something here, and a change in toPixmap might be necessary, too.
int newWidth, newHeight;
if (width == 0 || height == 0)
{
newWidth = this->width();
newHeight = this->height();
} else
{
newWidth = width;
newHeight = height;
}
if (painter->isActive())
{
QRect oldViewport = viewport();
setViewport(QRect(0, 0, newWidth, newHeight));
painter->setMode(QCPPainter::pmNoCaching);
if (mBackgroundBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush) // unlike in toPixmap, we can't do QPixmap::fill for Qt::SolidPattern brush style, so we also draw solid fills with fillRect here
painter->fillRect(mViewport, mBackgroundBrush);
draw(painter);
setViewport(oldViewport);
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Passed painter is not active";
}
/* end of 'src/core.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/colorgradient.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 25278 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPColorGradient
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPColorGradient
\brief Defines a color gradient for use with e.g. \ref QCPColorMap
This class describes a color gradient which can be used to encode data with color. For example,
QCPColorMap and QCPColorScale have \ref QCPColorMap::setGradient "setGradient" methods which
take an instance of this class. Colors are set with \ref setColorStopAt(double position, const QColor &color)
with a \a position from 0 to 1. In between these defined color positions, the
color will be interpolated linearly either in RGB or HSV space, see \ref setColorInterpolation.
Alternatively, load one of the preset color gradients shown in the image below, with \ref
loadPreset, or by directly specifying the preset in the constructor.
Apart from red, green and blue components, the gradient also interpolates the alpha values of the
configured color stops. This allows to display some portions of the data range as transparent in
the plot.
How NaN values are interpreted can be configured with \ref setNanHandling.
\image html QCPColorGradient.png
The constructor \ref QCPColorGradient(GradientPreset preset) allows directly converting a \ref
GradientPreset to a QCPColorGradient. This means that you can directly pass \ref GradientPreset
to all the \a setGradient methods, e.g.:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcolorgradient-setgradient
The total number of levels used in the gradient can be set with \ref setLevelCount. Whether the
color gradient shall be applied periodically (wrapping around) to data values that lie outside
the data range specified on the plottable instance can be controlled with \ref setPeriodic.
*/
/*!
Constructs a new, empty QCPColorGradient with no predefined color stops. You can add own color
stops with \ref setColorStopAt.
The color level count is initialized to 350.
*/
QCPColorGradient::QCPColorGradient() :
mLevelCount(350),
mColorInterpolation(ciRGB),
mNanHandling(nhNone),
mNanColor(Qt::black),
mPeriodic(false),
mColorBufferInvalidated(true)
{
mColorBuffer.fill(qRgb(0, 0, 0), mLevelCount);
}
/*!
Constructs a new QCPColorGradient initialized with the colors and color interpolation according
to \a preset.
The color level count is initialized to 350.
*/
QCPColorGradient::QCPColorGradient(GradientPreset preset) :
mLevelCount(350),
mColorInterpolation(ciRGB),
mNanHandling(nhNone),
mNanColor(Qt::black),
mPeriodic(false),
mColorBufferInvalidated(true)
{
mColorBuffer.fill(qRgb(0, 0, 0), mLevelCount);
loadPreset(preset);
}
/* undocumented operator */
bool QCPColorGradient::operator==(const QCPColorGradient &other) const
{
return ((other.mLevelCount == this->mLevelCount) &&
(other.mColorInterpolation == this->mColorInterpolation) &&
(other.mNanHandling == this ->mNanHandling) &&
(other.mNanColor == this->mNanColor) &&
(other.mPeriodic == this->mPeriodic) &&
(other.mColorStops == this->mColorStops));
}
/*!
Sets the number of discretization levels of the color gradient to \a n. The default is 350 which
is typically enough to create a smooth appearance. The minimum number of levels is 2.
\image html QCPColorGradient-levelcount.png
*/
void QCPColorGradient::setLevelCount(int n)
{
if (n < 2)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "n must be greater or equal 2 but was" << n;
n = 2;
}
if (n != mLevelCount)
{
mLevelCount = n;
mColorBufferInvalidated = true;
}
}
/*!
Sets at which positions from 0 to 1 which color shall occur. The positions are the keys, the
colors are the values of the passed QMap \a colorStops. In between these color stops, the color
is interpolated according to \ref setColorInterpolation.
A more convenient way to create a custom gradient may be to clear all color stops with \ref
clearColorStops (or creating a new, empty QCPColorGradient) and then adding them one by one with
\ref setColorStopAt.
\see clearColorStops
*/
void QCPColorGradient::setColorStops(const QMap<double, QColor> &colorStops)
{
mColorStops = colorStops;
mColorBufferInvalidated = true;
}
/*!
Sets the \a color the gradient will have at the specified \a position (from 0 to 1). In between
these color stops, the color is interpolated according to \ref setColorInterpolation.
\see setColorStops, clearColorStops
*/
void QCPColorGradient::setColorStopAt(double position, const QColor &color)
{
mColorStops.insert(position, color);
mColorBufferInvalidated = true;
}
/*!
Sets whether the colors in between the configured color stops (see \ref setColorStopAt) shall be
interpolated linearly in RGB or in HSV color space.
For example, a sweep in RGB space from red to green will have a muddy brown intermediate color,
whereas in HSV space the intermediate color is yellow.
*/
void QCPColorGradient::setColorInterpolation(QCPColorGradient::ColorInterpolation interpolation)
{
if (interpolation != mColorInterpolation)
{
mColorInterpolation = interpolation;
mColorBufferInvalidated = true;
}
}
/*!
Sets how NaNs in the data are displayed in the plot.
\see setNanColor
*/
void QCPColorGradient::setNanHandling(QCPColorGradient::NanHandling handling)
{
mNanHandling = handling;
}
/*!
Sets the color that NaN data is represented by, if \ref setNanHandling is set
to ref nhNanColor.
\see setNanHandling
*/
void QCPColorGradient::setNanColor(const QColor &color)
{
mNanColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets whether data points that are outside the configured data range (e.g. \ref
QCPColorMap::setDataRange) are colored by periodically repeating the color gradient or whether
they all have the same color, corresponding to the respective gradient boundary color.
\image html QCPColorGradient-periodic.png
As shown in the image above, gradients that have the same start and end color are especially
suitable for a periodic gradient mapping, since they produce smooth color transitions throughout
the color map. A preset that has this property is \ref gpHues.
In practice, using periodic color gradients makes sense when the data corresponds to a periodic
dimension, such as an angle or a phase. If this is not the case, the color encoding might become
ambiguous, because multiple different data values are shown as the same color.
*/
void QCPColorGradient::setPeriodic(bool enabled)
{
mPeriodic = enabled;
}
/*! \overload
This method is used to quickly convert a \a data array to colors. The colors will be output in
the array \a scanLine. Both \a data and \a scanLine must have the length \a n when passed to this
function. The data range that shall be used for mapping the data value to the gradient is passed
in \a range. \a logarithmic indicates whether the data values shall be mapped to colors
logarithmically.
if \a data actually contains 2D-data linearized via <tt>[row*columnCount + column]</tt>, you can
set \a dataIndexFactor to <tt>columnCount</tt> to convert a column instead of a row of the data
array, in \a scanLine. \a scanLine will remain a regular (1D) array. This works because \a data
is addressed <tt>data[i*dataIndexFactor]</tt>.
Use the overloaded method to additionally provide alpha map data.
The QRgb values that are placed in \a scanLine have their r, g, and b components premultiplied
with alpha (see QImage::Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied).
*/
void QCPColorGradient::colorize(const double *data, const QCPRange &range, QRgb *scanLine, int n, int dataIndexFactor, bool logarithmic)
{
// If you change something here, make sure to also adapt color() and the other colorize() overload
if (!data)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "null pointer given as data";
return;
}
if (!scanLine)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "null pointer given as scanLine";
return;
}
if (mColorBufferInvalidated)
updateColorBuffer();
const bool skipNanCheck = mNanHandling == nhNone;
const double posToIndexFactor = !logarithmic ? (mLevelCount-1)/range.size() : (mLevelCount-1)/qLn(range.upper/range.lower);
for (int i=0; i<n; ++i)
{
const double value = data[dataIndexFactor*i];
if (skipNanCheck || !std::isnan(value))
{
int index = int((!logarithmic ? value-range.lower : qLn(value/range.lower)) * posToIndexFactor);
if (!mPeriodic)
{
index = qBound(0, index, mLevelCount-1);
} else
{
index %= mLevelCount;
if (index < 0)
index += mLevelCount;
}
scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.at(index);
} else
{
switch(mNanHandling)
{
case nhLowestColor: scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.first(); break;
case nhHighestColor: scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.last(); break;
case nhTransparent: scanLine[i] = qRgba(0, 0, 0, 0); break;
case nhNanColor: scanLine[i] = mNanColor.rgba(); break;
case nhNone: break; // shouldn't happen
}
}
}
}
/*! \overload
Additionally to the other overload of \ref colorize, this method takes the array \a alpha, which
has the same size and structure as \a data and encodes the alpha information per data point.
The QRgb values that are placed in \a scanLine have their r, g and b components premultiplied
with alpha (see QImage::Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied).
*/
void QCPColorGradient::colorize(const double *data, const unsigned char *alpha, const QCPRange &range, QRgb *scanLine, int n, int dataIndexFactor, bool logarithmic)
{
// If you change something here, make sure to also adapt color() and the other colorize() overload
if (!data)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "null pointer given as data";
return;
}
if (!alpha)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "null pointer given as alpha";
return;
}
if (!scanLine)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "null pointer given as scanLine";
return;
}
if (mColorBufferInvalidated)
updateColorBuffer();
const bool skipNanCheck = mNanHandling == nhNone;
const double posToIndexFactor = !logarithmic ? (mLevelCount-1)/range.size() : (mLevelCount-1)/qLn(range.upper/range.lower);
for (int i=0; i<n; ++i)
{
const double value = data[dataIndexFactor*i];
if (skipNanCheck || !std::isnan(value))
{
int index = int((!logarithmic ? value-range.lower : qLn(value/range.lower)) * posToIndexFactor);
if (!mPeriodic)
{
index = qBound(0, index, mLevelCount-1);
} else
{
index %= mLevelCount;
if (index < 0)
index += mLevelCount;
}
if (alpha[dataIndexFactor*i] == 255)
{
scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.at(index);
} else
{
const QRgb rgb = mColorBuffer.at(index);
const float alphaF = alpha[dataIndexFactor*i]/255.0f;
scanLine[i] = qRgba(int(qRed(rgb)*alphaF), int(qGreen(rgb)*alphaF), int(qBlue(rgb)*alphaF), int(qAlpha(rgb)*alphaF)); // also multiply r,g,b with alpha, to conform to Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied
}
} else
{
switch(mNanHandling)
{
case nhLowestColor: scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.first(); break;
case nhHighestColor: scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.last(); break;
case nhTransparent: scanLine[i] = qRgba(0, 0, 0, 0); break;
case nhNanColor: scanLine[i] = mNanColor.rgba(); break;
case nhNone: break; // shouldn't happen
}
}
}
}
/*! \internal
This method is used to colorize a single data value given in \a position, to colors. The data
range that shall be used for mapping the data value to the gradient is passed in \a range. \a
logarithmic indicates whether the data value shall be mapped to a color logarithmically.
If an entire array of data values shall be converted, rather use \ref colorize, for better
performance.
The returned QRgb has its r, g and b components premultiplied with alpha (see
QImage::Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied).
*/
QRgb QCPColorGradient::color(double position, const QCPRange &range, bool logarithmic)
{
// If you change something here, make sure to also adapt ::colorize()
if (mColorBufferInvalidated)
updateColorBuffer();
const bool skipNanCheck = mNanHandling == nhNone;
if (!skipNanCheck && std::isnan(position))
{
switch(mNanHandling)
{
case nhLowestColor: return mColorBuffer.first();
case nhHighestColor: return mColorBuffer.last();
case nhTransparent: return qRgba(0, 0, 0, 0);
case nhNanColor: return mNanColor.rgba();
case nhNone: return qRgba(0, 0, 0, 0); // shouldn't happen
}
}
const double posToIndexFactor = !logarithmic ? (mLevelCount-1)/range.size() : (mLevelCount-1)/qLn(range.upper/range.lower);
int index = int((!logarithmic ? position-range.lower : qLn(position/range.lower)) * posToIndexFactor);
if (!mPeriodic)
{
index = qBound(0, index, mLevelCount-1);
} else
{
index %= mLevelCount;
if (index < 0)
index += mLevelCount;
}
return mColorBuffer.at(index);
}
/*!
Clears the current color stops and loads the specified \a preset. A preset consists of predefined
color stops and the corresponding color interpolation method.
The available presets are:
\image html QCPColorGradient.png
*/
void QCPColorGradient::loadPreset(GradientPreset preset)
{
clearColorStops();
switch (preset)
{
case gpGrayscale:
setColorInterpolation(ciRGB);
setColorStopAt(0, Qt::black);
setColorStopAt(1, Qt::white);
break;
case gpHot:
setColorInterpolation(ciRGB);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(50, 0, 0));
setColorStopAt(0.2, QColor(180, 10, 0));
setColorStopAt(0.4, QColor(245, 50, 0));
setColorStopAt(0.6, QColor(255, 150, 10));
setColorStopAt(0.8, QColor(255, 255, 50));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(255, 255, 255));
break;
case gpCold:
setColorInterpolation(ciRGB);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(0, 0, 50));
setColorStopAt(0.2, QColor(0, 10, 180));
setColorStopAt(0.4, QColor(0, 50, 245));
setColorStopAt(0.6, QColor(10, 150, 255));
setColorStopAt(0.8, QColor(50, 255, 255));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(255, 255, 255));
break;
case gpNight:
setColorInterpolation(ciHSV);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(10, 20, 30));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(250, 255, 250));
break;
case gpCandy:
setColorInterpolation(ciHSV);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(0, 0, 255));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(255, 250, 250));
break;
case gpGeography:
setColorInterpolation(ciRGB);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(70, 170, 210));
setColorStopAt(0.20, QColor(90, 160, 180));
setColorStopAt(0.25, QColor(45, 130, 175));
setColorStopAt(0.30, QColor(100, 140, 125));
setColorStopAt(0.5, QColor(100, 140, 100));
setColorStopAt(0.6, QColor(130, 145, 120));
setColorStopAt(0.7, QColor(140, 130, 120));
setColorStopAt(0.9, QColor(180, 190, 190));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(210, 210, 230));
break;
case gpIon:
setColorInterpolation(ciHSV);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(50, 10, 10));
setColorStopAt(0.45, QColor(0, 0, 255));
setColorStopAt(0.8, QColor(0, 255, 255));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(0, 255, 0));
break;
case gpThermal:
setColorInterpolation(ciRGB);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(0, 0, 50));
setColorStopAt(0.15, QColor(20, 0, 120));
setColorStopAt(0.33, QColor(200, 30, 140));
setColorStopAt(0.6, QColor(255, 100, 0));
setColorStopAt(0.85, QColor(255, 255, 40));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(255, 255, 255));
break;
case gpPolar:
setColorInterpolation(ciRGB);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(50, 255, 255));
setColorStopAt(0.18, QColor(10, 70, 255));
setColorStopAt(0.28, QColor(10, 10, 190));
setColorStopAt(0.5, QColor(0, 0, 0));
setColorStopAt(0.72, QColor(190, 10, 10));
setColorStopAt(0.82, QColor(255, 70, 10));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(255, 255, 50));
break;
case gpSpectrum:
setColorInterpolation(ciHSV);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(50, 0, 50));
setColorStopAt(0.15, QColor(0, 0, 255));
setColorStopAt(0.35, QColor(0, 255, 255));
setColorStopAt(0.6, QColor(255, 255, 0));
setColorStopAt(0.75, QColor(255, 30, 0));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(50, 0, 0));
break;
case gpJet:
setColorInterpolation(ciRGB);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(0, 0, 100));
setColorStopAt(0.15, QColor(0, 50, 255));
setColorStopAt(0.35, QColor(0, 255, 255));
setColorStopAt(0.65, QColor(255, 255, 0));
setColorStopAt(0.85, QColor(255, 30, 0));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(100, 0, 0));
break;
case gpHues:
setColorInterpolation(ciHSV);
setColorStopAt(0, QColor(255, 0, 0));
setColorStopAt(1.0/3.0, QColor(0, 0, 255));
setColorStopAt(2.0/3.0, QColor(0, 255, 0));
setColorStopAt(1, QColor(255, 0, 0));
break;
}
}
/*!
Clears all color stops.
\see setColorStops, setColorStopAt
*/
void QCPColorGradient::clearColorStops()
{
mColorStops.clear();
mColorBufferInvalidated = true;
}
/*!
Returns an inverted gradient. The inverted gradient has all properties as this \ref
QCPColorGradient, but the order of the color stops is inverted.
\see setColorStops, setColorStopAt
*/
QCPColorGradient QCPColorGradient::inverted() const
{
QCPColorGradient result(*this);
result.clearColorStops();
for (QMap<double, QColor>::const_iterator it=mColorStops.constBegin(); it!=mColorStops.constEnd(); ++it)
result.setColorStopAt(1.0-it.key(), it.value());
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns true if the color gradient uses transparency, i.e. if any of the configured color stops
has an alpha value below 255.
*/
bool QCPColorGradient::stopsUseAlpha() const
{
for (QMap<double, QColor>::const_iterator it=mColorStops.constBegin(); it!=mColorStops.constEnd(); ++it)
{
if (it.value().alpha() < 255)
return true;
}
return false;
}
/*! \internal
Updates the internal color buffer which will be used by \ref colorize and \ref color, to quickly
convert positions to colors. This is where the interpolation between color stops is calculated.
*/
void QCPColorGradient::updateColorBuffer()
{
if (mColorBuffer.size() != mLevelCount)
mColorBuffer.resize(mLevelCount);
if (mColorStops.size() > 1)
{
double indexToPosFactor = 1.0/double(mLevelCount-1);
const bool useAlpha = stopsUseAlpha();
for (int i=0; i<mLevelCount; ++i)
{
double position = i*indexToPosFactor;
QMap<double, QColor>::const_iterator it = mColorStops.lowerBound(position);
if (it == mColorStops.constEnd()) // position is on or after last stop, use color of last stop
{
if (useAlpha)
{
const QColor col = std::prev(it).value();
const double alphaPremultiplier = col.alpha()/255.0; // since we use QImage::Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied
mColorBuffer[i] = qRgba(int(col.red()*alphaPremultiplier),
int(col.green()*alphaPremultiplier),
int(col.blue()*alphaPremultiplier),
col.alpha());
} else
mColorBuffer[i] = std::prev(it).value().rgba();
} else if (it == mColorStops.constBegin()) // position is on or before first stop, use color of first stop
{
if (useAlpha)
{
const QColor &col = it.value();
const double alphaPremultiplier = col.alpha()/255.0; // since we use QImage::Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied
mColorBuffer[i] = qRgba(int(col.red()*alphaPremultiplier),
int(col.green()*alphaPremultiplier),
int(col.blue()*alphaPremultiplier),
col.alpha());
} else
mColorBuffer[i] = it.value().rgba();
} else // position is in between stops (or on an intermediate stop), interpolate color
{
QMap<double, QColor>::const_iterator high = it;
QMap<double, QColor>::const_iterator low = std::prev(it);
double t = (position-low.key())/(high.key()-low.key()); // interpolation factor 0..1
switch (mColorInterpolation)
{
case ciRGB:
{
if (useAlpha)
{
const int alpha = int((1-t)*low.value().alpha() + t*high.value().alpha());
const double alphaPremultiplier = alpha/255.0; // since we use QImage::Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied
mColorBuffer[i] = qRgba(int( ((1-t)*low.value().red() + t*high.value().red())*alphaPremultiplier ),
int( ((1-t)*low.value().green() + t*high.value().green())*alphaPremultiplier ),
int( ((1-t)*low.value().blue() + t*high.value().blue())*alphaPremultiplier ),
alpha);
} else
{
mColorBuffer[i] = qRgb(int( ((1-t)*low.value().red() + t*high.value().red()) ),
int( ((1-t)*low.value().green() + t*high.value().green()) ),
int( ((1-t)*low.value().blue() + t*high.value().blue())) );
}
break;
}
case ciHSV:
{
QColor lowHsv = low.value().toHsv();
QColor highHsv = high.value().toHsv();
double hue = 0;
double hueDiff = highHsv.hueF()-lowHsv.hueF();
if (hueDiff > 0.5)
hue = lowHsv.hueF() - t*(1.0-hueDiff);
else if (hueDiff < -0.5)
hue = lowHsv.hueF() + t*(1.0+hueDiff);
else
hue = lowHsv.hueF() + t*hueDiff;
if (hue < 0) hue += 1.0;
else if (hue >= 1.0) hue -= 1.0;
if (useAlpha)
{
const QRgb rgb = QColor::fromHsvF(hue,
(1-t)*lowHsv.saturationF() + t*highHsv.saturationF(),
(1-t)*lowHsv.valueF() + t*highHsv.valueF()).rgb();
const double alpha = (1-t)*lowHsv.alphaF() + t*highHsv.alphaF();
mColorBuffer[i] = qRgba(int(qRed(rgb)*alpha), int(qGreen(rgb)*alpha), int(qBlue(rgb)*alpha), int(255*alpha));
}
else
{
mColorBuffer[i] = QColor::fromHsvF(hue,
(1-t)*lowHsv.saturationF() + t*highHsv.saturationF(),
(1-t)*lowHsv.valueF() + t*highHsv.valueF()).rgb();
}
break;
}
}
}
}
} else if (mColorStops.size() == 1)
{
const QRgb rgb = mColorStops.constBegin().value().rgb();
const double alpha = mColorStops.constBegin().value().alphaF();
mColorBuffer.fill(qRgba(int(qRed(rgb)*alpha), int(qGreen(rgb)*alpha), int(qBlue(rgb)*alpha), int(255*alpha)));
} else // mColorStops is empty, fill color buffer with black
{
mColorBuffer.fill(qRgb(0, 0, 0));
}
mColorBufferInvalidated = false;
}
/* end of 'src/colorgradient.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/selectiondecorator-bracket.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 12308 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket
\brief A selection decorator which draws brackets around each selected data segment
Additionally to the regular highlighting of selected segments via color, fill and scatter style,
this \ref QCPSelectionDecorator subclass draws markers at the begin and end of each selected data
segment of the plottable.
The shape of the markers can be controlled with \ref setBracketStyle, \ref setBracketWidth and
\ref setBracketHeight. The color/fill can be controlled with \ref setBracketPen and \ref
setBracketBrush.
To introduce custom bracket styles, it is only necessary to sublcass \ref
QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket and reimplement \ref drawBracket. The rest will be managed by the
base class.
*/
/*!
Creates a new QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket instance with default values.
*/
QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket() :
mBracketPen(QPen(Qt::black)),
mBracketBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mBracketWidth(5),
mBracketHeight(50),
mBracketStyle(bsSquareBracket),
mTangentToData(false),
mTangentAverage(2)
{
}
QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::~QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the brackets at the beginning and end of each selected
data segment.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::setBracketPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mBracketPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to draw the brackets at the beginning and end of each selected
data segment.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::setBracketBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBracketBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the width of the drawn bracket. The width dimension is always parallel to the key axis of
the data, or the tangent direction of the current data slope, if \ref setTangentToData is
enabled.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::setBracketWidth(int width)
{
mBracketWidth = width;
}
/*!
Sets the height of the drawn bracket. The height dimension is always perpendicular to the key axis
of the data, or the tangent direction of the current data slope, if \ref setTangentToData is
enabled.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::setBracketHeight(int height)
{
mBracketHeight = height;
}
/*!
Sets the shape that the bracket/marker will have.
\see setBracketWidth, setBracketHeight
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::setBracketStyle(QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::BracketStyle style)
{
mBracketStyle = style;
}
/*!
Sets whether the brackets will be rotated such that they align with the slope of the data at the
position that they appear in.
For noisy data, it might be more visually appealing to average the slope over multiple data
points. This can be configured via \ref setTangentAverage.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::setTangentToData(bool enabled)
{
mTangentToData = enabled;
}
/*!
Controls over how many data points the slope shall be averaged, when brackets shall be aligned
with the data (if \ref setTangentToData is true).
From the position of the bracket, \a pointCount points towards the selected data range will be
taken into account. The smallest value of \a pointCount is 1, which is effectively equivalent to
disabling \ref setTangentToData.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::setTangentAverage(int pointCount)
{
mTangentAverage = pointCount;
if (mTangentAverage < 1)
mTangentAverage = 1;
}
/*!
Draws the bracket shape with \a painter. The parameter \a direction is either -1 or 1 and
indicates whether the bracket shall point to the left or the right (i.e. is a closing or opening
bracket, respectively).
The passed \a painter already contains all transformations that are necessary to position and
rotate the bracket appropriately. Painting operations can be performed as if drawing upright
brackets on flat data with horizontal key axis, with (0, 0) being the center of the bracket.
If you wish to sublcass \ref QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket in order to provide custom bracket
shapes (see \ref QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::bsUserStyle), this is the method you should
reimplement.
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::drawBracket(QCPPainter *painter, int direction) const
{
switch (mBracketStyle)
{
case bsSquareBracket:
{
painter->drawLine(QLineF(mBracketWidth*direction, -mBracketHeight*0.5, 0, -mBracketHeight*0.5));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(mBracketWidth*direction, mBracketHeight*0.5, 0, mBracketHeight*0.5));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, -mBracketHeight*0.5, 0, mBracketHeight*0.5));
break;
}
case bsHalfEllipse:
{
painter->drawArc(QRectF(-mBracketWidth*0.5, -mBracketHeight*0.5, mBracketWidth, mBracketHeight), -90*16, -180*16*direction);
break;
}
case bsEllipse:
{
painter->drawEllipse(QRectF(-mBracketWidth*0.5, -mBracketHeight*0.5, mBracketWidth, mBracketHeight));
break;
}
case bsPlus:
{
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, -mBracketHeight*0.5, 0, mBracketHeight*0.5));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(-mBracketWidth*0.5, 0, mBracketWidth*0.5, 0));
break;
}
default:
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "unknown/custom bracket style can't be handeld by default implementation:" << static_cast<int>(mBracketStyle);
break;
}
}
}
/*!
Draws the bracket decoration on the data points at the begin and end of each selected data
segment given in \a seletion.
It uses the method \ref drawBracket to actually draw the shapes.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::drawDecoration(QCPPainter *painter, QCPDataSelection selection)
{
if (!mPlottable || selection.isEmpty()) return;
if (QCPPlottableInterface1D *interface1d = mPlottable->interface1D())
{
foreach (const QCPDataRange &dataRange, selection.dataRanges())
{
// determine position and (if tangent mode is enabled) angle of brackets:
int openBracketDir = (mPlottable->keyAxis() && !mPlottable->keyAxis()->rangeReversed()) ? 1 : -1;
int closeBracketDir = -openBracketDir;
QPointF openBracketPos = getPixelCoordinates(interface1d, dataRange.begin());
QPointF closeBracketPos = getPixelCoordinates(interface1d, dataRange.end()-1);
double openBracketAngle = 0;
double closeBracketAngle = 0;
if (mTangentToData)
{
openBracketAngle = getTangentAngle(interface1d, dataRange.begin(), openBracketDir);
closeBracketAngle = getTangentAngle(interface1d, dataRange.end()-1, closeBracketDir);
}
// draw opening bracket:
QTransform oldTransform = painter->transform();
painter->setPen(mBracketPen);
painter->setBrush(mBracketBrush);
painter->translate(openBracketPos);
painter->rotate(openBracketAngle/M_PI*180.0);
drawBracket(painter, openBracketDir);
painter->setTransform(oldTransform);
// draw closing bracket:
painter->setPen(mBracketPen);
painter->setBrush(mBracketBrush);
painter->translate(closeBracketPos);
painter->rotate(closeBracketAngle/M_PI*180.0);
drawBracket(painter, closeBracketDir);
painter->setTransform(oldTransform);
}
}
}
/*! \internal
If \ref setTangentToData is enabled, brackets need to be rotated according to the data slope.
This method returns the angle in radians by which a bracket at the given \a dataIndex must be
rotated.
The parameter \a direction must be set to either -1 or 1, representing whether it is an opening
or closing bracket. Since for slope calculation multiple data points are required, this defines
the direction in which the algorithm walks, starting at \a dataIndex, to average those data
points. (see \ref setTangentToData and \ref setTangentAverage)
\a interface1d is the interface to the plottable's data which is used to query data coordinates.
*/
double QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::getTangentAngle(const QCPPlottableInterface1D *interface1d, int dataIndex, int direction) const
{
if (!interface1d || dataIndex < 0 || dataIndex >= interface1d->dataCount())
return 0;
direction = direction < 0 ? -1 : 1; // enforce direction is either -1 or 1
// how many steps we can actually go from index in the given direction without exceeding data bounds:
int averageCount;
if (direction < 0)
averageCount = qMin(mTangentAverage, dataIndex);
else
averageCount = qMin(mTangentAverage, interface1d->dataCount()-1-dataIndex);
qDebug() << averageCount;
// calculate point average of averageCount points:
QVector<QPointF> points(averageCount);
QPointF pointsAverage;
int currentIndex = dataIndex;
for (int i=0; i<averageCount; ++i)
{
points[i] = getPixelCoordinates(interface1d, currentIndex);
pointsAverage += points[i];
currentIndex += direction;
}
pointsAverage /= double(averageCount);
// calculate slope of linear regression through points:
double numSum = 0;
double denomSum = 0;
for (int i=0; i<averageCount; ++i)
{
const double dx = points.at(i).x()-pointsAverage.x();
const double dy = points.at(i).y()-pointsAverage.y();
numSum += dx*dy;
denomSum += dx*dx;
}
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(denomSum) && !qFuzzyIsNull(numSum))
{
return qAtan2(numSum, denomSum);
} else // undetermined angle, probably mTangentAverage == 1, so using only one data point
return 0;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pixel coordinates of the data point at \a dataIndex, using \a interface1d to access
the data points.
*/
QPointF QCPSelectionDecoratorBracket::getPixelCoordinates(const QCPPlottableInterface1D *interface1d, int dataIndex) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mPlottable->keyAxis();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mPlottable->valueAxis();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return {0, 0}; }
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
return {keyAxis->coordToPixel(interface1d->dataMainKey(dataIndex)), valueAxis->coordToPixel(interface1d->dataMainValue(dataIndex))};
else
return {valueAxis->coordToPixel(interface1d->dataMainValue(dataIndex)), keyAxis->coordToPixel(interface1d->dataMainKey(dataIndex))};
}
/* end of 'src/selectiondecorator-bracket.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/layoutelements/layoutelement-axisrect.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 47193 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAxisRect
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAxisRect
\brief Holds multiple axes and arranges them in a rectangular shape.
This class represents an axis rect, a rectangular area that is bounded on all sides with an
arbitrary number of axes.
Initially QCustomPlot has one axis rect, accessible via QCustomPlot::axisRect(). However, the
layout system allows to have multiple axis rects, e.g. arranged in a grid layout
(QCustomPlot::plotLayout).
By default, QCPAxisRect comes with four axes, at bottom, top, left and right. They can be
accessed via \ref axis by providing the respective axis type (\ref QCPAxis::AxisType) and index.
If you need all axes in the axis rect, use \ref axes. The top and right axes are set to be
invisible initially (QCPAxis::setVisible). To add more axes to a side, use \ref addAxis or \ref
addAxes. To remove an axis, use \ref removeAxis.
The axis rect layerable itself only draws a background pixmap or color, if specified (\ref
setBackground). It is placed on the "background" layer initially (see \ref QCPLayer for an
explanation of the QCustomPlot layer system). The axes that are held by the axis rect can be
placed on other layers, independently of the axis rect.
Every axis rect has a child layout of type \ref QCPLayoutInset. It is accessible via \ref
insetLayout and can be used to have other layout elements (or even other layouts with multiple
elements) hovering inside the axis rect.
If an axis rect is clicked and dragged, it processes this by moving certain axis ranges. The
behaviour can be controlled with \ref setRangeDrag and \ref setRangeDragAxes. If the mouse wheel
is scrolled while the cursor is on the axis rect, certain axes are scaled. This is controllable
via \ref setRangeZoom, \ref setRangeZoomAxes and \ref setRangeZoomFactor. These interactions are
only enabled if \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains \ref QCP::iRangeDrag and \ref
QCP::iRangeZoom.
\image html AxisRectSpacingOverview.png
<center>Overview of the spacings and paddings that define the geometry of an axis. The dashed
line on the far left indicates the viewport/widget border.</center>
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPLayoutInset *QCPAxisRect::insetLayout() const
Returns the inset layout of this axis rect. It can be used to place other layout elements (or
even layouts with multiple other elements) inside/on top of an axis rect.
\see QCPLayoutInset
*/
/*! \fn int QCPAxisRect::left() const
Returns the pixel position of the left border of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into
account here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPAxisRect::right() const
Returns the pixel position of the right border of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into
account here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPAxisRect::top() const
Returns the pixel position of the top border of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into
account here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPAxisRect::bottom() const
Returns the pixel position of the bottom border of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into
account here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPAxisRect::width() const
Returns the pixel width of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into account here, so the
returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPAxisRect::height() const
Returns the pixel height of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into account here, so the
returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QSize QCPAxisRect::size() const
Returns the pixel size of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into account here, so the
returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPAxisRect::topLeft() const
Returns the top left corner of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account here,
so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPAxisRect::topRight() const
Returns the top right corner of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account
here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPAxisRect::bottomLeft() const
Returns the bottom left corner of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account
here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPAxisRect::bottomRight() const
Returns the bottom right corner of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account
here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPAxisRect::center() const
Returns the center of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account here, so the
returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a QCPAxisRect instance and sets default values. An axis is added for each of the four
sides, the top and right axes are set invisible initially.
*/
QCPAxisRect::QCPAxisRect(QCustomPlot *parentPlot, bool setupDefaultAxes) :
QCPLayoutElement(parentPlot),
mBackgroundBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mBackgroundScaled(true),
mBackgroundScaledMode(Qt::KeepAspectRatioByExpanding),
mInsetLayout(new QCPLayoutInset),
mRangeDrag(Qt::Horizontal|Qt::Vertical),
mRangeZoom(Qt::Horizontal|Qt::Vertical),
mRangeZoomFactorHorz(0.85),
mRangeZoomFactorVert(0.85),
mDragging(false)
{
mInsetLayout->initializeParentPlot(mParentPlot);
mInsetLayout->setParentLayerable(this);
mInsetLayout->setParent(this);
setMinimumSize(50, 50);
setMinimumMargins(QMargins(15, 15, 15, 15));
mAxes.insert(QCPAxis::atLeft, QList<QCPAxis*>());
mAxes.insert(QCPAxis::atRight, QList<QCPAxis*>());
mAxes.insert(QCPAxis::atTop, QList<QCPAxis*>());
mAxes.insert(QCPAxis::atBottom, QList<QCPAxis*>());
if (setupDefaultAxes)
{
QCPAxis *xAxis = addAxis(QCPAxis::atBottom);
QCPAxis *yAxis = addAxis(QCPAxis::atLeft);
QCPAxis *xAxis2 = addAxis(QCPAxis::atTop);
QCPAxis *yAxis2 = addAxis(QCPAxis::atRight);
setRangeDragAxes(xAxis, yAxis);
setRangeZoomAxes(xAxis, yAxis);
xAxis2->setVisible(false);
yAxis2->setVisible(false);
xAxis->grid()->setVisible(true);
yAxis->grid()->setVisible(true);
xAxis2->grid()->setVisible(false);
yAxis2->grid()->setVisible(false);
xAxis2->grid()->setZeroLinePen(Qt::NoPen);
yAxis2->grid()->setZeroLinePen(Qt::NoPen);
xAxis2->grid()->setVisible(false);
yAxis2->grid()->setVisible(false);
}
}
QCPAxisRect::~QCPAxisRect()
{
delete mInsetLayout;
mInsetLayout = nullptr;
foreach (QCPAxis *axis, axes())
removeAxis(axis);
}
/*!
Returns the number of axes on the axis rect side specified with \a type.
\see axis
*/
int QCPAxisRect::axisCount(QCPAxis::AxisType type) const
{
return mAxes.value(type).size();
}
/*!
Returns the axis with the given \a index on the axis rect side specified with \a type.
\see axisCount, axes
*/
QCPAxis *QCPAxisRect::axis(QCPAxis::AxisType type, int index) const
{
QList<QCPAxis*> ax(mAxes.value(type));
if (index >= 0 && index < ax.size())
{
return ax.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Axis index out of bounds:" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/*!
Returns all axes on the axis rect sides specified with \a types.
\a types may be a single \ref QCPAxis::AxisType or an <tt>or</tt>-combination, to get the axes of
multiple sides.
\see axis
*/
QList<QCPAxis*> QCPAxisRect::axes(QCPAxis::AxisTypes types) const
{
QList<QCPAxis*> result;
if (types.testFlag(QCPAxis::atLeft))
result << mAxes.value(QCPAxis::atLeft);
if (types.testFlag(QCPAxis::atRight))
result << mAxes.value(QCPAxis::atRight);
if (types.testFlag(QCPAxis::atTop))
result << mAxes.value(QCPAxis::atTop);
if (types.testFlag(QCPAxis::atBottom))
result << mAxes.value(QCPAxis::atBottom);
return result;
}
/*! \overload
Returns all axes of this axis rect.
*/
QList<QCPAxis*> QCPAxisRect::axes() const
{
QList<QCPAxis*> result;
QHashIterator<QCPAxis::AxisType, QList<QCPAxis*> > it(mAxes);
while (it.hasNext())
{
it.next();
result << it.value();
}
return result;
}
/*!
Adds a new axis to the axis rect side specified with \a type, and returns it. If \a axis is 0, a
new QCPAxis instance is created internally. QCustomPlot owns the returned axis, so if you want to
remove an axis, use \ref removeAxis instead of deleting it manually.
You may inject QCPAxis instances (or subclasses of QCPAxis) by setting \a axis to an axis that was
previously created outside QCustomPlot. It is important to note that QCustomPlot takes ownership
of the axis, so you may not delete it afterwards. Further, the \a axis must have been created
with this axis rect as parent and with the same axis type as specified in \a type. If this is not
the case, a debug output is generated, the axis is not added, and the method returns \c nullptr.
This method can not be used to move \a axis between axis rects. The same \a axis instance must
not be added multiple times to the same or different axis rects.
If an axis rect side already contains one or more axes, the lower and upper endings of the new
axis (\ref QCPAxis::setLowerEnding, \ref QCPAxis::setUpperEnding) are set to \ref
QCPLineEnding::esHalfBar.
\see addAxes, setupFullAxesBox
*/
QCPAxis *QCPAxisRect::addAxis(QCPAxis::AxisType type, QCPAxis *axis)
{
QCPAxis *newAxis = axis;
if (!newAxis)
{
newAxis = new QCPAxis(this, type);
} else // user provided existing axis instance, do some sanity checks
{
if (newAxis->axisType() != type)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed axis has different axis type than specified in type parameter";
return nullptr;
}
if (newAxis->axisRect() != this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed axis doesn't have this axis rect as parent axis rect";
return nullptr;
}
if (axes().contains(newAxis))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed axis is already owned by this axis rect";
return nullptr;
}
}
if (!mAxes[type].isEmpty()) // multiple axes on one side, add half-bar axis ending to additional axes with offset
{
bool invert = (type == QCPAxis::atRight) || (type == QCPAxis::atBottom);
newAxis->setLowerEnding(QCPLineEnding(QCPLineEnding::esHalfBar, 6, 10, !invert));
newAxis->setUpperEnding(QCPLineEnding(QCPLineEnding::esHalfBar, 6, 10, invert));
}
mAxes[type].append(newAxis);
// reset convenience axis pointers on parent QCustomPlot if they are unset:
if (mParentPlot && mParentPlot->axisRectCount() > 0 && mParentPlot->axisRect(0) == this)
{
switch (type)
{
case QCPAxis::atBottom: { if (!mParentPlot->xAxis) mParentPlot->xAxis = newAxis; break; }
case QCPAxis::atLeft: { if (!mParentPlot->yAxis) mParentPlot->yAxis = newAxis; break; }
case QCPAxis::atTop: { if (!mParentPlot->xAxis2) mParentPlot->xAxis2 = newAxis; break; }
case QCPAxis::atRight: { if (!mParentPlot->yAxis2) mParentPlot->yAxis2 = newAxis; break; }
}
}
return newAxis;
}
/*!
Adds a new axis with \ref addAxis to each axis rect side specified in \a types. This may be an
<tt>or</tt>-combination of QCPAxis::AxisType, so axes can be added to multiple sides at once.
Returns a list of the added axes.
\see addAxis, setupFullAxesBox
*/
QList<QCPAxis*> QCPAxisRect::addAxes(QCPAxis::AxisTypes types)
{
QList<QCPAxis*> result;
if (types.testFlag(QCPAxis::atLeft))
result << addAxis(QCPAxis::atLeft);
if (types.testFlag(QCPAxis::atRight))
result << addAxis(QCPAxis::atRight);
if (types.testFlag(QCPAxis::atTop))
result << addAxis(QCPAxis::atTop);
if (types.testFlag(QCPAxis::atBottom))
result << addAxis(QCPAxis::atBottom);
return result;
}
/*!
Removes the specified \a axis from the axis rect and deletes it.
Returns true on success, i.e. if \a axis was a valid axis in this axis rect.
\see addAxis
*/
bool QCPAxisRect::removeAxis(QCPAxis *axis)
{
// don't access axis->axisType() to provide safety when axis is an invalid pointer, rather go through all axis containers:
QHashIterator<QCPAxis::AxisType, QList<QCPAxis*> > it(mAxes);
while (it.hasNext())
{
it.next();
if (it.value().contains(axis))
{
if (it.value().first() == axis && it.value().size() > 1) // if removing first axis, transfer axis offset to the new first axis (which at this point is the second axis, if it exists)
it.value()[1]->setOffset(axis->offset());
mAxes[it.key()].removeOne(axis);
if (qobject_cast<QCustomPlot*>(parentPlot())) // make sure this isn't called from QObject dtor when QCustomPlot is already destructed (happens when the axis rect is not in any layout and thus QObject-child of QCustomPlot)
parentPlot()->axisRemoved(axis);
delete axis;
return true;
}
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Axis isn't in axis rect:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(axis);
return false;
}
/*!
Zooms in (or out) to the passed rectangular region \a pixelRect, given in pixel coordinates.
All axes of this axis rect will have their range zoomed accordingly. If you only wish to zoom
specific axes, use the overloaded version of this method.
\see QCustomPlot::setSelectionRectMode
*/
void QCPAxisRect::zoom(const QRectF &pixelRect)
{
zoom(pixelRect, axes());
}
/*! \overload
Zooms in (or out) to the passed rectangular region \a pixelRect, given in pixel coordinates.
Only the axes passed in \a affectedAxes will have their ranges zoomed accordingly.
\see QCustomPlot::setSelectionRectMode
*/
void QCPAxisRect::zoom(const QRectF &pixelRect, const QList<QCPAxis*> &affectedAxes)
{
foreach (QCPAxis *axis, affectedAxes)
{
if (!axis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "a passed axis was zero";
continue;
}
QCPRange pixelRange;
if (axis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
pixelRange = QCPRange(pixelRect.left(), pixelRect.right());
else
pixelRange = QCPRange(pixelRect.top(), pixelRect.bottom());
axis->setRange(axis->pixelToCoord(pixelRange.lower), axis->pixelToCoord(pixelRange.upper));
}
}
/*!
Convenience function to create an axis on each side that doesn't have any axes yet and set their
visibility to true. Further, the top/right axes are assigned the following properties of the
bottom/left axes:
\li range (\ref QCPAxis::setRange)
\li range reversed (\ref QCPAxis::setRangeReversed)
\li scale type (\ref QCPAxis::setScaleType)
\li tick visibility (\ref QCPAxis::setTicks)
\li number format (\ref QCPAxis::setNumberFormat)
\li number precision (\ref QCPAxis::setNumberPrecision)
\li tick count of ticker (\ref QCPAxisTicker::setTickCount)
\li tick origin of ticker (\ref QCPAxisTicker::setTickOrigin)
Tick label visibility (\ref QCPAxis::setTickLabels) of the right and top axes are set to false.
If \a connectRanges is true, the \ref QCPAxis::rangeChanged "rangeChanged" signals of the bottom
and left axes are connected to the \ref QCPAxis::setRange slots of the top and right axes.
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setupFullAxesBox(bool connectRanges)
{
QCPAxis *xAxis, *yAxis, *xAxis2, *yAxis2;
if (axisCount(QCPAxis::atBottom) == 0)
xAxis = addAxis(QCPAxis::atBottom);
else
xAxis = axis(QCPAxis::atBottom);
if (axisCount(QCPAxis::atLeft) == 0)
yAxis = addAxis(QCPAxis::atLeft);
else
yAxis = axis(QCPAxis::atLeft);
if (axisCount(QCPAxis::atTop) == 0)
xAxis2 = addAxis(QCPAxis::atTop);
else
xAxis2 = axis(QCPAxis::atTop);
if (axisCount(QCPAxis::atRight) == 0)
yAxis2 = addAxis(QCPAxis::atRight);
else
yAxis2 = axis(QCPAxis::atRight);
xAxis->setVisible(true);
yAxis->setVisible(true);
xAxis2->setVisible(true);
yAxis2->setVisible(true);
xAxis2->setTickLabels(false);
yAxis2->setTickLabels(false);
xAxis2->setRange(xAxis->range());
xAxis2->setRangeReversed(xAxis->rangeReversed());
xAxis2->setScaleType(xAxis->scaleType());
xAxis2->setTicks(xAxis->ticks());
xAxis2->setNumberFormat(xAxis->numberFormat());
xAxis2->setNumberPrecision(xAxis->numberPrecision());
xAxis2->ticker()->setTickCount(xAxis->ticker()->tickCount());
xAxis2->ticker()->setTickOrigin(xAxis->ticker()->tickOrigin());
yAxis2->setRange(yAxis->range());
yAxis2->setRangeReversed(yAxis->rangeReversed());
yAxis2->setScaleType(yAxis->scaleType());
yAxis2->setTicks(yAxis->ticks());
yAxis2->setNumberFormat(yAxis->numberFormat());
yAxis2->setNumberPrecision(yAxis->numberPrecision());
yAxis2->ticker()->setTickCount(yAxis->ticker()->tickCount());
yAxis2->ticker()->setTickOrigin(yAxis->ticker()->tickOrigin());
if (connectRanges)
{
connect(xAxis, SIGNAL(rangeChanged(QCPRange)), xAxis2, SLOT(setRange(QCPRange)));
connect(yAxis, SIGNAL(rangeChanged(QCPRange)), yAxis2, SLOT(setRange(QCPRange)));
}
}
/*!
Returns a list of all the plottables that are associated with this axis rect.
A plottable is considered associated with an axis rect if its key or value axis (or both) is in
this axis rect.
\see graphs, items
*/
QList<QCPAbstractPlottable*> QCPAxisRect::plottables() const
{
// Note: don't append all QCPAxis::plottables() into a list, because we might get duplicate entries
QList<QCPAbstractPlottable*> result;
foreach (QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable, mParentPlot->mPlottables)
{
if (plottable->keyAxis()->axisRect() == this || plottable->valueAxis()->axisRect() == this)
result.append(plottable);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a list of all the graphs that are associated with this axis rect.
A graph is considered associated with an axis rect if its key or value axis (or both) is in
this axis rect.
\see plottables, items
*/
QList<QCPGraph*> QCPAxisRect::graphs() const
{
// Note: don't append all QCPAxis::graphs() into a list, because we might get duplicate entries
QList<QCPGraph*> result;
foreach (QCPGraph *graph, mParentPlot->mGraphs)
{
if (graph->keyAxis()->axisRect() == this || graph->valueAxis()->axisRect() == this)
result.append(graph);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns a list of all the items that are associated with this axis rect.
An item is considered associated with an axis rect if any of its positions has key or value axis
set to an axis that is in this axis rect, or if any of its positions has \ref
QCPItemPosition::setAxisRect set to the axis rect, or if the clip axis rect (\ref
QCPAbstractItem::setClipAxisRect) is set to this axis rect.
\see plottables, graphs
*/
QList<QCPAbstractItem *> QCPAxisRect::items() const
{
// Note: don't just append all QCPAxis::items() into a list, because we might get duplicate entries
// and miss those items that have this axis rect as clipAxisRect.
QList<QCPAbstractItem*> result;
foreach (QCPAbstractItem *item, mParentPlot->mItems)
{
if (item->clipAxisRect() == this)
{
result.append(item);
continue;
}
foreach (QCPItemPosition *position, item->positions())
{
if (position->axisRect() == this ||
position->keyAxis()->axisRect() == this ||
position->valueAxis()->axisRect() == this)
{
result.append(item);
break;
}
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
This method is called automatically upon replot and doesn't need to be called by users of
QCPAxisRect.
Calls the base class implementation to update the margins (see \ref QCPLayoutElement::update),
and finally passes the \ref rect to the inset layout (\ref insetLayout) and calls its
QCPInsetLayout::update function.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPAxisRect::update(UpdatePhase phase)
{
QCPLayoutElement::update(phase);
switch (phase)
{
case upPreparation:
{
foreach (QCPAxis *axis, axes())
axis->setupTickVectors();
break;
}
case upLayout:
{
mInsetLayout->setOuterRect(rect());
break;
}
default: break;
}
// pass update call on to inset layout (doesn't happen automatically, because QCPAxisRect doesn't derive from QCPLayout):
mInsetLayout->update(phase);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> QCPAxisRect::elements(bool recursive) const
{
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> result;
if (mInsetLayout)
{
result << mInsetLayout;
if (recursive)
result << mInsetLayout->elements(recursive);
}
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAxisRect::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
painter->setAntialiasing(false);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAxisRect::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
drawBackground(painter);
}
/*!
Sets \a pm as the axis background pixmap. The axis background pixmap will be drawn inside the
axis rect. Since axis rects place themselves on the "background" layer by default, the axis rect
backgrounds are usually drawn below everything else.
For cases where the provided pixmap doesn't have the same size as the axis rect, scaling can be
enabled with \ref setBackgroundScaled and the scaling mode (i.e. whether and how the aspect ratio
is preserved) can be set with \ref setBackgroundScaledMode. To set all these options in one call,
consider using the overloaded version of this function.
Below the pixmap, the axis rect may be optionally filled with a brush, if specified with \ref
setBackground(const QBrush &brush).
\see setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode, setBackground(const QBrush &brush)
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setBackground(const QPixmap &pm)
{
mBackgroundPixmap = pm;
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = QPixmap();
}
/*! \overload
Sets \a brush as the background brush. The axis rect background will be filled with this brush.
Since axis rects place themselves on the "background" layer by default, the axis rect backgrounds
are usually drawn below everything else.
The brush will be drawn before (under) any background pixmap, which may be specified with \ref
setBackground(const QPixmap &pm).
To disable drawing of a background brush, set \a brush to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setBackground(const QPixmap &pm)
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setBackground(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBackgroundBrush = brush;
}
/*! \overload
Allows setting the background pixmap of the axis rect, whether it shall be scaled and how it
shall be scaled in one call.
\see setBackground(const QPixmap &pm), setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setBackground(const QPixmap &pm, bool scaled, Qt::AspectRatioMode mode)
{
mBackgroundPixmap = pm;
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = QPixmap();
mBackgroundScaled = scaled;
mBackgroundScaledMode = mode;
}
/*!
Sets whether the axis background pixmap shall be scaled to fit the axis rect or not. If \a scaled
is set to true, you may control whether and how the aspect ratio of the original pixmap is
preserved with \ref setBackgroundScaledMode.
Note that the scaled version of the original pixmap is buffered, so there is no performance
penalty on replots. (Except when the axis rect dimensions are changed continuously.)
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setBackgroundScaled(bool scaled)
{
mBackgroundScaled = scaled;
}
/*!
If scaling of the axis background pixmap is enabled (\ref setBackgroundScaled), use this function to
define whether and how the aspect ratio of the original pixmap passed to \ref setBackground is preserved.
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaled
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setBackgroundScaledMode(Qt::AspectRatioMode mode)
{
mBackgroundScaledMode = mode;
}
/*!
Returns the range drag axis of the \a orientation provided. If multiple axes were set, returns
the first one (use \ref rangeDragAxes to retrieve a list with all set axes).
\see setRangeDragAxes
*/
QCPAxis *QCPAxisRect::rangeDragAxis(Qt::Orientation orientation)
{
if (orientation == Qt::Horizontal)
return mRangeDragHorzAxis.isEmpty() ? nullptr : mRangeDragHorzAxis.first().data();
else
return mRangeDragVertAxis.isEmpty() ? nullptr : mRangeDragVertAxis.first().data();
}
/*!
Returns the range zoom axis of the \a orientation provided. If multiple axes were set, returns
the first one (use \ref rangeZoomAxes to retrieve a list with all set axes).
\see setRangeZoomAxes
*/
QCPAxis *QCPAxisRect::rangeZoomAxis(Qt::Orientation orientation)
{
if (orientation == Qt::Horizontal)
return mRangeZoomHorzAxis.isEmpty() ? nullptr : mRangeZoomHorzAxis.first().data();
else
return mRangeZoomVertAxis.isEmpty() ? nullptr : mRangeZoomVertAxis.first().data();
}
/*!
Returns all range drag axes of the \a orientation provided.
\see rangeZoomAxis, setRangeZoomAxes
*/
QList<QCPAxis*> QCPAxisRect::rangeDragAxes(Qt::Orientation orientation)
{
QList<QCPAxis*> result;
if (orientation == Qt::Horizontal)
{
foreach (QPointer<QCPAxis> axis, mRangeDragHorzAxis)
{
if (!axis.isNull())
result.append(axis.data());
}
} else
{
foreach (QPointer<QCPAxis> axis, mRangeDragVertAxis)
{
if (!axis.isNull())
result.append(axis.data());
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns all range zoom axes of the \a orientation provided.
\see rangeDragAxis, setRangeDragAxes
*/
QList<QCPAxis*> QCPAxisRect::rangeZoomAxes(Qt::Orientation orientation)
{
QList<QCPAxis*> result;
if (orientation == Qt::Horizontal)
{
foreach (QPointer<QCPAxis> axis, mRangeZoomHorzAxis)
{
if (!axis.isNull())
result.append(axis.data());
}
} else
{
foreach (QPointer<QCPAxis> axis, mRangeZoomVertAxis)
{
if (!axis.isNull())
result.append(axis.data());
}
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns the range zoom factor of the \a orientation provided.
\see setRangeZoomFactor
*/
double QCPAxisRect::rangeZoomFactor(Qt::Orientation orientation)
{
return (orientation == Qt::Horizontal ? mRangeZoomFactorHorz : mRangeZoomFactorVert);
}
/*!
Sets which axis orientation may be range dragged by the user with mouse interaction.
What orientation corresponds to which specific axis can be set with
\ref setRangeDragAxes(QCPAxis *horizontal, QCPAxis *vertical). By
default, the horizontal axis is the bottom axis (xAxis) and the vertical axis
is the left axis (yAxis).
To disable range dragging entirely, pass \c nullptr as \a orientations or remove \ref
QCP::iRangeDrag from \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions. To enable range dragging for both
directions, pass <tt>Qt::Horizontal | Qt::Vertical</tt> as \a orientations.
In addition to setting \a orientations to a non-zero value, make sure \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions
contains \ref QCP::iRangeDrag to enable the range dragging interaction.
\see setRangeZoom, setRangeDragAxes, QCustomPlot::setNoAntialiasingOnDrag
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeDrag(Qt::Orientations orientations)
{
mRangeDrag = orientations;
}
/*!
Sets which axis orientation may be zoomed by the user with the mouse wheel. What orientation
corresponds to which specific axis can be set with \ref setRangeZoomAxes(QCPAxis *horizontal,
QCPAxis *vertical). By default, the horizontal axis is the bottom axis (xAxis) and the vertical
axis is the left axis (yAxis).
To disable range zooming entirely, pass \c nullptr as \a orientations or remove \ref
QCP::iRangeZoom from \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions. To enable range zooming for both
directions, pass <tt>Qt::Horizontal | Qt::Vertical</tt> as \a orientations.
In addition to setting \a orientations to a non-zero value, make sure \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions
contains \ref QCP::iRangeZoom to enable the range zooming interaction.
\see setRangeZoomFactor, setRangeZoomAxes, setRangeDrag
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoom(Qt::Orientations orientations)
{
mRangeZoom = orientations;
}
/*! \overload
Sets the axes whose range will be dragged when \ref setRangeDrag enables mouse range dragging on
the QCustomPlot widget. Pass \c nullptr if no axis shall be dragged in the respective
orientation.
Use the overload taking a list of axes, if multiple axes (more than one per orientation) shall
react to dragging interactions.
\see setRangeZoomAxes
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes(QCPAxis *horizontal, QCPAxis *vertical)
{
QList<QCPAxis*> horz, vert;
if (horizontal)
horz.append(horizontal);
if (vertical)
vert.append(vertical);
setRangeDragAxes(horz, vert);
}
/*! \overload
This method allows to set up multiple axes to react to horizontal and vertical dragging. The drag
orientation that the respective axis will react to is deduced from its orientation (\ref
QCPAxis::orientation).
In the unusual case that you wish to e.g. drag a vertically oriented axis with a horizontal drag
motion, use the overload taking two separate lists for horizontal and vertical dragging.
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes(QList<QCPAxis*> axes)
{
QList<QCPAxis*> horz, vert;
foreach (QCPAxis *ax, axes)
{
if (ax->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
horz.append(ax);
else
vert.append(ax);
}
setRangeDragAxes(horz, vert);
}
/*! \overload
This method allows to set multiple axes up to react to horizontal and vertical dragging, and
define specifically which axis reacts to which drag orientation (irrespective of the axis
orientation).
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes(QList<QCPAxis*> horizontal, QList<QCPAxis*> vertical)
{
mRangeDragHorzAxis.clear();
foreach (QCPAxis *ax, horizontal)
{
QPointer<QCPAxis> axPointer(ax);
if (!axPointer.isNull())
mRangeDragHorzAxis.append(axPointer);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid axis passed in horizontal list:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(ax);
}
mRangeDragVertAxis.clear();
foreach (QCPAxis *ax, vertical)
{
QPointer<QCPAxis> axPointer(ax);
if (!axPointer.isNull())
mRangeDragVertAxis.append(axPointer);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid axis passed in vertical list:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(ax);
}
}
/*!
Sets the axes whose range will be zoomed when \ref setRangeZoom enables mouse wheel zooming on
the QCustomPlot widget. Pass \c nullptr if no axis shall be zoomed in the respective orientation.
The two axes can be zoomed with different strengths, when different factors are passed to \ref
setRangeZoomFactor(double horizontalFactor, double verticalFactor).
Use the overload taking a list of axes, if multiple axes (more than one per orientation) shall
react to zooming interactions.
\see setRangeDragAxes
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomAxes(QCPAxis *horizontal, QCPAxis *vertical)
{
QList<QCPAxis*> horz, vert;
if (horizontal)
horz.append(horizontal);
if (vertical)
vert.append(vertical);
setRangeZoomAxes(horz, vert);
}
/*! \overload
This method allows to set up multiple axes to react to horizontal and vertical range zooming. The
zoom orientation that the respective axis will react to is deduced from its orientation (\ref
QCPAxis::orientation).
In the unusual case that you wish to e.g. zoom a vertically oriented axis with a horizontal zoom
interaction, use the overload taking two separate lists for horizontal and vertical zooming.
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomAxes(QList<QCPAxis*> axes)
{
QList<QCPAxis*> horz, vert;
foreach (QCPAxis *ax, axes)
{
if (ax->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
horz.append(ax);
else
vert.append(ax);
}
setRangeZoomAxes(horz, vert);
}
/*! \overload
This method allows to set multiple axes up to react to horizontal and vertical zooming, and
define specifically which axis reacts to which zoom orientation (irrespective of the axis
orientation).
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomAxes(QList<QCPAxis*> horizontal, QList<QCPAxis*> vertical)
{
mRangeZoomHorzAxis.clear();
foreach (QCPAxis *ax, horizontal)
{
QPointer<QCPAxis> axPointer(ax);
if (!axPointer.isNull())
mRangeZoomHorzAxis.append(axPointer);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid axis passed in horizontal list:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(ax);
}
mRangeZoomVertAxis.clear();
foreach (QCPAxis *ax, vertical)
{
QPointer<QCPAxis> axPointer(ax);
if (!axPointer.isNull())
mRangeZoomVertAxis.append(axPointer);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid axis passed in vertical list:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(ax);
}
}
/*!
Sets how strong one rotation step of the mouse wheel zooms, when range zoom was activated with
\ref setRangeZoom. The two parameters \a horizontalFactor and \a verticalFactor provide a way to
let the horizontal axis zoom at different rates than the vertical axis. Which axis is horizontal
and which is vertical, can be set with \ref setRangeZoomAxes.
When the zoom factor is greater than one, scrolling the mouse wheel backwards (towards the user)
will zoom in (make the currently visible range smaller). For zoom factors smaller than one, the
same scrolling direction will zoom out.
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomFactor(double horizontalFactor, double verticalFactor)
{
mRangeZoomFactorHorz = horizontalFactor;
mRangeZoomFactorVert = verticalFactor;
}
/*! \overload
Sets both the horizontal and vertical zoom \a factor.
*/
void QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomFactor(double factor)
{
mRangeZoomFactorHorz = factor;
mRangeZoomFactorVert = factor;
}
/*! \internal
Draws the background of this axis rect. It may consist of a background fill (a QBrush) and a
pixmap.
If a brush was given via \ref setBackground(const QBrush &brush), this function first draws an
according filling inside the axis rect with the provided \a painter.
Then, if a pixmap was provided via \ref setBackground, this function buffers the scaled version
depending on \ref setBackgroundScaled and \ref setBackgroundScaledMode and then draws it inside
the axis rect with the provided \a painter. The scaled version is buffered in
mScaledBackgroundPixmap to prevent expensive rescaling at every redraw. It is only updated, when
the axis rect has changed in a way that requires a rescale of the background pixmap (this is
dependent on the \ref setBackgroundScaledMode), or when a differend axis background pixmap was
set.
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCPAxisRect::drawBackground(QCPPainter *painter)
{
// draw background fill:
if (mBackgroundBrush != Qt::NoBrush)
painter->fillRect(mRect, mBackgroundBrush);
// draw background pixmap (on top of fill, if brush specified):
if (!mBackgroundPixmap.isNull())
{
if (mBackgroundScaled)
{
// check whether mScaledBackground needs to be updated:
QSize scaledSize(mBackgroundPixmap.size());
scaledSize.scale(mRect.size(), mBackgroundScaledMode);
if (mScaledBackgroundPixmap.size() != scaledSize)
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = mBackgroundPixmap.scaled(mRect.size(), mBackgroundScaledMode, Qt::SmoothTransformation);
painter->drawPixmap(mRect.topLeft()+QPoint(0, -1), mScaledBackgroundPixmap, QRect(0, 0, mRect.width(), mRect.height()) & mScaledBackgroundPixmap.rect());
} else
{
painter->drawPixmap(mRect.topLeft()+QPoint(0, -1), mBackgroundPixmap, QRect(0, 0, mRect.width(), mRect.height()));
}
}
}
/*! \internal
This function makes sure multiple axes on the side specified with \a type don't collide, but are
distributed according to their respective space requirement (QCPAxis::calculateMargin).
It does this by setting an appropriate offset (\ref QCPAxis::setOffset) on all axes except the
one with index zero.
This function is called by \ref calculateAutoMargin.
*/
void QCPAxisRect::updateAxesOffset(QCPAxis::AxisType type)
{
const QList<QCPAxis*> axesList = mAxes.value(type);
if (axesList.isEmpty())
return;
bool isFirstVisible = !axesList.first()->visible(); // if the first axis is visible, the second axis (which is where the loop starts) isn't the first visible axis, so initialize with false
for (int i=1; i<axesList.size(); ++i)
{
int offset = axesList.at(i-1)->offset() + axesList.at(i-1)->calculateMargin();
if (axesList.at(i)->visible()) // only add inner tick length to offset if this axis is visible and it's not the first visible one (might happen if true first axis is invisible)
{
if (!isFirstVisible)
offset += axesList.at(i)->tickLengthIn();
isFirstVisible = false;
}
axesList.at(i)->setOffset(offset);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
int QCPAxisRect::calculateAutoMargin(QCP::MarginSide side)
{
if (!mAutoMargins.testFlag(side))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Called with side that isn't specified as auto margin";
updateAxesOffset(QCPAxis::marginSideToAxisType(side));
// note: only need to look at the last (outer most) axis to determine the total margin, due to updateAxisOffset call
const QList<QCPAxis*> axesList = mAxes.value(QCPAxis::marginSideToAxisType(side));
if (!axesList.isEmpty())
return axesList.last()->offset() + axesList.last()->calculateMargin();
else
return 0;
}
/*! \internal
Reacts to a change in layout to potentially set the convenience axis pointers \ref
QCustomPlot::xAxis, \ref QCustomPlot::yAxis, etc. of the parent QCustomPlot to the respective
axes of this axis rect. This is only done if the respective convenience pointer is currently zero
and if there is no QCPAxisRect at position (0, 0) of the plot layout.
This automation makes it simpler to replace the main axis rect with a newly created one, without
the need to manually reset the convenience pointers.
*/
void QCPAxisRect::layoutChanged()
{
if (mParentPlot && mParentPlot->axisRectCount() > 0 && mParentPlot->axisRect(0) == this)
{
if (axisCount(QCPAxis::atBottom) > 0 && !mParentPlot->xAxis)
mParentPlot->xAxis = axis(QCPAxis::atBottom);
if (axisCount(QCPAxis::atLeft) > 0 && !mParentPlot->yAxis)
mParentPlot->yAxis = axis(QCPAxis::atLeft);
if (axisCount(QCPAxis::atTop) > 0 && !mParentPlot->xAxis2)
mParentPlot->xAxis2 = axis(QCPAxis::atTop);
if (axisCount(QCPAxis::atRight) > 0 && !mParentPlot->yAxis2)
mParentPlot->yAxis2 = axis(QCPAxis::atRight);
}
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when a mouse button is pressed on the axis rect. If the left mouse button is
pressed, the range dragging interaction is initialized (the actual range manipulation happens in
the \ref mouseMoveEvent).
The mDragging flag is set to true and some anchor points are set that are needed to determine the
distance the mouse was dragged in the mouse move/release events later.
\see mouseMoveEvent, mouseReleaseEvent
*/
void QCPAxisRect::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (event->buttons() & Qt::LeftButton)
{
mDragging = true;
// initialize antialiasing backup in case we start dragging:
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
{
mAADragBackup = mParentPlot->antialiasedElements();
mNotAADragBackup = mParentPlot->notAntialiasedElements();
}
// Mouse range dragging interaction:
if (mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeDrag))
{
mDragStartHorzRange.clear();
foreach (QPointer<QCPAxis> axis, mRangeDragHorzAxis)
mDragStartHorzRange.append(axis.isNull() ? QCPRange() : axis->range());
mDragStartVertRange.clear();
foreach (QPointer<QCPAxis> axis, mRangeDragVertAxis)
mDragStartVertRange.append(axis.isNull() ? QCPRange() : axis->range());
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when the mouse is moved on the axis rect. If range dragging was activated in a
preceding \ref mousePressEvent, the range is moved accordingly.
\see mousePressEvent, mouseReleaseEvent
*/
void QCPAxisRect::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(startPos)
// Mouse range dragging interaction:
if (mDragging && mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeDrag))
{
if (mRangeDrag.testFlag(Qt::Horizontal))
{
for (int i=0; i<mRangeDragHorzAxis.size(); ++i)
{
QCPAxis *ax = mRangeDragHorzAxis.at(i).data();
if (!ax)
continue;
if (i >= mDragStartHorzRange.size())
break;
if (ax->mScaleType == QCPAxis::stLinear)
{
double diff = ax->pixelToCoord(startPos.x()) - ax->pixelToCoord(event->pos().x());
ax->setRange(mDragStartHorzRange.at(i).lower+diff, mDragStartHorzRange.at(i).upper+diff);
} else if (ax->mScaleType == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
{
double diff = ax->pixelToCoord(startPos.x()) / ax->pixelToCoord(event->pos().x());
ax->setRange(mDragStartHorzRange.at(i).lower*diff, mDragStartHorzRange.at(i).upper*diff);
}
}
}
if (mRangeDrag.testFlag(Qt::Vertical))
{
for (int i=0; i<mRangeDragVertAxis.size(); ++i)
{
QCPAxis *ax = mRangeDragVertAxis.at(i).data();
if (!ax)
continue;
if (i >= mDragStartVertRange.size())
break;
if (ax->mScaleType == QCPAxis::stLinear)
{
double diff = ax->pixelToCoord(startPos.y()) - ax->pixelToCoord(event->pos().y());
ax->setRange(mDragStartVertRange.at(i).lower+diff, mDragStartVertRange.at(i).upper+diff);
} else if (ax->mScaleType == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
{
double diff = ax->pixelToCoord(startPos.y()) / ax->pixelToCoord(event->pos().y());
ax->setRange(mDragStartVertRange.at(i).lower*diff, mDragStartVertRange.at(i).upper*diff);
}
}
}
if (mRangeDrag != 0) // if either vertical or horizontal drag was enabled, do a replot
{
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
mParentPlot->setNotAntialiasedElements(QCP::aeAll);
mParentPlot->replot(QCustomPlot::rpQueuedReplot);
}
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAxisRect::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
Q_UNUSED(startPos)
mDragging = false;
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
{
mParentPlot->setAntialiasedElements(mAADragBackup);
mParentPlot->setNotAntialiasedElements(mNotAADragBackup);
}
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for mouse wheel events. If rangeZoom is Qt::Horizontal, Qt::Vertical or both, the
ranges of the axes defined as rangeZoomHorzAxis and rangeZoomVertAxis are scaled. The center of
the scaling operation is the current cursor position inside the axis rect. The scaling factor is
dependent on the mouse wheel delta (which direction the wheel was rotated) to provide a natural
zooming feel. The Strength of the zoom can be controlled via \ref setRangeZoomFactor.
Note, that event->angleDelta() is usually +/-120 for single rotation steps. However, if the mouse
wheel is turned rapidly, many steps may bunch up to one event, so the delta may then be multiples
of 120. This is taken into account here, by calculating \a wheelSteps and using it as exponent of
the range zoom factor. This takes care of the wheel direction automatically, by inverting the
factor, when the wheel step is negative (f^-1 = 1/f).
*/
void QCPAxisRect::wheelEvent(QWheelEvent *event)
{
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 0, 0)
const double delta = event->delta();
#else
const double delta = event->angleDelta().y();
#endif
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 14, 0)
const QPointF pos = event->pos();
#else
const QPointF pos = event->position();
#endif
// Mouse range zooming interaction:
if (mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeZoom))
{
if (mRangeZoom != 0)
{
double factor;
double wheelSteps = delta/120.0; // a single step delta is +/-120 usually
if (mRangeZoom.testFlag(Qt::Horizontal))
{
factor = qPow(mRangeZoomFactorHorz, wheelSteps);
foreach (QPointer<QCPAxis> axis, mRangeZoomHorzAxis)
{
if (!axis.isNull())
axis->scaleRange(factor, axis->pixelToCoord(pos.x()));
}
}
if (mRangeZoom.testFlag(Qt::Vertical))
{
factor = qPow(mRangeZoomFactorVert, wheelSteps);
foreach (QPointer<QCPAxis> axis, mRangeZoomVertAxis)
{
if (!axis.isNull())
axis->scaleRange(factor, axis->pixelToCoord(pos.y()));
}
}
mParentPlot->replot();
}
}
}
/* end of 'src/layoutelements/layoutelement-axisrect.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/layoutelements/layoutelement-legend.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 31762 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPAbstractLegendItem
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPAbstractLegendItem
\brief The abstract base class for all entries in a QCPLegend.
It defines a very basic interface for entries in a QCPLegend. For representing plottables in the
legend, the subclass \ref QCPPlottableLegendItem is more suitable.
Only derive directly from this class when you need absolute freedom (e.g. a custom legend entry
that's not even associated with a plottable).
You must implement the following pure virtual functions:
\li \ref draw (from QCPLayerable)
You inherit the following members you may use:
<table>
<tr>
<td>QCPLegend *\b mParentLegend</td>
<td>A pointer to the parent QCPLegend.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>QFont \b mFont</td>
<td>The generic font of the item. You should use this font for all or at least the most prominent text of the item.</td>
</tr>
</table>
*/
/* start of documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPAbstractLegendItem::selectionChanged(bool selected)
This signal is emitted when the selection state of this legend item has changed, either by user
interaction or by a direct call to \ref setSelected.
*/
/* end of documentation of signals */
/*!
Constructs a QCPAbstractLegendItem and associates it with the QCPLegend \a parent. This does not
cause the item to be added to \a parent, so \ref QCPLegend::addItem must be called separately.
*/
QCPAbstractLegendItem::QCPAbstractLegendItem(QCPLegend *parent) :
QCPLayoutElement(parent->parentPlot()),
mParentLegend(parent),
mFont(parent->font()),
mTextColor(parent->textColor()),
mSelectedFont(parent->selectedFont()),
mSelectedTextColor(parent->selectedTextColor()),
mSelectable(true),
mSelected(false)
{
setLayer(QLatin1String("legend"));
setMargins(QMargins(0, 0, 0, 0));
}
/*!
Sets the default font of this specific legend item to \a font.
\see setTextColor, QCPLegend::setFont
*/
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::setFont(const QFont &font)
{
mFont = font;
}
/*!
Sets the default text color of this specific legend item to \a color.
\see setFont, QCPLegend::setTextColor
*/
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::setTextColor(const QColor &color)
{
mTextColor = color;
}
/*!
When this legend item is selected, \a font is used to draw generic text, instead of the normal
font set with \ref setFont.
\see setFont, QCPLegend::setSelectedFont
*/
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::setSelectedFont(const QFont &font)
{
mSelectedFont = font;
}
/*!
When this legend item is selected, \a color is used to draw generic text, instead of the normal
color set with \ref setTextColor.
\see setTextColor, QCPLegend::setSelectedTextColor
*/
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::setSelectedTextColor(const QColor &color)
{
mSelectedTextColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets whether this specific legend item is selectable.
\see setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::setSelectable(bool selectable)
{
if (mSelectable != selectable)
{
mSelectable = selectable;
emit selectableChanged(mSelectable);
}
}
/*!
Sets whether this specific legend item is selected.
It is possible to set the selection state of this item by calling this function directly, even if
setSelectable is set to false.
\see setSelectableParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::setSelected(bool selected)
{
if (mSelected != selected)
{
mSelected = selected;
emit selectionChanged(mSelected);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPAbstractLegendItem::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (!mParentPlot) return -1;
if (onlySelectable && (!mSelectable || !mParentLegend->selectableParts().testFlag(QCPLegend::spItems)))
return -1;
if (mRect.contains(pos.toPoint()))
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
else
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeLegendItems);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QRect QCPAbstractLegendItem::clipRect() const
{
return mOuterRect;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (mSelectable && mParentLegend->selectableParts().testFlag(QCPLegend::spItems))
{
bool selBefore = mSelected;
setSelected(additive ? !mSelected : true);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelected != selBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPAbstractLegendItem::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
if (mSelectable && mParentLegend->selectableParts().testFlag(QCPLegend::spItems))
{
bool selBefore = mSelected;
setSelected(false);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelected != selBefore;
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPlottableLegendItem
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPlottableLegendItem
\brief A legend item representing a plottable with an icon and the plottable name.
This is the standard legend item for plottables. It displays an icon of the plottable next to the
plottable name. The icon is drawn by the respective plottable itself (\ref
QCPAbstractPlottable::drawLegendIcon), and tries to give an intuitive symbol for the plottable.
For example, the QCPGraph draws a centered horizontal line and/or a single scatter point in the
middle.
Legend items of this type are always associated with one plottable (retrievable via the
plottable() function and settable with the constructor). You may change the font of the plottable
name with \ref setFont. Icon padding and border pen is taken from the parent QCPLegend, see \ref
QCPLegend::setIconBorderPen and \ref QCPLegend::setIconTextPadding.
The function \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::addToLegend/\ref QCPAbstractPlottable::removeFromLegend
creates/removes legend items of this type.
Since QCPLegend is based on QCPLayoutGrid, a legend item itself is just a subclass of
QCPLayoutElement. While it could be added to a legend (or any other layout) via the normal layout
interface, QCPLegend has specialized functions for handling legend items conveniently, see the
documentation of \ref QCPLegend.
*/
/*!
Creates a new legend item associated with \a plottable.
Once it's created, it can be added to the legend via \ref QCPLegend::addItem.
A more convenient way of adding/removing a plottable to/from the legend is via the functions \ref
QCPAbstractPlottable::addToLegend and \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::removeFromLegend.
*/
QCPPlottableLegendItem::QCPPlottableLegendItem(QCPLegend *parent, QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable) :
QCPAbstractLegendItem(parent),
mPlottable(plottable)
{
setAntialiased(false);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that shall be used to draw the icon border, taking into account the selection
state of this item.
*/
QPen QCPPlottableLegendItem::getIconBorderPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mParentLegend->selectedIconBorderPen() : mParentLegend->iconBorderPen();
}
/*! \internal
Returns the text color that shall be used to draw text, taking into account the selection state
of this item.
*/
QColor QCPPlottableLegendItem::getTextColor() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedTextColor : mTextColor;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the font that shall be used to draw text, taking into account the selection state of this
item.
*/
QFont QCPPlottableLegendItem::getFont() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedFont : mFont;
}
/*! \internal
Draws the item with \a painter. The size and position of the drawn legend item is defined by the
parent layout (typically a \ref QCPLegend) and the \ref minimumOuterSizeHint and \ref
maximumOuterSizeHint of this legend item.
*/
void QCPPlottableLegendItem::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (!mPlottable) return;
painter->setFont(getFont());
painter->setPen(QPen(getTextColor()));
QSize iconSize = mParentLegend->iconSize();
QRect textRect = painter->fontMetrics().boundingRect(0, 0, 0, iconSize.height(), Qt::TextDontClip, mPlottable->name());
QRect iconRect(mRect.topLeft(), iconSize);
int textHeight = qMax(textRect.height(), iconSize.height()); // if text has smaller height than icon, center text vertically in icon height, else align tops
painter->drawText(mRect.x()+iconSize.width()+mParentLegend->iconTextPadding(), mRect.y(), textRect.width(), textHeight, Qt::TextDontClip, mPlottable->name());
// draw icon:
painter->save();
painter->setClipRect(iconRect, Qt::IntersectClip);
mPlottable->drawLegendIcon(painter, iconRect);
painter->restore();
// draw icon border:
if (getIconBorderPen().style() != Qt::NoPen)
{
painter->setPen(getIconBorderPen());
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
int halfPen = qCeil(painter->pen().widthF()*0.5)+1;
painter->setClipRect(mOuterRect.adjusted(-halfPen, -halfPen, halfPen, halfPen)); // extend default clip rect so thicker pens (especially during selection) are not clipped
painter->drawRect(iconRect);
}
}
/*! \internal
Calculates and returns the size of this item. This includes the icon, the text and the padding in
between.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
QSize QCPPlottableLegendItem::minimumOuterSizeHint() const
{
if (!mPlottable) return {};
QSize result(0, 0);
QRect textRect;
QFontMetrics fontMetrics(getFont());
QSize iconSize = mParentLegend->iconSize();
textRect = fontMetrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, iconSize.height(), Qt::TextDontClip, mPlottable->name());
result.setWidth(iconSize.width() + mParentLegend->iconTextPadding() + textRect.width());
result.setHeight(qMax(textRect.height(), iconSize.height()));
result.rwidth() += mMargins.left()+mMargins.right();
result.rheight() += mMargins.top()+mMargins.bottom();
return result;
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPLegend
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPLegend
\brief Manages a legend inside a QCustomPlot.
A legend is a small box somewhere in the plot which lists plottables with their name and icon.
A legend is populated with legend items by calling \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::addToLegend on the
plottable, for which a legend item shall be created. In the case of the main legend (\ref
QCustomPlot::legend), simply adding plottables to the plot while \ref
QCustomPlot::setAutoAddPlottableToLegend is set to true (the default) creates corresponding
legend items. The legend item associated with a certain plottable can be removed with \ref
QCPAbstractPlottable::removeFromLegend. However, QCPLegend also offers an interface to add and
manipulate legend items directly: \ref item, \ref itemWithPlottable, \ref itemCount, \ref
addItem, \ref removeItem, etc.
Since \ref QCPLegend derives from \ref QCPLayoutGrid, it can be placed in any position a \ref
QCPLayoutElement may be positioned. The legend items are themselves \ref QCPLayoutElement
"QCPLayoutElements" which are placed in the grid layout of the legend. \ref QCPLegend only adds
an interface specialized for handling child elements of type \ref QCPAbstractLegendItem, as
mentioned above. In principle, any other layout elements may also be added to a legend via the
normal \ref QCPLayoutGrid interface. See the special page about \link thelayoutsystem The Layout
System\endlink for examples on how to add other elements to the legend and move it outside the axis
rect.
Use the methods \ref setFillOrder and \ref setWrap inherited from \ref QCPLayoutGrid to control
in which order (column first or row first) the legend is filled up when calling \ref addItem, and
at which column or row wrapping occurs. The default fill order for legends is \ref foRowsFirst.
By default, every QCustomPlot has one legend (\ref QCustomPlot::legend) which is placed in the
inset layout of the main axis rect (\ref QCPAxisRect::insetLayout). To move the legend to another
position inside the axis rect, use the methods of the \ref QCPLayoutInset. To move the legend
outside of the axis rect, place it anywhere else with the \ref QCPLayout/\ref QCPLayoutElement
interface.
*/
/* start of documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPLegend::selectionChanged(QCPLegend::SelectableParts selection);
This signal is emitted when the selection state of this legend has changed.
\see setSelectedParts, setSelectableParts
*/
/* end of documentation of signals */
/*!
Constructs a new QCPLegend instance with default values.
Note that by default, QCustomPlot already contains a legend ready to be used as \ref
QCustomPlot::legend
*/
QCPLegend::QCPLegend() :
mIconTextPadding{}
{
setFillOrder(QCPLayoutGrid::foRowsFirst);
setWrap(0);
setRowSpacing(3);
setColumnSpacing(8);
setMargins(QMargins(7, 5, 7, 4));
setAntialiased(false);
setIconSize(32, 18);
setIconTextPadding(7);
setSelectableParts(spLegendBox | spItems);
setSelectedParts(spNone);
setBorderPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0));
setSelectedBorderPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2));
setIconBorderPen(Qt::NoPen);
setSelectedIconBorderPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2));
setBrush(Qt::white);
setSelectedBrush(Qt::white);
setTextColor(Qt::black);
setSelectedTextColor(Qt::blue);
}
QCPLegend::~QCPLegend()
{
clearItems();
if (qobject_cast<QCustomPlot*>(mParentPlot)) // make sure this isn't called from QObject dtor when QCustomPlot is already destructed (happens when the legend is not in any layout and thus QObject-child of QCustomPlot)
mParentPlot->legendRemoved(this);
}
/* no doc for getter, see setSelectedParts */
QCPLegend::SelectableParts QCPLegend::selectedParts() const
{
// check whether any legend elements selected, if yes, add spItems to return value
bool hasSelectedItems = false;
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (item(i) && item(i)->selected())
{
hasSelectedItems = true;
break;
}
}
if (hasSelectedItems)
return mSelectedParts | spItems;
else
return mSelectedParts & ~spItems;
}
/*!
Sets the pen, the border of the entire legend is drawn with.
*/
void QCPLegend::setBorderPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mBorderPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush of the legend background.
*/
void QCPLegend::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the default font of legend text. Legend items that draw text (e.g. the name of a graph) will
use this font by default. However, a different font can be specified on a per-item-basis by
accessing the specific legend item.
This function will also set \a font on all already existing legend items.
\see QCPAbstractLegendItem::setFont
*/
void QCPLegend::setFont(const QFont &font)
{
mFont = font;
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (item(i))
item(i)->setFont(mFont);
}
}
/*!
Sets the default color of legend text. Legend items that draw text (e.g. the name of a graph)
will use this color by default. However, a different colors can be specified on a per-item-basis
by accessing the specific legend item.
This function will also set \a color on all already existing legend items.
\see QCPAbstractLegendItem::setTextColor
*/
void QCPLegend::setTextColor(const QColor &color)
{
mTextColor = color;
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (item(i))
item(i)->setTextColor(color);
}
}
/*!
Sets the size of legend icons. Legend items that draw an icon (e.g. a visual
representation of the graph) will use this size by default.
*/
void QCPLegend::setIconSize(const QSize &size)
{
mIconSize = size;
}
/*! \overload
*/
void QCPLegend::setIconSize(int width, int height)
{
mIconSize.setWidth(width);
mIconSize.setHeight(height);
}
/*!
Sets the horizontal space in pixels between the legend icon and the text next to it.
Legend items that draw an icon (e.g. a visual representation of the graph) and text (e.g. the
name of the graph) will use this space by default.
*/
void QCPLegend::setIconTextPadding(int padding)
{
mIconTextPadding = padding;
}
/*!
Sets the pen used to draw a border around each legend icon. Legend items that draw an
icon (e.g. a visual representation of the graph) will use this pen by default.
If no border is wanted, set this to \a Qt::NoPen.
*/
void QCPLegend::setIconBorderPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mIconBorderPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets whether the user can (de-)select the parts in \a selectable by clicking on the QCustomPlot surface.
(When \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains \ref QCP::iSelectLegend.)
However, even when \a selectable is set to a value not allowing the selection of a specific part,
it is still possible to set the selection of this part manually, by calling \ref setSelectedParts
directly.
\see SelectablePart, setSelectedParts
*/
void QCPLegend::setSelectableParts(const SelectableParts &selectable)
{
if (mSelectableParts != selectable)
{
mSelectableParts = selectable;
emit selectableChanged(mSelectableParts);
}
}
/*!
Sets the selected state of the respective legend parts described by \ref SelectablePart. When a part
is selected, it uses a different pen/font and brush. If some legend items are selected and \a selected
doesn't contain \ref spItems, those items become deselected.
The entire selection mechanism is handled automatically when \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions
contains iSelectLegend. You only need to call this function when you wish to change the selection
state manually.
This function can change the selection state of a part even when \ref setSelectableParts was set to a
value that actually excludes the part.
emits the \ref selectionChanged signal when \a selected is different from the previous selection state.
Note that it doesn't make sense to set the selected state \ref spItems here when it wasn't set
before, because there's no way to specify which exact items to newly select. Do this by calling
\ref QCPAbstractLegendItem::setSelected directly on the legend item you wish to select.
\see SelectablePart, setSelectableParts, selectTest, setSelectedBorderPen, setSelectedIconBorderPen, setSelectedBrush,
setSelectedFont
*/
void QCPLegend::setSelectedParts(const SelectableParts &selected)
{
SelectableParts newSelected = selected;
mSelectedParts = this->selectedParts(); // update mSelectedParts in case item selection changed
if (mSelectedParts != newSelected)
{
if (!mSelectedParts.testFlag(spItems) && newSelected.testFlag(spItems)) // attempt to set spItems flag (can't do that)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "spItems flag can not be set, it can only be unset with this function";
newSelected &= ~spItems;
}
if (mSelectedParts.testFlag(spItems) && !newSelected.testFlag(spItems)) // spItems flag was unset, so clear item selection
{
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (item(i))
item(i)->setSelected(false);
}
}
mSelectedParts = newSelected;
emit selectionChanged(mSelectedParts);
}
}
/*!
When the legend box is selected, this pen is used to draw the border instead of the normal pen
set via \ref setBorderPen.
\see setSelectedParts, setSelectableParts, setSelectedBrush
*/
void QCPLegend::setSelectedBorderPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedBorderPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen legend items will use to draw their icon borders, when they are selected.
\see setSelectedParts, setSelectableParts, setSelectedFont
*/
void QCPLegend::setSelectedIconBorderPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedIconBorderPen = pen;
}
/*!
When the legend box is selected, this brush is used to draw the legend background instead of the normal brush
set via \ref setBrush.
\see setSelectedParts, setSelectableParts, setSelectedBorderPen
*/
void QCPLegend::setSelectedBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mSelectedBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the default font that is used by legend items when they are selected.
This function will also set \a font on all already existing legend items.
\see setFont, QCPAbstractLegendItem::setSelectedFont
*/
void QCPLegend::setSelectedFont(const QFont &font)
{
mSelectedFont = font;
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (item(i))
item(i)->setSelectedFont(font);
}
}
/*!
Sets the default text color that is used by legend items when they are selected.
This function will also set \a color on all already existing legend items.
\see setTextColor, QCPAbstractLegendItem::setSelectedTextColor
*/
void QCPLegend::setSelectedTextColor(const QColor &color)
{
mSelectedTextColor = color;
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (item(i))
item(i)->setSelectedTextColor(color);
}
}
/*!
Returns the item with index \a i. If non-legend items were added to the legend, and the element
at the specified cell index is not a QCPAbstractLegendItem, returns \c nullptr.
Note that the linear index depends on the current fill order (\ref setFillOrder).
\see itemCount, addItem, itemWithPlottable
*/
QCPAbstractLegendItem *QCPLegend::item(int index) const
{
return qobject_cast<QCPAbstractLegendItem*>(elementAt(index));
}
/*!
Returns the QCPPlottableLegendItem which is associated with \a plottable (e.g. a \ref QCPGraph*).
If such an item isn't in the legend, returns \c nullptr.
\see hasItemWithPlottable
*/
QCPPlottableLegendItem *QCPLegend::itemWithPlottable(const QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable) const
{
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (QCPPlottableLegendItem *pli = qobject_cast<QCPPlottableLegendItem*>(item(i)))
{
if (pli->plottable() == plottable)
return pli;
}
}
return nullptr;
}
/*!
Returns the number of items currently in the legend. It is identical to the base class
QCPLayoutGrid::elementCount(), and unlike the other "item" interface methods of QCPLegend,
doesn't only address elements which can be cast to QCPAbstractLegendItem.
Note that if empty cells are in the legend (e.g. by calling methods of the \ref QCPLayoutGrid
base class which allows creating empty cells), they are included in the returned count.
\see item
*/
int QCPLegend::itemCount() const
{
return elementCount();
}
/*!
Returns whether the legend contains \a item.
\see hasItemWithPlottable
*/
bool QCPLegend::hasItem(QCPAbstractLegendItem *item) const
{
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (item == this->item(i))
return true;
}
return false;
}
/*!
Returns whether the legend contains a QCPPlottableLegendItem which is associated with \a plottable (e.g. a \ref QCPGraph*).
If such an item isn't in the legend, returns false.
\see itemWithPlottable
*/
bool QCPLegend::hasItemWithPlottable(const QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable) const
{
return itemWithPlottable(plottable);
}
/*!
Adds \a item to the legend, if it's not present already. The element is arranged according to the
current fill order (\ref setFillOrder) and wrapping (\ref setWrap).
Returns true on sucess, i.e. if the item wasn't in the list already and has been successfuly added.
The legend takes ownership of the item.
\see removeItem, item, hasItem
*/
bool QCPLegend::addItem(QCPAbstractLegendItem *item)
{
return addElement(item);
}
/*! \overload
Removes the item with the specified \a index from the legend and deletes it.
After successful removal, the legend is reordered according to the current fill order (\ref
setFillOrder) and wrapping (\ref setWrap), so no empty cell remains where the removed \a item
was. If you don't want this, rather use the raw element interface of \ref QCPLayoutGrid.
Returns true, if successful. Unlike \ref QCPLayoutGrid::removeAt, this method only removes
elements derived from \ref QCPAbstractLegendItem.
\see itemCount, clearItems
*/
bool QCPLegend::removeItem(int index)
{
if (QCPAbstractLegendItem *ali = item(index))
{
bool success = remove(ali);
if (success)
setFillOrder(fillOrder(), true); // gets rid of empty cell by reordering
return success;
} else
return false;
}
/*! \overload
Removes \a item from the legend and deletes it.
After successful removal, the legend is reordered according to the current fill order (\ref
setFillOrder) and wrapping (\ref setWrap), so no empty cell remains where the removed \a item
was. If you don't want this, rather use the raw element interface of \ref QCPLayoutGrid.
Returns true, if successful.
\see clearItems
*/
bool QCPLegend::removeItem(QCPAbstractLegendItem *item)
{
bool success = remove(item);
if (success)
setFillOrder(fillOrder(), true); // gets rid of empty cell by reordering
return success;
}
/*!
Removes all items from the legend.
*/
void QCPLegend::clearItems()
{
for (int i=elementCount()-1; i>=0; --i)
{
if (item(i))
removeAt(i); // don't use removeItem() because it would unnecessarily reorder the whole legend for each item
}
setFillOrder(fillOrder(), true); // get rid of empty cells by reordering once after all items are removed
}
/*!
Returns the legend items that are currently selected. If no items are selected,
the list is empty.
\see QCPAbstractLegendItem::setSelected, setSelectable
*/
QList<QCPAbstractLegendItem *> QCPLegend::selectedItems() const
{
QList<QCPAbstractLegendItem*> result;
for (int i=0; i<itemCount(); ++i)
{
if (QCPAbstractLegendItem *ali = item(i))
{
if (ali->selected())
result.append(ali);
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing main legend elements.
This is the antialiasing state the painter passed to the \ref draw method is in by default.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\seebaseclassmethod
\see setAntialiased
*/
void QCPLegend::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeLegend);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen used to paint the border of the legend, taking into account the selection state
of the legend box.
*/
QPen QCPLegend::getBorderPen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spLegendBox) ? mSelectedBorderPen : mBorderPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the brush used to paint the background of the legend, taking into account the selection
state of the legend box.
*/
QBrush QCPLegend::getBrush() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spLegendBox) ? mSelectedBrush : mBrush;
}
/*! \internal
Draws the legend box with the provided \a painter. The individual legend items are layerables
themselves, thus are drawn independently.
*/
void QCPLegend::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
// draw background rect:
painter->setBrush(getBrush());
painter->setPen(getBorderPen());
painter->drawRect(mOuterRect);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPLegend::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
if (!mParentPlot) return -1;
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectableParts.testFlag(spLegendBox))
return -1;
if (mOuterRect.contains(pos.toPoint()))
{
if (details) details->setValue(spLegendBox);
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPLegend::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
mSelectedParts = selectedParts(); // in case item selection has changed
if (details.value<SelectablePart>() == spLegendBox && mSelectableParts.testFlag(spLegendBox))
{
SelectableParts selBefore = mSelectedParts;
setSelectedParts(additive ? mSelectedParts^spLegendBox : mSelectedParts|spLegendBox); // no need to unset spItems in !additive case, because they will be deselected by QCustomPlot (they're normal QCPLayerables with own deselectEvent)
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelectedParts != selBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPLegend::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
mSelectedParts = selectedParts(); // in case item selection has changed
if (mSelectableParts.testFlag(spLegendBox))
{
SelectableParts selBefore = mSelectedParts;
setSelectedParts(selectedParts() & ~spLegendBox);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelectedParts != selBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCP::Interaction QCPLegend::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectLegend;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCP::Interaction QCPAbstractLegendItem::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectLegend;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPLegend::parentPlotInitialized(QCustomPlot *parentPlot)
{
if (parentPlot && !parentPlot->legend)
parentPlot->legend = this;
}
/* end of 'src/layoutelements/layoutelement-legend.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/layoutelements/layoutelement-textelement.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 12925 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPTextElement
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPTextElement
\brief A layout element displaying a text
The text may be specified with \ref setText, the formatting can be controlled with \ref setFont,
\ref setTextColor, and \ref setTextFlags.
A text element can be added as follows:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcptextelement-creation
*/
/* start documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPTextElement::selectionChanged(bool selected)
This signal is emitted when the selection state has changed to \a selected, either by user
interaction or by a direct call to \ref setSelected.
\see setSelected, setSelectable
*/
/*! \fn void QCPTextElement::clicked(QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when the text element is clicked.
\see doubleClicked, selectTest
*/
/*! \fn void QCPTextElement::doubleClicked(QMouseEvent *event)
This signal is emitted when the text element is double clicked.
\see clicked, selectTest
*/
/* end documentation of signals */
/*! \overload
Creates a new QCPTextElement instance and sets default values. The initial text is empty (\ref
setText).
*/
QCPTextElement::QCPTextElement(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPLayoutElement(parentPlot),
mText(),
mTextFlags(Qt::AlignCenter),
mFont(QFont(QLatin1String("sans serif"), 12)), // will be taken from parentPlot if available, see below
mTextColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedFont(QFont(QLatin1String("sans serif"), 12)), // will be taken from parentPlot if available, see below
mSelectedTextColor(Qt::blue),
mSelectable(false),
mSelected(false)
{
if (parentPlot)
{
mFont = parentPlot->font();
mSelectedFont = parentPlot->font();
}
setMargins(QMargins(2, 2, 2, 2));
}
/*! \overload
Creates a new QCPTextElement instance and sets default values.
The initial text is set to \a text.
*/
QCPTextElement::QCPTextElement(QCustomPlot *parentPlot, const QString &text) :
QCPLayoutElement(parentPlot),
mText(text),
mTextFlags(Qt::AlignCenter),
mFont(QFont(QLatin1String("sans serif"), 12)), // will be taken from parentPlot if available, see below
mTextColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedFont(QFont(QLatin1String("sans serif"), 12)), // will be taken from parentPlot if available, see below
mSelectedTextColor(Qt::blue),
mSelectable(false),
mSelected(false)
{
if (parentPlot)
{
mFont = parentPlot->font();
mSelectedFont = parentPlot->font();
}
setMargins(QMargins(2, 2, 2, 2));
}
/*! \overload
Creates a new QCPTextElement instance and sets default values.
The initial text is set to \a text with \a pointSize.
*/
QCPTextElement::QCPTextElement(QCustomPlot *parentPlot, const QString &text, double pointSize) :
QCPLayoutElement(parentPlot),
mText(text),
mTextFlags(Qt::AlignCenter),
mFont(QFont(QLatin1String("sans serif"), int(pointSize))), // will be taken from parentPlot if available, see below
mTextColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedFont(QFont(QLatin1String("sans serif"), int(pointSize))), // will be taken from parentPlot if available, see below
mSelectedTextColor(Qt::blue),
mSelectable(false),
mSelected(false)
{
mFont.setPointSizeF(pointSize); // set here again as floating point, because constructor above only takes integer
if (parentPlot)
{
mFont = parentPlot->font();
mFont.setPointSizeF(pointSize);
mSelectedFont = parentPlot->font();
mSelectedFont.setPointSizeF(pointSize);
}
setMargins(QMargins(2, 2, 2, 2));
}
/*! \overload
Creates a new QCPTextElement instance and sets default values.
The initial text is set to \a text with \a pointSize and the specified \a fontFamily.
*/
QCPTextElement::QCPTextElement(QCustomPlot *parentPlot, const QString &text, const QString &fontFamily, double pointSize) :
QCPLayoutElement(parentPlot),
mText(text),
mTextFlags(Qt::AlignCenter),
mFont(QFont(fontFamily, int(pointSize))),
mTextColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedFont(QFont(fontFamily, int(pointSize))),
mSelectedTextColor(Qt::blue),
mSelectable(false),
mSelected(false)
{
mFont.setPointSizeF(pointSize); // set here again as floating point, because constructor above only takes integer
setMargins(QMargins(2, 2, 2, 2));
}
/*! \overload
Creates a new QCPTextElement instance and sets default values.
The initial text is set to \a text with the specified \a font.
*/
QCPTextElement::QCPTextElement(QCustomPlot *parentPlot, const QString &text, const QFont &font) :
QCPLayoutElement(parentPlot),
mText(text),
mTextFlags(Qt::AlignCenter),
mFont(font),
mTextColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedFont(font),
mSelectedTextColor(Qt::blue),
mSelectable(false),
mSelected(false)
{
setMargins(QMargins(2, 2, 2, 2));
}
/*!
Sets the text that will be displayed to \a text. Multiple lines can be created by insertion of "\n".
\see setFont, setTextColor, setTextFlags
*/
void QCPTextElement::setText(const QString &text)
{
mText = text;
}
/*!
Sets options for text alignment and wrapping behaviour. \a flags is a bitwise OR-combination of
\c Qt::AlignmentFlag and \c Qt::TextFlag enums.
Possible enums are:
- Qt::AlignLeft
- Qt::AlignRight
- Qt::AlignHCenter
- Qt::AlignJustify
- Qt::AlignTop
- Qt::AlignBottom
- Qt::AlignVCenter
- Qt::AlignCenter
- Qt::TextDontClip
- Qt::TextSingleLine
- Qt::TextExpandTabs
- Qt::TextShowMnemonic
- Qt::TextWordWrap
- Qt::TextIncludeTrailingSpaces
*/
void QCPTextElement::setTextFlags(int flags)
{
mTextFlags = flags;
}
/*!
Sets the \a font of the text.
\see setTextColor, setSelectedFont
*/
void QCPTextElement::setFont(const QFont &font)
{
mFont = font;
}
/*!
Sets the \a color of the text.
\see setFont, setSelectedTextColor
*/
void QCPTextElement::setTextColor(const QColor &color)
{
mTextColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the \a font of the text that will be used if the text element is selected (\ref setSelected).
\see setFont
*/
void QCPTextElement::setSelectedFont(const QFont &font)
{
mSelectedFont = font;
}
/*!
Sets the \a color of the text that will be used if the text element is selected (\ref setSelected).
\see setTextColor
*/
void QCPTextElement::setSelectedTextColor(const QColor &color)
{
mSelectedTextColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets whether the user may select this text element.
Note that even when \a selectable is set to <tt>false</tt>, the selection state may be changed
programmatically via \ref setSelected.
*/
void QCPTextElement::setSelectable(bool selectable)
{
if (mSelectable != selectable)
{
mSelectable = selectable;
emit selectableChanged(mSelectable);
}
}
/*!
Sets the selection state of this text element to \a selected. If the selection has changed, \ref
selectionChanged is emitted.
Note that this function can change the selection state independently of the current \ref
setSelectable state.
*/
void QCPTextElement::setSelected(bool selected)
{
if (mSelected != selected)
{
mSelected = selected;
emit selectionChanged(mSelected);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPTextElement::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeOther);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPTextElement::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
painter->setFont(mainFont());
painter->setPen(QPen(mainTextColor()));
painter->drawText(mRect, mTextFlags, mText, &mTextBoundingRect);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QSize QCPTextElement::minimumOuterSizeHint() const
{
QFontMetrics metrics(mFont);
QSize result(metrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, mText).size());
result.rwidth() += mMargins.left()+mMargins.right();
result.rheight() += mMargins.top()+mMargins.bottom();
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QSize QCPTextElement::maximumOuterSizeHint() const
{
QFontMetrics metrics(mFont);
QSize result(metrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip, mText).size());
result.setWidth(QWIDGETSIZE_MAX);
result.rheight() += mMargins.top()+mMargins.bottom();
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPTextElement::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (mSelectable)
{
bool selBefore = mSelected;
setSelected(additive ? !mSelected : true);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelected != selBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPTextElement::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
if (mSelectable)
{
bool selBefore = mSelected;
setSelected(false);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelected != selBefore;
}
}
/*!
Returns 0.99*selectionTolerance (see \ref QCustomPlot::setSelectionTolerance) when \a pos is
within the bounding box of the text element's text. Note that this bounding box is updated in the
draw call.
If \a pos is outside the text's bounding box or if \a onlySelectable is true and this text
element is not selectable (\ref setSelectable), returns -1.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
double QCPTextElement::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
if (mTextBoundingRect.contains(pos.toPoint()))
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
else
return -1;
}
/*!
Accepts the mouse event in order to emit the according click signal in the \ref
mouseReleaseEvent.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPTextElement::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
event->accept();
}
/*!
Emits the \ref clicked signal if the cursor hasn't moved by more than a few pixels since the \ref
mousePressEvent.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPTextElement::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
if ((QPointF(event->pos())-startPos).manhattanLength() <= 3)
emit clicked(event);
}
/*!
Emits the \ref doubleClicked signal.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPTextElement::mouseDoubleClickEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
emit doubleClicked(event);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the main font to be used. This is mSelectedFont if \ref setSelected is set to
<tt>true</tt>, else mFont is returned.
*/
QFont QCPTextElement::mainFont() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedFont : mFont;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the main color to be used. This is mSelectedTextColor if \ref setSelected is set to
<tt>true</tt>, else mTextColor is returned.
*/
QColor QCPTextElement::mainTextColor() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedTextColor : mTextColor;
}
/* end of 'src/layoutelements/layoutelement-textelement.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/layoutelements/layoutelement-colorscale.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 26531 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPColorScale
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPColorScale
\brief A color scale for use with color coding data such as QCPColorMap
This layout element can be placed on the plot to correlate a color gradient with data values. It
is usually used in combination with one or multiple \ref QCPColorMap "QCPColorMaps".
\image html QCPColorScale.png
The color scale can be either horizontal or vertical, as shown in the image above. The
orientation and the side where the numbers appear is controlled with \ref setType.
Use \ref QCPColorMap::setColorScale to connect a color map with a color scale. Once they are
connected, they share their gradient, data range and data scale type (\ref setGradient, \ref
setDataRange, \ref setDataScaleType). Multiple color maps may be associated with a single color
scale, to make them all synchronize these properties.
To have finer control over the number display and axis behaviour, you can directly access the
\ref axis. See the documentation of QCPAxis for details about configuring axes. For example, if
you want to change the number of automatically generated ticks, call
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcolorscale-tickcount
Placing a color scale next to the main axis rect works like with any other layout element:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcolorscale-creation
In this case we have placed it to the right of the default axis rect, so it wasn't necessary to
call \ref setType, since \ref QCPAxis::atRight is already the default. The text next to the color
scale can be set with \ref setLabel.
For optimum appearance (like in the image above), it may be desirable to line up the axis rect and
the borders of the color scale. Use a \ref QCPMarginGroup to achieve this:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcolorscale-margingroup
Color scales are initialized with a non-zero minimum top and bottom margin (\ref
setMinimumMargins), because vertical color scales are most common and the minimum top/bottom
margin makes sure it keeps some distance to the top/bottom widget border. So if you change to a
horizontal color scale by setting \ref setType to \ref QCPAxis::atBottom or \ref QCPAxis::atTop, you
might want to also change the minimum margins accordingly, e.g. <tt>setMinimumMargins(QMargins(6, 0, 6, 0))</tt>.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPAxis *QCPColorScale::axis() const
Returns the internal \ref QCPAxis instance of this color scale. You can access it to alter the
appearance and behaviour of the axis. \ref QCPColorScale duplicates some properties in its
interface for convenience. Those are \ref setDataRange (\ref QCPAxis::setRange), \ref
setDataScaleType (\ref QCPAxis::setScaleType), and the method \ref setLabel (\ref
QCPAxis::setLabel). As they each are connected, it does not matter whether you use the method on
the QCPColorScale or on its QCPAxis.
If the type of the color scale is changed with \ref setType, the axis returned by this method
will change, too, to either the left, right, bottom or top axis, depending on which type was set.
*/
/* end documentation of signals */
/* start documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPColorScale::dataRangeChanged(const QCPRange &newRange);
This signal is emitted when the data range changes.
\see setDataRange
*/
/*! \fn void QCPColorScale::dataScaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType scaleType);
This signal is emitted when the data scale type changes.
\see setDataScaleType
*/
/*! \fn void QCPColorScale::gradientChanged(const QCPColorGradient &newGradient);
This signal is emitted when the gradient changes.
\see setGradient
*/
/* end documentation of signals */
/*!
Constructs a new QCPColorScale.
*/
QCPColorScale::QCPColorScale(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPLayoutElement(parentPlot),
mType(QCPAxis::atTop), // set to atTop such that setType(QCPAxis::atRight) below doesn't skip work because it thinks it's already atRight
mDataScaleType(QCPAxis::stLinear),
mGradient(QCPColorGradient::gpCold),
mBarWidth(20),
mAxisRect(new QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate(this))
{
setMinimumMargins(QMargins(0, 6, 0, 6)); // for default right color scale types, keep some room at bottom and top (important if no margin group is used)
setType(QCPAxis::atRight);
setDataRange(QCPRange(0, 6));
}
QCPColorScale::~QCPColorScale()
{
delete mAxisRect;
}
/* undocumented getter */
QString QCPColorScale::label() const
{
if (!mColorAxis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal color axis undefined";
return QString();
}
return mColorAxis.data()->label();
}
/* undocumented getter */
bool QCPColorScale::rangeDrag() const
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return false;
}
return mAxisRect.data()->rangeDrag().testFlag(QCPAxis::orientation(mType)) &&
mAxisRect.data()->rangeDragAxis(QCPAxis::orientation(mType)) &&
mAxisRect.data()->rangeDragAxis(QCPAxis::orientation(mType))->orientation() == QCPAxis::orientation(mType);
}
/* undocumented getter */
bool QCPColorScale::rangeZoom() const
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return false;
}
return mAxisRect.data()->rangeZoom().testFlag(QCPAxis::orientation(mType)) &&
mAxisRect.data()->rangeZoomAxis(QCPAxis::orientation(mType)) &&
mAxisRect.data()->rangeZoomAxis(QCPAxis::orientation(mType))->orientation() == QCPAxis::orientation(mType);
}
/*!
Sets at which side of the color scale the axis is placed, and thus also its orientation.
Note that after setting \a type to a different value, the axis returned by \ref axis() will
be a different one. The new axis will adopt the following properties from the previous axis: The
range, scale type, label and ticker (the latter will be shared and not copied).
*/
void QCPColorScale::setType(QCPAxis::AxisType type)
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return;
}
if (mType != type)
{
mType = type;
QCPRange rangeTransfer(0, 6);
QString labelTransfer;
QSharedPointer<QCPAxisTicker> tickerTransfer;
// transfer/revert some settings on old axis if it exists:
bool doTransfer = !mColorAxis.isNull();
if (doTransfer)
{
rangeTransfer = mColorAxis.data()->range();
labelTransfer = mColorAxis.data()->label();
tickerTransfer = mColorAxis.data()->ticker();
mColorAxis.data()->setLabel(QString());
disconnect(mColorAxis.data(), SIGNAL(rangeChanged(QCPRange)), this, SLOT(setDataRange(QCPRange)));
disconnect(mColorAxis.data(), SIGNAL(scaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), this, SLOT(setDataScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
}
const QList<QCPAxis::AxisType> allAxisTypes = QList<QCPAxis::AxisType>() << QCPAxis::atLeft << QCPAxis::atRight << QCPAxis::atBottom << QCPAxis::atTop;
foreach (QCPAxis::AxisType atype, allAxisTypes)
{
mAxisRect.data()->axis(atype)->setTicks(atype == mType);
mAxisRect.data()->axis(atype)->setTickLabels(atype== mType);
}
// set new mColorAxis pointer:
mColorAxis = mAxisRect.data()->axis(mType);
// transfer settings to new axis:
if (doTransfer)
{
mColorAxis.data()->setRange(rangeTransfer); // range transfer necessary if axis changes from vertical to horizontal or vice versa (axes with same orientation are synchronized via signals)
mColorAxis.data()->setLabel(labelTransfer);
mColorAxis.data()->setTicker(tickerTransfer);
}
connect(mColorAxis.data(), SIGNAL(rangeChanged(QCPRange)), this, SLOT(setDataRange(QCPRange)));
connect(mColorAxis.data(), SIGNAL(scaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), this, SLOT(setDataScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
mAxisRect.data()->setRangeDragAxes(QList<QCPAxis*>() << mColorAxis.data());
}
}
/*!
Sets the range spanned by the color gradient and that is shown by the axis in the color scale.
It is equivalent to calling QCPColorMap::setDataRange on any of the connected color maps. It is
also equivalent to directly accessing the \ref axis and setting its range with \ref
QCPAxis::setRange.
\see setDataScaleType, setGradient, rescaleDataRange
*/
void QCPColorScale::setDataRange(const QCPRange &dataRange)
{
if (mDataRange.lower != dataRange.lower || mDataRange.upper != dataRange.upper)
{
mDataRange = dataRange;
if (mColorAxis)
mColorAxis.data()->setRange(mDataRange);
emit dataRangeChanged(mDataRange);
}
}
/*!
Sets the scale type of the color scale, i.e. whether values are associated with colors linearly
or logarithmically.
It is equivalent to calling QCPColorMap::setDataScaleType on any of the connected color maps. It is
also equivalent to directly accessing the \ref axis and setting its scale type with \ref
QCPAxis::setScaleType.
Note that this method controls the coordinate transformation. For logarithmic scales, you will
likely also want to use a logarithmic tick spacing and labeling, which can be achieved by setting
the color scale's \ref axis ticker to an instance of \ref QCPAxisTickerLog :
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpaxisticker-log-colorscale
See the documentation of \ref QCPAxisTickerLog about the details of logarithmic axis tick
creation.
\see setDataRange, setGradient
*/
void QCPColorScale::setDataScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType scaleType)
{
if (mDataScaleType != scaleType)
{
mDataScaleType = scaleType;
if (mColorAxis)
mColorAxis.data()->setScaleType(mDataScaleType);
if (mDataScaleType == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
setDataRange(mDataRange.sanitizedForLogScale());
emit dataScaleTypeChanged(mDataScaleType);
}
}
/*!
Sets the color gradient that will be used to represent data values.
It is equivalent to calling QCPColorMap::setGradient on any of the connected color maps.
\see setDataRange, setDataScaleType
*/
void QCPColorScale::setGradient(const QCPColorGradient &gradient)
{
if (mGradient != gradient)
{
mGradient = gradient;
if (mAxisRect)
mAxisRect.data()->mGradientImageInvalidated = true;
emit gradientChanged(mGradient);
}
}
/*!
Sets the axis label of the color scale. This is equivalent to calling \ref QCPAxis::setLabel on
the internal \ref axis.
*/
void QCPColorScale::setLabel(const QString &str)
{
if (!mColorAxis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal color axis undefined";
return;
}
mColorAxis.data()->setLabel(str);
}
/*!
Sets the width (or height, for horizontal color scales) the bar where the gradient is displayed
will have.
*/
void QCPColorScale::setBarWidth(int width)
{
mBarWidth = width;
}
/*!
Sets whether the user can drag the data range (\ref setDataRange).
Note that \ref QCP::iRangeDrag must be in the QCustomPlot's interactions (\ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions) to allow range dragging.
*/
void QCPColorScale::setRangeDrag(bool enabled)
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return;
}
if (enabled)
{
mAxisRect.data()->setRangeDrag(QCPAxis::orientation(mType));
} else
{
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 2, 0)
mAxisRect.data()->setRangeDrag(nullptr);
#else
mAxisRect.data()->setRangeDrag({});
#endif
}
}
/*!
Sets whether the user can zoom the data range (\ref setDataRange) by scrolling the mouse wheel.
Note that \ref QCP::iRangeZoom must be in the QCustomPlot's interactions (\ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions) to allow range dragging.
*/
void QCPColorScale::setRangeZoom(bool enabled)
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return;
}
if (enabled)
{
mAxisRect.data()->setRangeZoom(QCPAxis::orientation(mType));
} else
{
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 2, 0)
mAxisRect.data()->setRangeDrag(nullptr);
#else
mAxisRect.data()->setRangeZoom({});
#endif
}
}
/*!
Returns a list of all the color maps associated with this color scale.
*/
QList<QCPColorMap*> QCPColorScale::colorMaps() const
{
QList<QCPColorMap*> result;
for (int i=0; i<mParentPlot->plottableCount(); ++i)
{
if (QCPColorMap *cm = qobject_cast<QCPColorMap*>(mParentPlot->plottable(i)))
if (cm->colorScale() == this)
result.append(cm);
}
return result;
}
/*!
Changes the data range such that all color maps associated with this color scale are fully mapped
to the gradient in the data dimension.
\see setDataRange
*/
void QCPColorScale::rescaleDataRange(bool onlyVisibleMaps)
{
QList<QCPColorMap*> maps = colorMaps();
QCPRange newRange;
bool haveRange = false;
QCP::SignDomain sign = QCP::sdBoth;
if (mDataScaleType == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
sign = (mDataRange.upper < 0 ? QCP::sdNegative : QCP::sdPositive);
foreach (QCPColorMap *map, maps)
{
if (!map->realVisibility() && onlyVisibleMaps)
continue;
QCPRange mapRange;
if (map->colorScale() == this)
{
bool currentFoundRange = true;
mapRange = map->data()->dataBounds();
if (sign == QCP::sdPositive)
{
if (mapRange.lower <= 0 && mapRange.upper > 0)
mapRange.lower = mapRange.upper*1e-3;
else if (mapRange.lower <= 0 && mapRange.upper <= 0)
currentFoundRange = false;
} else if (sign == QCP::sdNegative)
{
if (mapRange.upper >= 0 && mapRange.lower < 0)
mapRange.upper = mapRange.lower*1e-3;
else if (mapRange.upper >= 0 && mapRange.lower >= 0)
currentFoundRange = false;
}
if (currentFoundRange)
{
if (!haveRange)
newRange = mapRange;
else
newRange.expand(mapRange);
haveRange = true;
}
}
}
if (haveRange)
{
if (!QCPRange::validRange(newRange)) // likely due to range being zero (plottable has only constant data in this dimension), shift current range to at least center the data
{
double center = (newRange.lower+newRange.upper)*0.5; // upper and lower should be equal anyway, but just to make sure, incase validRange returned false for other reason
if (mDataScaleType == QCPAxis::stLinear)
{
newRange.lower = center-mDataRange.size()/2.0;
newRange.upper = center+mDataRange.size()/2.0;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
newRange.lower = center/qSqrt(mDataRange.upper/mDataRange.lower);
newRange.upper = center*qSqrt(mDataRange.upper/mDataRange.lower);
}
}
setDataRange(newRange);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPColorScale::update(UpdatePhase phase)
{
QCPLayoutElement::update(phase);
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return;
}
mAxisRect.data()->update(phase);
switch (phase)
{
case upMargins:
{
if (mType == QCPAxis::atBottom || mType == QCPAxis::atTop)
{
setMaximumSize(QWIDGETSIZE_MAX, mBarWidth+mAxisRect.data()->margins().top()+mAxisRect.data()->margins().bottom());
setMinimumSize(0, mBarWidth+mAxisRect.data()->margins().top()+mAxisRect.data()->margins().bottom());
} else
{
setMaximumSize(mBarWidth+mAxisRect.data()->margins().left()+mAxisRect.data()->margins().right(), QWIDGETSIZE_MAX);
setMinimumSize(mBarWidth+mAxisRect.data()->margins().left()+mAxisRect.data()->margins().right(), 0);
}
break;
}
case upLayout:
{
mAxisRect.data()->setOuterRect(rect());
break;
}
default: break;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPColorScale::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
painter->setAntialiasing(false);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPColorScale::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return;
}
mAxisRect.data()->mousePressEvent(event, details);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPColorScale::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return;
}
mAxisRect.data()->mouseMoveEvent(event, startPos);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPColorScale::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return;
}
mAxisRect.data()->mouseReleaseEvent(event, startPos);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPColorScale::wheelEvent(QWheelEvent *event)
{
if (!mAxisRect)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "internal axis rect was deleted";
return;
}
mAxisRect.data()->wheelEvent(event);
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate
\internal
\brief An axis rect subclass for use in a QCPColorScale
This is a private class and not part of the public QCustomPlot interface.
It provides the axis rect functionality for the QCPColorScale class.
*/
/*!
Creates a new instance, as a child of \a parentColorScale.
*/
QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate::QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate(QCPColorScale *parentColorScale) :
QCPAxisRect(parentColorScale->parentPlot(), true),
mParentColorScale(parentColorScale),
mGradientImageInvalidated(true)
{
setParentLayerable(parentColorScale);
setMinimumMargins(QMargins(0, 0, 0, 0));
const QList<QCPAxis::AxisType> allAxisTypes = QList<QCPAxis::AxisType>() << QCPAxis::atBottom << QCPAxis::atTop << QCPAxis::atLeft << QCPAxis::atRight;
foreach (QCPAxis::AxisType type, allAxisTypes)
{
axis(type)->setVisible(true);
axis(type)->grid()->setVisible(false);
axis(type)->setPadding(0);
connect(axis(type), SIGNAL(selectionChanged(QCPAxis::SelectableParts)), this, SLOT(axisSelectionChanged(QCPAxis::SelectableParts)));
connect(axis(type), SIGNAL(selectableChanged(QCPAxis::SelectableParts)), this, SLOT(axisSelectableChanged(QCPAxis::SelectableParts)));
}
connect(axis(QCPAxis::atLeft), SIGNAL(rangeChanged(QCPRange)), axis(QCPAxis::atRight), SLOT(setRange(QCPRange)));
connect(axis(QCPAxis::atRight), SIGNAL(rangeChanged(QCPRange)), axis(QCPAxis::atLeft), SLOT(setRange(QCPRange)));
connect(axis(QCPAxis::atBottom), SIGNAL(rangeChanged(QCPRange)), axis(QCPAxis::atTop), SLOT(setRange(QCPRange)));
connect(axis(QCPAxis::atTop), SIGNAL(rangeChanged(QCPRange)), axis(QCPAxis::atBottom), SLOT(setRange(QCPRange)));
connect(axis(QCPAxis::atLeft), SIGNAL(scaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), axis(QCPAxis::atRight), SLOT(setScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
connect(axis(QCPAxis::atRight), SIGNAL(scaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), axis(QCPAxis::atLeft), SLOT(setScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
connect(axis(QCPAxis::atBottom), SIGNAL(scaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), axis(QCPAxis::atTop), SLOT(setScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
connect(axis(QCPAxis::atTop), SIGNAL(scaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), axis(QCPAxis::atBottom), SLOT(setScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
// make layer transfers of color scale transfer to axis rect and axes
// the axes must be set after axis rect, such that they appear above color gradient drawn by axis rect:
connect(parentColorScale, SIGNAL(layerChanged(QCPLayer*)), this, SLOT(setLayer(QCPLayer*)));
foreach (QCPAxis::AxisType type, allAxisTypes)
connect(parentColorScale, SIGNAL(layerChanged(QCPLayer*)), axis(type), SLOT(setLayer(QCPLayer*)));
}
/*! \internal
Updates the color gradient image if necessary, by calling \ref updateGradientImage, then draws
it. Then the axes are drawn by calling the \ref QCPAxisRect::draw base class implementation.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (mGradientImageInvalidated)
updateGradientImage();
bool mirrorHorz = false;
bool mirrorVert = false;
if (mParentColorScale->mColorAxis)
{
mirrorHorz = mParentColorScale->mColorAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && (mParentColorScale->type() == QCPAxis::atBottom || mParentColorScale->type() == QCPAxis::atTop);
mirrorVert = mParentColorScale->mColorAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && (mParentColorScale->type() == QCPAxis::atLeft || mParentColorScale->type() == QCPAxis::atRight);
}
painter->drawImage(rect().adjusted(0, -1, 0, -1), mGradientImage.mirrored(mirrorHorz, mirrorVert));
QCPAxisRect::draw(painter);
}
/*! \internal
Uses the current gradient of the parent \ref QCPColorScale (specified in the constructor) to
generate a gradient image. This gradient image will be used in the \ref draw method.
*/
void QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate::updateGradientImage()
{
if (rect().isEmpty())
return;
const QImage::Format format = QImage::Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied;
int n = mParentColorScale->mGradient.levelCount();
int w, h;
QVector<double> data(n);
for (int i=0; i<n; ++i)
data[i] = i;
if (mParentColorScale->mType == QCPAxis::atBottom || mParentColorScale->mType == QCPAxis::atTop)
{
w = n;
h = rect().height();
mGradientImage = QImage(w, h, format);
QVector<QRgb*> pixels;
for (int y=0; y<h; ++y)
pixels.append(reinterpret_cast<QRgb*>(mGradientImage.scanLine(y)));
mParentColorScale->mGradient.colorize(data.constData(), QCPRange(0, n-1), pixels.first(), n);
for (int y=1; y<h; ++y)
memcpy(pixels.at(y), pixels.first(), size_t(n)*sizeof(QRgb));
} else
{
w = rect().width();
h = n;
mGradientImage = QImage(w, h, format);
for (int y=0; y<h; ++y)
{
QRgb *pixels = reinterpret_cast<QRgb*>(mGradientImage.scanLine(y));
const QRgb lineColor = mParentColorScale->mGradient.color(data[h-1-y], QCPRange(0, n-1));
for (int x=0; x<w; ++x)
pixels[x] = lineColor;
}
}
mGradientImageInvalidated = false;
}
/*! \internal
This slot is connected to the selectionChanged signals of the four axes in the constructor. It
synchronizes the selection state of the axes.
*/
void QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate::axisSelectionChanged(QCPAxis::SelectableParts selectedParts)
{
// axis bases of four axes shall always (de-)selected synchronously:
const QList<QCPAxis::AxisType> allAxisTypes = QList<QCPAxis::AxisType>() << QCPAxis::atBottom << QCPAxis::atTop << QCPAxis::atLeft << QCPAxis::atRight;
foreach (QCPAxis::AxisType type, allAxisTypes)
{
if (QCPAxis *senderAxis = qobject_cast<QCPAxis*>(sender()))
if (senderAxis->axisType() == type)
continue;
if (axis(type)->selectableParts().testFlag(QCPAxis::spAxis))
{
if (selectedParts.testFlag(QCPAxis::spAxis))
axis(type)->setSelectedParts(axis(type)->selectedParts() | QCPAxis::spAxis);
else
axis(type)->setSelectedParts(axis(type)->selectedParts() & ~QCPAxis::spAxis);
}
}
}
/*! \internal
This slot is connected to the selectableChanged signals of the four axes in the constructor. It
synchronizes the selectability of the axes.
*/
void QCPColorScaleAxisRectPrivate::axisSelectableChanged(QCPAxis::SelectableParts selectableParts)
{
// synchronize axis base selectability:
const QList<QCPAxis::AxisType> allAxisTypes = QList<QCPAxis::AxisType>() << QCPAxis::atBottom << QCPAxis::atTop << QCPAxis::atLeft << QCPAxis::atRight;
foreach (QCPAxis::AxisType type, allAxisTypes)
{
if (QCPAxis *senderAxis = qobject_cast<QCPAxis*>(sender()))
if (senderAxis->axisType() == type)
continue;
if (axis(type)->selectableParts().testFlag(QCPAxis::spAxis))
{
if (selectableParts.testFlag(QCPAxis::spAxis))
axis(type)->setSelectableParts(axis(type)->selectableParts() | QCPAxis::spAxis);
else
axis(type)->setSelectableParts(axis(type)->selectableParts() & ~QCPAxis::spAxis);
}
}
}
/* end of 'src/layoutelements/layoutelement-colorscale.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/plottables/plottable-graph.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 74518 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPGraphData
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPGraphData
\brief Holds the data of one single data point for QCPGraph.
The stored data is:
\li \a key: coordinate on the key axis of this data point (this is the \a mainKey and the \a sortKey)
\li \a value: coordinate on the value axis of this data point (this is the \a mainValue)
The container for storing multiple data points is \ref QCPGraphDataContainer. It is a typedef for
\ref QCPDataContainer with \ref QCPGraphData as the DataType template parameter. See the
documentation there for an explanation regarding the data type's generic methods.
\see QCPGraphDataContainer
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn double QCPGraphData::sortKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static QCPGraphData QCPGraphData::fromSortKey(double sortKey)
Returns a data point with the specified \a sortKey. All other members are set to zero.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static static bool QCPGraphData::sortKeyIsMainKey()
Since the member \a key is both the data point key coordinate and the data ordering parameter,
this method returns true.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPGraphData::mainKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPGraphData::mainValue() const
Returns the \a value member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange QCPGraphData::valueRange() const
Returns a QCPRange with both lower and upper boundary set to \a value of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a data point with key and value set to zero.
*/
QCPGraphData::QCPGraphData() :
key(0),
value(0)
{
}
/*!
Constructs a data point with the specified \a key and \a value.
*/
QCPGraphData::QCPGraphData(double key, double value) :
key(key),
value(value)
{
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPGraph
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPGraph
\brief A plottable representing a graph in a plot.
\image html QCPGraph.png
Usually you create new graphs by calling QCustomPlot::addGraph. The resulting instance can be
accessed via QCustomPlot::graph.
To plot data, assign it with the \ref setData or \ref addData functions. Alternatively, you can
also access and modify the data via the \ref data method, which returns a pointer to the internal
\ref QCPGraphDataContainer.
Graphs are used to display single-valued data. Single-valued means that there should only be one
data point per unique key coordinate. In other words, the graph can't have \a loops. If you do
want to plot non-single-valued curves, rather use the QCPCurve plottable.
Gaps in the graph line can be created by adding data points with NaN as value
(<tt>qQNaN()</tt> or <tt>std::numeric_limits<double>::quiet_NaN()</tt>) in between the two data points that shall be
separated.
\section qcpgraph-appearance Changing the appearance
The appearance of the graph is mainly determined by the line style, scatter style, brush and pen
of the graph (\ref setLineStyle, \ref setScatterStyle, \ref setBrush, \ref setPen).
\subsection filling Filling under or between graphs
QCPGraph knows two types of fills: Normal graph fills towards the zero-value-line parallel to
the key axis of the graph, and fills between two graphs, called channel fills. To enable a fill,
just set a brush with \ref setBrush which is neither Qt::NoBrush nor fully transparent.
By default, a normal fill towards the zero-value-line will be drawn. To set up a channel fill
between this graph and another one, call \ref setChannelFillGraph with the other graph as
parameter.
\see QCustomPlot::addGraph, QCustomPlot::graph
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QSharedPointer<QCPGraphDataContainer> QCPGraph::data() const
Returns a shared pointer to the internal data storage of type \ref QCPGraphDataContainer. You may
use it to directly manipulate the data, which may be more convenient and faster than using the
regular \ref setData or \ref addData methods.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a graph which uses \a keyAxis as its key axis ("x") and \a valueAxis as its value
axis ("y"). \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in the same QCustomPlot instance and not have
the same orientation. If either of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding message is
printed to the debug output (qDebug), the construction is not aborted, though.
The created QCPGraph is automatically registered with the QCustomPlot instance inferred from \a
keyAxis. This QCustomPlot instance takes ownership of the QCPGraph, so do not delete it manually
but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
To directly create a graph inside a plot, you can also use the simpler QCustomPlot::addGraph function.
*/
QCPGraph::QCPGraph(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis) :
QCPAbstractPlottable1D<QCPGraphData>(keyAxis, valueAxis),
mLineStyle{},
mScatterSkip{},
mAdaptiveSampling{}
{
// special handling for QCPGraphs to maintain the simple graph interface:
mParentPlot->registerGraph(this);
setPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 0));
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setLineStyle(lsLine);
setScatterSkip(0);
setChannelFillGraph(nullptr);
setAdaptiveSampling(true);
}
QCPGraph::~QCPGraph()
{
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data container with the provided \a data container.
Since a QSharedPointer is used, multiple QCPGraphs may share the same data container safely.
Modifying the data in the container will then affect all graphs that share the container. Sharing
can be achieved by simply exchanging the data containers wrapped in shared pointers:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpgraph-datasharing-1
If you do not wish to share containers, but create a copy from an existing container, rather use
the \ref QCPDataContainer<DataType>::set method on the graph's data container directly:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpgraph-datasharing-2
\see addData
*/
void QCPGraph::setData(QSharedPointer<QCPGraphDataContainer> data)
{
mDataContainer = data;
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data with the provided points in \a keys and \a values. The provided
vectors should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the
smallest vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
\see addData
*/
void QCPGraph::setData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values, bool alreadySorted)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(keys, values, alreadySorted);
}
/*!
Sets how the single data points are connected in the plot. For scatter-only plots, set \a ls to
\ref lsNone and \ref setScatterStyle to the desired scatter style.
\see setScatterStyle
*/
void QCPGraph::setLineStyle(LineStyle ls)
{
mLineStyle = ls;
}
/*!
Sets the visual appearance of single data points in the plot. If set to \ref QCPScatterStyle::ssNone, no scatter points
are drawn (e.g. for line-only-plots with appropriate line style).
\see QCPScatterStyle, setLineStyle
*/
void QCPGraph::setScatterStyle(const QCPScatterStyle &style)
{
mScatterStyle = style;
}
/*!
If scatters are displayed (scatter style not \ref QCPScatterStyle::ssNone), \a skip number of
scatter points are skipped/not drawn after every drawn scatter point.
This can be used to make the data appear sparser while for example still having a smooth line,
and to improve performance for very high density plots.
If \a skip is set to 0 (default), all scatter points are drawn.
\see setScatterStyle
*/
void QCPGraph::setScatterSkip(int skip)
{
mScatterSkip = qMax(0, skip);
}
/*!
Sets the target graph for filling the area between this graph and \a targetGraph with the current
brush (\ref setBrush).
When \a targetGraph is set to 0, a normal graph fill to the zero-value-line will be shown. To
disable any filling, set the brush to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setBrush
*/
void QCPGraph::setChannelFillGraph(QCPGraph *targetGraph)
{
// prevent setting channel target to this graph itself:
if (targetGraph == this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "targetGraph is this graph itself";
mChannelFillGraph = nullptr;
return;
}
// prevent setting channel target to a graph not in the plot:
if (targetGraph && targetGraph->mParentPlot != mParentPlot)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "targetGraph not in same plot";
mChannelFillGraph = nullptr;
return;
}
mChannelFillGraph = targetGraph;
}
/*!
Sets whether adaptive sampling shall be used when plotting this graph. QCustomPlot's adaptive
sampling technique can drastically improve the replot performance for graphs with a larger number
of points (e.g. above 10,000), without notably changing the appearance of the graph.
By default, adaptive sampling is enabled. Even if enabled, QCustomPlot decides whether adaptive
sampling shall actually be used on a per-graph basis. So leaving adaptive sampling enabled has no
disadvantage in almost all cases.
\image html adaptive-sampling-line.png "A line plot of 500,000 points without and with adaptive sampling"
As can be seen, line plots experience no visual degradation from adaptive sampling. Outliers are
reproduced reliably, as well as the overall shape of the data set. The replot time reduces
dramatically though. This allows QCustomPlot to display large amounts of data in realtime.
\image html adaptive-sampling-scatter.png "A scatter plot of 100,000 points without and with adaptive sampling"
Care must be taken when using high-density scatter plots in combination with adaptive sampling.
The adaptive sampling algorithm treats scatter plots more carefully than line plots which still
gives a significant reduction of replot times, but not quite as much as for line plots. This is
because scatter plots inherently need more data points to be preserved in order to still resemble
the original, non-adaptive-sampling plot. As shown above, the results still aren't quite
identical, as banding occurs for the outer data points. This is in fact intentional, such that
the boundaries of the data cloud stay visible to the viewer. How strong the banding appears,
depends on the point density, i.e. the number of points in the plot.
For some situations with scatter plots it might thus be desirable to manually turn adaptive
sampling off. For example, when saving the plot to disk. This can be achieved by setting \a
enabled to false before issuing a command like \ref QCustomPlot::savePng, and setting \a enabled
back to true afterwards.
*/
void QCPGraph::setAdaptiveSampling(bool enabled)
{
mAdaptiveSampling = enabled;
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided points in \a keys and \a values to the current data. The provided vectors
should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the smallest
vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPGraph::addData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values, bool alreadySorted)
{
if (keys.size() != values.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "keys and values have different sizes:" << keys.size() << values.size();
const int n = qMin(keys.size(), values.size());
QVector<QCPGraphData> tempData(n);
QVector<QCPGraphData>::iterator it = tempData.begin();
const QVector<QCPGraphData>::iterator itEnd = tempData.end();
int i = 0;
while (it != itEnd)
{
it->key = keys[i];
it->value = values[i];
++it;
++i;
}
mDataContainer->add(tempData, alreadySorted); // don't modify tempData beyond this to prevent copy on write
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided data point as \a key and \a value to the current data.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPGraph::addData(double key, double value)
{
mDataContainer->add(QCPGraphData(key, value));
}
/*!
Implements a selectTest specific to this plottable's point geometry.
If \a details is not 0, it will be set to a \ref QCPDataSelection, describing the closest data
point to \a pos.
\seebaseclassmethod \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::selectTest
*/
double QCPGraph::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return -1;
if (mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->rect().contains(pos.toPoint()) || mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iSelectPlottablesBeyondAxisRect))
{
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator closestDataPoint = mDataContainer->constEnd();
double result = pointDistance(pos, closestDataPoint);
if (details)
{
int pointIndex = int(closestDataPoint-mDataContainer->constBegin());
details->setValue(QCPDataSelection(QCPDataRange(pointIndex, pointIndex+1)));
}
return result;
} else
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPGraph::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const
{
return mDataContainer->keyRange(foundRange, inSignDomain);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPGraph::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const
{
return mDataContainer->valueRange(foundRange, inSignDomain, inKeyRange);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPGraph::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (mKeyAxis.data()->range().size() <= 0 || mDataContainer->isEmpty()) return;
if (mLineStyle == lsNone && mScatterStyle.isNone()) return;
QVector<QPointF> lines, scatters; // line and (if necessary) scatter pixel coordinates will be stored here while iterating over segments
// loop over and draw segments of unselected/selected data:
QList<QCPDataRange> selectedSegments, unselectedSegments, allSegments;
getDataSegments(selectedSegments, unselectedSegments);
allSegments << unselectedSegments << selectedSegments;
for (int i=0; i<allSegments.size(); ++i)
{
bool isSelectedSegment = i >= unselectedSegments.size();
// get line pixel points appropriate to line style:
QCPDataRange lineDataRange = isSelectedSegment ? allSegments.at(i) : allSegments.at(i).adjusted(-1, 1); // unselected segments extend lines to bordering selected data point (safe to exceed total data bounds in first/last segment, getLines takes care)
getLines(&lines, lineDataRange);
// check data validity if flag set:
#ifdef QCUSTOMPLOT_CHECK_DATA
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it;
for (it = mDataContainer->constBegin(); it != mDataContainer->constEnd(); ++it)
{
if (QCP::isInvalidData(it->key, it->value))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Data point at" << it->key << "invalid." << "Plottable name:" << name();
}
#endif
// draw fill of graph:
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->applyBrush(painter);
else
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
painter->setPen(Qt::NoPen);
drawFill(painter, &lines);
// draw line:
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
else
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
if (mLineStyle == lsImpulse)
drawImpulsePlot(painter, lines);
else
drawLinePlot(painter, lines); // also step plots can be drawn as a line plot
}
// draw scatters:
QCPScatterStyle finalScatterStyle = mScatterStyle;
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
finalScatterStyle = mSelectionDecorator->getFinalScatterStyle(mScatterStyle);
if (!finalScatterStyle.isNone())
{
getScatters(&scatters, allSegments.at(i));
drawScatterPlot(painter, scatters, finalScatterStyle);
}
}
// draw other selection decoration that isn't just line/scatter pens and brushes:
if (mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->drawDecoration(painter, selection());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPGraph::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRectF &rect) const
{
// draw fill:
if (mBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush)
{
applyFillAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->fillRect(QRectF(rect.left(), rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0, rect.width(), rect.height()/3.0), mBrush);
}
// draw line vertically centered:
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.left(), rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0, rect.right()+5, rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0)); // +5 on x2 else last segment is missing from dashed/dotted pens
}
// draw scatter symbol:
if (!mScatterStyle.isNone())
{
applyScattersAntialiasingHint(painter);
// scale scatter pixmap if it's too large to fit in legend icon rect:
if (mScatterStyle.shape() == QCPScatterStyle::ssPixmap && (mScatterStyle.pixmap().size().width() > rect.width() || mScatterStyle.pixmap().size().height() > rect.height()))
{
QCPScatterStyle scaledStyle(mScatterStyle);
scaledStyle.setPixmap(scaledStyle.pixmap().scaled(rect.size().toSize(), Qt::KeepAspectRatio, Qt::SmoothTransformation));
scaledStyle.applyTo(painter, mPen);
scaledStyle.drawShape(painter, QRectF(rect).center());
} else
{
mScatterStyle.applyTo(painter, mPen);
mScatterStyle.drawShape(painter, QRectF(rect).center());
}
}
}
/*! \internal
This method retrieves an optimized set of data points via \ref getOptimizedLineData, and branches
out to the line style specific functions such as \ref dataToLines, \ref dataToStepLeftLines, etc.
according to the line style of the graph.
\a lines will be filled with points in pixel coordinates, that can be drawn with the according
draw functions like \ref drawLinePlot and \ref drawImpulsePlot. The points returned in \a lines
aren't necessarily the original data points. For example, step line styles require additional
points to form the steps when drawn. If the line style of the graph is \ref lsNone, the \a
lines vector will be empty.
\a dataRange specifies the beginning and ending data indices that will be taken into account for
conversion. In this function, the specified range may exceed the total data bounds without harm:
a correspondingly trimmed data range will be used. This takes the burden off the user of this
function to check for valid indices in \a dataRange, e.g. when extending ranges coming from \ref
getDataSegments.
\see getScatters
*/
void QCPGraph::getLines(QVector<QPointF> *lines, const QCPDataRange &dataRange) const
{
if (!lines) return;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator begin, end;
getVisibleDataBounds(begin, end, dataRange);
if (begin == end)
{
lines->clear();
return;
}
QVector<QCPGraphData> lineData;
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
getOptimizedLineData(&lineData, begin, end);
if (mKeyAxis->rangeReversed() != (mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)) // make sure key pixels are sorted ascending in lineData (significantly simplifies following processing)
std::reverse(lineData.begin(), lineData.end());
switch (mLineStyle)
{
case lsNone: lines->clear(); break;
case lsLine: *lines = dataToLines(lineData); break;
case lsStepLeft: *lines = dataToStepLeftLines(lineData); break;
case lsStepRight: *lines = dataToStepRightLines(lineData); break;
case lsStepCenter: *lines = dataToStepCenterLines(lineData); break;
case lsImpulse: *lines = dataToImpulseLines(lineData); break;
}
}
/*! \internal
This method retrieves an optimized set of data points via \ref getOptimizedScatterData and then
converts them to pixel coordinates. The resulting points are returned in \a scatters, and can be
passed to \ref drawScatterPlot.
\a dataRange specifies the beginning and ending data indices that will be taken into account for
conversion. In this function, the specified range may exceed the total data bounds without harm:
a correspondingly trimmed data range will be used. This takes the burden off the user of this
function to check for valid indices in \a dataRange, e.g. when extending ranges coming from \ref
getDataSegments.
*/
void QCPGraph::getScatters(QVector<QPointF> *scatters, const QCPDataRange &dataRange) const
{
if (!scatters) return;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; scatters->clear(); return; }
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator begin, end;
getVisibleDataBounds(begin, end, dataRange);
if (begin == end)
{
scatters->clear();
return;
}
QVector<QCPGraphData> data;
getOptimizedScatterData(&data, begin, end);
if (mKeyAxis->rangeReversed() != (mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)) // make sure key pixels are sorted ascending in data (significantly simplifies following processing)
std::reverse(data.begin(), data.end());
scatters->resize(data.size());
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
if (!qIsNaN(data.at(i).value))
{
(*scatters)[i].setX(valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value));
(*scatters)[i].setY(keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key));
}
}
} else
{
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
if (!qIsNaN(data.at(i).value))
{
(*scatters)[i].setX(keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key));
(*scatters)[i].setY(valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value));
}
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Takes raw data points in plot coordinates as \a data, and returns a vector containing pixel
coordinate points which are suitable for drawing the line style \ref lsLine.
The source of \a data is usually \ref getOptimizedLineData, and this method is called in \a
getLines if the line style is set accordingly.
\see dataToStepLeftLines, dataToStepRightLines, dataToStepCenterLines, dataToImpulseLines, getLines, drawLinePlot
*/
QVector<QPointF> QCPGraph::dataToLines(const QVector<QCPGraphData> &data) const
{
QVector<QPointF> result;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return result; }
result.resize(data.size());
// transform data points to pixels:
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
result[i].setX(valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value));
result[i].setY(keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key));
}
} else // key axis is horizontal
{
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
result[i].setX(keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key));
result[i].setY(valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value));
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Takes raw data points in plot coordinates as \a data, and returns a vector containing pixel
coordinate points which are suitable for drawing the line style \ref lsStepLeft.
The source of \a data is usually \ref getOptimizedLineData, and this method is called in \a
getLines if the line style is set accordingly.
\see dataToLines, dataToStepRightLines, dataToStepCenterLines, dataToImpulseLines, getLines, drawLinePlot
*/
QVector<QPointF> QCPGraph::dataToStepLeftLines(const QVector<QCPGraphData> &data) const
{
QVector<QPointF> result;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return result; }
result.resize(data.size()*2);
// calculate steps from data and transform to pixel coordinates:
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
double lastValue = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.first().value);
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
const double key = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key);
result[i*2+0].setX(lastValue);
result[i*2+0].setY(key);
lastValue = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value);
result[i*2+1].setX(lastValue);
result[i*2+1].setY(key);
}
} else // key axis is horizontal
{
double lastValue = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.first().value);
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
const double key = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key);
result[i*2+0].setX(key);
result[i*2+0].setY(lastValue);
lastValue = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value);
result[i*2+1].setX(key);
result[i*2+1].setY(lastValue);
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Takes raw data points in plot coordinates as \a data, and returns a vector containing pixel
coordinate points which are suitable for drawing the line style \ref lsStepRight.
The source of \a data is usually \ref getOptimizedLineData, and this method is called in \a
getLines if the line style is set accordingly.
\see dataToLines, dataToStepLeftLines, dataToStepCenterLines, dataToImpulseLines, getLines, drawLinePlot
*/
QVector<QPointF> QCPGraph::dataToStepRightLines(const QVector<QCPGraphData> &data) const
{
QVector<QPointF> result;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return result; }
result.resize(data.size()*2);
// calculate steps from data and transform to pixel coordinates:
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
double lastKey = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.first().key);
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
const double value = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value);
result[i*2+0].setX(value);
result[i*2+0].setY(lastKey);
lastKey = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key);
result[i*2+1].setX(value);
result[i*2+1].setY(lastKey);
}
} else // key axis is horizontal
{
double lastKey = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.first().key);
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
const double value = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value);
result[i*2+0].setX(lastKey);
result[i*2+0].setY(value);
lastKey = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key);
result[i*2+1].setX(lastKey);
result[i*2+1].setY(value);
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Takes raw data points in plot coordinates as \a data, and returns a vector containing pixel
coordinate points which are suitable for drawing the line style \ref lsStepCenter.
The source of \a data is usually \ref getOptimizedLineData, and this method is called in \a
getLines if the line style is set accordingly.
\see dataToLines, dataToStepLeftLines, dataToStepRightLines, dataToImpulseLines, getLines, drawLinePlot
*/
QVector<QPointF> QCPGraph::dataToStepCenterLines(const QVector<QCPGraphData> &data) const
{
QVector<QPointF> result;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return result; }
result.resize(data.size()*2);
// calculate steps from data and transform to pixel coordinates:
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
double lastKey = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.first().key);
double lastValue = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.first().value);
result[0].setX(lastValue);
result[0].setY(lastKey);
for (int i=1; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
const double key = (keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key)+lastKey)*0.5;
result[i*2-1].setX(lastValue);
result[i*2-1].setY(key);
lastValue = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value);
lastKey = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key);
result[i*2+0].setX(lastValue);
result[i*2+0].setY(key);
}
result[data.size()*2-1].setX(lastValue);
result[data.size()*2-1].setY(lastKey);
} else // key axis is horizontal
{
double lastKey = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.first().key);
double lastValue = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.first().value);
result[0].setX(lastKey);
result[0].setY(lastValue);
for (int i=1; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
const double key = (keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key)+lastKey)*0.5;
result[i*2-1].setX(key);
result[i*2-1].setY(lastValue);
lastValue = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value);
lastKey = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key);
result[i*2+0].setX(key);
result[i*2+0].setY(lastValue);
}
result[data.size()*2-1].setX(lastKey);
result[data.size()*2-1].setY(lastValue);
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Takes raw data points in plot coordinates as \a data, and returns a vector containing pixel
coordinate points which are suitable for drawing the line style \ref lsImpulse.
The source of \a data is usually \ref getOptimizedLineData, and this method is called in \a
getLines if the line style is set accordingly.
\see dataToLines, dataToStepLeftLines, dataToStepRightLines, dataToStepCenterLines, getLines, drawImpulsePlot
*/
QVector<QPointF> QCPGraph::dataToImpulseLines(const QVector<QCPGraphData> &data) const
{
QVector<QPointF> result;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return result; }
result.resize(data.size()*2);
// transform data points to pixels:
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
const double key = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key);
result[i*2+0].setX(valueAxis->coordToPixel(0));
result[i*2+0].setY(key);
result[i*2+1].setX(valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value));
result[i*2+1].setY(key);
}
} else // key axis is horizontal
{
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
const double key = keyAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key);
result[i*2+0].setX(key);
result[i*2+0].setY(valueAxis->coordToPixel(0));
result[i*2+1].setX(key);
result[i*2+1].setY(valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).value));
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Draws the fill of the graph using the specified \a painter, with the currently set brush.
Depending on whether a normal fill or a channel fill (\ref setChannelFillGraph) is needed, \ref
getFillPolygon or \ref getChannelFillPolygon are used to find the according fill polygons.
In order to handle NaN Data points correctly (the fill needs to be split into disjoint areas),
this method first determines a list of non-NaN segments with \ref getNonNanSegments, on which to
operate. In the channel fill case, \ref getOverlappingSegments is used to consolidate the non-NaN
segments of the two involved graphs, before passing the overlapping pairs to \ref
getChannelFillPolygon.
Pass the points of this graph's line as \a lines, in pixel coordinates.
\see drawLinePlot, drawImpulsePlot, drawScatterPlot
*/
void QCPGraph::drawFill(QCPPainter *painter, QVector<QPointF> *lines) const
{
if (mLineStyle == lsImpulse) return; // fill doesn't make sense for impulse plot
if (painter->brush().style() == Qt::NoBrush || painter->brush().color().alpha() == 0) return;
applyFillAntialiasingHint(painter);
const QVector<QCPDataRange> segments = getNonNanSegments(lines, keyAxis()->orientation());
if (!mChannelFillGraph)
{
// draw base fill under graph, fill goes all the way to the zero-value-line:
foreach (QCPDataRange segment, segments)
painter->drawPolygon(getFillPolygon(lines, segment));
} else
{
// draw fill between this graph and mChannelFillGraph:
QVector<QPointF> otherLines;
mChannelFillGraph->getLines(&otherLines, QCPDataRange(0, mChannelFillGraph->dataCount()));
if (!otherLines.isEmpty())
{
QVector<QCPDataRange> otherSegments = getNonNanSegments(&otherLines, mChannelFillGraph->keyAxis()->orientation());
QVector<QPair<QCPDataRange, QCPDataRange> > segmentPairs = getOverlappingSegments(segments, lines, otherSegments, &otherLines);
for (int i=0; i<segmentPairs.size(); ++i)
painter->drawPolygon(getChannelFillPolygon(lines, segmentPairs.at(i).first, &otherLines, segmentPairs.at(i).second));
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws scatter symbols at every point passed in \a scatters, given in pixel coordinates. The
scatters will be drawn with \a painter and have the appearance as specified in \a style.
\see drawLinePlot, drawImpulsePlot
*/
void QCPGraph::drawScatterPlot(QCPPainter *painter, const QVector<QPointF> &scatters, const QCPScatterStyle &style) const
{
applyScattersAntialiasingHint(painter);
style.applyTo(painter, mPen);
foreach (const QPointF &scatter, scatters)
style.drawShape(painter, scatter.x(), scatter.y());
}
/*! \internal
Draws lines between the points in \a lines, given in pixel coordinates.
\see drawScatterPlot, drawImpulsePlot, QCPAbstractPlottable1D::drawPolyline
*/
void QCPGraph::drawLinePlot(QCPPainter *painter, const QVector<QPointF> &lines) const
{
if (painter->pen().style() != Qt::NoPen && painter->pen().color().alpha() != 0)
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
drawPolyline(painter, lines);
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws impulses from the provided data, i.e. it connects all line pairs in \a lines, given in
pixel coordinates. The \a lines necessary for impulses are generated by \ref dataToImpulseLines
from the regular graph data points.
\see drawLinePlot, drawScatterPlot
*/
void QCPGraph::drawImpulsePlot(QCPPainter *painter, const QVector<QPointF> &lines) const
{
if (painter->pen().style() != Qt::NoPen && painter->pen().color().alpha() != 0)
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
QPen oldPen = painter->pen();
QPen newPen = painter->pen();
newPen.setCapStyle(Qt::FlatCap); // so impulse line doesn't reach beyond zero-line
painter->setPen(newPen);
painter->drawLines(lines);
painter->setPen(oldPen);
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns via \a lineData the data points that need to be visualized for this graph when plotting
graph lines, taking into consideration the currently visible axis ranges and, if \ref
setAdaptiveSampling is enabled, local point densities. The considered data can be restricted
further by \a begin and \a end, e.g. to only plot a certain segment of the data (see \ref
getDataSegments).
This method is used by \ref getLines to retrieve the basic working set of data.
\see getOptimizedScatterData
*/
void QCPGraph::getOptimizedLineData(QVector<QCPGraphData> *lineData, const QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, const QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &end) const
{
if (!lineData) return;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (begin == end) return;
int dataCount = int(end-begin);
int maxCount = (std::numeric_limits<int>::max)();
if (mAdaptiveSampling)
{
double keyPixelSpan = qAbs(keyAxis->coordToPixel(begin->key)-keyAxis->coordToPixel((end-1)->key));
if (2*keyPixelSpan+2 < static_cast<double>((std::numeric_limits<int>::max)()))
maxCount = int(2*keyPixelSpan+2);
}
if (mAdaptiveSampling && dataCount >= maxCount) // use adaptive sampling only if there are at least two points per pixel on average
{
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin;
double minValue = it->value;
double maxValue = it->value;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator currentIntervalFirstPoint = it;
int reversedFactor = keyAxis->pixelOrientation(); // is used to calculate keyEpsilon pixel into the correct direction
int reversedRound = reversedFactor==-1 ? 1 : 0; // is used to switch between floor (normal) and ceil (reversed) rounding of currentIntervalStartKey
double currentIntervalStartKey = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(int(keyAxis->coordToPixel(begin->key)+reversedRound));
double lastIntervalEndKey = currentIntervalStartKey;
double keyEpsilon = qAbs(currentIntervalStartKey-keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(currentIntervalStartKey)+1.0*reversedFactor)); // interval of one pixel on screen when mapped to plot key coordinates
bool keyEpsilonVariable = keyAxis->scaleType() == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic; // indicates whether keyEpsilon needs to be updated after every interval (for log axes)
int intervalDataCount = 1;
++it; // advance iterator to second data point because adaptive sampling works in 1 point retrospect
while (it != end)
{
if (it->key < currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon) // data point is still within same pixel, so skip it and expand value span of this cluster if necessary
{
if (it->value < minValue)
minValue = it->value;
else if (it->value > maxValue)
maxValue = it->value;
++intervalDataCount;
} else // new pixel interval started
{
if (intervalDataCount >= 2) // last pixel had multiple data points, consolidate them to a cluster
{
if (lastIntervalEndKey < currentIntervalStartKey-keyEpsilon) // last point is further away, so first point of this cluster must be at a real data point
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon*0.2, currentIntervalFirstPoint->value));
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon*0.25, minValue));
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon*0.75, maxValue));
if (it->key > currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon*2) // new pixel started further away from previous cluster, so make sure the last point of the cluster is at a real data point
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon*0.8, (it-1)->value));
} else
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalFirstPoint->key, currentIntervalFirstPoint->value));
lastIntervalEndKey = (it-1)->key;
minValue = it->value;
maxValue = it->value;
currentIntervalFirstPoint = it;
currentIntervalStartKey = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(int(keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key)+reversedRound));
if (keyEpsilonVariable)
keyEpsilon = qAbs(currentIntervalStartKey-keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(currentIntervalStartKey)+1.0*reversedFactor));
intervalDataCount = 1;
}
++it;
}
// handle last interval:
if (intervalDataCount >= 2) // last pixel had multiple data points, consolidate them to a cluster
{
if (lastIntervalEndKey < currentIntervalStartKey-keyEpsilon) // last point wasn't a cluster, so first point of this cluster must be at a real data point
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon*0.2, currentIntervalFirstPoint->value));
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon*0.25, minValue));
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon*0.75, maxValue));
} else
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(currentIntervalFirstPoint->key, currentIntervalFirstPoint->value));
} else // don't use adaptive sampling algorithm, transfer points one-to-one from the data container into the output
{
lineData->resize(dataCount);
std::copy(begin, end, lineData->begin());
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns via \a scatterData the data points that need to be visualized for this graph when
plotting scatter points, taking into consideration the currently visible axis ranges and, if \ref
setAdaptiveSampling is enabled, local point densities. The considered data can be restricted
further by \a begin and \a end, e.g. to only plot a certain segment of the data (see \ref
getDataSegments).
This method is used by \ref getScatters to retrieve the basic working set of data.
\see getOptimizedLineData
*/
void QCPGraph::getOptimizedScatterData(QVector<QCPGraphData> *scatterData, QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator begin, QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator end) const
{
if (!scatterData) return;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
const int scatterModulo = mScatterSkip+1;
const bool doScatterSkip = mScatterSkip > 0;
int beginIndex = int(begin-mDataContainer->constBegin());
int endIndex = int(end-mDataContainer->constBegin());
while (doScatterSkip && begin != end && beginIndex % scatterModulo != 0) // advance begin iterator to first non-skipped scatter
{
++beginIndex;
++begin;
}
if (begin == end) return;
int dataCount = int(end-begin);
int maxCount = (std::numeric_limits<int>::max)();
if (mAdaptiveSampling)
{
int keyPixelSpan = int(qAbs(keyAxis->coordToPixel(begin->key)-keyAxis->coordToPixel((end-1)->key)));
maxCount = 2*keyPixelSpan+2;
}
if (mAdaptiveSampling && dataCount >= maxCount) // use adaptive sampling only if there are at least two points per pixel on average
{
double valueMaxRange = valueAxis->range().upper;
double valueMinRange = valueAxis->range().lower;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin;
int itIndex = int(beginIndex);
double minValue = it->value;
double maxValue = it->value;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator minValueIt = it;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator maxValueIt = it;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator currentIntervalStart = it;
int reversedFactor = keyAxis->pixelOrientation(); // is used to calculate keyEpsilon pixel into the correct direction
int reversedRound = reversedFactor==-1 ? 1 : 0; // is used to switch between floor (normal) and ceil (reversed) rounding of currentIntervalStartKey
double currentIntervalStartKey = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(int(keyAxis->coordToPixel(begin->key)+reversedRound));
double keyEpsilon = qAbs(currentIntervalStartKey-keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(currentIntervalStartKey)+1.0*reversedFactor)); // interval of one pixel on screen when mapped to plot key coordinates
bool keyEpsilonVariable = keyAxis->scaleType() == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic; // indicates whether keyEpsilon needs to be updated after every interval (for log axes)
int intervalDataCount = 1;
// advance iterator to second (non-skipped) data point because adaptive sampling works in 1 point retrospect:
if (!doScatterSkip)
++it;
else
{
itIndex += scatterModulo;
if (itIndex < endIndex) // make sure we didn't jump over end
it += scatterModulo;
else
{
it = end;
itIndex = endIndex;
}
}
// main loop over data points:
while (it != end)
{
if (it->key < currentIntervalStartKey+keyEpsilon) // data point is still within same pixel, so skip it and expand value span of this pixel if necessary
{
if (it->value < minValue && it->value > valueMinRange && it->value < valueMaxRange)
{
minValue = it->value;
minValueIt = it;
} else if (it->value > maxValue && it->value > valueMinRange && it->value < valueMaxRange)
{
maxValue = it->value;
maxValueIt = it;
}
++intervalDataCount;
} else // new pixel started
{
if (intervalDataCount >= 2) // last pixel had multiple data points, consolidate them
{
// determine value pixel span and add as many points in interval to maintain certain vertical data density (this is specific to scatter plot):
double valuePixelSpan = qAbs(valueAxis->coordToPixel(minValue)-valueAxis->coordToPixel(maxValue));
int dataModulo = qMax(1, qRound(intervalDataCount/(valuePixelSpan/4.0))); // approximately every 4 value pixels one data point on average
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator intervalIt = currentIntervalStart;
int c = 0;
while (intervalIt != it)
{
if ((c % dataModulo == 0 || intervalIt == minValueIt || intervalIt == maxValueIt) && intervalIt->value > valueMinRange && intervalIt->value < valueMaxRange)
scatterData->append(*intervalIt);
++c;
if (!doScatterSkip)
++intervalIt;
else
intervalIt += scatterModulo; // since we know indices of "currentIntervalStart", "intervalIt" and "it" are multiples of scatterModulo, we can't accidentally jump over "it" here
}
} else if (currentIntervalStart->value > valueMinRange && currentIntervalStart->value < valueMaxRange)
scatterData->append(*currentIntervalStart);
minValue = it->value;
maxValue = it->value;
currentIntervalStart = it;
currentIntervalStartKey = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(int(keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key)+reversedRound));
if (keyEpsilonVariable)
keyEpsilon = qAbs(currentIntervalStartKey-keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(currentIntervalStartKey)+1.0*reversedFactor));
intervalDataCount = 1;
}
// advance to next data point:
if (!doScatterSkip)
++it;
else
{
itIndex += scatterModulo;
if (itIndex < endIndex) // make sure we didn't jump over end
it += scatterModulo;
else
{
it = end;
itIndex = endIndex;
}
}
}
// handle last interval:
if (intervalDataCount >= 2) // last pixel had multiple data points, consolidate them
{
// determine value pixel span and add as many points in interval to maintain certain vertical data density (this is specific to scatter plot):
double valuePixelSpan = qAbs(valueAxis->coordToPixel(minValue)-valueAxis->coordToPixel(maxValue));
int dataModulo = qMax(1, qRound(intervalDataCount/(valuePixelSpan/4.0))); // approximately every 4 value pixels one data point on average
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator intervalIt = currentIntervalStart;
int intervalItIndex = int(intervalIt-mDataContainer->constBegin());
int c = 0;
while (intervalIt != it)
{
if ((c % dataModulo == 0 || intervalIt == minValueIt || intervalIt == maxValueIt) && intervalIt->value > valueMinRange && intervalIt->value < valueMaxRange)
scatterData->append(*intervalIt);
++c;
if (!doScatterSkip)
++intervalIt;
else // here we can't guarantee that adding scatterModulo doesn't exceed "it" (because "it" is equal to "end" here, and "end" isn't scatterModulo-aligned), so check via index comparison:
{
intervalItIndex += scatterModulo;
if (intervalItIndex < itIndex)
intervalIt += scatterModulo;
else
{
intervalIt = it;
intervalItIndex = itIndex;
}
}
}
} else if (currentIntervalStart->value > valueMinRange && currentIntervalStart->value < valueMaxRange)
scatterData->append(*currentIntervalStart);
} else // don't use adaptive sampling algorithm, transfer points one-to-one from the data container into the output
{
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin;
int itIndex = beginIndex;
scatterData->reserve(dataCount);
while (it != end)
{
scatterData->append(*it);
// advance to next data point:
if (!doScatterSkip)
++it;
else
{
itIndex += scatterModulo;
if (itIndex < endIndex)
it += scatterModulo;
else
{
it = end;
itIndex = endIndex;
}
}
}
}
}
/*!
This method outputs the currently visible data range via \a begin and \a end. The returned range
will also never exceed \a rangeRestriction.
This method takes into account that the drawing of data lines at the axis rect border always
requires the points just outside the visible axis range. So \a begin and \a end may actually
indicate a range that contains one additional data point to the left and right of the visible
axis range.
*/
void QCPGraph::getVisibleDataBounds(QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &end, const QCPDataRange &rangeRestriction) const
{
if (rangeRestriction.isEmpty())
{
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
begin = end;
} else
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
// get visible data range:
begin = mDataContainer->findBegin(keyAxis->range().lower);
end = mDataContainer->findEnd(keyAxis->range().upper);
// limit lower/upperEnd to rangeRestriction:
mDataContainer->limitIteratorsToDataRange(begin, end, rangeRestriction); // this also ensures rangeRestriction outside data bounds doesn't break anything
}
}
/*! \internal
This method goes through the passed points in \a lineData and returns a list of the segments
which don't contain NaN data points.
\a keyOrientation defines whether the \a x or \a y member of the passed QPointF is used to check
for NaN. If \a keyOrientation is \c Qt::Horizontal, the \a y member is checked, if it is \c
Qt::Vertical, the \a x member is checked.
\see getOverlappingSegments, drawFill
*/
QVector<QCPDataRange> QCPGraph::getNonNanSegments(const QVector<QPointF> *lineData, Qt::Orientation keyOrientation) const
{
QVector<QCPDataRange> result;
const int n = lineData->size();
QCPDataRange currentSegment(-1, -1);
int i = 0;
if (keyOrientation == Qt::Horizontal)
{
while (i < n)
{
while (i < n && qIsNaN(lineData->at(i).y())) // seek next non-NaN data point
++i;
if (i == n)
break;
currentSegment.setBegin(i++);
while (i < n && !qIsNaN(lineData->at(i).y())) // seek next NaN data point or end of data
++i;
currentSegment.setEnd(i++);
result.append(currentSegment);
}
} else // keyOrientation == Qt::Vertical
{
while (i < n)
{
while (i < n && qIsNaN(lineData->at(i).x())) // seek next non-NaN data point
++i;
if (i == n)
break;
currentSegment.setBegin(i++);
while (i < n && !qIsNaN(lineData->at(i).x())) // seek next NaN data point or end of data
++i;
currentSegment.setEnd(i++);
result.append(currentSegment);
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
This method takes two segment lists (e.g. created by \ref getNonNanSegments) \a thisSegments and
\a otherSegments, and their associated point data \a thisData and \a otherData.
It returns all pairs of segments (the first from \a thisSegments, the second from \a
otherSegments), which overlap in plot coordinates.
This method is useful in the case of a channel fill between two graphs, when only those non-NaN
segments which actually overlap in their key coordinate shall be considered for drawing a channel
fill polygon.
It is assumed that the passed segments in \a thisSegments are ordered ascending by index, and
that the segments don't overlap themselves. The same is assumed for the segments in \a
otherSegments. This is fulfilled when the segments are obtained via \ref getNonNanSegments.
\see getNonNanSegments, segmentsIntersect, drawFill, getChannelFillPolygon
*/
QVector<QPair<QCPDataRange, QCPDataRange> > QCPGraph::getOverlappingSegments(QVector<QCPDataRange> thisSegments, const QVector<QPointF> *thisData, QVector<QCPDataRange> otherSegments, const QVector<QPointF> *otherData) const
{
QVector<QPair<QCPDataRange, QCPDataRange> > result;
if (thisData->isEmpty() || otherData->isEmpty() || thisSegments.isEmpty() || otherSegments.isEmpty())
return result;
int thisIndex = 0;
int otherIndex = 0;
const bool verticalKey = mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical;
while (thisIndex < thisSegments.size() && otherIndex < otherSegments.size())
{
if (thisSegments.at(thisIndex).size() < 2) // segments with fewer than two points won't have a fill anyhow
{
++thisIndex;
continue;
}
if (otherSegments.at(otherIndex).size() < 2) // segments with fewer than two points won't have a fill anyhow
{
++otherIndex;
continue;
}
double thisLower, thisUpper, otherLower, otherUpper;
if (!verticalKey)
{
thisLower = thisData->at(thisSegments.at(thisIndex).begin()).x();
thisUpper = thisData->at(thisSegments.at(thisIndex).end()-1).x();
otherLower = otherData->at(otherSegments.at(otherIndex).begin()).x();
otherUpper = otherData->at(otherSegments.at(otherIndex).end()-1).x();
} else
{
thisLower = thisData->at(thisSegments.at(thisIndex).begin()).y();
thisUpper = thisData->at(thisSegments.at(thisIndex).end()-1).y();
otherLower = otherData->at(otherSegments.at(otherIndex).begin()).y();
otherUpper = otherData->at(otherSegments.at(otherIndex).end()-1).y();
}
int bPrecedence;
if (segmentsIntersect(thisLower, thisUpper, otherLower, otherUpper, bPrecedence))
result.append(QPair<QCPDataRange, QCPDataRange>(thisSegments.at(thisIndex), otherSegments.at(otherIndex)));
if (bPrecedence <= 0) // otherSegment doesn't reach as far as thisSegment, so continue with next otherSegment, keeping current thisSegment
++otherIndex;
else // otherSegment reaches further than thisSegment, so continue with next thisSegment, keeping current otherSegment
++thisIndex;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns whether the segments defined by the coordinates (aLower, aUpper) and (bLower, bUpper)
have overlap.
The output parameter \a bPrecedence indicates whether the \a b segment reaches farther than the
\a a segment or not. If \a bPrecedence returns 1, segment \a b reaches the farthest to higher
coordinates (i.e. bUpper > aUpper). If it returns -1, segment \a a reaches the farthest. Only if
both segment's upper bounds are identical, 0 is returned as \a bPrecedence.
It is assumed that the lower bounds always have smaller or equal values than the upper bounds.
\see getOverlappingSegments
*/
bool QCPGraph::segmentsIntersect(double aLower, double aUpper, double bLower, double bUpper, int &bPrecedence) const
{
bPrecedence = 0;
if (aLower > bUpper)
{
bPrecedence = -1;
return false;
} else if (bLower > aUpper)
{
bPrecedence = 1;
return false;
} else
{
if (aUpper > bUpper)
bPrecedence = -1;
else if (aUpper < bUpper)
bPrecedence = 1;
return true;
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the point which closes the fill polygon on the zero-value-line parallel to the key axis.
The logarithmic axis scale case is a bit special, since the zero-value-line in pixel coordinates
is in positive or negative infinity. So this case is handled separately by just closing the fill
polygon on the axis which lies in the direction towards the zero value.
\a matchingDataPoint will provide the key (in pixels) of the returned point. Depending on whether
the key axis of this graph is horizontal or vertical, \a matchingDataPoint will provide the x or
y value of the returned point, respectively.
*/
QPointF QCPGraph::getFillBasePoint(QPointF matchingDataPoint) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return {}; }
QPointF result;
if (valueAxis->scaleType() == QCPAxis::stLinear)
{
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
result.setX(matchingDataPoint.x());
result.setY(valueAxis->coordToPixel(0));
} else // keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical
{
result.setX(valueAxis->coordToPixel(0));
result.setY(matchingDataPoint.y());
}
} else // valueAxis->mScaleType == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic
{
// In logarithmic scaling we can't just draw to value 0 so we just fill all the way
// to the axis which is in the direction towards 0
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
if ((valueAxis->range().upper < 0 && !valueAxis->rangeReversed()) ||
(valueAxis->range().upper > 0 && valueAxis->rangeReversed())) // if range is negative, zero is on opposite side of key axis
result.setX(keyAxis->axisRect()->right());
else
result.setX(keyAxis->axisRect()->left());
result.setY(matchingDataPoint.y());
} else if (keyAxis->axisType() == QCPAxis::atTop || keyAxis->axisType() == QCPAxis::atBottom)
{
result.setX(matchingDataPoint.x());
if ((valueAxis->range().upper < 0 && !valueAxis->rangeReversed()) ||
(valueAxis->range().upper > 0 && valueAxis->rangeReversed())) // if range is negative, zero is on opposite side of key axis
result.setY(keyAxis->axisRect()->top());
else
result.setY(keyAxis->axisRect()->bottom());
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the polygon needed for drawing normal fills between this graph and the key axis.
Pass the graph's data points (in pixel coordinates) as \a lineData, and specify the \a segment
which shall be used for the fill. The collection of \a lineData points described by \a segment
must not contain NaN data points (see \ref getNonNanSegments).
The returned fill polygon will be closed at the key axis (the zero-value line) for linear value
axes. For logarithmic value axes the polygon will reach just beyond the corresponding axis rect
side (see \ref getFillBasePoint).
For increased performance (due to implicit sharing), keep the returned QPolygonF const.
\see drawFill, getNonNanSegments
*/
const QPolygonF QCPGraph::getFillPolygon(const QVector<QPointF> *lineData, QCPDataRange segment) const
{
if (segment.size() < 2)
return QPolygonF();
QPolygonF result(segment.size()+2);
result[0] = getFillBasePoint(lineData->at(segment.begin()));
std::copy(lineData->constBegin()+segment.begin(), lineData->constBegin()+segment.end(), result.begin()+1);
result[result.size()-1] = getFillBasePoint(lineData->at(segment.end()-1));
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the polygon needed for drawing (partial) channel fills between this graph and the graph
specified by \ref setChannelFillGraph.
The data points of this graph are passed as pixel coordinates via \a thisData, the data of the
other graph as \a otherData. The returned polygon will be calculated for the specified data
segments \a thisSegment and \a otherSegment, pertaining to the respective \a thisData and \a
otherData, respectively.
The passed \a thisSegment and \a otherSegment should correspond to the segment pairs returned by
\ref getOverlappingSegments, to make sure only segments that actually have key coordinate overlap
need to be processed here.
For increased performance due to implicit sharing, keep the returned QPolygonF const.
\see drawFill, getOverlappingSegments, getNonNanSegments
*/
const QPolygonF QCPGraph::getChannelFillPolygon(const QVector<QPointF> *thisData, QCPDataRange thisSegment, const QVector<QPointF> *otherData, QCPDataRange otherSegment) const
{
if (!mChannelFillGraph)
return QPolygonF();
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return QPolygonF(); }
if (!mChannelFillGraph.data()->mKeyAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "channel fill target key axis invalid"; return QPolygonF(); }
if (mChannelFillGraph.data()->mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() != keyAxis->orientation())
return QPolygonF(); // don't have same axis orientation, can't fill that (Note: if keyAxis fits, valueAxis will fit too, because it's always orthogonal to keyAxis)
if (thisData->isEmpty()) return QPolygonF();
QVector<QPointF> thisSegmentData(thisSegment.size());
QVector<QPointF> otherSegmentData(otherSegment.size());
std::copy(thisData->constBegin()+thisSegment.begin(), thisData->constBegin()+thisSegment.end(), thisSegmentData.begin());
std::copy(otherData->constBegin()+otherSegment.begin(), otherData->constBegin()+otherSegment.end(), otherSegmentData.begin());
// pointers to be able to swap them, depending which data range needs cropping:
QVector<QPointF> *staticData = &thisSegmentData;
QVector<QPointF> *croppedData = &otherSegmentData;
// crop both vectors to ranges in which the keys overlap (which coord is key, depends on axisType):
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
// x is key
// crop lower bound:
if (staticData->first().x() < croppedData->first().x()) // other one must be cropped
qSwap(staticData, croppedData);
const int lowBound = findIndexBelowX(croppedData, staticData->first().x());
if (lowBound == -1) return QPolygonF(); // key ranges have no overlap
croppedData->remove(0, lowBound);
// set lowest point of cropped data to fit exactly key position of first static data point via linear interpolation:
if (croppedData->size() < 2) return QPolygonF(); // need at least two points for interpolation
double slope;
if (!qFuzzyCompare(croppedData->at(1).x(), croppedData->at(0).x()))
slope = (croppedData->at(1).y()-croppedData->at(0).y())/(croppedData->at(1).x()-croppedData->at(0).x());
else
slope = 0;
(*croppedData)[0].setY(croppedData->at(0).y()+slope*(staticData->first().x()-croppedData->at(0).x()));
(*croppedData)[0].setX(staticData->first().x());
// crop upper bound:
if (staticData->last().x() > croppedData->last().x()) // other one must be cropped
qSwap(staticData, croppedData);
int highBound = findIndexAboveX(croppedData, staticData->last().x());
if (highBound == -1) return QPolygonF(); // key ranges have no overlap
croppedData->remove(highBound+1, croppedData->size()-(highBound+1));
// set highest point of cropped data to fit exactly key position of last static data point via linear interpolation:
if (croppedData->size() < 2) return QPolygonF(); // need at least two points for interpolation
const int li = croppedData->size()-1; // last index
if (!qFuzzyCompare(croppedData->at(li).x(), croppedData->at(li-1).x()))
slope = (croppedData->at(li).y()-croppedData->at(li-1).y())/(croppedData->at(li).x()-croppedData->at(li-1).x());
else
slope = 0;
(*croppedData)[li].setY(croppedData->at(li-1).y()+slope*(staticData->last().x()-croppedData->at(li-1).x()));
(*croppedData)[li].setX(staticData->last().x());
} else // mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical
{
// y is key
// crop lower bound:
if (staticData->first().y() < croppedData->first().y()) // other one must be cropped
qSwap(staticData, croppedData);
int lowBound = findIndexBelowY(croppedData, staticData->first().y());
if (lowBound == -1) return QPolygonF(); // key ranges have no overlap
croppedData->remove(0, lowBound);
// set lowest point of cropped data to fit exactly key position of first static data point via linear interpolation:
if (croppedData->size() < 2) return QPolygonF(); // need at least two points for interpolation
double slope;
if (!qFuzzyCompare(croppedData->at(1).y(), croppedData->at(0).y())) // avoid division by zero in step plots
slope = (croppedData->at(1).x()-croppedData->at(0).x())/(croppedData->at(1).y()-croppedData->at(0).y());
else
slope = 0;
(*croppedData)[0].setX(croppedData->at(0).x()+slope*(staticData->first().y()-croppedData->at(0).y()));
(*croppedData)[0].setY(staticData->first().y());
// crop upper bound:
if (staticData->last().y() > croppedData->last().y()) // other one must be cropped
qSwap(staticData, croppedData);
int highBound = findIndexAboveY(croppedData, staticData->last().y());
if (highBound == -1) return QPolygonF(); // key ranges have no overlap
croppedData->remove(highBound+1, croppedData->size()-(highBound+1));
// set highest point of cropped data to fit exactly key position of last static data point via linear interpolation:
if (croppedData->size() < 2) return QPolygonF(); // need at least two points for interpolation
int li = croppedData->size()-1; // last index
if (!qFuzzyCompare(croppedData->at(li).y(), croppedData->at(li-1).y())) // avoid division by zero in step plots
slope = (croppedData->at(li).x()-croppedData->at(li-1).x())/(croppedData->at(li).y()-croppedData->at(li-1).y());
else
slope = 0;
(*croppedData)[li].setX(croppedData->at(li-1).x()+slope*(staticData->last().y()-croppedData->at(li-1).y()));
(*croppedData)[li].setY(staticData->last().y());
}
// return joined:
for (int i=otherSegmentData.size()-1; i>=0; --i) // insert reversed, otherwise the polygon will be twisted
thisSegmentData << otherSegmentData.at(i);
return QPolygonF(thisSegmentData);
}
/*! \internal
Finds the smallest index of \a data, whose points x value is just above \a x. Assumes x values in
\a data points are ordered ascending, as is ensured by \ref getLines/\ref getScatters if the key
axis is horizontal.
Used to calculate the channel fill polygon, see \ref getChannelFillPolygon.
*/
int QCPGraph::findIndexAboveX(const QVector<QPointF> *data, double x) const
{
for (int i=data->size()-1; i>=0; --i)
{
if (data->at(i).x() < x)
{
if (i<data->size()-1)
return i+1;
else
return data->size()-1;
}
}
return -1;
}
/*! \internal
Finds the highest index of \a data, whose points x value is just below \a x. Assumes x values in
\a data points are ordered ascending, as is ensured by \ref getLines/\ref getScatters if the key
axis is horizontal.
Used to calculate the channel fill polygon, see \ref getChannelFillPolygon.
*/
int QCPGraph::findIndexBelowX(const QVector<QPointF> *data, double x) const
{
for (int i=0; i<data->size(); ++i)
{
if (data->at(i).x() > x)
{
if (i>0)
return i-1;
else
return 0;
}
}
return -1;
}
/*! \internal
Finds the smallest index of \a data, whose points y value is just above \a y. Assumes y values in
\a data points are ordered ascending, as is ensured by \ref getLines/\ref getScatters if the key
axis is vertical.
Used to calculate the channel fill polygon, see \ref getChannelFillPolygon.
*/
int QCPGraph::findIndexAboveY(const QVector<QPointF> *data, double y) const
{
for (int i=data->size()-1; i>=0; --i)
{
if (data->at(i).y() < y)
{
if (i<data->size()-1)
return i+1;
else
return data->size()-1;
}
}
return -1;
}
/*! \internal
Calculates the minimum distance in pixels the graph's representation has from the given \a
pixelPoint. This is used to determine whether the graph was clicked or not, e.g. in \ref
selectTest. The closest data point to \a pixelPoint is returned in \a closestData. Note that if
the graph has a line representation, the returned distance may be smaller than the distance to
the \a closestData point, since the distance to the graph line is also taken into account.
If either the graph has no data or if the line style is \ref lsNone and the scatter style's shape
is \ref QCPScatterStyle::ssNone (i.e. there is no visual representation of the graph), returns -1.0.
*/
double QCPGraph::pointDistance(const QPointF &pixelPoint, QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &closestData) const
{
closestData = mDataContainer->constEnd();
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1.0;
if (mLineStyle == lsNone && mScatterStyle.isNone())
return -1.0;
// calculate minimum distances to graph data points and find closestData iterator:
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
// determine which key range comes into question, taking selection tolerance around pos into account:
double posKeyMin, posKeyMax, dummy;
pixelsToCoords(pixelPoint-QPointF(mParentPlot->selectionTolerance(), mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()), posKeyMin, dummy);
pixelsToCoords(pixelPoint+QPointF(mParentPlot->selectionTolerance(), mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()), posKeyMax, dummy);
if (posKeyMin > posKeyMax)
qSwap(posKeyMin, posKeyMax);
// iterate over found data points and then choose the one with the shortest distance to pos:
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator begin = mDataContainer->findBegin(posKeyMin, true);
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator end = mDataContainer->findEnd(posKeyMax, true);
for (QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
const double currentDistSqr = QCPVector2D(coordsToPixels(it->key, it->value)-pixelPoint).lengthSquared();
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestData = it;
}
}
// calculate distance to graph line if there is one (if so, will probably be smaller than distance to closest data point):
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
// line displayed, calculate distance to line segments:
QVector<QPointF> lineData;
getLines(&lineData, QCPDataRange(0, dataCount())); // don't limit data range further since with sharp data spikes, line segments may be closer to test point than segments with closer key coordinate
QCPVector2D p(pixelPoint);
const int step = mLineStyle==lsImpulse ? 2 : 1; // impulse plot differs from other line styles in that the lineData points are only pairwise connected
for (int i=0; i<lineData.size()-1; i+=step)
{
const double currentDistSqr = p.distanceSquaredToLine(lineData.at(i), lineData.at(i+1));
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
}
}
return qSqrt(minDistSqr);
}
/*! \internal
Finds the highest index of \a data, whose points y value is just below \a y. Assumes y values in
\a data points are ordered ascending, as is ensured by \ref getLines/\ref getScatters if the key
axis is vertical.
Used to calculate the channel fill polygon, see \ref getChannelFillPolygon.
*/
int QCPGraph::findIndexBelowY(const QVector<QPointF> *data, double y) const
{
for (int i=0; i<data->size(); ++i)
{
if (data->at(i).y() > y)
{
if (i>0)
return i-1;
else
return 0;
}
}
return -1;
}
/* end of 'src/plottables/plottable-graph.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/plottables/plottable-curve.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 63851 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPCurveData
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPCurveData
\brief Holds the data of one single data point for QCPCurve.
The stored data is:
\li \a t: the free ordering parameter of this curve point, like in the mathematical vector <em>(x(t), y(t))</em>. (This is the \a sortKey)
\li \a key: coordinate on the key axis of this curve point (this is the \a mainKey)
\li \a value: coordinate on the value axis of this curve point (this is the \a mainValue)
The container for storing multiple data points is \ref QCPCurveDataContainer. It is a typedef for
\ref QCPDataContainer with \ref QCPCurveData as the DataType template parameter. See the
documentation there for an explanation regarding the data type's generic methods.
\see QCPCurveDataContainer
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn double QCPCurveData::sortKey() const
Returns the \a t member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static QCPCurveData QCPCurveData::fromSortKey(double sortKey)
Returns a data point with the specified \a sortKey (assigned to the data point's \a t member).
All other members are set to zero.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static static bool QCPCurveData::sortKeyIsMainKey()
Since the member \a key is the data point key coordinate and the member \a t is the data ordering
parameter, this method returns false.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPCurveData::mainKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPCurveData::mainValue() const
Returns the \a value member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange QCPCurveData::valueRange() const
Returns a QCPRange with both lower and upper boundary set to \a value of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a curve data point with t, key and value set to zero.
*/
QCPCurveData::QCPCurveData() :
t(0),
key(0),
value(0)
{
}
/*!
Constructs a curve data point with the specified \a t, \a key and \a value.
*/
QCPCurveData::QCPCurveData(double t, double key, double value) :
t(t),
key(key),
value(value)
{
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPCurve
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPCurve
\brief A plottable representing a parametric curve in a plot.
\image html QCPCurve.png
Unlike QCPGraph, plottables of this type may have multiple points with the same key coordinate,
so their visual representation can have \a loops. This is realized by introducing a third
coordinate \a t, which defines the order of the points described by the other two coordinates \a
x and \a y.
To plot data, assign it with the \ref setData or \ref addData functions. Alternatively, you can
also access and modify the curve's data via the \ref data method, which returns a pointer to the
internal \ref QCPCurveDataContainer.
Gaps in the curve can be created by adding data points with NaN as key and value
(<tt>qQNaN()</tt> or <tt>std::numeric_limits<double>::quiet_NaN()</tt>) in between the two data points that shall be
separated.
\section qcpcurve-appearance Changing the appearance
The appearance of the curve is determined by the pen and the brush (\ref setPen, \ref setBrush).
\section qcpcurve-usage Usage
Like all data representing objects in QCustomPlot, the QCPCurve is a plottable
(QCPAbstractPlottable). So the plottable-interface of QCustomPlot applies
(QCustomPlot::plottable, QCustomPlot::removePlottable, etc.)
Usually, you first create an instance:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcurve-creation-1
which registers it with the QCustomPlot instance of the passed axes. Note that this QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the plottable, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
The newly created plottable can be modified, e.g.:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcurve-creation-2
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QSharedPointer<QCPCurveDataContainer> QCPCurve::data() const
Returns a shared pointer to the internal data storage of type \ref QCPCurveDataContainer. You may
use it to directly manipulate the data, which may be more convenient and faster than using the
regular \ref setData or \ref addData methods.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a curve which uses \a keyAxis as its key axis ("x") and \a valueAxis as its value
axis ("y"). \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in the same QCustomPlot instance and not have
the same orientation. If either of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding message is
printed to the debug output (qDebug), the construction is not aborted, though.
The created QCPCurve is automatically registered with the QCustomPlot instance inferred from \a
keyAxis. This QCustomPlot instance takes ownership of the QCPCurve, so do not delete it manually
but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
*/
QCPCurve::QCPCurve(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis) :
QCPAbstractPlottable1D<QCPCurveData>(keyAxis, valueAxis),
mScatterSkip{},
mLineStyle{}
{
// modify inherited properties from abstract plottable:
setPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 0));
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setScatterStyle(QCPScatterStyle());
setLineStyle(lsLine);
setScatterSkip(0);
}
QCPCurve::~QCPCurve()
{
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data container with the provided \a data container.
Since a QSharedPointer is used, multiple QCPCurves may share the same data container safely.
Modifying the data in the container will then affect all curves that share the container. Sharing
can be achieved by simply exchanging the data containers wrapped in shared pointers:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcurve-datasharing-1
If you do not wish to share containers, but create a copy from an existing container, rather use
the \ref QCPDataContainer<DataType>::set method on the curve's data container directly:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcurve-datasharing-2
\see addData
*/
void QCPCurve::setData(QSharedPointer<QCPCurveDataContainer> data)
{
mDataContainer = data;
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data with the provided points in \a t, \a keys and \a values. The provided
vectors should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the
smallest vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a t in ascending order, you can
set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
\see addData
*/
void QCPCurve::setData(const QVector<double> &t, const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values, bool alreadySorted)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(t, keys, values, alreadySorted);
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data with the provided points in \a keys and \a values. The provided vectors
should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the smallest
vector.
The t parameter of each data point will be set to the integer index of the respective key/value
pair.
\see addData
*/
void QCPCurve::setData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(keys, values);
}
/*!
Sets the visual appearance of single data points in the plot. If set to \ref
QCPScatterStyle::ssNone, no scatter points are drawn (e.g. for line-only plots with appropriate
line style).
\see QCPScatterStyle, setLineStyle
*/
void QCPCurve::setScatterStyle(const QCPScatterStyle &style)
{
mScatterStyle = style;
}
/*!
If scatters are displayed (scatter style not \ref QCPScatterStyle::ssNone), \a skip number of
scatter points are skipped/not drawn after every drawn scatter point.
This can be used to make the data appear sparser while for example still having a smooth line,
and to improve performance for very high density plots.
If \a skip is set to 0 (default), all scatter points are drawn.
\see setScatterStyle
*/
void QCPCurve::setScatterSkip(int skip)
{
mScatterSkip = qMax(0, skip);
}
/*!
Sets how the single data points are connected in the plot or how they are represented visually
apart from the scatter symbol. For scatter-only plots, set \a style to \ref lsNone and \ref
setScatterStyle to the desired scatter style.
\see setScatterStyle
*/
void QCPCurve::setLineStyle(QCPCurve::LineStyle style)
{
mLineStyle = style;
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided points in \a t, \a keys and \a values to the current data. The provided vectors
should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the smallest
vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPCurve::addData(const QVector<double> &t, const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values, bool alreadySorted)
{
if (t.size() != keys.size() || t.size() != values.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "ts, keys and values have different sizes:" << t.size() << keys.size() << values.size();
const int n = qMin(qMin(t.size(), keys.size()), values.size());
QVector<QCPCurveData> tempData(n);
QVector<QCPCurveData>::iterator it = tempData.begin();
const QVector<QCPCurveData>::iterator itEnd = tempData.end();
int i = 0;
while (it != itEnd)
{
it->t = t[i];
it->key = keys[i];
it->value = values[i];
++it;
++i;
}
mDataContainer->add(tempData, alreadySorted); // don't modify tempData beyond this to prevent copy on write
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided points in \a keys and \a values to the current data. The provided vectors
should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the smallest
vector.
The t parameter of each data point will be set to the integer index of the respective key/value
pair.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPCurve::addData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values)
{
if (keys.size() != values.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "keys and values have different sizes:" << keys.size() << values.size();
const int n = qMin(keys.size(), values.size());
double tStart;
if (!mDataContainer->isEmpty())
tStart = (mDataContainer->constEnd()-1)->t + 1.0;
else
tStart = 0;
QVector<QCPCurveData> tempData(n);
QVector<QCPCurveData>::iterator it = tempData.begin();
const QVector<QCPCurveData>::iterator itEnd = tempData.end();
int i = 0;
while (it != itEnd)
{
it->t = tStart + i;
it->key = keys[i];
it->value = values[i];
++it;
++i;
}
mDataContainer->add(tempData, true); // don't modify tempData beyond this to prevent copy on write
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided data point as \a t, \a key and \a value to the current data.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPCurve::addData(double t, double key, double value)
{
mDataContainer->add(QCPCurveData(t, key, value));
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided data point as \a key and \a value to the current data.
The t parameter is generated automatically by increments of 1 for each point, starting at the
highest t of previously existing data or 0, if the curve data is empty.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPCurve::addData(double key, double value)
{
if (!mDataContainer->isEmpty())
mDataContainer->add(QCPCurveData((mDataContainer->constEnd()-1)->t + 1.0, key, value));
else
mDataContainer->add(QCPCurveData(0.0, key, value));
}
/*!
Implements a selectTest specific to this plottable's point geometry.
If \a details is not 0, it will be set to a \ref QCPDataSelection, describing the closest data
point to \a pos.
\seebaseclassmethod \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::selectTest
*/
double QCPCurve::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return -1;
if (mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->rect().contains(pos.toPoint()) || mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iSelectPlottablesBeyondAxisRect))
{
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator closestDataPoint = mDataContainer->constEnd();
double result = pointDistance(pos, closestDataPoint);
if (details)
{
int pointIndex = int( closestDataPoint-mDataContainer->constBegin() );
details->setValue(QCPDataSelection(QCPDataRange(pointIndex, pointIndex+1)));
}
return result;
} else
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPCurve::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const
{
return mDataContainer->keyRange(foundRange, inSignDomain);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPCurve::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const
{
return mDataContainer->valueRange(foundRange, inSignDomain, inKeyRange);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPCurve::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty()) return;
// allocate line vector:
QVector<QPointF> lines, scatters;
// loop over and draw segments of unselected/selected data:
QList<QCPDataRange> selectedSegments, unselectedSegments, allSegments;
getDataSegments(selectedSegments, unselectedSegments);
allSegments << unselectedSegments << selectedSegments;
for (int i=0; i<allSegments.size(); ++i)
{
bool isSelectedSegment = i >= unselectedSegments.size();
// fill with curve data:
QPen finalCurvePen = mPen; // determine the final pen already here, because the line optimization depends on its stroke width
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
finalCurvePen = mSelectionDecorator->pen();
QCPDataRange lineDataRange = isSelectedSegment ? allSegments.at(i) : allSegments.at(i).adjusted(-1, 1); // unselected segments extend lines to bordering selected data point (safe to exceed total data bounds in first/last segment, getCurveLines takes care)
getCurveLines(&lines, lineDataRange, finalCurvePen.widthF());
// check data validity if flag set:
#ifdef QCUSTOMPLOT_CHECK_DATA
for (QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator it = mDataContainer->constBegin(); it != mDataContainer->constEnd(); ++it)
{
if (QCP::isInvalidData(it->t) ||
QCP::isInvalidData(it->key, it->value))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Data point at" << it->key << "invalid." << "Plottable name:" << name();
}
#endif
// draw curve fill:
applyFillAntialiasingHint(painter);
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->applyBrush(painter);
else
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
painter->setPen(Qt::NoPen);
if (painter->brush().style() != Qt::NoBrush && painter->brush().color().alpha() != 0)
painter->drawPolygon(QPolygonF(lines));
// draw curve line:
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
painter->setPen(finalCurvePen);
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
drawCurveLine(painter, lines);
}
// draw scatters:
QCPScatterStyle finalScatterStyle = mScatterStyle;
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
finalScatterStyle = mSelectionDecorator->getFinalScatterStyle(mScatterStyle);
if (!finalScatterStyle.isNone())
{
getScatters(&scatters, allSegments.at(i), finalScatterStyle.size());
drawScatterPlot(painter, scatters, finalScatterStyle);
}
}
// draw other selection decoration that isn't just line/scatter pens and brushes:
if (mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->drawDecoration(painter, selection());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPCurve::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRectF &rect) const
{
// draw fill:
if (mBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush)
{
applyFillAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->fillRect(QRectF(rect.left(), rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0, rect.width(), rect.height()/3.0), mBrush);
}
// draw line vertically centered:
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.left(), rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0, rect.right()+5, rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0)); // +5 on x2 else last segment is missing from dashed/dotted pens
}
// draw scatter symbol:
if (!mScatterStyle.isNone())
{
applyScattersAntialiasingHint(painter);
// scale scatter pixmap if it's too large to fit in legend icon rect:
if (mScatterStyle.shape() == QCPScatterStyle::ssPixmap && (mScatterStyle.pixmap().size().width() > rect.width() || mScatterStyle.pixmap().size().height() > rect.height()))
{
QCPScatterStyle scaledStyle(mScatterStyle);
scaledStyle.setPixmap(scaledStyle.pixmap().scaled(rect.size().toSize(), Qt::KeepAspectRatio, Qt::SmoothTransformation));
scaledStyle.applyTo(painter, mPen);
scaledStyle.drawShape(painter, QRectF(rect).center());
} else
{
mScatterStyle.applyTo(painter, mPen);
mScatterStyle.drawShape(painter, QRectF(rect).center());
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws lines between the points in \a lines, given in pixel coordinates.
\see drawScatterPlot, getCurveLines
*/
void QCPCurve::drawCurveLine(QCPPainter *painter, const QVector<QPointF> &lines) const
{
if (painter->pen().style() != Qt::NoPen && painter->pen().color().alpha() != 0)
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
drawPolyline(painter, lines);
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws scatter symbols at every point passed in \a points, given in pixel coordinates. The
scatters will be drawn with \a painter and have the appearance as specified in \a style.
\see drawCurveLine, getCurveLines
*/
void QCPCurve::drawScatterPlot(QCPPainter *painter, const QVector<QPointF> &points, const QCPScatterStyle &style) const
{
// draw scatter point symbols:
applyScattersAntialiasingHint(painter);
style.applyTo(painter, mPen);
foreach (const QPointF &point, points)
if (!qIsNaN(point.x()) && !qIsNaN(point.y()))
style.drawShape(painter, point);
}
/*! \internal
Called by \ref draw to generate points in pixel coordinates which represent the line of the
curve.
Line segments that aren't visible in the current axis rect are handled in an optimized way. They
are projected onto a rectangle slightly larger than the visible axis rect and simplified
regarding point count. The algorithm makes sure to preserve appearance of lines and fills inside
the visible axis rect by generating new temporary points on the outer rect if necessary.
\a lines will be filled with points in pixel coordinates, that can be drawn with \ref
drawCurveLine.
\a dataRange specifies the beginning and ending data indices that will be taken into account for
conversion. In this function, the specified range may exceed the total data bounds without harm:
a correspondingly trimmed data range will be used. This takes the burden off the user of this
function to check for valid indices in \a dataRange, e.g. when extending ranges coming from \ref
getDataSegments.
\a penWidth specifies the pen width that will be used to later draw the lines generated by this
function. This is needed here to calculate an accordingly wider margin around the axis rect when
performing the line optimization.
Methods that are also involved in the algorithm are: \ref getRegion, \ref getOptimizedPoint, \ref
getOptimizedCornerPoints \ref mayTraverse, \ref getTraverse, \ref getTraverseCornerPoints.
\see drawCurveLine, drawScatterPlot
*/
void QCPCurve::getCurveLines(QVector<QPointF> *lines, const QCPDataRange &dataRange, double penWidth) const
{
if (!lines) return;
lines->clear();
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
// add margins to rect to compensate for stroke width
const double strokeMargin = qMax(qreal(1.0), qreal(penWidth*0.75)); // stroke radius + 50% safety
const double keyMin = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(keyAxis->range().lower)-strokeMargin*keyAxis->pixelOrientation());
const double keyMax = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(keyAxis->range().upper)+strokeMargin*keyAxis->pixelOrientation());
const double valueMin = valueAxis->pixelToCoord(valueAxis->coordToPixel(valueAxis->range().lower)-strokeMargin*valueAxis->pixelOrientation());
const double valueMax = valueAxis->pixelToCoord(valueAxis->coordToPixel(valueAxis->range().upper)+strokeMargin*valueAxis->pixelOrientation());
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator itBegin = mDataContainer->constBegin();
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator itEnd = mDataContainer->constEnd();
mDataContainer->limitIteratorsToDataRange(itBegin, itEnd, dataRange);
if (itBegin == itEnd)
return;
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator it = itBegin;
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator prevIt = itEnd-1;
int prevRegion = getRegion(prevIt->key, prevIt->value, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin);
QVector<QPointF> trailingPoints; // points that must be applied after all other points (are generated only when handling first point to get virtual segment between last and first point right)
while (it != itEnd)
{
const int currentRegion = getRegion(it->key, it->value, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin);
if (currentRegion != prevRegion) // changed region, possibly need to add some optimized edge points or original points if entering R
{
if (currentRegion != 5) // segment doesn't end in R, so it's a candidate for removal
{
QPointF crossA, crossB;
if (prevRegion == 5) // we're coming from R, so add this point optimized
{
lines->append(getOptimizedPoint(currentRegion, it->key, it->value, prevIt->key, prevIt->value, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin));
// in the situations 5->1/7/9/3 the segment may leave R and directly cross through two outer regions. In these cases we need to add an additional corner point
*lines << getOptimizedCornerPoints(prevRegion, currentRegion, prevIt->key, prevIt->value, it->key, it->value, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin);
} else if (mayTraverse(prevRegion, currentRegion) &&
getTraverse(prevIt->key, prevIt->value, it->key, it->value, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin, crossA, crossB))
{
// add the two cross points optimized if segment crosses R and if segment isn't virtual zeroth segment between last and first curve point:
QVector<QPointF> beforeTraverseCornerPoints, afterTraverseCornerPoints;
getTraverseCornerPoints(prevRegion, currentRegion, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin, beforeTraverseCornerPoints, afterTraverseCornerPoints);
if (it != itBegin)
{
*lines << beforeTraverseCornerPoints;
lines->append(crossA);
lines->append(crossB);
*lines << afterTraverseCornerPoints;
} else
{
lines->append(crossB);
*lines << afterTraverseCornerPoints;
trailingPoints << beforeTraverseCornerPoints << crossA ;
}
} else // doesn't cross R, line is just moving around in outside regions, so only need to add optimized point(s) at the boundary corner(s)
{
*lines << getOptimizedCornerPoints(prevRegion, currentRegion, prevIt->key, prevIt->value, it->key, it->value, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin);
}
} else // segment does end in R, so we add previous point optimized and this point at original position
{
if (it == itBegin) // it is first point in curve and prevIt is last one. So save optimized point for adding it to the lineData in the end
trailingPoints << getOptimizedPoint(prevRegion, prevIt->key, prevIt->value, it->key, it->value, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin);
else
lines->append(getOptimizedPoint(prevRegion, prevIt->key, prevIt->value, it->key, it->value, keyMin, valueMax, keyMax, valueMin));
lines->append(coordsToPixels(it->key, it->value));
}
} else // region didn't change
{
if (currentRegion == 5) // still in R, keep adding original points
{
lines->append(coordsToPixels(it->key, it->value));
} else // still outside R, no need to add anything
{
// see how this is not doing anything? That's the main optimization...
}
}
prevIt = it;
prevRegion = currentRegion;
++it;
}
*lines << trailingPoints;
}
/*! \internal
Called by \ref draw to generate points in pixel coordinates which represent the scatters of the
curve. If a scatter skip is configured (\ref setScatterSkip), the returned points are accordingly
sparser.
Scatters that aren't visible in the current axis rect are optimized away.
\a scatters will be filled with points in pixel coordinates, that can be drawn with \ref
drawScatterPlot.
\a dataRange specifies the beginning and ending data indices that will be taken into account for
conversion.
\a scatterWidth specifies the scatter width that will be used to later draw the scatters at pixel
coordinates generated by this function. This is needed here to calculate an accordingly wider
margin around the axis rect when performing the data point reduction.
\see draw, drawScatterPlot
*/
void QCPCurve::getScatters(QVector<QPointF> *scatters, const QCPDataRange &dataRange, double scatterWidth) const
{
if (!scatters) return;
scatters->clear();
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator begin = mDataContainer->constBegin();
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
mDataContainer->limitIteratorsToDataRange(begin, end, dataRange);
if (begin == end)
return;
const int scatterModulo = mScatterSkip+1;
const bool doScatterSkip = mScatterSkip > 0;
int endIndex = int( end-mDataContainer->constBegin() );
QCPRange keyRange = keyAxis->range();
QCPRange valueRange = valueAxis->range();
// extend range to include width of scatter symbols:
keyRange.lower = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(keyRange.lower)-scatterWidth*keyAxis->pixelOrientation());
keyRange.upper = keyAxis->pixelToCoord(keyAxis->coordToPixel(keyRange.upper)+scatterWidth*keyAxis->pixelOrientation());
valueRange.lower = valueAxis->pixelToCoord(valueAxis->coordToPixel(valueRange.lower)-scatterWidth*valueAxis->pixelOrientation());
valueRange.upper = valueAxis->pixelToCoord(valueAxis->coordToPixel(valueRange.upper)+scatterWidth*valueAxis->pixelOrientation());
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin;
int itIndex = int( begin-mDataContainer->constBegin() );
while (doScatterSkip && it != end && itIndex % scatterModulo != 0) // advance begin iterator to first non-skipped scatter
{
++itIndex;
++it;
}
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
while (it != end)
{
if (!qIsNaN(it->value) && keyRange.contains(it->key) && valueRange.contains(it->value))
scatters->append(QPointF(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->value), keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key)));
// advance iterator to next (non-skipped) data point:
if (!doScatterSkip)
++it;
else
{
itIndex += scatterModulo;
if (itIndex < endIndex) // make sure we didn't jump over end
it += scatterModulo;
else
{
it = end;
itIndex = endIndex;
}
}
}
} else
{
while (it != end)
{
if (!qIsNaN(it->value) && keyRange.contains(it->key) && valueRange.contains(it->value))
scatters->append(QPointF(keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key), valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->value)));
// advance iterator to next (non-skipped) data point:
if (!doScatterSkip)
++it;
else
{
itIndex += scatterModulo;
if (itIndex < endIndex) // make sure we didn't jump over end
it += scatterModulo;
else
{
it = end;
itIndex = endIndex;
}
}
}
}
}
/*! \internal
This function is part of the curve optimization algorithm of \ref getCurveLines.
It returns the region of the given point (\a key, \a value) with respect to a rectangle defined
by \a keyMin, \a keyMax, \a valueMin, and \a valueMax.
The regions are enumerated from top to bottom (\a valueMin to \a valueMax) and left to right (\a
keyMin to \a keyMax):
<table style="width:10em; text-align:center">
<tr><td>1</td><td>4</td><td>7</td></tr>
<tr><td>2</td><td style="border:1px solid black">5</td><td>8</td></tr>
<tr><td>3</td><td>6</td><td>9</td></tr>
</table>
With the rectangle being region 5, and the outer regions extending infinitely outwards. In the
curve optimization algorithm, region 5 is considered to be the visible portion of the plot.
*/
int QCPCurve::getRegion(double key, double value, double keyMin, double valueMax, double keyMax, double valueMin) const
{
if (key < keyMin) // region 123
{
if (value > valueMax)
return 1;
else if (value < valueMin)
return 3;
else
return 2;
} else if (key > keyMax) // region 789
{
if (value > valueMax)
return 7;
else if (value < valueMin)
return 9;
else
return 8;
} else // region 456
{
if (value > valueMax)
return 4;
else if (value < valueMin)
return 6;
else
return 5;
}
}
/*! \internal
This function is part of the curve optimization algorithm of \ref getCurveLines.
This method is used in case the current segment passes from inside the visible rect (region 5,
see \ref getRegion) to any of the outer regions (\a otherRegion). The current segment is given by
the line connecting (\a key, \a value) with (\a otherKey, \a otherValue).
It returns the intersection point of the segment with the border of region 5.
For this function it doesn't matter whether (\a key, \a value) is the point inside region 5 or
whether it's (\a otherKey, \a otherValue), i.e. whether the segment is coming from region 5 or
leaving it. It is important though that \a otherRegion correctly identifies the other region not
equal to 5.
*/
QPointF QCPCurve::getOptimizedPoint(int otherRegion, double otherKey, double otherValue, double key, double value, double keyMin, double valueMax, double keyMax, double valueMin) const
{
// The intersection point interpolation here is done in pixel coordinates, so we don't need to
// differentiate between different axis scale types. Note that the nomenclature
// top/left/bottom/right/min/max is with respect to the rect in plot coordinates, wich may be
// different in pixel coordinates (horz/vert key axes, reversed ranges)
const double keyMinPx = mKeyAxis->coordToPixel(keyMin);
const double keyMaxPx = mKeyAxis->coordToPixel(keyMax);
const double valueMinPx = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(valueMin);
const double valueMaxPx = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(valueMax);
const double otherValuePx = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(otherValue);
const double valuePx = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(value);
const double otherKeyPx = mKeyAxis->coordToPixel(otherKey);
const double keyPx = mKeyAxis->coordToPixel(key);
double intersectKeyPx = keyMinPx; // initial key just a fail-safe
double intersectValuePx = valueMinPx; // initial value just a fail-safe
switch (otherRegion)
{
case 1: // top and left edge
{
intersectValuePx = valueMaxPx;
intersectKeyPx = otherKeyPx + (keyPx-otherKeyPx)/(valuePx-otherValuePx)*(intersectValuePx-otherValuePx);
if (intersectKeyPx < qMin(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx) || intersectKeyPx > qMax(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx)) // check whether top edge is not intersected, then it must be left edge (qMin/qMax necessary since axes may be reversed)
{
intersectKeyPx = keyMinPx;
intersectValuePx = otherValuePx + (valuePx-otherValuePx)/(keyPx-otherKeyPx)*(intersectKeyPx-otherKeyPx);
}
break;
}
case 2: // left edge
{
intersectKeyPx = keyMinPx;
intersectValuePx = otherValuePx + (valuePx-otherValuePx)/(keyPx-otherKeyPx)*(intersectKeyPx-otherKeyPx);
break;
}
case 3: // bottom and left edge
{
intersectValuePx = valueMinPx;
intersectKeyPx = otherKeyPx + (keyPx-otherKeyPx)/(valuePx-otherValuePx)*(intersectValuePx-otherValuePx);
if (intersectKeyPx < qMin(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx) || intersectKeyPx > qMax(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx)) // check whether bottom edge is not intersected, then it must be left edge (qMin/qMax necessary since axes may be reversed)
{
intersectKeyPx = keyMinPx;
intersectValuePx = otherValuePx + (valuePx-otherValuePx)/(keyPx-otherKeyPx)*(intersectKeyPx-otherKeyPx);
}
break;
}
case 4: // top edge
{
intersectValuePx = valueMaxPx;
intersectKeyPx = otherKeyPx + (keyPx-otherKeyPx)/(valuePx-otherValuePx)*(intersectValuePx-otherValuePx);
break;
}
case 5:
{
break; // case 5 shouldn't happen for this function but we add it anyway to prevent potential discontinuity in branch table
}
case 6: // bottom edge
{
intersectValuePx = valueMinPx;
intersectKeyPx = otherKeyPx + (keyPx-otherKeyPx)/(valuePx-otherValuePx)*(intersectValuePx-otherValuePx);
break;
}
case 7: // top and right edge
{
intersectValuePx = valueMaxPx;
intersectKeyPx = otherKeyPx + (keyPx-otherKeyPx)/(valuePx-otherValuePx)*(intersectValuePx-otherValuePx);
if (intersectKeyPx < qMin(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx) || intersectKeyPx > qMax(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx)) // check whether top edge is not intersected, then it must be right edge (qMin/qMax necessary since axes may be reversed)
{
intersectKeyPx = keyMaxPx;
intersectValuePx = otherValuePx + (valuePx-otherValuePx)/(keyPx-otherKeyPx)*(intersectKeyPx-otherKeyPx);
}
break;
}
case 8: // right edge
{
intersectKeyPx = keyMaxPx;
intersectValuePx = otherValuePx + (valuePx-otherValuePx)/(keyPx-otherKeyPx)*(intersectKeyPx-otherKeyPx);
break;
}
case 9: // bottom and right edge
{
intersectValuePx = valueMinPx;
intersectKeyPx = otherKeyPx + (keyPx-otherKeyPx)/(valuePx-otherValuePx)*(intersectValuePx-otherValuePx);
if (intersectKeyPx < qMin(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx) || intersectKeyPx > qMax(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx)) // check whether bottom edge is not intersected, then it must be right edge (qMin/qMax necessary since axes may be reversed)
{
intersectKeyPx = keyMaxPx;
intersectValuePx = otherValuePx + (valuePx-otherValuePx)/(keyPx-otherKeyPx)*(intersectKeyPx-otherKeyPx);
}
break;
}
}
if (mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
return {intersectKeyPx, intersectValuePx};
else
return {intersectValuePx, intersectKeyPx};
}
/*! \internal
This function is part of the curve optimization algorithm of \ref getCurveLines.
In situations where a single segment skips over multiple regions it might become necessary to add
extra points at the corners of region 5 (see \ref getRegion) such that the optimized segment
doesn't unintentionally cut through the visible area of the axis rect and create plot artifacts.
This method provides these points that must be added, assuming the original segment doesn't
start, end, or traverse region 5. (Corner points where region 5 is traversed are calculated by
\ref getTraverseCornerPoints.)
For example, consider a segment which directly goes from region 4 to 2 but originally is far out
to the top left such that it doesn't cross region 5. Naively optimizing these points by
projecting them on the top and left borders of region 5 will create a segment that surely crosses
5, creating a visual artifact in the plot. This method prevents this by providing extra points at
the top left corner, making the optimized curve correctly pass from region 4 to 1 to 2 without
traversing 5.
*/
QVector<QPointF> QCPCurve::getOptimizedCornerPoints(int prevRegion, int currentRegion, double prevKey, double prevValue, double key, double value, double keyMin, double valueMax, double keyMax, double valueMin) const
{
QVector<QPointF> result;
switch (prevRegion)
{
case 1:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 2: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 4: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 3: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 7: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 6: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 8: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 9: { // in this case we need another distinction of cases: segment may pass below or above rect, requiring either bottom right or top left corner points
if ((value-prevValue)/(key-prevKey)*(keyMin-key)+value < valueMin) // segment passes below R
{ result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); }
else
{ result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); }
break;
}
}
break;
}
case 2:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 3: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 4: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 6: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 7: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 9: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
case 3:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 2: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 6: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 1: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 9: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 4: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 8: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 7: { // in this case we need another distinction of cases: segment may pass below or above rect, requiring either bottom right or top left corner points
if ((value-prevValue)/(key-prevKey)*(keyMax-key)+value < valueMin) // segment passes below R
{ result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); }
else
{ result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); }
break;
}
}
break;
}
case 4:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 7: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 2: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 8: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 3: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 9: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
case 5:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 7: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 9: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 3: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
case 6:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 3: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 9: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 2: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 8: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 1: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 7: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
}
break;
}
case 7:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 4: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 8: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 1: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 9: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 2: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 6: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 3: { // in this case we need another distinction of cases: segment may pass below or above rect, requiring either bottom right or top left corner points
if ((value-prevValue)/(key-prevKey)*(keyMax-key)+value < valueMin) // segment passes below R
{ result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); }
else
{ result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); }
break;
}
}
break;
}
case 8:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 7: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 9: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 4: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 6: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 1: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 3: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
case 9:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 6: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 8: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 3: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 7: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 2: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 4: { result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); break; }
case 1: { // in this case we need another distinction of cases: segment may pass below or above rect, requiring either bottom right or top left corner points
if ((value-prevValue)/(key-prevKey)*(keyMin-key)+value < valueMin) // segment passes below R
{ result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); }
else
{ result << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin) << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); result.append(result.last()); result << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); }
break;
}
}
break;
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
This function is part of the curve optimization algorithm of \ref getCurveLines.
This method returns whether a segment going from \a prevRegion to \a currentRegion (see \ref
getRegion) may traverse the visible region 5. This function assumes that neither \a prevRegion
nor \a currentRegion is 5 itself.
If this method returns false, the segment for sure doesn't pass region 5. If it returns true, the
segment may or may not pass region 5 and a more fine-grained calculation must be used (\ref
getTraverse).
*/
bool QCPCurve::mayTraverse(int prevRegion, int currentRegion) const
{
switch (prevRegion)
{
case 1:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 4:
case 7:
case 2:
case 3: return false;
default: return true;
}
}
case 2:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1:
case 3: return false;
default: return true;
}
}
case 3:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1:
case 2:
case 6:
case 9: return false;
default: return true;
}
}
case 4:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1:
case 7: return false;
default: return true;
}
}
case 5: return false; // should never occur
case 6:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 3:
case 9: return false;
default: return true;
}
}
case 7:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1:
case 4:
case 8:
case 9: return false;
default: return true;
}
}
case 8:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 7:
case 9: return false;
default: return true;
}
}
case 9:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 3:
case 6:
case 8:
case 7: return false;
default: return true;
}
}
default: return true;
}
}
/*! \internal
This function is part of the curve optimization algorithm of \ref getCurveLines.
This method assumes that the \ref mayTraverse test has returned true, so there is a chance the
segment defined by (\a prevKey, \a prevValue) and (\a key, \a value) goes through the visible
region 5.
The return value of this method indicates whether the segment actually traverses region 5 or not.
If the segment traverses 5, the output parameters \a crossA and \a crossB indicate the entry and
exit points of region 5. They will become the optimized points for that segment.
*/
bool QCPCurve::getTraverse(double prevKey, double prevValue, double key, double value, double keyMin, double valueMax, double keyMax, double valueMin, QPointF &crossA, QPointF &crossB) const
{
// The intersection point interpolation here is done in pixel coordinates, so we don't need to
// differentiate between different axis scale types. Note that the nomenclature
// top/left/bottom/right/min/max is with respect to the rect in plot coordinates, wich may be
// different in pixel coordinates (horz/vert key axes, reversed ranges)
QList<QPointF> intersections;
const double valueMinPx = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(valueMin);
const double valueMaxPx = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(valueMax);
const double keyMinPx = mKeyAxis->coordToPixel(keyMin);
const double keyMaxPx = mKeyAxis->coordToPixel(keyMax);
const double keyPx = mKeyAxis->coordToPixel(key);
const double valuePx = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(value);
const double prevKeyPx = mKeyAxis->coordToPixel(prevKey);
const double prevValuePx = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(prevValue);
if (qFuzzyIsNull(keyPx-prevKeyPx)) // line is parallel to value axis
{
// due to region filter in mayTraverse(), if line is parallel to value or key axis, region 5 is traversed here
intersections.append(mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? QPointF(keyPx, valueMinPx) : QPointF(valueMinPx, keyPx)); // direction will be taken care of at end of method
intersections.append(mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? QPointF(keyPx, valueMaxPx) : QPointF(valueMaxPx, keyPx));
} else if (qFuzzyIsNull(valuePx-prevValuePx)) // line is parallel to key axis
{
// due to region filter in mayTraverse(), if line is parallel to value or key axis, region 5 is traversed here
intersections.append(mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? QPointF(keyMinPx, valuePx) : QPointF(valuePx, keyMinPx)); // direction will be taken care of at end of method
intersections.append(mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? QPointF(keyMaxPx, valuePx) : QPointF(valuePx, keyMaxPx));
} else // line is skewed
{
double gamma;
double keyPerValuePx = (keyPx-prevKeyPx)/(valuePx-prevValuePx);
// check top of rect:
gamma = prevKeyPx + (valueMaxPx-prevValuePx)*keyPerValuePx;
if (gamma >= qMin(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx) && gamma <= qMax(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx)) // qMin/qMax necessary since axes may be reversed
intersections.append(mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? QPointF(gamma, valueMaxPx) : QPointF(valueMaxPx, gamma));
// check bottom of rect:
gamma = prevKeyPx + (valueMinPx-prevValuePx)*keyPerValuePx;
if (gamma >= qMin(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx) && gamma <= qMax(keyMinPx, keyMaxPx)) // qMin/qMax necessary since axes may be reversed
intersections.append(mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? QPointF(gamma, valueMinPx) : QPointF(valueMinPx, gamma));
const double valuePerKeyPx = 1.0/keyPerValuePx;
// check left of rect:
gamma = prevValuePx + (keyMinPx-prevKeyPx)*valuePerKeyPx;
if (gamma >= qMin(valueMinPx, valueMaxPx) && gamma <= qMax(valueMinPx, valueMaxPx)) // qMin/qMax necessary since axes may be reversed
intersections.append(mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? QPointF(keyMinPx, gamma) : QPointF(gamma, keyMinPx));
// check right of rect:
gamma = prevValuePx + (keyMaxPx-prevKeyPx)*valuePerKeyPx;
if (gamma >= qMin(valueMinPx, valueMaxPx) && gamma <= qMax(valueMinPx, valueMaxPx)) // qMin/qMax necessary since axes may be reversed
intersections.append(mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? QPointF(keyMaxPx, gamma) : QPointF(gamma, keyMaxPx));
}
// handle cases where found points isn't exactly 2:
if (intersections.size() > 2)
{
// line probably goes through corner of rect, and we got duplicate points there. single out the point pair with greatest distance in between:
double distSqrMax = 0;
QPointF pv1, pv2;
for (int i=0; i<intersections.size()-1; ++i)
{
for (int k=i+1; k<intersections.size(); ++k)
{
QPointF distPoint = intersections.at(i)-intersections.at(k);
double distSqr = distPoint.x()*distPoint.x()+distPoint.y()+distPoint.y();
if (distSqr > distSqrMax)
{
pv1 = intersections.at(i);
pv2 = intersections.at(k);
distSqrMax = distSqr;
}
}
}
intersections = QList<QPointF>() << pv1 << pv2;
} else if (intersections.size() != 2)
{
// one or even zero points found (shouldn't happen unless line perfectly tangent to corner), no need to draw segment
return false;
}
// possibly re-sort points so optimized point segment has same direction as original segment:
double xDelta = keyPx-prevKeyPx;
double yDelta = valuePx-prevValuePx;
if (mKeyAxis->orientation() != Qt::Horizontal)
qSwap(xDelta, yDelta);
if (xDelta*(intersections.at(1).x()-intersections.at(0).x()) + yDelta*(intersections.at(1).y()-intersections.at(0).y()) < 0) // scalar product of both segments < 0 -> opposite direction
intersections.move(0, 1);
crossA = intersections.at(0);
crossB = intersections.at(1);
return true;
}
/*! \internal
This function is part of the curve optimization algorithm of \ref getCurveLines.
This method assumes that the \ref getTraverse test has returned true, so the segment definitely
traverses the visible region 5 when going from \a prevRegion to \a currentRegion.
In certain situations it is not sufficient to merely generate the entry and exit points of the
segment into/out of region 5, as \ref getTraverse provides. It may happen that a single segment, in
addition to traversing region 5, skips another region outside of region 5, which makes it
necessary to add an optimized corner point there (very similar to the job \ref
getOptimizedCornerPoints does for segments that are completely in outside regions and don't
traverse 5).
As an example, consider a segment going from region 1 to region 6, traversing the lower left
corner of region 5. In this configuration, the segment additionally crosses the border between
region 1 and 2 before entering region 5. This makes it necessary to add an additional point in
the top left corner, before adding the optimized traverse points. So in this case, the output
parameter \a beforeTraverse will contain the top left corner point, and \a afterTraverse will be
empty.
In some cases, such as when going from region 1 to 9, it may even be necessary to add additional
corner points before and after the traverse. Then both \a beforeTraverse and \a afterTraverse
return the respective corner points.
*/
void QCPCurve::getTraverseCornerPoints(int prevRegion, int currentRegion, double keyMin, double valueMax, double keyMax, double valueMin, QVector<QPointF> &beforeTraverse, QVector<QPointF> &afterTraverse) const
{
switch (prevRegion)
{
case 1:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 6: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 9: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 8: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
}
break;
}
case 2:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 7: { afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 9: { afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
case 3:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 4: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 7: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 8: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
case 4:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 3: { afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 9: { afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
case 5: { break; } // shouldn't happen because this method only handles full traverses
case 6:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1: { afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 7: { afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
}
break;
}
case 7:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 2: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
case 3: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
case 6: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMax); break; }
}
break;
}
case 8:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 1: { afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 3: { afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
case 9:
{
switch (currentRegion)
{
case 2: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
case 1: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); afterTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMin, valueMax); break; }
case 4: { beforeTraverse << coordsToPixels(keyMax, valueMin); break; }
}
break;
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Calculates the (minimum) distance (in pixels) the curve's representation has from the given \a
pixelPoint in pixels. This is used to determine whether the curve was clicked or not, e.g. in
\ref selectTest. The closest data point to \a pixelPoint is returned in \a closestData. Note that
if the curve has a line representation, the returned distance may be smaller than the distance to
the \a closestData point, since the distance to the curve line is also taken into account.
If either the curve has no data or if the line style is \ref lsNone and the scatter style's shape
is \ref QCPScatterStyle::ssNone (i.e. there is no visual representation of the curve), returns
-1.0.
*/
double QCPCurve::pointDistance(const QPointF &pixelPoint, QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator &closestData) const
{
closestData = mDataContainer->constEnd();
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1.0;
if (mLineStyle == lsNone && mScatterStyle.isNone())
return -1.0;
if (mDataContainer->size() == 1)
{
QPointF dataPoint = coordsToPixels(mDataContainer->constBegin()->key, mDataContainer->constBegin()->value);
closestData = mDataContainer->constBegin();
return QCPVector2D(dataPoint-pixelPoint).length();
}
// calculate minimum distances to curve data points and find closestData iterator:
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
// iterate over found data points and then choose the one with the shortest distance to pos:
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator begin = mDataContainer->constBegin();
QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
for (QCPCurveDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
const double currentDistSqr = QCPVector2D(coordsToPixels(it->key, it->value)-pixelPoint).lengthSquared();
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestData = it;
}
}
// calculate distance to line if there is one (if so, will probably be smaller than distance to closest data point):
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
QVector<QPointF> lines;
getCurveLines(&lines, QCPDataRange(0, dataCount()), mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*1.2); // optimized lines outside axis rect shouldn't respond to clicks at the edge, so use 1.2*tolerance as pen width
for (int i=0; i<lines.size()-1; ++i)
{
double currentDistSqr = QCPVector2D(pixelPoint).distanceSquaredToLine(lines.at(i), lines.at(i+1));
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
}
}
return qSqrt(minDistSqr);
}
/* end of 'src/plottables/plottable-curve.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/plottables/plottable-bars.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 43907 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPBarsGroup
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPBarsGroup
\brief Groups multiple QCPBars together so they appear side by side
\image html QCPBarsGroup.png
When showing multiple QCPBars in one plot which have bars at identical keys, it may be desirable
to have them appearing next to each other at each key. This is what adding the respective QCPBars
plottables to a QCPBarsGroup achieves. (An alternative approach is to stack them on top of each
other, see \ref QCPBars::moveAbove.)
\section qcpbarsgroup-usage Usage
To add a QCPBars plottable to the group, create a new group and then add the respective bars
intances:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpbarsgroup-creation
Alternatively to appending to the group like shown above, you can also set the group on the
QCPBars plottable via \ref QCPBars::setBarsGroup.
The spacing between the bars can be configured via \ref setSpacingType and \ref setSpacing. The
bars in this group appear in the plot in the order they were appended. To insert a bars plottable
at a certain index position, or to reposition a bars plottable which is already in the group, use
\ref insert.
To remove specific bars from the group, use either \ref remove or call \ref
QCPBars::setBarsGroup "QCPBars::setBarsGroup(0)" on the respective bars plottable.
To clear the entire group, call \ref clear, or simply delete the group.
\section qcpbarsgroup-example Example
The image above is generated with the following code:
\snippet documentation/doc-image-generator/mainwindow.cpp qcpbarsgroup-example
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QList<QCPBars*> QCPBarsGroup::bars() const
Returns all bars currently in this group.
\see bars(int index)
*/
/*! \fn int QCPBarsGroup::size() const
Returns the number of QCPBars plottables that are part of this group.
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPBarsGroup::isEmpty() const
Returns whether this bars group is empty.
\see size
*/
/*! \fn bool QCPBarsGroup::contains(QCPBars *bars)
Returns whether the specified \a bars plottable is part of this group.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a new bars group for the specified QCustomPlot instance.
*/
QCPBarsGroup::QCPBarsGroup(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QObject(parentPlot),
mParentPlot(parentPlot),
mSpacingType(stAbsolute),
mSpacing(4)
{
}
QCPBarsGroup::~QCPBarsGroup()
{
clear();
}
/*!
Sets how the spacing between adjacent bars is interpreted. See \ref SpacingType.
The actual spacing can then be specified with \ref setSpacing.
\see setSpacing
*/
void QCPBarsGroup::setSpacingType(SpacingType spacingType)
{
mSpacingType = spacingType;
}
/*!
Sets the spacing between adjacent bars. What the number passed as \a spacing actually means, is
defined by the current \ref SpacingType, which can be set with \ref setSpacingType.
\see setSpacingType
*/
void QCPBarsGroup::setSpacing(double spacing)
{
mSpacing = spacing;
}
/*!
Returns the QCPBars instance with the specified \a index in this group. If no such QCPBars
exists, returns \c nullptr.
\see bars(), size
*/
QCPBars *QCPBarsGroup::bars(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mBars.size())
{
return mBars.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << index;
return nullptr;
}
}
/*!
Removes all QCPBars plottables from this group.
\see isEmpty
*/
void QCPBarsGroup::clear()
{
const QList<QCPBars*> oldBars = mBars;
foreach (QCPBars *bars, oldBars)
bars->setBarsGroup(nullptr); // removes itself from mBars via removeBars
}
/*!
Adds the specified \a bars plottable to this group. Alternatively, you can also use \ref
QCPBars::setBarsGroup on the \a bars instance.
\see insert, remove
*/
void QCPBarsGroup::append(QCPBars *bars)
{
if (!bars)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "bars is 0";
return;
}
if (!mBars.contains(bars))
bars->setBarsGroup(this);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "bars plottable is already in this bars group:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(bars);
}
/*!
Inserts the specified \a bars plottable into this group at the specified index position \a i.
This gives you full control over the ordering of the bars.
\a bars may already be part of this group. In that case, \a bars is just moved to the new index
position.
\see append, remove
*/
void QCPBarsGroup::insert(int i, QCPBars *bars)
{
if (!bars)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "bars is 0";
return;
}
// first append to bars list normally:
if (!mBars.contains(bars))
bars->setBarsGroup(this);
// then move to according position:
mBars.move(mBars.indexOf(bars), qBound(0, i, mBars.size()-1));
}
/*!
Removes the specified \a bars plottable from this group.
\see contains, clear
*/
void QCPBarsGroup::remove(QCPBars *bars)
{
if (!bars)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "bars is 0";
return;
}
if (mBars.contains(bars))
bars->setBarsGroup(nullptr);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "bars plottable is not in this bars group:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(bars);
}
/*! \internal
Adds the specified \a bars to the internal mBars list of bars. This method does not change the
barsGroup property on \a bars.
\see unregisterBars
*/
void QCPBarsGroup::registerBars(QCPBars *bars)
{
if (!mBars.contains(bars))
mBars.append(bars);
}
/*! \internal
Removes the specified \a bars from the internal mBars list of bars. This method does not change
the barsGroup property on \a bars.
\see registerBars
*/
void QCPBarsGroup::unregisterBars(QCPBars *bars)
{
mBars.removeOne(bars);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pixel offset in the key dimension the specified \a bars plottable should have at the
given key coordinate \a keyCoord. The offset is relative to the pixel position of the key
coordinate \a keyCoord.
*/
double QCPBarsGroup::keyPixelOffset(const QCPBars *bars, double keyCoord)
{
// find list of all base bars in case some mBars are stacked:
QList<const QCPBars*> baseBars;
foreach (const QCPBars *b, mBars)
{
while (b->barBelow())
b = b->barBelow();
if (!baseBars.contains(b))
baseBars.append(b);
}
// find base bar this "bars" is stacked on:
const QCPBars *thisBase = bars;
while (thisBase->barBelow())
thisBase = thisBase->barBelow();
// determine key pixel offset of this base bars considering all other base bars in this barsgroup:
double result = 0;
int index = baseBars.indexOf(thisBase);
if (index >= 0)
{
if (baseBars.size() % 2 == 1 && index == (baseBars.size()-1)/2) // is center bar (int division on purpose)
{
return result;
} else
{
double lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth;
int startIndex;
int dir = (index <= (baseBars.size()-1)/2) ? -1 : 1; // if bar is to lower keys of center, dir is negative
if (baseBars.size() % 2 == 0) // even number of bars
{
startIndex = baseBars.size()/2 + (dir < 0 ? -1 : 0);
result += getPixelSpacing(baseBars.at(startIndex), keyCoord)*0.5; // half of middle spacing
} else // uneven number of bars
{
startIndex = (baseBars.size()-1)/2+dir;
baseBars.at((baseBars.size()-1)/2)->getPixelWidth(keyCoord, lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth);
result += qAbs(upperPixelWidth-lowerPixelWidth)*0.5; // half of center bar
result += getPixelSpacing(baseBars.at((baseBars.size()-1)/2), keyCoord); // center bar spacing
}
for (int i = startIndex; i != index; i += dir) // add widths and spacings of bars in between center and our bars
{
baseBars.at(i)->getPixelWidth(keyCoord, lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth);
result += qAbs(upperPixelWidth-lowerPixelWidth);
result += getPixelSpacing(baseBars.at(i), keyCoord);
}
// finally half of our bars width:
baseBars.at(index)->getPixelWidth(keyCoord, lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth);
result += qAbs(upperPixelWidth-lowerPixelWidth)*0.5;
// correct sign of result depending on orientation and direction of key axis:
result *= dir*thisBase->keyAxis()->pixelOrientation();
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the spacing in pixels which is between this \a bars and the following one, both at the
key coordinate \a keyCoord.
\note Typically the returned value doesn't depend on \a bars or \a keyCoord. \a bars is only
needed to get access to the key axis transformation and axis rect for the modes \ref
stAxisRectRatio and \ref stPlotCoords. The \a keyCoord is only relevant for spacings given in
\ref stPlotCoords on a logarithmic axis.
*/
double QCPBarsGroup::getPixelSpacing(const QCPBars *bars, double keyCoord)
{
switch (mSpacingType)
{
case stAbsolute:
{
return mSpacing;
}
case stAxisRectRatio:
{
if (bars->keyAxis()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
return bars->keyAxis()->axisRect()->width()*mSpacing;
else
return bars->keyAxis()->axisRect()->height()*mSpacing;
}
case stPlotCoords:
{
double keyPixel = bars->keyAxis()->coordToPixel(keyCoord);
return qAbs(bars->keyAxis()->coordToPixel(keyCoord+mSpacing)-keyPixel);
}
}
return 0;
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPBarsData
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPBarsData
\brief Holds the data of one single data point (one bar) for QCPBars.
The stored data is:
\li \a key: coordinate on the key axis of this bar (this is the \a mainKey and the \a sortKey)
\li \a value: height coordinate on the value axis of this bar (this is the \a mainValue)
The container for storing multiple data points is \ref QCPBarsDataContainer. It is a typedef for
\ref QCPDataContainer with \ref QCPBarsData as the DataType template parameter. See the
documentation there for an explanation regarding the data type's generic methods.
\see QCPBarsDataContainer
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn double QCPBarsData::sortKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static QCPBarsData QCPBarsData::fromSortKey(double sortKey)
Returns a data point with the specified \a sortKey. All other members are set to zero.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static static bool QCPBarsData::sortKeyIsMainKey()
Since the member \a key is both the data point key coordinate and the data ordering parameter,
this method returns true.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPBarsData::mainKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPBarsData::mainValue() const
Returns the \a value member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange QCPBarsData::valueRange() const
Returns a QCPRange with both lower and upper boundary set to \a value of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a bar data point with key and value set to zero.
*/
QCPBarsData::QCPBarsData() :
key(0),
value(0)
{
}
/*!
Constructs a bar data point with the specified \a key and \a value.
*/
QCPBarsData::QCPBarsData(double key, double value) :
key(key),
value(value)
{
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPBars
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPBars
\brief A plottable representing a bar chart in a plot.
\image html QCPBars.png
To plot data, assign it with the \ref setData or \ref addData functions.
\section qcpbars-appearance Changing the appearance
The appearance of the bars is determined by the pen and the brush (\ref setPen, \ref setBrush).
The width of the individual bars can be controlled with \ref setWidthType and \ref setWidth.
Bar charts are stackable. This means, two QCPBars plottables can be placed on top of each other
(see \ref QCPBars::moveAbove). So when two bars are at the same key position, they will appear
stacked.
If you would like to group multiple QCPBars plottables together so they appear side by side as
shown below, use QCPBarsGroup.
\image html QCPBarsGroup.png
\section qcpbars-usage Usage
Like all data representing objects in QCustomPlot, the QCPBars is a plottable
(QCPAbstractPlottable). So the plottable-interface of QCustomPlot applies
(QCustomPlot::plottable, QCustomPlot::removePlottable, etc.)
Usually, you first create an instance:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpbars-creation-1
which registers it with the QCustomPlot instance of the passed axes. Note that this QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the plottable, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
The newly created plottable can be modified, e.g.:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpbars-creation-2
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QSharedPointer<QCPBarsDataContainer> QCPBars::data() const
Returns a shared pointer to the internal data storage of type \ref QCPBarsDataContainer. You may
use it to directly manipulate the data, which may be more convenient and faster than using the
regular \ref setData or \ref addData methods.
*/
/*! \fn QCPBars *QCPBars::barBelow() const
Returns the bars plottable that is directly below this bars plottable.
If there is no such plottable, returns \c nullptr.
\see barAbove, moveBelow, moveAbove
*/
/*! \fn QCPBars *QCPBars::barAbove() const
Returns the bars plottable that is directly above this bars plottable.
If there is no such plottable, returns \c nullptr.
\see barBelow, moveBelow, moveAbove
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a bar chart which uses \a keyAxis as its key axis ("x") and \a valueAxis as its value
axis ("y"). \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in the same QCustomPlot instance and not have
the same orientation. If either of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding message is
printed to the debug output (qDebug), the construction is not aborted, though.
The created QCPBars is automatically registered with the QCustomPlot instance inferred from \a
keyAxis. This QCustomPlot instance takes ownership of the QCPBars, so do not delete it manually
but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
*/
QCPBars::QCPBars(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis) :
QCPAbstractPlottable1D<QCPBarsData>(keyAxis, valueAxis),
mWidth(0.75),
mWidthType(wtPlotCoords),
mBarsGroup(nullptr),
mBaseValue(0),
mStackingGap(1)
{
// modify inherited properties from abstract plottable:
mPen.setColor(Qt::blue);
mPen.setStyle(Qt::SolidLine);
mBrush.setColor(QColor(40, 50, 255, 30));
mBrush.setStyle(Qt::SolidPattern);
mSelectionDecorator->setBrush(QBrush(QColor(160, 160, 255)));
}
QCPBars::~QCPBars()
{
setBarsGroup(nullptr);
if (mBarBelow || mBarAbove)
connectBars(mBarBelow.data(), mBarAbove.data()); // take this bar out of any stacking
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data container with the provided \a data container.
Since a QSharedPointer is used, multiple QCPBars may share the same data container safely.
Modifying the data in the container will then affect all bars that share the container. Sharing
can be achieved by simply exchanging the data containers wrapped in shared pointers:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpbars-datasharing-1
If you do not wish to share containers, but create a copy from an existing container, rather use
the \ref QCPDataContainer<DataType>::set method on the bar's data container directly:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpbars-datasharing-2
\see addData
*/
void QCPBars::setData(QSharedPointer<QCPBarsDataContainer> data)
{
mDataContainer = data;
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data with the provided points in \a keys and \a values. The provided
vectors should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the
smallest vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
\see addData
*/
void QCPBars::setData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values, bool alreadySorted)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(keys, values, alreadySorted);
}
/*!
Sets the width of the bars.
How the number passed as \a width is interpreted (e.g. screen pixels, plot coordinates,...),
depends on the currently set width type, see \ref setWidthType and \ref WidthType.
*/
void QCPBars::setWidth(double width)
{
mWidth = width;
}
/*!
Sets how the width of the bars is defined. See the documentation of \ref WidthType for an
explanation of the possible values for \a widthType.
The default value is \ref wtPlotCoords.
\see setWidth
*/
void QCPBars::setWidthType(QCPBars::WidthType widthType)
{
mWidthType = widthType;
}
/*!
Sets to which QCPBarsGroup this QCPBars instance belongs to. Alternatively, you can also use \ref
QCPBarsGroup::append.
To remove this QCPBars from any group, set \a barsGroup to \c nullptr.
*/
void QCPBars::setBarsGroup(QCPBarsGroup *barsGroup)
{
// deregister at old group:
if (mBarsGroup)
mBarsGroup->unregisterBars(this);
mBarsGroup = barsGroup;
// register at new group:
if (mBarsGroup)
mBarsGroup->registerBars(this);
}
/*!
Sets the base value of this bars plottable.
The base value defines where on the value coordinate the bars start. How far the bars extend from
the base value is given by their individual value data. For example, if the base value is set to
1, a bar with data value 2 will have its lowest point at value coordinate 1 and highest point at
3.
For stacked bars, only the base value of the bottom-most QCPBars has meaning.
The default base value is 0.
*/
void QCPBars::setBaseValue(double baseValue)
{
mBaseValue = baseValue;
}
/*!
If this bars plottable is stacked on top of another bars plottable (\ref moveAbove), this method
allows specifying a distance in \a pixels, by which the drawn bar rectangles will be separated by
the bars below it.
*/
void QCPBars::setStackingGap(double pixels)
{
mStackingGap = pixels;
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided points in \a keys and \a values to the current data. The provided vectors
should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the smallest
vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPBars::addData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values, bool alreadySorted)
{
if (keys.size() != values.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "keys and values have different sizes:" << keys.size() << values.size();
const int n = qMin(keys.size(), values.size());
QVector<QCPBarsData> tempData(n);
QVector<QCPBarsData>::iterator it = tempData.begin();
const QVector<QCPBarsData>::iterator itEnd = tempData.end();
int i = 0;
while (it != itEnd)
{
it->key = keys[i];
it->value = values[i];
++it;
++i;
}
mDataContainer->add(tempData, alreadySorted); // don't modify tempData beyond this to prevent copy on write
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided data point as \a key and \a value to the current data.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPBars::addData(double key, double value)
{
mDataContainer->add(QCPBarsData(key, value));
}
/*!
Moves this bars plottable below \a bars. In other words, the bars of this plottable will appear
below the bars of \a bars. The move target \a bars must use the same key and value axis as this
plottable.
Inserting into and removing from existing bar stacking is handled gracefully. If \a bars already
has a bars object below itself, this bars object is inserted between the two. If this bars object
is already between two other bars, the two other bars will be stacked on top of each other after
the operation.
To remove this bars plottable from any stacking, set \a bars to \c nullptr.
\see moveBelow, barAbove, barBelow
*/
void QCPBars::moveBelow(QCPBars *bars)
{
if (bars == this) return;
if (bars && (bars->keyAxis() != mKeyAxis.data() || bars->valueAxis() != mValueAxis.data()))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed QCPBars* doesn't have same key and value axis as this QCPBars";
return;
}
// remove from stacking:
connectBars(mBarBelow.data(), mBarAbove.data()); // Note: also works if one (or both) of them is 0
// if new bar given, insert this bar below it:
if (bars)
{
if (bars->mBarBelow)
connectBars(bars->mBarBelow.data(), this);
connectBars(this, bars);
}
}
/*!
Moves this bars plottable above \a bars. In other words, the bars of this plottable will appear
above the bars of \a bars. The move target \a bars must use the same key and value axis as this
plottable.
Inserting into and removing from existing bar stacking is handled gracefully. If \a bars already
has a bars object above itself, this bars object is inserted between the two. If this bars object
is already between two other bars, the two other bars will be stacked on top of each other after
the operation.
To remove this bars plottable from any stacking, set \a bars to \c nullptr.
\see moveBelow, barBelow, barAbove
*/
void QCPBars::moveAbove(QCPBars *bars)
{
if (bars == this) return;
if (bars && (bars->keyAxis() != mKeyAxis.data() || bars->valueAxis() != mValueAxis.data()))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed QCPBars* doesn't have same key and value axis as this QCPBars";
return;
}
// remove from stacking:
connectBars(mBarBelow.data(), mBarAbove.data()); // Note: also works if one (or both) of them is 0
// if new bar given, insert this bar above it:
if (bars)
{
if (bars->mBarAbove)
connectBars(this, bars->mBarAbove.data());
connectBars(bars, this);
}
}
/*!
\copydoc QCPPlottableInterface1D::selectTestRect
*/
QCPDataSelection QCPBars::selectTestRect(const QRectF &rect, bool onlySelectable) const
{
QCPDataSelection result;
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return result;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return result;
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
for (QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it=visibleBegin; it!=visibleEnd; ++it)
{
if (rect.intersects(getBarRect(it->key, it->value)))
result.addDataRange(QCPDataRange(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()), int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()+1)), false);
}
result.simplify();
return result;
}
/*!
Implements a selectTest specific to this plottable's point geometry.
If \a details is not 0, it will be set to a \ref QCPDataSelection, describing the closest data
point to \a pos.
\seebaseclassmethod \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::selectTest
*/
double QCPBars::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return -1;
if (mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->rect().contains(pos.toPoint()) || mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iSelectPlottablesBeyondAxisRect))
{
// get visible data range:
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
for (QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it=visibleBegin; it!=visibleEnd; ++it)
{
if (getBarRect(it->key, it->value).contains(pos))
{
if (details)
{
int pointIndex = int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin());
details->setValue(QCPDataSelection(QCPDataRange(pointIndex, pointIndex+1)));
}
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
}
}
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPBars::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const
{
/* Note: If this QCPBars uses absolute pixels as width (or is in a QCPBarsGroup with spacing in
absolute pixels), using this method to adapt the key axis range to fit the bars into the
currently visible axis range will not work perfectly. Because in the moment the axis range is
changed to the new range, the fixed pixel widths/spacings will represent different coordinate
spans than before, which in turn would require a different key range to perfectly fit, and so on.
The only solution would be to iteratively approach the perfect fitting axis range, but the
mismatch isn't large enough in most applications, to warrant this here. If a user does need a
better fit, he should call the corresponding axis rescale multiple times in a row.
*/
QCPRange range;
range = mDataContainer->keyRange(foundRange, inSignDomain);
// determine exact range of bars by including bar width and barsgroup offset:
if (foundRange && mKeyAxis)
{
double lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth, keyPixel;
// lower range bound:
getPixelWidth(range.lower, lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth);
keyPixel = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(range.lower) + lowerPixelWidth;
if (mBarsGroup)
keyPixel += mBarsGroup->keyPixelOffset(this, range.lower);
const double lowerCorrected = mKeyAxis.data()->pixelToCoord(keyPixel);
if (!qIsNaN(lowerCorrected) && qIsFinite(lowerCorrected) && range.lower > lowerCorrected)
range.lower = lowerCorrected;
// upper range bound:
getPixelWidth(range.upper, lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth);
keyPixel = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(range.upper) + upperPixelWidth;
if (mBarsGroup)
keyPixel += mBarsGroup->keyPixelOffset(this, range.upper);
const double upperCorrected = mKeyAxis.data()->pixelToCoord(keyPixel);
if (!qIsNaN(upperCorrected) && qIsFinite(upperCorrected) && range.upper < upperCorrected)
range.upper = upperCorrected;
}
return range;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPBars::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const
{
// Note: can't simply use mDataContainer->valueRange here because we need to
// take into account bar base value and possible stacking of multiple bars
QCPRange range;
range.lower = mBaseValue;
range.upper = mBaseValue;
bool haveLower = true; // set to true, because baseValue should always be visible in bar charts
bool haveUpper = true; // set to true, because baseValue should always be visible in bar charts
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator itBegin = mDataContainer->constBegin();
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator itEnd = mDataContainer->constEnd();
if (inKeyRange != QCPRange())
{
itBegin = mDataContainer->findBegin(inKeyRange.lower, false);
itEnd = mDataContainer->findEnd(inKeyRange.upper, false);
}
for (QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it = itBegin; it != itEnd; ++it)
{
const double current = it->value + getStackedBaseValue(it->key, it->value >= 0);
if (qIsNaN(current)) continue;
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdBoth || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative && current < 0) || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive && current > 0))
{
if (current < range.lower || !haveLower)
{
range.lower = current;
haveLower = true;
}
if (current > range.upper || !haveUpper)
{
range.upper = current;
haveUpper = true;
}
}
}
foundRange = true; // return true because bar charts always have the 0-line visible
return range;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QPointF QCPBars::dataPixelPosition(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mDataContainer->size())
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return {}; }
const QCPDataContainer<QCPBarsData>::const_iterator it = mDataContainer->constBegin()+index;
const double valuePixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(getStackedBaseValue(it->key, it->value >= 0) + it->value);
const double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key) + (mBarsGroup ? mBarsGroup->keyPixelOffset(this, it->key) : 0);
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
return {keyPixel, valuePixel};
else
return {valuePixel, keyPixel};
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Index out of bounds" << index;
return {};
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPBars::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty()) return;
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
// loop over and draw segments of unselected/selected data:
QList<QCPDataRange> selectedSegments, unselectedSegments, allSegments;
getDataSegments(selectedSegments, unselectedSegments);
allSegments << unselectedSegments << selectedSegments;
for (int i=0; i<allSegments.size(); ++i)
{
bool isSelectedSegment = i >= unselectedSegments.size();
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator begin = visibleBegin;
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator end = visibleEnd;
mDataContainer->limitIteratorsToDataRange(begin, end, allSegments.at(i));
if (begin == end)
continue;
for (QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
// check data validity if flag set:
#ifdef QCUSTOMPLOT_CHECK_DATA
if (QCP::isInvalidData(it->key, it->value))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Data point at" << it->key << "of drawn range invalid." << "Plottable name:" << name();
#endif
// draw bar:
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
{
mSelectionDecorator->applyBrush(painter);
mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
} else
{
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
painter->setPen(mPen);
}
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->drawPolygon(getBarRect(it->key, it->value));
}
}
// draw other selection decoration that isn't just line/scatter pens and brushes:
if (mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->drawDecoration(painter, selection());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPBars::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRectF &rect) const
{
// draw filled rect:
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
painter->setPen(mPen);
QRectF r = QRectF(0, 0, rect.width()*0.67, rect.height()*0.67);
r.moveCenter(rect.center());
painter->drawRect(r);
}
/*! \internal
called by \ref draw to determine which data (key) range is visible at the current key axis range
setting, so only that needs to be processed. It also takes into account the bar width.
\a begin returns an iterator to the lowest data point that needs to be taken into account when
plotting. Note that in order to get a clean plot all the way to the edge of the axis rect, \a
lower may still be just outside the visible range.
\a end returns an iterator one higher than the highest visible data point. Same as before, \a end
may also lie just outside of the visible range.
if the plottable contains no data, both \a begin and \a end point to constEnd.
*/
void QCPBars::getVisibleDataBounds(QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator &end) const
{
if (!mKeyAxis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key axis";
begin = mDataContainer->constEnd();
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
return;
}
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty())
{
begin = mDataContainer->constEnd();
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
return;
}
// get visible data range as QMap iterators
begin = mDataContainer->findBegin(mKeyAxis.data()->range().lower);
end = mDataContainer->findEnd(mKeyAxis.data()->range().upper);
double lowerPixelBound = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(mKeyAxis.data()->range().lower);
double upperPixelBound = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(mKeyAxis.data()->range().upper);
bool isVisible = false;
// walk left from begin to find lower bar that actually is completely outside visible pixel range:
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin;
while (it != mDataContainer->constBegin())
{
--it;
const QRectF barRect = getBarRect(it->key, it->value);
if (mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
isVisible = ((!mKeyAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && barRect.right() >= lowerPixelBound) || (mKeyAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && barRect.left() <= lowerPixelBound));
else // keyaxis is vertical
isVisible = ((!mKeyAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && barRect.top() <= lowerPixelBound) || (mKeyAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && barRect.bottom() >= lowerPixelBound));
if (isVisible)
begin = it;
else
break;
}
// walk right from ubound to find upper bar that actually is completely outside visible pixel range:
it = end;
while (it != mDataContainer->constEnd())
{
const QRectF barRect = getBarRect(it->key, it->value);
if (mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
isVisible = ((!mKeyAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && barRect.left() <= upperPixelBound) || (mKeyAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && barRect.right() >= upperPixelBound));
else // keyaxis is vertical
isVisible = ((!mKeyAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && barRect.bottom() >= upperPixelBound) || (mKeyAxis.data()->rangeReversed() && barRect.top() <= upperPixelBound));
if (isVisible)
end = it+1;
else
break;
++it;
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the rect in pixel coordinates of a single bar with the specified \a key and \a value. The
rect is shifted according to the bar stacking (see \ref moveAbove) and base value (see \ref
setBaseValue), and to have non-overlapping border lines with the bars stacked below.
*/
QRectF QCPBars::getBarRect(double key, double value) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return {}; }
double lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth;
getPixelWidth(key, lowerPixelWidth, upperPixelWidth);
double base = getStackedBaseValue(key, value >= 0);
double basePixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(base);
double valuePixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(base+value);
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(key);
if (mBarsGroup)
keyPixel += mBarsGroup->keyPixelOffset(this, key);
double bottomOffset = (mBarBelow && mPen != Qt::NoPen ? 1 : 0)*(mPen.isCosmetic() ? 1 : mPen.widthF());
bottomOffset += mBarBelow ? mStackingGap : 0;
bottomOffset *= (value<0 ? -1 : 1)*valueAxis->pixelOrientation();
if (qAbs(valuePixel-basePixel) <= qAbs(bottomOffset))
bottomOffset = valuePixel-basePixel;
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
return QRectF(QPointF(keyPixel+lowerPixelWidth, valuePixel), QPointF(keyPixel+upperPixelWidth, basePixel+bottomOffset)).normalized();
} else
{
return QRectF(QPointF(basePixel+bottomOffset, keyPixel+lowerPixelWidth), QPointF(valuePixel, keyPixel+upperPixelWidth)).normalized();
}
}
/*! \internal
This function is used to determine the width of the bar at coordinate \a key, according to the
specified width (\ref setWidth) and width type (\ref setWidthType).
The output parameters \a lower and \a upper return the number of pixels the bar extends to lower
and higher keys, relative to the \a key coordinate (so with a non-reversed horizontal axis, \a
lower is negative and \a upper positive).
*/
void QCPBars::getPixelWidth(double key, double &lower, double &upper) const
{
lower = 0;
upper = 0;
switch (mWidthType)
{
case wtAbsolute:
{
upper = mWidth*0.5*mKeyAxis.data()->pixelOrientation();
lower = -upper;
break;
}
case wtAxisRectRatio:
{
if (mKeyAxis && mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect())
{
if (mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
upper = mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->width()*mWidth*0.5*mKeyAxis.data()->pixelOrientation();
else
upper = mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->height()*mWidth*0.5*mKeyAxis.data()->pixelOrientation();
lower = -upper;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "No key axis or axis rect defined";
break;
}
case wtPlotCoords:
{
if (mKeyAxis)
{
double keyPixel = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(key);
upper = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(key+mWidth*0.5)-keyPixel;
lower = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(key-mWidth*0.5)-keyPixel;
// no need to qSwap(lower, higher) when range reversed, because higher/lower are gained by
// coordinate transform which includes range direction
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "No key axis defined";
break;
}
}
}
/*! \internal
This function is called to find at which value to start drawing the base of a bar at \a key, when
it is stacked on top of another QCPBars (e.g. with \ref moveAbove).
positive and negative bars are separated per stack (positive are stacked above baseValue upwards,
negative are stacked below baseValue downwards). This can be indicated with \a positive. So if the
bar for which we need the base value is negative, set \a positive to false.
*/
double QCPBars::getStackedBaseValue(double key, bool positive) const
{
if (mBarBelow)
{
double max = 0; // don't initialize with mBaseValue here because only base value of bottom-most bar has meaning in a bar stack
// find bars of mBarBelow that are approximately at key and find largest one:
double epsilon = qAbs(key)*(sizeof(key)==4 ? 1e-6 : 1e-14); // should be safe even when changed to use float at some point
if (key == 0)
epsilon = (sizeof(key)==4 ? 1e-6 : 1e-14);
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it = mBarBelow.data()->mDataContainer->findBegin(key-epsilon);
QCPBarsDataContainer::const_iterator itEnd = mBarBelow.data()->mDataContainer->findEnd(key+epsilon);
while (it != itEnd)
{
if (it->key > key-epsilon && it->key < key+epsilon)
{
if ((positive && it->value > max) ||
(!positive && it->value < max))
max = it->value;
}
++it;
}
// recurse down the bar-stack to find the total height:
return max + mBarBelow.data()->getStackedBaseValue(key, positive);
} else
return mBaseValue;
}
/*! \internal
Connects \a below and \a above to each other via their mBarAbove/mBarBelow properties. The bar(s)
currently above lower and below upper will become disconnected to lower/upper.
If lower is zero, upper will be disconnected at the bottom.
If upper is zero, lower will be disconnected at the top.
*/
void QCPBars::connectBars(QCPBars *lower, QCPBars *upper)
{
if (!lower && !upper) return;
if (!lower) // disconnect upper at bottom
{
// disconnect old bar below upper:
if (upper->mBarBelow && upper->mBarBelow.data()->mBarAbove.data() == upper)
upper->mBarBelow.data()->mBarAbove = nullptr;
upper->mBarBelow = nullptr;
} else if (!upper) // disconnect lower at top
{
// disconnect old bar above lower:
if (lower->mBarAbove && lower->mBarAbove.data()->mBarBelow.data() == lower)
lower->mBarAbove.data()->mBarBelow = nullptr;
lower->mBarAbove = nullptr;
} else // connect lower and upper
{
// disconnect old bar above lower:
if (lower->mBarAbove && lower->mBarAbove.data()->mBarBelow.data() == lower)
lower->mBarAbove.data()->mBarBelow = nullptr;
// disconnect old bar below upper:
if (upper->mBarBelow && upper->mBarBelow.data()->mBarAbove.data() == upper)
upper->mBarBelow.data()->mBarAbove = nullptr;
lower->mBarAbove = upper;
upper->mBarBelow = lower;
}
}
/* end of 'src/plottables/plottable-bars.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/plottables/plottable-statisticalbox.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 28951 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPStatisticalBoxData
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPStatisticalBoxData
\brief Holds the data of one single data point for QCPStatisticalBox.
The stored data is:
\li \a key: coordinate on the key axis of this data point (this is the \a mainKey and the \a sortKey)
\li \a minimum: the position of the lower whisker, typically the minimum measurement of the
sample that's not considered an outlier.
\li \a lowerQuartile: the lower end of the box. The lower and the upper quartiles are the two
statistical quartiles around the median of the sample, they should contain 50% of the sample
data.
\li \a median: the value of the median mark inside the quartile box. The median separates the
sample data in half (50% of the sample data is below/above the median). (This is the \a mainValue)
\li \a upperQuartile: the upper end of the box. The lower and the upper quartiles are the two
statistical quartiles around the median of the sample, they should contain 50% of the sample
data.
\li \a maximum: the position of the upper whisker, typically the maximum measurement of the
sample that's not considered an outlier.
\li \a outliers: a QVector of outlier values that will be drawn as scatter points at the \a key
coordinate of this data point (see \ref QCPStatisticalBox::setOutlierStyle)
The container for storing multiple data points is \ref QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer. It is a
typedef for \ref QCPDataContainer with \ref QCPStatisticalBoxData as the DataType template
parameter. See the documentation there for an explanation regarding the data type's generic
methods.
\see QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn double QCPStatisticalBoxData::sortKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static QCPStatisticalBoxData QCPStatisticalBoxData::fromSortKey(double sortKey)
Returns a data point with the specified \a sortKey. All other members are set to zero.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static static bool QCPStatisticalBoxData::sortKeyIsMainKey()
Since the member \a key is both the data point key coordinate and the data ordering parameter,
this method returns true.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPStatisticalBoxData::mainKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPStatisticalBoxData::mainValue() const
Returns the \a median member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange QCPStatisticalBoxData::valueRange() const
Returns a QCPRange spanning from the \a minimum to the \a maximum member of this statistical box
data point, possibly further expanded by outliers.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a data point with key and all values set to zero.
*/
QCPStatisticalBoxData::QCPStatisticalBoxData() :
key(0),
minimum(0),
lowerQuartile(0),
median(0),
upperQuartile(0),
maximum(0)
{
}
/*!
Constructs a data point with the specified \a key, \a minimum, \a lowerQuartile, \a median, \a
upperQuartile, \a maximum and optionally a number of \a outliers.
*/
QCPStatisticalBoxData::QCPStatisticalBoxData(double key, double minimum, double lowerQuartile, double median, double upperQuartile, double maximum, const QVector<double> &outliers) :
key(key),
minimum(minimum),
lowerQuartile(lowerQuartile),
median(median),
upperQuartile(upperQuartile),
maximum(maximum),
outliers(outliers)
{
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPStatisticalBox
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPStatisticalBox
\brief A plottable representing a single statistical box in a plot.
\image html QCPStatisticalBox.png
To plot data, assign it with the \ref setData or \ref addData functions. Alternatively, you can
also access and modify the data via the \ref data method, which returns a pointer to the internal
\ref QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer.
Additionally each data point can itself have a list of outliers, drawn as scatter points at the
key coordinate of the respective statistical box data point. They can either be set by using the
respective \ref addData(double,double,double,double,double,double,const QVector<double>&)
"addData" method or accessing the individual data points through \ref data, and setting the
<tt>QVector<double> outliers</tt> of the data points directly.
\section qcpstatisticalbox-appearance Changing the appearance
The appearance of each data point box, ranging from the lower to the upper quartile, is
controlled via \ref setPen and \ref setBrush. You may change the width of the boxes with \ref
setWidth in plot coordinates.
Each data point's visual representation also consists of two whiskers. Whiskers are the lines
which reach from the upper quartile to the maximum, and from the lower quartile to the minimum.
The appearance of the whiskers can be modified with: \ref setWhiskerPen, \ref setWhiskerBarPen,
\ref setWhiskerWidth. The whisker width is the width of the bar perpendicular to the whisker at
the top (for maximum) and bottom (for minimum). If the whisker pen is changed, make sure to set
the \c capStyle to \c Qt::FlatCap. Otherwise the backbone line might exceed the whisker bars by a
few pixels due to the pen cap being not perfectly flat.
The median indicator line inside the box has its own pen, \ref setMedianPen.
The outlier data points are drawn as normal scatter points. Their look can be controlled with
\ref setOutlierStyle
\section qcpstatisticalbox-usage Usage
Like all data representing objects in QCustomPlot, the QCPStatisticalBox is a plottable
(QCPAbstractPlottable). So the plottable-interface of QCustomPlot applies
(QCustomPlot::plottable, QCustomPlot::removePlottable, etc.)
Usually, you first create an instance:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpstatisticalbox-creation-1
which registers it with the QCustomPlot instance of the passed axes. Note that this QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the plottable, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
The newly created plottable can be modified, e.g.:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpstatisticalbox-creation-2
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QSharedPointer<QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer> QCPStatisticalBox::data() const
Returns a shared pointer to the internal data storage of type \ref
QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer. You may use it to directly manipulate the data, which may be more
convenient and faster than using the regular \ref setData or \ref addData methods.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a statistical box which uses \a keyAxis as its key axis ("x") and \a valueAxis as its
value axis ("y"). \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in the same QCustomPlot instance and
not have the same orientation. If either of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding
message is printed to the debug output (qDebug), the construction is not aborted, though.
The created QCPStatisticalBox is automatically registered with the QCustomPlot instance inferred
from \a keyAxis. This QCustomPlot instance takes ownership of the QCPStatisticalBox, so do not
delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
*/
QCPStatisticalBox::QCPStatisticalBox(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis) :
QCPAbstractPlottable1D<QCPStatisticalBoxData>(keyAxis, valueAxis),
mWidth(0.5),
mWhiskerWidth(0.2),
mWhiskerPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::DashLine, Qt::FlatCap),
mWhiskerBarPen(Qt::black),
mWhiskerAntialiased(false),
mMedianPen(Qt::black, 3, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::FlatCap),
mOutlierStyle(QCPScatterStyle::ssCircle, Qt::blue, 6)
{
setPen(QPen(Qt::black));
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data container with the provided \a data container.
Since a QSharedPointer is used, multiple QCPStatisticalBoxes may share the same data container
safely. Modifying the data in the container will then affect all statistical boxes that share the
container. Sharing can be achieved by simply exchanging the data containers wrapped in shared
pointers:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpstatisticalbox-datasharing-1
If you do not wish to share containers, but create a copy from an existing container, rather use
the \ref QCPDataContainer<DataType>::set method on the statistical box data container directly:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpstatisticalbox-datasharing-2
\see addData
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setData(QSharedPointer<QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer> data)
{
mDataContainer = data;
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data with the provided points in \a keys, \a minimum, \a lowerQuartile, \a
median, \a upperQuartile and \a maximum. The provided vectors should have equal length. Else, the
number of added points will be the size of the smallest vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
\see addData
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &minimum, const QVector<double> &lowerQuartile, const QVector<double> &median, const QVector<double> &upperQuartile, const QVector<double> &maximum, bool alreadySorted)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(keys, minimum, lowerQuartile, median, upperQuartile, maximum, alreadySorted);
}
/*!
Sets the width of the boxes in key coordinates.
\see setWhiskerWidth
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setWidth(double width)
{
mWidth = width;
}
/*!
Sets the width of the whiskers in key coordinates.
Whiskers are the lines which reach from the upper quartile to the maximum, and from the lower
quartile to the minimum.
\see setWidth
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setWhiskerWidth(double width)
{
mWhiskerWidth = width;
}
/*!
Sets the pen used for drawing the whisker backbone.
Whiskers are the lines which reach from the upper quartile to the maximum, and from the lower
quartile to the minimum.
Make sure to set the \c capStyle of the passed \a pen to \c Qt::FlatCap. Otherwise the backbone
line might exceed the whisker bars by a few pixels due to the pen cap being not perfectly flat.
\see setWhiskerBarPen
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setWhiskerPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mWhiskerPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen used for drawing the whisker bars. Those are the lines parallel to the key axis at
each end of the whisker backbone.
Whiskers are the lines which reach from the upper quartile to the maximum, and from the lower
quartile to the minimum.
\see setWhiskerPen
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setWhiskerBarPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mWhiskerBarPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets whether the statistical boxes whiskers are drawn with antialiasing or not.
Note that antialiasing settings may be overridden by QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setWhiskerAntialiased(bool enabled)
{
mWhiskerAntialiased = enabled;
}
/*!
Sets the pen used for drawing the median indicator line inside the statistical boxes.
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setMedianPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mMedianPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the appearance of the outlier data points.
Outliers can be specified with the method
\ref addData(double key, double minimum, double lowerQuartile, double median, double upperQuartile, double maximum, const QVector<double> &outliers)
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::setOutlierStyle(const QCPScatterStyle &style)
{
mOutlierStyle = style;
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided points in \a keys, \a minimum, \a lowerQuartile, \a median, \a upperQuartile and
\a maximum to the current data. The provided vectors should have equal length. Else, the number
of added points will be the size of the smallest vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::addData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &minimum, const QVector<double> &lowerQuartile, const QVector<double> &median, const QVector<double> &upperQuartile, const QVector<double> &maximum, bool alreadySorted)
{
if (keys.size() != minimum.size() || minimum.size() != lowerQuartile.size() || lowerQuartile.size() != median.size() ||
median.size() != upperQuartile.size() || upperQuartile.size() != maximum.size() || maximum.size() != keys.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "keys, minimum, lowerQuartile, median, upperQuartile, maximum have different sizes:"
<< keys.size() << minimum.size() << lowerQuartile.size() << median.size() << upperQuartile.size() << maximum.size();
const int n = qMin(keys.size(), qMin(minimum.size(), qMin(lowerQuartile.size(), qMin(median.size(), qMin(upperQuartile.size(), maximum.size())))));
QVector<QCPStatisticalBoxData> tempData(n);
QVector<QCPStatisticalBoxData>::iterator it = tempData.begin();
const QVector<QCPStatisticalBoxData>::iterator itEnd = tempData.end();
int i = 0;
while (it != itEnd)
{
it->key = keys[i];
it->minimum = minimum[i];
it->lowerQuartile = lowerQuartile[i];
it->median = median[i];
it->upperQuartile = upperQuartile[i];
it->maximum = maximum[i];
++it;
++i;
}
mDataContainer->add(tempData, alreadySorted); // don't modify tempData beyond this to prevent copy on write
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided data point as \a key, \a minimum, \a lowerQuartile, \a median, \a upperQuartile
and \a maximum to the current data.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::addData(double key, double minimum, double lowerQuartile, double median, double upperQuartile, double maximum, const QVector<double> &outliers)
{
mDataContainer->add(QCPStatisticalBoxData(key, minimum, lowerQuartile, median, upperQuartile, maximum, outliers));
}
/*!
\copydoc QCPPlottableInterface1D::selectTestRect
*/
QCPDataSelection QCPStatisticalBox::selectTestRect(const QRectF &rect, bool onlySelectable) const
{
QCPDataSelection result;
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return result;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return result;
QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
for (QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator it=visibleBegin; it!=visibleEnd; ++it)
{
if (rect.intersects(getQuartileBox(it)))
result.addDataRange(QCPDataRange(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()), int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()+1)), false);
}
result.simplify();
return result;
}
/*!
Implements a selectTest specific to this plottable's point geometry.
If \a details is not 0, it will be set to a \ref QCPDataSelection, describing the closest data
point to \a pos.
\seebaseclassmethod \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::selectTest
*/
double QCPStatisticalBox::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return -1;
if (mKeyAxis->axisRect()->rect().contains(pos.toPoint()) || mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iSelectPlottablesBeyondAxisRect))
{
// get visible data range:
QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator closestDataPoint = mDataContainer->constEnd();
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
for (QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator it=visibleBegin; it!=visibleEnd; ++it)
{
if (getQuartileBox(it).contains(pos)) // quartile box
{
double currentDistSqr = mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99 * mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestDataPoint = it;
}
} else // whiskers
{
const QVector<QLineF> whiskerBackbones = getWhiskerBackboneLines(it);
const QCPVector2D posVec(pos);
foreach (const QLineF &backbone, whiskerBackbones)
{
double currentDistSqr = posVec.distanceSquaredToLine(backbone);
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestDataPoint = it;
}
}
}
}
if (details)
{
int pointIndex = int(closestDataPoint-mDataContainer->constBegin());
details->setValue(QCPDataSelection(QCPDataRange(pointIndex, pointIndex+1)));
}
return qSqrt(minDistSqr);
}
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPStatisticalBox::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const
{
QCPRange range = mDataContainer->keyRange(foundRange, inSignDomain);
// determine exact range by including width of bars/flags:
if (foundRange)
{
if (inSignDomain != QCP::sdPositive || range.lower-mWidth*0.5 > 0)
range.lower -= mWidth*0.5;
if (inSignDomain != QCP::sdNegative || range.upper+mWidth*0.5 < 0)
range.upper += mWidth*0.5;
}
return range;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPStatisticalBox::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const
{
return mDataContainer->valueRange(foundRange, inSignDomain, inKeyRange);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPStatisticalBox::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty()) return;
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
// loop over and draw segments of unselected/selected data:
QList<QCPDataRange> selectedSegments, unselectedSegments, allSegments;
getDataSegments(selectedSegments, unselectedSegments);
allSegments << unselectedSegments << selectedSegments;
for (int i=0; i<allSegments.size(); ++i)
{
bool isSelectedSegment = i >= unselectedSegments.size();
QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator begin = visibleBegin;
QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator end = visibleEnd;
mDataContainer->limitIteratorsToDataRange(begin, end, allSegments.at(i));
if (begin == end)
continue;
for (QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
// check data validity if flag set:
# ifdef QCUSTOMPLOT_CHECK_DATA
if (QCP::isInvalidData(it->key, it->minimum) ||
QCP::isInvalidData(it->lowerQuartile, it->median) ||
QCP::isInvalidData(it->upperQuartile, it->maximum))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Data point at" << it->key << "of drawn range has invalid data." << "Plottable name:" << name();
for (int i=0; i<it->outliers.size(); ++i)
if (QCP::isInvalidData(it->outliers.at(i)))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Data point outlier at" << it->key << "of drawn range invalid." << "Plottable name:" << name();
# endif
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
{
mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
mSelectionDecorator->applyBrush(painter);
} else
{
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
}
QCPScatterStyle finalOutlierStyle = mOutlierStyle;
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
finalOutlierStyle = mSelectionDecorator->getFinalScatterStyle(mOutlierStyle);
drawStatisticalBox(painter, it, finalOutlierStyle);
}
}
// draw other selection decoration that isn't just line/scatter pens and brushes:
if (mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->drawDecoration(painter, selection());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPStatisticalBox::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRectF &rect) const
{
// draw filled rect:
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
QRectF r = QRectF(0, 0, rect.width()*0.67, rect.height()*0.67);
r.moveCenter(rect.center());
painter->drawRect(r);
}
/*!
Draws the graphical representation of a single statistical box with the data given by the
iterator \a it with the provided \a painter.
If the statistical box has a set of outlier data points, they are drawn with \a outlierStyle.
\see getQuartileBox, getWhiskerBackboneLines, getWhiskerBarLines
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::drawStatisticalBox(QCPPainter *painter, QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator it, const QCPScatterStyle &outlierStyle) const
{
// draw quartile box:
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
const QRectF quartileBox = getQuartileBox(it);
painter->drawRect(quartileBox);
// draw median line with cliprect set to quartile box:
painter->save();
painter->setClipRect(quartileBox, Qt::IntersectClip);
painter->setPen(mMedianPen);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(coordsToPixels(it->key-mWidth*0.5, it->median), coordsToPixels(it->key+mWidth*0.5, it->median)));
painter->restore();
// draw whisker lines:
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mWhiskerAntialiased, QCP::aePlottables);
painter->setPen(mWhiskerPen);
painter->drawLines(getWhiskerBackboneLines(it));
painter->setPen(mWhiskerBarPen);
painter->drawLines(getWhiskerBarLines(it));
// draw outliers:
applyScattersAntialiasingHint(painter);
outlierStyle.applyTo(painter, mPen);
for (int i=0; i<it->outliers.size(); ++i)
outlierStyle.drawShape(painter, coordsToPixels(it->key, it->outliers.at(i)));
}
/*! \internal
called by \ref draw to determine which data (key) range is visible at the current key axis range
setting, so only that needs to be processed. It also takes into account the bar width.
\a begin returns an iterator to the lowest data point that needs to be taken into account when
plotting. Note that in order to get a clean plot all the way to the edge of the axis rect, \a
lower may still be just outside the visible range.
\a end returns an iterator one higher than the highest visible data point. Same as before, \a end
may also lie just outside of the visible range.
if the plottable contains no data, both \a begin and \a end point to constEnd.
*/
void QCPStatisticalBox::getVisibleDataBounds(QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator &end) const
{
if (!mKeyAxis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key axis";
begin = mDataContainer->constEnd();
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
return;
}
begin = mDataContainer->findBegin(mKeyAxis.data()->range().lower-mWidth*0.5); // subtract half width of box to include partially visible data points
end = mDataContainer->findEnd(mKeyAxis.data()->range().upper+mWidth*0.5); // add half width of box to include partially visible data points
}
/*! \internal
Returns the box in plot coordinates (keys in x, values in y of the returned rect) that covers the
value range from the lower to the upper quartile, of the data given by \a it.
\see drawStatisticalBox, getWhiskerBackboneLines, getWhiskerBarLines
*/
QRectF QCPStatisticalBox::getQuartileBox(QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator it) const
{
QRectF result;
result.setTopLeft(coordsToPixels(it->key-mWidth*0.5, it->upperQuartile));
result.setBottomRight(coordsToPixels(it->key+mWidth*0.5, it->lowerQuartile));
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the whisker backbones (keys in x, values in y of the returned lines) that cover the value
range from the minimum to the lower quartile, and from the upper quartile to the maximum of the
data given by \a it.
\see drawStatisticalBox, getQuartileBox, getWhiskerBarLines
*/
QVector<QLineF> QCPStatisticalBox::getWhiskerBackboneLines(QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator it) const
{
QVector<QLineF> result(2);
result[0].setPoints(coordsToPixels(it->key, it->lowerQuartile), coordsToPixels(it->key, it->minimum)); // min backbone
result[1].setPoints(coordsToPixels(it->key, it->upperQuartile), coordsToPixels(it->key, it->maximum)); // max backbone
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the whisker bars (keys in x, values in y of the returned lines) that are placed at the
end of the whisker backbones, at the minimum and maximum of the data given by \a it.
\see drawStatisticalBox, getQuartileBox, getWhiskerBackboneLines
*/
QVector<QLineF> QCPStatisticalBox::getWhiskerBarLines(QCPStatisticalBoxDataContainer::const_iterator it) const
{
QVector<QLineF> result(2);
result[0].setPoints(coordsToPixels(it->key-mWhiskerWidth*0.5, it->minimum), coordsToPixels(it->key+mWhiskerWidth*0.5, it->minimum)); // min bar
result[1].setPoints(coordsToPixels(it->key-mWhiskerWidth*0.5, it->maximum), coordsToPixels(it->key+mWhiskerWidth*0.5, it->maximum)); // max bar
return result;
}
/* end of 'src/plottables/plottable-statisticalbox.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/plottables/plottable-colormap.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 48149 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPColorMapData
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPColorMapData
\brief Holds the two-dimensional data of a QCPColorMap plottable.
This class is a data storage for \ref QCPColorMap. It holds a two-dimensional array, which \ref
QCPColorMap then displays as a 2D image in the plot, where the array values are represented by a
color, depending on the value.
The size of the array can be controlled via \ref setSize (or \ref setKeySize, \ref setValueSize).
Which plot coordinates these cells correspond to can be configured with \ref setRange (or \ref
setKeyRange, \ref setValueRange).
The data cells can be accessed in two ways: They can be directly addressed by an integer index
with \ref setCell. This is the fastest method. Alternatively, they can be addressed by their plot
coordinate with \ref setData. plot coordinate to cell index transformations and vice versa are
provided by the functions \ref coordToCell and \ref cellToCoord.
A \ref QCPColorMapData also holds an on-demand two-dimensional array of alpha values which (if
allocated) has the same size as the data map. It can be accessed via \ref setAlpha, \ref
fillAlpha and \ref clearAlpha. The memory for the alpha map is only allocated if needed, i.e. on
the first call of \ref setAlpha. \ref clearAlpha restores full opacity and frees the alpha map.
This class also buffers the minimum and maximum values that are in the data set, to provide
QCPColorMap::rescaleDataRange with the necessary information quickly. Setting a cell to a value
that is greater than the current maximum increases this maximum to the new value. However,
setting the cell that currently holds the maximum value to a smaller value doesn't decrease the
maximum again, because finding the true new maximum would require going through the entire data
array, which might be time consuming. The same holds for the data minimum. This functionality is
given by \ref recalculateDataBounds, such that you can decide when it is sensible to find the
true current minimum and maximum. The method QCPColorMap::rescaleDataRange offers a convenience
parameter \a recalculateDataBounds which may be set to true to automatically call \ref
recalculateDataBounds internally.
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn bool QCPColorMapData::isEmpty() const
Returns whether this instance carries no data. This is equivalent to having a size where at least
one of the dimensions is 0 (see \ref setSize).
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a new QCPColorMapData instance. The instance has \a keySize cells in the key direction
and \a valueSize cells in the value direction. These cells will be displayed by the \ref QCPColorMap
at the coordinates \a keyRange and \a valueRange.
\see setSize, setKeySize, setValueSize, setRange, setKeyRange, setValueRange
*/
QCPColorMapData::QCPColorMapData(int keySize, int valueSize, const QCPRange &keyRange, const QCPRange &valueRange) :
mKeySize(0),
mValueSize(0),
mKeyRange(keyRange),
mValueRange(valueRange),
mIsEmpty(true),
mData(nullptr),
mAlpha(nullptr),
mDataModified(true)
{
setSize(keySize, valueSize);
fill(0);
}
QCPColorMapData::~QCPColorMapData()
{
delete[] mData;
delete[] mAlpha;
}
/*!
Constructs a new QCPColorMapData instance copying the data and range of \a other.
*/
QCPColorMapData::QCPColorMapData(const QCPColorMapData &other) :
mKeySize(0),
mValueSize(0),
mIsEmpty(true),
mData(nullptr),
mAlpha(nullptr),
mDataModified(true)
{
*this = other;
}
/*!
Overwrites this color map data instance with the data stored in \a other. The alpha map state is
transferred, too.
*/
QCPColorMapData &QCPColorMapData::operator=(const QCPColorMapData &other)
{
if (&other != this)
{
const int keySize = other.keySize();
const int valueSize = other.valueSize();
if (!other.mAlpha && mAlpha)
clearAlpha();
setSize(keySize, valueSize);
if (other.mAlpha && !mAlpha)
createAlpha(false);
setRange(other.keyRange(), other.valueRange());
if (!isEmpty())
{
memcpy(mData, other.mData, sizeof(mData[0])*size_t(keySize*valueSize));
if (mAlpha)
memcpy(mAlpha, other.mAlpha, sizeof(mAlpha[0])*size_t(keySize*valueSize));
}
mDataBounds = other.mDataBounds;
mDataModified = true;
}
return *this;
}
/* undocumented getter */
double QCPColorMapData::data(double key, double value)
{
int keyCell = int( (key-mKeyRange.lower)/(mKeyRange.upper-mKeyRange.lower)*(mKeySize-1)+0.5 );
int valueCell = int( (value-mValueRange.lower)/(mValueRange.upper-mValueRange.lower)*(mValueSize-1)+0.5 );
if (keyCell >= 0 && keyCell < mKeySize && valueCell >= 0 && valueCell < mValueSize)
return mData[valueCell*mKeySize + keyCell];
else
return 0;
}
/* undocumented getter */
double QCPColorMapData::cell(int keyIndex, int valueIndex)
{
if (keyIndex >= 0 && keyIndex < mKeySize && valueIndex >= 0 && valueIndex < mValueSize)
return mData[valueIndex*mKeySize + keyIndex];
else
return 0;
}
/*!
Returns the alpha map value of the cell with the indices \a keyIndex and \a valueIndex.
If this color map data doesn't have an alpha map (because \ref setAlpha was never called after
creation or after a call to \ref clearAlpha), returns 255, which corresponds to full opacity.
\see setAlpha
*/
unsigned char QCPColorMapData::alpha(int keyIndex, int valueIndex)
{
if (mAlpha && keyIndex >= 0 && keyIndex < mKeySize && valueIndex >= 0 && valueIndex < mValueSize)
return mAlpha[valueIndex*mKeySize + keyIndex];
else
return 255;
}
/*!
Resizes the data array to have \a keySize cells in the key dimension and \a valueSize cells in
the value dimension.
The current data is discarded and the map cells are set to 0, unless the map had already the
requested size.
Setting at least one of \a keySize or \a valueSize to zero frees the internal data array and \ref
isEmpty returns true.
\see setRange, setKeySize, setValueSize
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setSize(int keySize, int valueSize)
{
if (keySize != mKeySize || valueSize != mValueSize)
{
mKeySize = keySize;
mValueSize = valueSize;
delete[] mData;
mIsEmpty = mKeySize == 0 || mValueSize == 0;
if (!mIsEmpty)
{
#ifdef __EXCEPTIONS
try { // 2D arrays get memory intensive fast. So if the allocation fails, at least output debug message
#endif
mData = new double[size_t(mKeySize*mValueSize)];
#ifdef __EXCEPTIONS
} catch (...) { mData = nullptr; }
#endif
if (mData)
fill(0);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "out of memory for data dimensions "<< mKeySize << "*" << mValueSize;
} else
mData = nullptr;
if (mAlpha) // if we had an alpha map, recreate it with new size
createAlpha();
mDataModified = true;
}
}
/*!
Resizes the data array to have \a keySize cells in the key dimension.
The current data is discarded and the map cells are set to 0, unless the map had already the
requested size.
Setting \a keySize to zero frees the internal data array and \ref isEmpty returns true.
\see setKeyRange, setSize, setValueSize
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setKeySize(int keySize)
{
setSize(keySize, mValueSize);
}
/*!
Resizes the data array to have \a valueSize cells in the value dimension.
The current data is discarded and the map cells are set to 0, unless the map had already the
requested size.
Setting \a valueSize to zero frees the internal data array and \ref isEmpty returns true.
\see setValueRange, setSize, setKeySize
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setValueSize(int valueSize)
{
setSize(mKeySize, valueSize);
}
/*!
Sets the coordinate ranges the data shall be distributed over. This defines the rectangular area
covered by the color map in plot coordinates.
The outer cells will be centered on the range boundaries given to this function. For example, if
the key size (\ref setKeySize) is 3 and \a keyRange is set to <tt>QCPRange(2, 3)</tt> there will
be cells centered on the key coordinates 2, 2.5 and 3.
\see setSize
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setRange(const QCPRange &keyRange, const QCPRange &valueRange)
{
setKeyRange(keyRange);
setValueRange(valueRange);
}
/*!
Sets the coordinate range the data shall be distributed over in the key dimension. Together with
the value range, This defines the rectangular area covered by the color map in plot coordinates.
The outer cells will be centered on the range boundaries given to this function. For example, if
the key size (\ref setKeySize) is 3 and \a keyRange is set to <tt>QCPRange(2, 3)</tt> there will
be cells centered on the key coordinates 2, 2.5 and 3.
\see setRange, setValueRange, setSize
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setKeyRange(const QCPRange &keyRange)
{
mKeyRange = keyRange;
}
/*!
Sets the coordinate range the data shall be distributed over in the value dimension. Together with
the key range, This defines the rectangular area covered by the color map in plot coordinates.
The outer cells will be centered on the range boundaries given to this function. For example, if
the value size (\ref setValueSize) is 3 and \a valueRange is set to <tt>QCPRange(2, 3)</tt> there
will be cells centered on the value coordinates 2, 2.5 and 3.
\see setRange, setKeyRange, setSize
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setValueRange(const QCPRange &valueRange)
{
mValueRange = valueRange;
}
/*!
Sets the data of the cell, which lies at the plot coordinates given by \a key and \a value, to \a
z.
\note The QCPColorMap always displays the data at equal key/value intervals, even if the key or
value axis is set to a logarithmic scaling. If you want to use QCPColorMap with logarithmic axes,
you shouldn't use the \ref QCPColorMapData::setData method as it uses a linear transformation to
determine the cell index. Rather directly access the cell index with \ref
QCPColorMapData::setCell.
\see setCell, setRange
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setData(double key, double value, double z)
{
int keyCell = int( (key-mKeyRange.lower)/(mKeyRange.upper-mKeyRange.lower)*(mKeySize-1)+0.5 );
int valueCell = int( (value-mValueRange.lower)/(mValueRange.upper-mValueRange.lower)*(mValueSize-1)+0.5 );
if (keyCell >= 0 && keyCell < mKeySize && valueCell >= 0 && valueCell < mValueSize)
{
mData[valueCell*mKeySize + keyCell] = z;
if (z < mDataBounds.lower)
mDataBounds.lower = z;
if (z > mDataBounds.upper)
mDataBounds.upper = z;
mDataModified = true;
}
}
/*!
Sets the data of the cell with indices \a keyIndex and \a valueIndex to \a z. The indices
enumerate the cells starting from zero, up to the map's size-1 in the respective dimension (see
\ref setSize).
In the standard plot configuration (horizontal key axis and vertical value axis, both not
range-reversed), the cell with indices (0, 0) is in the bottom left corner and the cell with
indices (keySize-1, valueSize-1) is in the top right corner of the color map.
\see setData, setSize
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setCell(int keyIndex, int valueIndex, double z)
{
if (keyIndex >= 0 && keyIndex < mKeySize && valueIndex >= 0 && valueIndex < mValueSize)
{
mData[valueIndex*mKeySize + keyIndex] = z;
if (z < mDataBounds.lower)
mDataBounds.lower = z;
if (z > mDataBounds.upper)
mDataBounds.upper = z;
mDataModified = true;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << keyIndex << valueIndex;
}
/*!
Sets the alpha of the color map cell given by \a keyIndex and \a valueIndex to \a alpha. A value
of 0 for \a alpha results in a fully transparent cell, and a value of 255 results in a fully
opaque cell.
If an alpha map doesn't exist yet for this color map data, it will be created here. If you wish
to restore full opacity and free any allocated memory of the alpha map, call \ref clearAlpha.
Note that the cell-wise alpha which can be configured here is independent of any alpha configured
in the color map's gradient (\ref QCPColorGradient). If a cell is affected both by the cell-wise
and gradient alpha, the alpha values will be blended accordingly during rendering of the color
map.
\see fillAlpha, clearAlpha
*/
void QCPColorMapData::setAlpha(int keyIndex, int valueIndex, unsigned char alpha)
{
if (keyIndex >= 0 && keyIndex < mKeySize && valueIndex >= 0 && valueIndex < mValueSize)
{
if (mAlpha || createAlpha())
{
mAlpha[valueIndex*mKeySize + keyIndex] = alpha;
mDataModified = true;
}
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "index out of bounds:" << keyIndex << valueIndex;
}
/*!
Goes through the data and updates the buffered minimum and maximum data values.
Calling this method is only advised if you are about to call \ref QCPColorMap::rescaleDataRange
and can not guarantee that the cells holding the maximum or minimum data haven't been overwritten
with a smaller or larger value respectively, since the buffered maximum/minimum values have been
updated the last time. Why this is the case is explained in the class description (\ref
QCPColorMapData).
Note that the method \ref QCPColorMap::rescaleDataRange provides a parameter \a
recalculateDataBounds for convenience. Setting this to true will call this method for you, before
doing the rescale.
*/
void QCPColorMapData::recalculateDataBounds()
{
if (mKeySize > 0 && mValueSize > 0)
{
double minHeight = mData[0];
double maxHeight = mData[0];
const int dataCount = mValueSize*mKeySize;
for (int i=0; i<dataCount; ++i)
{
if (mData[i] > maxHeight)
maxHeight = mData[i];
if (mData[i] < minHeight)
minHeight = mData[i];
}
mDataBounds.lower = minHeight;
mDataBounds.upper = maxHeight;
}
}
/*!
Frees the internal data memory.
This is equivalent to calling \ref setSize "setSize(0, 0)".
*/
void QCPColorMapData::clear()
{
setSize(0, 0);
}
/*!
Frees the internal alpha map. The color map will have full opacity again.
*/
void QCPColorMapData::clearAlpha()
{
if (mAlpha)
{
delete[] mAlpha;
mAlpha = nullptr;
mDataModified = true;
}
}
/*!
Sets all cells to the value \a z.
*/
void QCPColorMapData::fill(double z)
{
const int dataCount = mValueSize*mKeySize;
for (int i=0; i<dataCount; ++i)
mData[i] = z;
mDataBounds = QCPRange(z, z);
mDataModified = true;
}
/*!
Sets the opacity of all color map cells to \a alpha. A value of 0 for \a alpha results in a fully
transparent color map, and a value of 255 results in a fully opaque color map.
If you wish to restore opacity to 100% and free any used memory for the alpha map, rather use
\ref clearAlpha.
\see setAlpha
*/
void QCPColorMapData::fillAlpha(unsigned char alpha)
{
if (mAlpha || createAlpha(false))
{
const int dataCount = mValueSize*mKeySize;
for (int i=0; i<dataCount; ++i)
mAlpha[i] = alpha;
mDataModified = true;
}
}
/*!
Transforms plot coordinates given by \a key and \a value to cell indices of this QCPColorMapData
instance. The resulting cell indices are returned via the output parameters \a keyIndex and \a
valueIndex.
The retrieved key/value cell indices can then be used for example with \ref setCell.
If you are only interested in a key or value index, you may pass \c nullptr as \a valueIndex or
\a keyIndex.
\note The QCPColorMap always displays the data at equal key/value intervals, even if the key or
value axis is set to a logarithmic scaling. If you want to use QCPColorMap with logarithmic axes,
you shouldn't use the \ref QCPColorMapData::coordToCell method as it uses a linear transformation to
determine the cell index.
\see cellToCoord, QCPAxis::coordToPixel
*/
void QCPColorMapData::coordToCell(double key, double value, int *keyIndex, int *valueIndex) const
{
if (keyIndex)
*keyIndex = int( (key-mKeyRange.lower)/(mKeyRange.upper-mKeyRange.lower)*(mKeySize-1)+0.5 );
if (valueIndex)
*valueIndex = int( (value-mValueRange.lower)/(mValueRange.upper-mValueRange.lower)*(mValueSize-1)+0.5 );
}
/*!
Transforms cell indices given by \a keyIndex and \a valueIndex to cell indices of this QCPColorMapData
instance. The resulting coordinates are returned via the output parameters \a key and \a
value.
If you are only interested in a key or value coordinate, you may pass \c nullptr as \a key or \a
value.
\note The QCPColorMap always displays the data at equal key/value intervals, even if the key or
value axis is set to a logarithmic scaling. If you want to use QCPColorMap with logarithmic axes,
you shouldn't use the \ref QCPColorMapData::cellToCoord method as it uses a linear transformation to
determine the cell index.
\see coordToCell, QCPAxis::pixelToCoord
*/
void QCPColorMapData::cellToCoord(int keyIndex, int valueIndex, double *key, double *value) const
{
if (key)
*key = keyIndex/double(mKeySize-1)*(mKeyRange.upper-mKeyRange.lower)+mKeyRange.lower;
if (value)
*value = valueIndex/double(mValueSize-1)*(mValueRange.upper-mValueRange.lower)+mValueRange.lower;
}
/*! \internal
Allocates the internal alpha map with the current data map key/value size and, if \a
initializeOpaque is true, initializes all values to 255. If \a initializeOpaque is false, the
values are not initialized at all. In this case, the alpha map should be initialized manually,
e.g. with \ref fillAlpha.
If an alpha map exists already, it is deleted first. If this color map is empty (has either key
or value size zero, see \ref isEmpty), the alpha map is cleared.
The return value indicates the existence of the alpha map after the call. So this method returns
true if the data map isn't empty and an alpha map was successfully allocated.
*/
bool QCPColorMapData::createAlpha(bool initializeOpaque)
{
clearAlpha();
if (isEmpty())
return false;
#ifdef __EXCEPTIONS
try { // 2D arrays get memory intensive fast. So if the allocation fails, at least output debug message
#endif
mAlpha = new unsigned char[size_t(mKeySize*mValueSize)];
#ifdef __EXCEPTIONS
} catch (...) { mAlpha = nullptr; }
#endif
if (mAlpha)
{
if (initializeOpaque)
fillAlpha(255);
return true;
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "out of memory for data dimensions "<< mKeySize << "*" << mValueSize;
return false;
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPColorMap
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPColorMap
\brief A plottable representing a two-dimensional color map in a plot.
\image html QCPColorMap.png
The data is stored in the class \ref QCPColorMapData, which can be accessed via the data()
method.
A color map has three dimensions to represent a data point: The \a key dimension, the \a value
dimension and the \a data dimension. As with other plottables such as graphs, \a key and \a value
correspond to two orthogonal axes on the QCustomPlot surface that you specify in the QCPColorMap
constructor. The \a data dimension however is encoded as the color of the point at (\a key, \a
value).
Set the number of points (or \a cells) in the key/value dimension via \ref
QCPColorMapData::setSize. The plot coordinate range over which these points will be displayed is
specified via \ref QCPColorMapData::setRange. The first cell will be centered on the lower range
boundary and the last cell will be centered on the upper range boundary. The data can be set by
either accessing the cells directly with QCPColorMapData::setCell or by addressing the cells via
their plot coordinates with \ref QCPColorMapData::setData. If possible, you should prefer
setCell, since it doesn't need to do any coordinate transformation and thus performs a bit
better.
The cell with index (0, 0) is at the bottom left, if the color map uses normal (i.e. not reversed)
key and value axes.
To show the user which colors correspond to which \a data values, a \ref QCPColorScale is
typically placed to the right of the axis rect. See the documentation there for details on how to
add and use a color scale.
\section qcpcolormap-appearance Changing the appearance
Most important to the appearance is the color gradient, which can be specified via \ref
setGradient. See the documentation of \ref QCPColorGradient for details on configuring a color
gradient.
The \a data range that is mapped to the colors of the gradient can be specified with \ref
setDataRange. To make the data range encompass the whole data set minimum to maximum, call \ref
rescaleDataRange. If your data may contain NaN values, use \ref QCPColorGradient::setNanHandling
to define how they are displayed.
\section qcpcolormap-transparency Transparency
Transparency in color maps can be achieved by two mechanisms. On one hand, you can specify alpha
values for color stops of the \ref QCPColorGradient, via the regular QColor interface. This will
cause the color map data which gets mapped to colors around those color stops to appear with the
accordingly interpolated transparency.
On the other hand you can also directly apply an alpha value to each cell independent of its
data, by using the alpha map feature of \ref QCPColorMapData. The relevant methods are \ref
QCPColorMapData::setAlpha, QCPColorMapData::fillAlpha and \ref QCPColorMapData::clearAlpha().
The two transparencies will be joined together in the plot and otherwise not interfere with each
other. They are mixed in a multiplicative matter, so an alpha of e.g. 50% (128/255) in both modes
simultaneously, will result in a total transparency of 25% (64/255).
\section qcpcolormap-usage Usage
Like all data representing objects in QCustomPlot, the QCPColorMap is a plottable
(QCPAbstractPlottable). So the plottable-interface of QCustomPlot applies
(QCustomPlot::plottable, QCustomPlot::removePlottable, etc.)
Usually, you first create an instance:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcolormap-creation-1
which registers it with the QCustomPlot instance of the passed axes. Note that this QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the plottable, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
The newly created plottable can be modified, e.g.:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpcolormap-creation-2
\note The QCPColorMap always displays the data at equal key/value intervals, even if the key or
value axis is set to a logarithmic scaling. If you want to use QCPColorMap with logarithmic axes,
you shouldn't use the \ref QCPColorMapData::setData method as it uses a linear transformation to
determine the cell index. Rather directly access the cell index with \ref
QCPColorMapData::setCell.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPColorMapData *QCPColorMap::data() const
Returns a pointer to the internal data storage of type \ref QCPColorMapData. Access this to
modify data points (cells) and the color map key/value range.
\see setData
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/* start documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPColorMap::dataRangeChanged(const QCPRange &newRange);
This signal is emitted when the data range changes.
\see setDataRange
*/
/*! \fn void QCPColorMap::dataScaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType scaleType);
This signal is emitted when the data scale type changes.
\see setDataScaleType
*/
/*! \fn void QCPColorMap::gradientChanged(const QCPColorGradient &newGradient);
This signal is emitted when the gradient changes.
\see setGradient
*/
/* end documentation of signals */
/*!
Constructs a color map with the specified \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis.
The created QCPColorMap is automatically registered with the QCustomPlot instance inferred from
\a keyAxis. This QCustomPlot instance takes ownership of the QCPColorMap, so do not delete it
manually but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
*/
QCPColorMap::QCPColorMap(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis) :
QCPAbstractPlottable(keyAxis, valueAxis),
mDataScaleType(QCPAxis::stLinear),
mMapData(new QCPColorMapData(10, 10, QCPRange(0, 5), QCPRange(0, 5))),
mGradient(QCPColorGradient::gpCold),
mInterpolate(true),
mTightBoundary(false),
mMapImageInvalidated(true)
{
}
QCPColorMap::~QCPColorMap()
{
delete mMapData;
}
/*!
Replaces the current \ref data with the provided \a data.
If \a copy is set to true, the \a data object will only be copied. if false, the color map
takes ownership of the passed data and replaces the internal data pointer with it. This is
significantly faster than copying for large datasets.
*/
void QCPColorMap::setData(QCPColorMapData *data, bool copy)
{
if (mMapData == data)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "The data pointer is already in (and owned by) this plottable" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(data);
return;
}
if (copy)
{
*mMapData = *data;
} else
{
delete mMapData;
mMapData = data;
}
mMapImageInvalidated = true;
}
/*!
Sets the data range of this color map to \a dataRange. The data range defines which data values
are mapped to the color gradient.
To make the data range span the full range of the data set, use \ref rescaleDataRange.
\see QCPColorScale::setDataRange
*/
void QCPColorMap::setDataRange(const QCPRange &dataRange)
{
if (!QCPRange::validRange(dataRange)) return;
if (mDataRange.lower != dataRange.lower || mDataRange.upper != dataRange.upper)
{
if (mDataScaleType == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
mDataRange = dataRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
else
mDataRange = dataRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
mMapImageInvalidated = true;
emit dataRangeChanged(mDataRange);
}
}
/*!
Sets whether the data is correlated with the color gradient linearly or logarithmically.
\see QCPColorScale::setDataScaleType
*/
void QCPColorMap::setDataScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType scaleType)
{
if (mDataScaleType != scaleType)
{
mDataScaleType = scaleType;
mMapImageInvalidated = true;
emit dataScaleTypeChanged(mDataScaleType);
if (mDataScaleType == QCPAxis::stLogarithmic)
setDataRange(mDataRange.sanitizedForLogScale());
}
}
/*!
Sets the color gradient that is used to represent the data. For more details on how to create an
own gradient or use one of the preset gradients, see \ref QCPColorGradient.
The colors defined by the gradient will be used to represent data values in the currently set
data range, see \ref setDataRange. Data points that are outside this data range will either be
colored uniformly with the respective gradient boundary color, or the gradient will repeat,
depending on \ref QCPColorGradient::setPeriodic.
\see QCPColorScale::setGradient
*/
void QCPColorMap::setGradient(const QCPColorGradient &gradient)
{
if (mGradient != gradient)
{
mGradient = gradient;
mMapImageInvalidated = true;
emit gradientChanged(mGradient);
}
}
/*!
Sets whether the color map image shall use bicubic interpolation when displaying the color map
shrinked or expanded, and not at a 1:1 pixel-to-data scale.
\image html QCPColorMap-interpolate.png "A 10*10 color map, with interpolation and without interpolation enabled"
*/
void QCPColorMap::setInterpolate(bool enabled)
{
mInterpolate = enabled;
mMapImageInvalidated = true; // because oversampling factors might need to change
}
/*!
Sets whether the outer most data rows and columns are clipped to the specified key and value
range (see \ref QCPColorMapData::setKeyRange, \ref QCPColorMapData::setValueRange).
if \a enabled is set to false, the data points at the border of the color map are drawn with the
same width and height as all other data points. Since the data points are represented by
rectangles of one color centered on the data coordinate, this means that the shown color map
extends by half a data point over the specified key/value range in each direction.
\image html QCPColorMap-tightboundary.png "A color map, with tight boundary enabled and disabled"
*/
void QCPColorMap::setTightBoundary(bool enabled)
{
mTightBoundary = enabled;
}
/*!
Associates the color scale \a colorScale with this color map.
This means that both the color scale and the color map synchronize their gradient, data range and
data scale type (\ref setGradient, \ref setDataRange, \ref setDataScaleType). Multiple color maps
can be associated with one single color scale. This causes the color maps to also synchronize
those properties, via the mutual color scale.
This function causes the color map to adopt the current color gradient, data range and data scale
type of \a colorScale. After this call, you may change these properties at either the color map
or the color scale, and the setting will be applied to both.
Pass \c nullptr as \a colorScale to disconnect the color scale from this color map again.
*/
void QCPColorMap::setColorScale(QCPColorScale *colorScale)
{
if (mColorScale) // unconnect signals from old color scale
{
disconnect(this, SIGNAL(dataRangeChanged(QCPRange)), mColorScale.data(), SLOT(setDataRange(QCPRange)));
disconnect(this, SIGNAL(dataScaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), mColorScale.data(), SLOT(setDataScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
disconnect(this, SIGNAL(gradientChanged(QCPColorGradient)), mColorScale.data(), SLOT(setGradient(QCPColorGradient)));
disconnect(mColorScale.data(), SIGNAL(dataRangeChanged(QCPRange)), this, SLOT(setDataRange(QCPRange)));
disconnect(mColorScale.data(), SIGNAL(gradientChanged(QCPColorGradient)), this, SLOT(setGradient(QCPColorGradient)));
disconnect(mColorScale.data(), SIGNAL(dataScaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), this, SLOT(setDataScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
}
mColorScale = colorScale;
if (mColorScale) // connect signals to new color scale
{
setGradient(mColorScale.data()->gradient());
setDataRange(mColorScale.data()->dataRange());
setDataScaleType(mColorScale.data()->dataScaleType());
connect(this, SIGNAL(dataRangeChanged(QCPRange)), mColorScale.data(), SLOT(setDataRange(QCPRange)));
connect(this, SIGNAL(dataScaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), mColorScale.data(), SLOT(setDataScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
connect(this, SIGNAL(gradientChanged(QCPColorGradient)), mColorScale.data(), SLOT(setGradient(QCPColorGradient)));
connect(mColorScale.data(), SIGNAL(dataRangeChanged(QCPRange)), this, SLOT(setDataRange(QCPRange)));
connect(mColorScale.data(), SIGNAL(gradientChanged(QCPColorGradient)), this, SLOT(setGradient(QCPColorGradient)));
connect(mColorScale.data(), SIGNAL(dataScaleTypeChanged(QCPAxis::ScaleType)), this, SLOT(setDataScaleType(QCPAxis::ScaleType)));
}
}
/*!
Sets the data range (\ref setDataRange) to span the minimum and maximum values that occur in the
current data set. This corresponds to the \ref rescaleKeyAxis or \ref rescaleValueAxis methods,
only for the third data dimension of the color map.
The minimum and maximum values of the data set are buffered in the internal QCPColorMapData
instance (\ref data). As data is updated via its \ref QCPColorMapData::setCell or \ref
QCPColorMapData::setData, the buffered minimum and maximum values are updated, too. For
performance reasons, however, they are only updated in an expanding fashion. So the buffered
maximum can only increase and the buffered minimum can only decrease. In consequence, changes to
the data that actually lower the maximum of the data set (by overwriting the cell holding the
current maximum with a smaller value), aren't recognized and the buffered maximum overestimates
the true maximum of the data set. The same happens for the buffered minimum. To recalculate the
true minimum and maximum by explicitly looking at each cell, the method
QCPColorMapData::recalculateDataBounds can be used. For convenience, setting the parameter \a
recalculateDataBounds calls this method before setting the data range to the buffered minimum and
maximum.
\see setDataRange
*/
void QCPColorMap::rescaleDataRange(bool recalculateDataBounds)
{
if (recalculateDataBounds)
mMapData->recalculateDataBounds();
setDataRange(mMapData->dataBounds());
}
/*!
Takes the current appearance of the color map and updates the legend icon, which is used to
represent this color map in the legend (see \ref QCPLegend).
The \a transformMode specifies whether the rescaling is done by a faster, low quality image
scaling algorithm (Qt::FastTransformation) or by a slower, higher quality algorithm
(Qt::SmoothTransformation).
The current color map appearance is scaled down to \a thumbSize. Ideally, this should be equal to
the size of the legend icon (see \ref QCPLegend::setIconSize). If it isn't exactly the configured
legend icon size, the thumb will be rescaled during drawing of the legend item.
\see setDataRange
*/
void QCPColorMap::updateLegendIcon(Qt::TransformationMode transformMode, const QSize &thumbSize)
{
if (mMapImage.isNull() && !data()->isEmpty())
updateMapImage(); // try to update map image if it's null (happens if no draw has happened yet)
if (!mMapImage.isNull()) // might still be null, e.g. if data is empty, so check here again
{
bool mirrorX = (keyAxis()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? keyAxis() : valueAxis())->rangeReversed();
bool mirrorY = (valueAxis()->orientation() == Qt::Vertical ? valueAxis() : keyAxis())->rangeReversed();
mLegendIcon = QPixmap::fromImage(mMapImage.mirrored(mirrorX, mirrorY)).scaled(thumbSize, Qt::KeepAspectRatio, transformMode);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPColorMap::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mMapData->isEmpty())
return -1;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return -1;
if (mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->rect().contains(pos.toPoint()) || mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iSelectPlottablesBeyondAxisRect))
{
double posKey, posValue;
pixelsToCoords(pos, posKey, posValue);
if (mMapData->keyRange().contains(posKey) && mMapData->valueRange().contains(posValue))
{
if (details)
details->setValue(QCPDataSelection(QCPDataRange(0, 1))); // temporary solution, to facilitate whole-plottable selection. Replace in future version with segmented 2D selection.
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
}
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPColorMap::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const
{
foundRange = true;
QCPRange result = mMapData->keyRange();
result.normalize();
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive)
{
if (result.lower <= 0 && result.upper > 0)
result.lower = result.upper*1e-3;
else if (result.lower <= 0 && result.upper <= 0)
foundRange = false;
} else if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative)
{
if (result.upper >= 0 && result.lower < 0)
result.upper = result.lower*1e-3;
else if (result.upper >= 0 && result.lower >= 0)
foundRange = false;
}
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPColorMap::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const
{
if (inKeyRange != QCPRange())
{
if (mMapData->keyRange().upper < inKeyRange.lower || mMapData->keyRange().lower > inKeyRange.upper)
{
foundRange = false;
return {};
}
}
foundRange = true;
QCPRange result = mMapData->valueRange();
result.normalize();
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive)
{
if (result.lower <= 0 && result.upper > 0)
result.lower = result.upper*1e-3;
else if (result.lower <= 0 && result.upper <= 0)
foundRange = false;
} else if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative)
{
if (result.upper >= 0 && result.lower < 0)
result.upper = result.lower*1e-3;
else if (result.upper >= 0 && result.lower >= 0)
foundRange = false;
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Updates the internal map image buffer by going through the internal \ref QCPColorMapData and
turning the data values into color pixels with \ref QCPColorGradient::colorize.
This method is called by \ref QCPColorMap::draw if either the data has been modified or the map image
has been invalidated for a different reason (e.g. a change of the data range with \ref
setDataRange).
If the map cell count is low, the image created will be oversampled in order to avoid a
QPainter::drawImage bug which makes inner pixel boundaries jitter when stretch-drawing images
without smooth transform enabled. Accordingly, oversampling isn't performed if \ref
setInterpolate is true.
*/
void QCPColorMap::updateMapImage()
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis) return;
if (mMapData->isEmpty()) return;
const QImage::Format format = QImage::Format_ARGB32_Premultiplied;
const int keySize = mMapData->keySize();
const int valueSize = mMapData->valueSize();
int keyOversamplingFactor = mInterpolate ? 1 : int(1.0+100.0/double(keySize)); // make mMapImage have at least size 100, factor becomes 1 if size > 200 or interpolation is on
int valueOversamplingFactor = mInterpolate ? 1 : int(1.0+100.0/double(valueSize)); // make mMapImage have at least size 100, factor becomes 1 if size > 200 or interpolation is on
// resize mMapImage to correct dimensions including possible oversampling factors, according to key/value axes orientation:
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal && (mMapImage.width() != keySize*keyOversamplingFactor || mMapImage.height() != valueSize*valueOversamplingFactor))
mMapImage = QImage(QSize(keySize*keyOversamplingFactor, valueSize*valueOversamplingFactor), format);
else if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical && (mMapImage.width() != valueSize*valueOversamplingFactor || mMapImage.height() != keySize*keyOversamplingFactor))
mMapImage = QImage(QSize(valueSize*valueOversamplingFactor, keySize*keyOversamplingFactor), format);
if (mMapImage.isNull())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Couldn't create map image (possibly too large for memory)";
mMapImage = QImage(QSize(10, 10), format);
mMapImage.fill(Qt::black);
} else
{
QImage *localMapImage = &mMapImage; // this is the image on which the colorization operates. Either the final mMapImage, or if we need oversampling, mUndersampledMapImage
if (keyOversamplingFactor > 1 || valueOversamplingFactor > 1)
{
// resize undersampled map image to actual key/value cell sizes:
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal && (mUndersampledMapImage.width() != keySize || mUndersampledMapImage.height() != valueSize))
mUndersampledMapImage = QImage(QSize(keySize, valueSize), format);
else if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical && (mUndersampledMapImage.width() != valueSize || mUndersampledMapImage.height() != keySize))
mUndersampledMapImage = QImage(QSize(valueSize, keySize), format);
localMapImage = &mUndersampledMapImage; // make the colorization run on the undersampled image
} else if (!mUndersampledMapImage.isNull())
mUndersampledMapImage = QImage(); // don't need oversampling mechanism anymore (map size has changed) but mUndersampledMapImage still has nonzero size, free it
const double *rawData = mMapData->mData;
const unsigned char *rawAlpha = mMapData->mAlpha;
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
const int lineCount = valueSize;
const int rowCount = keySize;
for (int line=0; line<lineCount; ++line)
{
QRgb* pixels = reinterpret_cast<QRgb*>(localMapImage->scanLine(lineCount-1-line)); // invert scanline index because QImage counts scanlines from top, but our vertical index counts from bottom (mathematical coordinate system)
if (rawAlpha)
mGradient.colorize(rawData+line*rowCount, rawAlpha+line*rowCount, mDataRange, pixels, rowCount, 1, mDataScaleType==QCPAxis::stLogarithmic);
else
mGradient.colorize(rawData+line*rowCount, mDataRange, pixels, rowCount, 1, mDataScaleType==QCPAxis::stLogarithmic);
}
} else // keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical
{
const int lineCount = keySize;
const int rowCount = valueSize;
for (int line=0; line<lineCount; ++line)
{
QRgb* pixels = reinterpret_cast<QRgb*>(localMapImage->scanLine(lineCount-1-line)); // invert scanline index because QImage counts scanlines from top, but our vertical index counts from bottom (mathematical coordinate system)
if (rawAlpha)
mGradient.colorize(rawData+line, rawAlpha+line, mDataRange, pixels, rowCount, lineCount, mDataScaleType==QCPAxis::stLogarithmic);
else
mGradient.colorize(rawData+line, mDataRange, pixels, rowCount, lineCount, mDataScaleType==QCPAxis::stLogarithmic);
}
}
if (keyOversamplingFactor > 1 || valueOversamplingFactor > 1)
{
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
mMapImage = mUndersampledMapImage.scaled(keySize*keyOversamplingFactor, valueSize*valueOversamplingFactor, Qt::IgnoreAspectRatio, Qt::FastTransformation);
else
mMapImage = mUndersampledMapImage.scaled(valueSize*valueOversamplingFactor, keySize*keyOversamplingFactor, Qt::IgnoreAspectRatio, Qt::FastTransformation);
}
}
mMapData->mDataModified = false;
mMapImageInvalidated = false;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPColorMap::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (mMapData->isEmpty()) return;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis) return;
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
if (mMapData->mDataModified || mMapImageInvalidated)
updateMapImage();
// use buffer if painting vectorized (PDF):
const bool useBuffer = painter->modes().testFlag(QCPPainter::pmVectorized);
QCPPainter *localPainter = painter; // will be redirected to paint on mapBuffer if painting vectorized
QRectF mapBufferTarget; // the rect in absolute widget coordinates where the visible map portion/buffer will end up in
QPixmap mapBuffer;
if (useBuffer)
{
const double mapBufferPixelRatio = 3; // factor by which DPI is increased in embedded bitmaps
mapBufferTarget = painter->clipRegion().boundingRect();
mapBuffer = QPixmap((mapBufferTarget.size()*mapBufferPixelRatio).toSize());
mapBuffer.fill(Qt::transparent);
localPainter = new QCPPainter(&mapBuffer);
localPainter->scale(mapBufferPixelRatio, mapBufferPixelRatio);
localPainter->translate(-mapBufferTarget.topLeft());
}
QRectF imageRect = QRectF(coordsToPixels(mMapData->keyRange().lower, mMapData->valueRange().lower),
coordsToPixels(mMapData->keyRange().upper, mMapData->valueRange().upper)).normalized();
// extend imageRect to contain outer halves/quarters of bordering/cornering pixels (cells are centered on map range boundary):
double halfCellWidth = 0; // in pixels
double halfCellHeight = 0; // in pixels
if (keyAxis()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
if (mMapData->keySize() > 1)
halfCellWidth = 0.5*imageRect.width()/double(mMapData->keySize()-1);
if (mMapData->valueSize() > 1)
halfCellHeight = 0.5*imageRect.height()/double(mMapData->valueSize()-1);
} else // keyAxis orientation is Qt::Vertical
{
if (mMapData->keySize() > 1)
halfCellHeight = 0.5*imageRect.height()/double(mMapData->keySize()-1);
if (mMapData->valueSize() > 1)
halfCellWidth = 0.5*imageRect.width()/double(mMapData->valueSize()-1);
}
imageRect.adjust(-halfCellWidth, -halfCellHeight, halfCellWidth, halfCellHeight);
const bool mirrorX = (keyAxis()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? keyAxis() : valueAxis())->rangeReversed();
const bool mirrorY = (valueAxis()->orientation() == Qt::Vertical ? valueAxis() : keyAxis())->rangeReversed();
const bool smoothBackup = localPainter->renderHints().testFlag(QPainter::SmoothPixmapTransform);
localPainter->setRenderHint(QPainter::SmoothPixmapTransform, mInterpolate);
QRegion clipBackup;
if (mTightBoundary)
{
clipBackup = localPainter->clipRegion();
QRectF tightClipRect = QRectF(coordsToPixels(mMapData->keyRange().lower, mMapData->valueRange().lower),
coordsToPixels(mMapData->keyRange().upper, mMapData->valueRange().upper)).normalized();
localPainter->setClipRect(tightClipRect, Qt::IntersectClip);
}
localPainter->drawImage(imageRect, mMapImage.mirrored(mirrorX, mirrorY));
if (mTightBoundary)
localPainter->setClipRegion(clipBackup);
localPainter->setRenderHint(QPainter::SmoothPixmapTransform, smoothBackup);
if (useBuffer) // localPainter painted to mapBuffer, so now draw buffer with original painter
{
delete localPainter;
painter->drawPixmap(mapBufferTarget.toRect(), mapBuffer);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPColorMap::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRectF &rect) const
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
// draw map thumbnail:
if (!mLegendIcon.isNull())
{
QPixmap scaledIcon = mLegendIcon.scaled(rect.size().toSize(), Qt::KeepAspectRatio, Qt::FastTransformation);
QRectF iconRect = QRectF(0, 0, scaledIcon.width(), scaledIcon.height());
iconRect.moveCenter(rect.center());
painter->drawPixmap(iconRect.topLeft(), scaledIcon);
}
/*
// draw frame:
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
painter->setPen(Qt::black);
painter->drawRect(rect.adjusted(1, 1, 0, 0));
*/
}
/* end of 'src/plottables/plottable-colormap.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/plottables/plottable-financial.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 42914 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPFinancialData
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPFinancialData
\brief Holds the data of one single data point for QCPFinancial.
The stored data is:
\li \a key: coordinate on the key axis of this data point (this is the \a mainKey and the \a sortKey)
\li \a open: The opening value at the data point (this is the \a mainValue)
\li \a high: The high/maximum value at the data point
\li \a low: The low/minimum value at the data point
\li \a close: The closing value at the data point
The container for storing multiple data points is \ref QCPFinancialDataContainer. It is a typedef
for \ref QCPDataContainer with \ref QCPFinancialData as the DataType template parameter. See the
documentation there for an explanation regarding the data type's generic methods.
\see QCPFinancialDataContainer
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn double QCPFinancialData::sortKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static QCPFinancialData QCPFinancialData::fromSortKey(double sortKey)
Returns a data point with the specified \a sortKey. All other members are set to zero.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn static static bool QCPFinancialData::sortKeyIsMainKey()
Since the member \a key is both the data point key coordinate and the data ordering parameter,
this method returns true.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPFinancialData::mainKey() const
Returns the \a key member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn double QCPFinancialData::mainValue() const
Returns the \a open member of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/*! \fn QCPRange QCPFinancialData::valueRange() const
Returns a QCPRange spanning from the \a low to the \a high value of this data point.
For a general explanation of what this method is good for in the context of the data container,
see the documentation of \ref QCPDataContainer.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a data point with key and all values set to zero.
*/
QCPFinancialData::QCPFinancialData() :
key(0),
open(0),
high(0),
low(0),
close(0)
{
}
/*!
Constructs a data point with the specified \a key and OHLC values.
*/
QCPFinancialData::QCPFinancialData(double key, double open, double high, double low, double close) :
key(key),
open(open),
high(high),
low(low),
close(close)
{
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPFinancial
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPFinancial
\brief A plottable representing a financial stock chart
\image html QCPFinancial.png
This plottable represents time series data binned to certain intervals, mainly used for stock
charts. The two common representations OHLC (Open-High-Low-Close) bars and Candlesticks can be
set via \ref setChartStyle.
The data is passed via \ref setData as a set of open/high/low/close values at certain keys
(typically times). This means the data must be already binned appropriately. If data is only
available as a series of values (e.g. \a price against \a time), you can use the static
convenience function \ref timeSeriesToOhlc to generate binned OHLC-data which can then be passed
to \ref setData.
The width of the OHLC bars/candlesticks can be controlled with \ref setWidth and \ref
setWidthType. A typical choice is to set the width type to \ref wtPlotCoords (the default) and
the width to (or slightly less than) one time bin interval width.
\section qcpfinancial-appearance Changing the appearance
Charts can be either single- or two-colored (\ref setTwoColored). If set to be single-colored,
lines are drawn with the plottable's pen (\ref setPen) and fills with the brush (\ref setBrush).
If set to two-colored, positive changes of the value during an interval (\a close >= \a open) are
represented with a different pen and brush than negative changes (\a close < \a open). These can
be configured with \ref setPenPositive, \ref setPenNegative, \ref setBrushPositive, and \ref
setBrushNegative. In two-colored mode, the normal plottable pen/brush is ignored. Upon selection
however, the normal selected pen/brush (provided by the \ref selectionDecorator) is used,
irrespective of whether the chart is single- or two-colored.
\section qcpfinancial-usage Usage
Like all data representing objects in QCustomPlot, the QCPFinancial is a plottable
(QCPAbstractPlottable). So the plottable-interface of QCustomPlot applies
(QCustomPlot::plottable, QCustomPlot::removePlottable, etc.)
Usually, you first create an instance:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpfinancial-creation-1
which registers it with the QCustomPlot instance of the passed axes. Note that this QCustomPlot
instance takes ownership of the plottable, so do not delete it manually but use
QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead. The newly created plottable can be modified, e.g.:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpfinancial-creation-2
Here we have used the static helper method \ref timeSeriesToOhlc, to turn a time-price data
series into a 24-hour binned open-high-low-close data series as QCPFinancial uses.
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPFinancialDataContainer *QCPFinancial::data() const
Returns a pointer to the internal data storage of type \ref QCPFinancialDataContainer. You may
use it to directly manipulate the data, which may be more convenient and faster than using the
regular \ref setData or \ref addData methods, in certain situations.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a financial chart which uses \a keyAxis as its key axis ("x") and \a valueAxis as its value
axis ("y"). \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in the same QCustomPlot instance and not have
the same orientation. If either of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding message is
printed to the debug output (qDebug), the construction is not aborted, though.
The created QCPFinancial is automatically registered with the QCustomPlot instance inferred from \a
keyAxis. This QCustomPlot instance takes ownership of the QCPFinancial, so do not delete it manually
but use QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
*/
QCPFinancial::QCPFinancial(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis) :
QCPAbstractPlottable1D<QCPFinancialData>(keyAxis, valueAxis),
mChartStyle(csCandlestick),
mWidth(0.5),
mWidthType(wtPlotCoords),
mTwoColored(true),
mBrushPositive(QBrush(QColor(50, 160, 0))),
mBrushNegative(QBrush(QColor(180, 0, 15))),
mPenPositive(QPen(QColor(40, 150, 0))),
mPenNegative(QPen(QColor(170, 5, 5)))
{
mSelectionDecorator->setBrush(QBrush(QColor(160, 160, 255)));
}
QCPFinancial::~QCPFinancial()
{
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data container with the provided \a data container.
Since a QSharedPointer is used, multiple QCPFinancials may share the same data container safely.
Modifying the data in the container will then affect all financials that share the container.
Sharing can be achieved by simply exchanging the data containers wrapped in shared pointers:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpfinancial-datasharing-1
If you do not wish to share containers, but create a copy from an existing container, rather use
the \ref QCPDataContainer<DataType>::set method on the financial's data container directly:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpfinancial-datasharing-2
\see addData, timeSeriesToOhlc
*/
void QCPFinancial::setData(QSharedPointer<QCPFinancialDataContainer> data)
{
mDataContainer = data;
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data with the provided points in \a keys, \a open, \a high, \a low and \a
close. The provided vectors should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be
the size of the smallest vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
\see addData, timeSeriesToOhlc
*/
void QCPFinancial::setData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &open, const QVector<double> &high, const QVector<double> &low, const QVector<double> &close, bool alreadySorted)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(keys, open, high, low, close, alreadySorted);
}
/*!
Sets which representation style shall be used to display the OHLC data.
*/
void QCPFinancial::setChartStyle(QCPFinancial::ChartStyle style)
{
mChartStyle = style;
}
/*!
Sets the width of the individual bars/candlesticks to \a width in plot key coordinates.
A typical choice is to set it to (or slightly less than) one bin interval width.
*/
void QCPFinancial::setWidth(double width)
{
mWidth = width;
}
/*!
Sets how the width of the financial bars is defined. See the documentation of \ref WidthType for
an explanation of the possible values for \a widthType.
The default value is \ref wtPlotCoords.
\see setWidth
*/
void QCPFinancial::setWidthType(QCPFinancial::WidthType widthType)
{
mWidthType = widthType;
}
/*!
Sets whether this chart shall contrast positive from negative trends per data point by using two
separate colors to draw the respective bars/candlesticks.
If \a twoColored is false, the normal plottable's pen and brush are used (\ref setPen, \ref
setBrush).
\see setPenPositive, setPenNegative, setBrushPositive, setBrushNegative
*/
void QCPFinancial::setTwoColored(bool twoColored)
{
mTwoColored = twoColored;
}
/*!
If \ref setTwoColored is set to true, this function controls the brush that is used to draw fills
of data points with a positive trend (i.e. bars/candlesticks with close >= open).
If \a twoColored is false, the normal plottable's pen and brush are used (\ref setPen, \ref
setBrush).
\see setBrushNegative, setPenPositive, setPenNegative
*/
void QCPFinancial::setBrushPositive(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrushPositive = brush;
}
/*!
If \ref setTwoColored is set to true, this function controls the brush that is used to draw fills
of data points with a negative trend (i.e. bars/candlesticks with close < open).
If \a twoColored is false, the normal plottable's pen and brush are used (\ref setPen, \ref
setBrush).
\see setBrushPositive, setPenNegative, setPenPositive
*/
void QCPFinancial::setBrushNegative(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrushNegative = brush;
}
/*!
If \ref setTwoColored is set to true, this function controls the pen that is used to draw
outlines of data points with a positive trend (i.e. bars/candlesticks with close >= open).
If \a twoColored is false, the normal plottable's pen and brush are used (\ref setPen, \ref
setBrush).
\see setPenNegative, setBrushPositive, setBrushNegative
*/
void QCPFinancial::setPenPositive(const QPen &pen)
{
mPenPositive = pen;
}
/*!
If \ref setTwoColored is set to true, this function controls the pen that is used to draw
outlines of data points with a negative trend (i.e. bars/candlesticks with close < open).
If \a twoColored is false, the normal plottable's pen and brush are used (\ref setPen, \ref
setBrush).
\see setPenPositive, setBrushNegative, setBrushPositive
*/
void QCPFinancial::setPenNegative(const QPen &pen)
{
mPenNegative = pen;
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided points in \a keys, \a open, \a high, \a low and \a close to the current data.
The provided vectors should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size
of the smallest vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
\see timeSeriesToOhlc
*/
void QCPFinancial::addData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &open, const QVector<double> &high, const QVector<double> &low, const QVector<double> &close, bool alreadySorted)
{
if (keys.size() != open.size() || open.size() != high.size() || high.size() != low.size() || low.size() != close.size() || close.size() != keys.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "keys, open, high, low, close have different sizes:" << keys.size() << open.size() << high.size() << low.size() << close.size();
const int n = qMin(keys.size(), qMin(open.size(), qMin(high.size(), qMin(low.size(), close.size()))));
QVector<QCPFinancialData> tempData(n);
QVector<QCPFinancialData>::iterator it = tempData.begin();
const QVector<QCPFinancialData>::iterator itEnd = tempData.end();
int i = 0;
while (it != itEnd)
{
it->key = keys[i];
it->open = open[i];
it->high = high[i];
it->low = low[i];
it->close = close[i];
++it;
++i;
}
mDataContainer->add(tempData, alreadySorted); // don't modify tempData beyond this to prevent copy on write
}
/*! \overload
Adds the provided data point as \a key, \a open, \a high, \a low and \a close to the current
data.
Alternatively, you can also access and modify the data directly via the \ref data method, which
returns a pointer to the internal data container.
\see timeSeriesToOhlc
*/
void QCPFinancial::addData(double key, double open, double high, double low, double close)
{
mDataContainer->add(QCPFinancialData(key, open, high, low, close));
}
/*!
\copydoc QCPPlottableInterface1D::selectTestRect
*/
QCPDataSelection QCPFinancial::selectTestRect(const QRectF &rect, bool onlySelectable) const
{
QCPDataSelection result;
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return result;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return result;
QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it=visibleBegin; it!=visibleEnd; ++it)
{
if (rect.intersects(selectionHitBox(it)))
result.addDataRange(QCPDataRange(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()), int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()+1)), false);
}
result.simplify();
return result;
}
/*!
Implements a selectTest specific to this plottable's point geometry.
If \a details is not 0, it will be set to a \ref QCPDataSelection, describing the closest data
point to \a pos.
\seebaseclassmethod \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::selectTest
*/
double QCPFinancial::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return -1;
if (mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->rect().contains(pos.toPoint()) || mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iSelectPlottablesBeyondAxisRect))
{
// get visible data range:
QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator closestDataPoint = mDataContainer->constEnd();
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
// perform select test according to configured style:
double result = -1;
switch (mChartStyle)
{
case QCPFinancial::csOhlc:
result = ohlcSelectTest(pos, visibleBegin, visibleEnd, closestDataPoint); break;
case QCPFinancial::csCandlestick:
result = candlestickSelectTest(pos, visibleBegin, visibleEnd, closestDataPoint); break;
}
if (details)
{
int pointIndex = int(closestDataPoint-mDataContainer->constBegin());
details->setValue(QCPDataSelection(QCPDataRange(pointIndex, pointIndex+1)));
}
return result;
}
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPFinancial::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const
{
QCPRange range = mDataContainer->keyRange(foundRange, inSignDomain);
// determine exact range by including width of bars/flags:
if (foundRange)
{
if (inSignDomain != QCP::sdPositive || range.lower-mWidth*0.5 > 0)
range.lower -= mWidth*0.5;
if (inSignDomain != QCP::sdNegative || range.upper+mWidth*0.5 < 0)
range.upper += mWidth*0.5;
}
return range;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPFinancial::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const
{
return mDataContainer->valueRange(foundRange, inSignDomain, inKeyRange);
}
/*!
A convenience function that converts time series data (\a value against \a time) to OHLC binned
data points. The return value can then be passed on to \ref QCPFinancialDataContainer::set(const
QCPFinancialDataContainer&).
The size of the bins can be controlled with \a timeBinSize in the same units as \a time is given.
For example, if the unit of \a time is seconds and single OHLC/Candlesticks should span an hour
each, set \a timeBinSize to 3600.
\a timeBinOffset allows to control precisely at what \a time coordinate a bin should start. The
value passed as \a timeBinOffset doesn't need to be in the range encompassed by the \a time keys.
It merely defines the mathematical offset/phase of the bins that will be used to process the
data.
*/
QCPFinancialDataContainer QCPFinancial::timeSeriesToOhlc(const QVector<double> &time, const QVector<double> &value, double timeBinSize, double timeBinOffset)
{
QCPFinancialDataContainer data;
int count = qMin(time.size(), value.size());
if (count == 0)
return QCPFinancialDataContainer();
QCPFinancialData currentBinData(0, value.first(), value.first(), value.first(), value.first());
int currentBinIndex = qFloor((time.first()-timeBinOffset)/timeBinSize+0.5);
for (int i=0; i<count; ++i)
{
int index = qFloor((time.at(i)-timeBinOffset)/timeBinSize+0.5);
if (currentBinIndex == index) // data point still in current bin, extend high/low:
{
if (value.at(i) < currentBinData.low) currentBinData.low = value.at(i);
if (value.at(i) > currentBinData.high) currentBinData.high = value.at(i);
if (i == count-1) // last data point is in current bin, finalize bin:
{
currentBinData.close = value.at(i);
currentBinData.key = timeBinOffset+(index)*timeBinSize;
data.add(currentBinData);
}
} else // data point not anymore in current bin, set close of old and open of new bin, and add old to map:
{
// finalize current bin:
currentBinData.close = value.at(i-1);
currentBinData.key = timeBinOffset+(index-1)*timeBinSize;
data.add(currentBinData);
// start next bin:
currentBinIndex = index;
currentBinData.open = value.at(i);
currentBinData.high = value.at(i);
currentBinData.low = value.at(i);
}
}
return data;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPFinancial::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
// get visible data range:
QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd);
// loop over and draw segments of unselected/selected data:
QList<QCPDataRange> selectedSegments, unselectedSegments, allSegments;
getDataSegments(selectedSegments, unselectedSegments);
allSegments << unselectedSegments << selectedSegments;
for (int i=0; i<allSegments.size(); ++i)
{
bool isSelectedSegment = i >= unselectedSegments.size();
QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator begin = visibleBegin;
QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator end = visibleEnd;
mDataContainer->limitIteratorsToDataRange(begin, end, allSegments.at(i));
if (begin == end)
continue;
// draw data segment according to configured style:
switch (mChartStyle)
{
case QCPFinancial::csOhlc:
drawOhlcPlot(painter, begin, end, isSelectedSegment); break;
case QCPFinancial::csCandlestick:
drawCandlestickPlot(painter, begin, end, isSelectedSegment); break;
}
}
// draw other selection decoration that isn't just line/scatter pens and brushes:
if (mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->drawDecoration(painter, selection());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPFinancial::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRectF &rect) const
{
painter->setAntialiasing(false); // legend icon especially of csCandlestick looks better without antialiasing
if (mChartStyle == csOhlc)
{
if (mTwoColored)
{
// draw upper left half icon with positive color:
painter->setBrush(mBrushPositive);
painter->setPen(mPenPositive);
painter->setClipRegion(QRegion(QPolygon() << rect.bottomLeft().toPoint() << rect.topRight().toPoint() << rect.topLeft().toPoint()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width(), rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.2, rect.height()*0.3, rect.width()*0.2, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.8, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width()*0.8, rect.height()*0.7).translated(rect.topLeft()));
// draw bottom right half icon with negative color:
painter->setBrush(mBrushNegative);
painter->setPen(mPenNegative);
painter->setClipRegion(QRegion(QPolygon() << rect.bottomLeft().toPoint() << rect.topRight().toPoint() << rect.bottomRight().toPoint()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width(), rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.2, rect.height()*0.3, rect.width()*0.2, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.8, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width()*0.8, rect.height()*0.7).translated(rect.topLeft()));
} else
{
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width(), rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.2, rect.height()*0.3, rect.width()*0.2, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.8, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width()*0.8, rect.height()*0.7).translated(rect.topLeft()));
}
} else if (mChartStyle == csCandlestick)
{
if (mTwoColored)
{
// draw upper left half icon with positive color:
painter->setBrush(mBrushPositive);
painter->setPen(mPenPositive);
painter->setClipRegion(QRegion(QPolygon() << rect.bottomLeft().toPoint() << rect.topRight().toPoint() << rect.topLeft().toPoint()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width()*0.25, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.75, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width(), rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawRect(QRectF(rect.width()*0.25, rect.height()*0.25, rect.width()*0.5, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
// draw bottom right half icon with negative color:
painter->setBrush(mBrushNegative);
painter->setPen(mPenNegative);
painter->setClipRegion(QRegion(QPolygon() << rect.bottomLeft().toPoint() << rect.topRight().toPoint() << rect.bottomRight().toPoint()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width()*0.25, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.75, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width(), rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawRect(QRectF(rect.width()*0.25, rect.height()*0.25, rect.width()*0.5, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
} else
{
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(0, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width()*0.25, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.width()*0.75, rect.height()*0.5, rect.width(), rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
painter->drawRect(QRectF(rect.width()*0.25, rect.height()*0.25, rect.width()*0.5, rect.height()*0.5).translated(rect.topLeft()));
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws the data from \a begin to \a end-1 as OHLC bars with the provided \a painter.
This method is a helper function for \ref draw. It is used when the chart style is \ref csOhlc.
*/
void QCPFinancial::drawOhlcPlot(QCPPainter *painter, const QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, const QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &end, bool isSelected)
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin; it != end; ++it)
{
if (isSelected && mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
else if (mTwoColored)
painter->setPen(it->close >= it->open ? mPenPositive : mPenNegative);
else
painter->setPen(mPen);
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
double openPixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->open);
double closePixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->close);
// draw backbone:
painter->drawLine(QPointF(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high)), QPointF(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low)));
// draw open:
double pixelWidth = getPixelWidth(it->key, keyPixel); // sign of this makes sure open/close are on correct sides
painter->drawLine(QPointF(keyPixel-pixelWidth, openPixel), QPointF(keyPixel, openPixel));
// draw close:
painter->drawLine(QPointF(keyPixel, closePixel), QPointF(keyPixel+pixelWidth, closePixel));
}
} else
{
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin; it != end; ++it)
{
if (isSelected && mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
else if (mTwoColored)
painter->setPen(it->close >= it->open ? mPenPositive : mPenNegative);
else
painter->setPen(mPen);
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
double openPixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->open);
double closePixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->close);
// draw backbone:
painter->drawLine(QPointF(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high), keyPixel), QPointF(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low), keyPixel));
// draw open:
double pixelWidth = getPixelWidth(it->key, keyPixel); // sign of this makes sure open/close are on correct sides
painter->drawLine(QPointF(openPixel, keyPixel-pixelWidth), QPointF(openPixel, keyPixel));
// draw close:
painter->drawLine(QPointF(closePixel, keyPixel), QPointF(closePixel, keyPixel+pixelWidth));
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws the data from \a begin to \a end-1 as Candlesticks with the provided \a painter.
This method is a helper function for \ref draw. It is used when the chart style is \ref csCandlestick.
*/
void QCPFinancial::drawCandlestickPlot(QCPPainter *painter, const QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, const QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &end, bool isSelected)
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin; it != end; ++it)
{
if (isSelected && mSelectionDecorator)
{
mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
mSelectionDecorator->applyBrush(painter);
} else if (mTwoColored)
{
painter->setPen(it->close >= it->open ? mPenPositive : mPenNegative);
painter->setBrush(it->close >= it->open ? mBrushPositive : mBrushNegative);
} else
{
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
}
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
double openPixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->open);
double closePixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->close);
// draw high:
painter->drawLine(QPointF(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high)), QPointF(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(qMax(it->open, it->close))));
// draw low:
painter->drawLine(QPointF(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low)), QPointF(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(qMin(it->open, it->close))));
// draw open-close box:
double pixelWidth = getPixelWidth(it->key, keyPixel);
painter->drawRect(QRectF(QPointF(keyPixel-pixelWidth, closePixel), QPointF(keyPixel+pixelWidth, openPixel)));
}
} else // keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical
{
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin; it != end; ++it)
{
if (isSelected && mSelectionDecorator)
{
mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
mSelectionDecorator->applyBrush(painter);
} else if (mTwoColored)
{
painter->setPen(it->close >= it->open ? mPenPositive : mPenNegative);
painter->setBrush(it->close >= it->open ? mBrushPositive : mBrushNegative);
} else
{
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
}
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
double openPixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->open);
double closePixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->close);
// draw high:
painter->drawLine(QPointF(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high), keyPixel), QPointF(valueAxis->coordToPixel(qMax(it->open, it->close)), keyPixel));
// draw low:
painter->drawLine(QPointF(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low), keyPixel), QPointF(valueAxis->coordToPixel(qMin(it->open, it->close)), keyPixel));
// draw open-close box:
double pixelWidth = getPixelWidth(it->key, keyPixel);
painter->drawRect(QRectF(QPointF(closePixel, keyPixel-pixelWidth), QPointF(openPixel, keyPixel+pixelWidth)));
}
}
}
/*! \internal
This function is used to determine the width of the bar at coordinate \a key, according to the
specified width (\ref setWidth) and width type (\ref setWidthType). Provide the pixel position of
\a key in \a keyPixel (because usually this was already calculated via \ref QCPAxis::coordToPixel
when this function is called).
It returns the number of pixels the bar extends to higher keys, relative to the \a key
coordinate. So with a non-reversed horizontal axis, the return value is positive. With a reversed
horizontal axis, the return value is negative. This is important so the open/close flags on the
\ref csOhlc bar are drawn to the correct side.
*/
double QCPFinancial::getPixelWidth(double key, double keyPixel) const
{
double result = 0;
switch (mWidthType)
{
case wtAbsolute:
{
if (mKeyAxis)
result = mWidth*0.5*mKeyAxis.data()->pixelOrientation();
break;
}
case wtAxisRectRatio:
{
if (mKeyAxis && mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect())
{
if (mKeyAxis.data()->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
result = mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->width()*mWidth*0.5*mKeyAxis.data()->pixelOrientation();
else
result = mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->height()*mWidth*0.5*mKeyAxis.data()->pixelOrientation();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "No key axis or axis rect defined";
break;
}
case wtPlotCoords:
{
if (mKeyAxis)
result = mKeyAxis.data()->coordToPixel(key+mWidth*0.5)-keyPixel;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "No key axis defined";
break;
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
This method is a helper function for \ref selectTest. It is used to test for selection when the
chart style is \ref csOhlc. It only tests against the data points between \a begin and \a end.
Like \ref selectTest, this method returns the shortest distance of \a pos to the graphical
representation of the plottable, and \a closestDataPoint will point to the respective data point.
*/
double QCPFinancial::ohlcSelectTest(const QPointF &pos, const QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, const QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &end, QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &closestDataPoint) const
{
closestDataPoint = mDataContainer->constEnd();
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return -1; }
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
// calculate distance to backbone:
double currentDistSqr = QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high)), QCPVector2D(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low)));
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestDataPoint = it;
}
}
} else // keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical
{
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
// calculate distance to backbone:
double currentDistSqr = QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high), keyPixel), QCPVector2D(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low), keyPixel));
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestDataPoint = it;
}
}
}
return qSqrt(minDistSqr);
}
/*! \internal
This method is a helper function for \ref selectTest. It is used to test for selection when the
chart style is \ref csCandlestick. It only tests against the data points between \a begin and \a
end.
Like \ref selectTest, this method returns the shortest distance of \a pos to the graphical
representation of the plottable, and \a closestDataPoint will point to the respective data point.
*/
double QCPFinancial::candlestickSelectTest(const QPointF &pos, const QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, const QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &end, QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &closestDataPoint) const
{
closestDataPoint = mDataContainer->constEnd();
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return -1; }
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
{
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
double currentDistSqr;
// determine whether pos is in open-close-box:
QCPRange boxKeyRange(it->key-mWidth*0.5, it->key+mWidth*0.5);
QCPRange boxValueRange(it->close, it->open);
double posKey, posValue;
pixelsToCoords(pos, posKey, posValue);
if (boxKeyRange.contains(posKey) && boxValueRange.contains(posValue)) // is in open-close-box
{
currentDistSqr = mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99 * mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
} else
{
// calculate distance to high/low lines:
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
double highLineDistSqr = QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high)), QCPVector2D(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(qMax(it->open, it->close))));
double lowLineDistSqr = QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low)), QCPVector2D(keyPixel, valueAxis->coordToPixel(qMin(it->open, it->close))));
currentDistSqr = qMin(highLineDistSqr, lowLineDistSqr);
}
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestDataPoint = it;
}
}
} else // keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical
{
for (QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
double currentDistSqr;
// determine whether pos is in open-close-box:
QCPRange boxKeyRange(it->key-mWidth*0.5, it->key+mWidth*0.5);
QCPRange boxValueRange(it->close, it->open);
double posKey, posValue;
pixelsToCoords(pos, posKey, posValue);
if (boxKeyRange.contains(posKey) && boxValueRange.contains(posValue)) // is in open-close-box
{
currentDistSqr = mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99 * mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
} else
{
// calculate distance to high/low lines:
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
double highLineDistSqr = QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high), keyPixel), QCPVector2D(valueAxis->coordToPixel(qMax(it->open, it->close)), keyPixel));
double lowLineDistSqr = QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low), keyPixel), QCPVector2D(valueAxis->coordToPixel(qMin(it->open, it->close)), keyPixel));
currentDistSqr = qMin(highLineDistSqr, lowLineDistSqr);
}
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestDataPoint = it;
}
}
}
return qSqrt(minDistSqr);
}
/*! \internal
called by the drawing methods to determine which data (key) range is visible at the current key
axis range setting, so only that needs to be processed.
\a begin returns an iterator to the lowest data point that needs to be taken into account when
plotting. Note that in order to get a clean plot all the way to the edge of the axis rect, \a
begin may still be just outside the visible range.
\a end returns the iterator just above the highest data point that needs to be taken into
account. Same as before, \a end may also lie just outside of the visible range
if the plottable contains no data, both \a begin and \a end point to \c constEnd.
*/
void QCPFinancial::getVisibleDataBounds(QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator &end) const
{
if (!mKeyAxis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key axis";
begin = mDataContainer->constEnd();
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
return;
}
begin = mDataContainer->findBegin(mKeyAxis.data()->range().lower-mWidth*0.5); // subtract half width of ohlc/candlestick to include partially visible data points
end = mDataContainer->findEnd(mKeyAxis.data()->range().upper+mWidth*0.5); // add half width of ohlc/candlestick to include partially visible data points
}
/*! \internal
Returns the hit box in pixel coordinates that will be used for data selection with the selection
rect (\ref selectTestRect), of the data point given by \a it.
*/
QRectF QCPFinancial::selectionHitBox(QCPFinancialDataContainer::const_iterator it) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return {}; }
double keyPixel = keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key);
double highPixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->high);
double lowPixel = valueAxis->coordToPixel(it->low);
double keyWidthPixels = keyPixel-keyAxis->coordToPixel(it->key-mWidth*0.5);
if (keyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal)
return QRectF(keyPixel-keyWidthPixels, highPixel, keyWidthPixels*2, lowPixel-highPixel).normalized();
else
return QRectF(highPixel, keyPixel-keyWidthPixels, lowPixel-highPixel, keyWidthPixels*2).normalized();
}
/* end of 'src/plottables/plottable-financial.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/plottables/plottable-errorbar.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 37679 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPErrorBarsData
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPErrorBarsData
\brief Holds the data of one single error bar for QCPErrorBars.
The stored data is:
\li \a errorMinus: how much the error bar extends towards negative coordinates from the data
point position
\li \a errorPlus: how much the error bar extends towards positive coordinates from the data point
position
The container for storing the error bar information is \ref QCPErrorBarsDataContainer. It is a
typedef for <tt>QVector<\ref QCPErrorBarsData></tt>.
\see QCPErrorBarsDataContainer
*/
/*!
Constructs an error bar with errors set to zero.
*/
QCPErrorBarsData::QCPErrorBarsData() :
errorMinus(0),
errorPlus(0)
{
}
/*!
Constructs an error bar with equal \a error in both negative and positive direction.
*/
QCPErrorBarsData::QCPErrorBarsData(double error) :
errorMinus(error),
errorPlus(error)
{
}
/*!
Constructs an error bar with negative and positive errors set to \a errorMinus and \a errorPlus,
respectively.
*/
QCPErrorBarsData::QCPErrorBarsData(double errorMinus, double errorPlus) :
errorMinus(errorMinus),
errorPlus(errorPlus)
{
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPErrorBars
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPErrorBars
\brief A plottable that adds a set of error bars to other plottables.
\image html QCPErrorBars.png
The \ref QCPErrorBars plottable can be attached to other one-dimensional plottables (e.g. \ref
QCPGraph, \ref QCPCurve, \ref QCPBars, etc.) and equips them with error bars.
Use \ref setDataPlottable to define for which plottable the \ref QCPErrorBars shall display the
error bars. The orientation of the error bars can be controlled with \ref setErrorType.
By using \ref setData, you can supply the actual error data, either as symmetric error or
plus/minus asymmetric errors. \ref QCPErrorBars only stores the error data. The absolute
key/value position of each error bar will be adopted from the configured data plottable. The
error data of the \ref QCPErrorBars are associated one-to-one via their index to the data points
of the data plottable. You can directly access and manipulate the error bar data via \ref data.
Set either of the plus/minus errors to NaN (<tt>qQNaN()</tt> or
<tt>std::numeric_limits<double>::quiet_NaN()</tt>) to not show the respective error bar on the data point at
that index.
\section qcperrorbars-appearance Changing the appearance
The appearance of the error bars is defined by the pen (\ref setPen), and the width of the
whiskers (\ref setWhiskerWidth). Further, the error bar backbones may leave a gap around the data
point center to prevent that error bars are drawn too close to or even through scatter points.
This gap size can be controlled via \ref setSymbolGap.
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QSharedPointer<QCPErrorBarsDataContainer> QCPErrorBars::data() const
Returns a shared pointer to the internal data storage of type \ref QCPErrorBarsDataContainer. You
may use it to directly manipulate the error values, which may be more convenient and faster than
using the regular \ref setData methods.
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs an error bars plottable which uses \a keyAxis as its key axis ("x") and \a valueAxis as its value
axis ("y"). \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in the same QCustomPlot instance and not have
the same orientation. If either of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding message is
printed to the debug output (qDebug), the construction is not aborted, though.
It is also important that the \a keyAxis and \a valueAxis are the same for the error bars
plottable and the data plottable that the error bars shall be drawn on (\ref setDataPlottable).
The created \ref QCPErrorBars is automatically registered with the QCustomPlot instance inferred
from \a keyAxis. This QCustomPlot instance takes ownership of the \ref QCPErrorBars, so do not
delete it manually but use \ref QCustomPlot::removePlottable() instead.
*/
QCPErrorBars::QCPErrorBars(QCPAxis *keyAxis, QCPAxis *valueAxis) :
QCPAbstractPlottable(keyAxis, valueAxis),
mDataContainer(new QVector<QCPErrorBarsData>),
mErrorType(etValueError),
mWhiskerWidth(9),
mSymbolGap(10)
{
setPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0));
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
}
QCPErrorBars::~QCPErrorBars()
{
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data container with the provided \a data container.
Since a QSharedPointer is used, multiple \ref QCPErrorBars instances may share the same data
container safely. Modifying the data in the container will then affect all \ref QCPErrorBars
instances that share the container. Sharing can be achieved by simply exchanging the data
containers wrapped in shared pointers:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcperrorbars-datasharing-1
If you do not wish to share containers, but create a copy from an existing container, assign the
data containers directly:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcperrorbars-datasharing-2
(This uses different notation compared with other plottables, because the \ref QCPErrorBars
uses a \c QVector<QCPErrorBarsData> as its data container, instead of a \ref QCPDataContainer.)
\see addData
*/
void QCPErrorBars::setData(QSharedPointer<QCPErrorBarsDataContainer> data)
{
mDataContainer = data;
}
/*! \overload
Sets symmetrical error values as specified in \a error. The errors will be associated one-to-one
by the data point index to the associated data plottable (\ref setDataPlottable).
You can directly access and manipulate the error bar data via \ref data.
\see addData
*/
void QCPErrorBars::setData(const QVector<double> &error)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(error);
}
/*! \overload
Sets asymmetrical errors as specified in \a errorMinus and \a errorPlus. The errors will be
associated one-to-one by the data point index to the associated data plottable (\ref
setDataPlottable).
You can directly access and manipulate the error bar data via \ref data.
\see addData
*/
void QCPErrorBars::setData(const QVector<double> &errorMinus, const QVector<double> &errorPlus)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(errorMinus, errorPlus);
}
/*!
Sets the data plottable to which the error bars will be applied. The error values specified e.g.
via \ref setData will be associated one-to-one by the data point index to the data points of \a
plottable. This means that the error bars will adopt the key/value coordinates of the data point
with the same index.
The passed \a plottable must be a one-dimensional plottable, i.e. it must implement the \ref
QCPPlottableInterface1D. Further, it must not be a \ref QCPErrorBars instance itself. If either
of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding qDebug output is generated, and the data
plottable of this \ref QCPErrorBars instance is set to zero.
For proper display, care must also be taken that the key and value axes of the \a plottable match
those configured for this \ref QCPErrorBars instance.
*/
void QCPErrorBars::setDataPlottable(QCPAbstractPlottable *plottable)
{
if (plottable && qobject_cast<QCPErrorBars*>(plottable))
{
mDataPlottable = nullptr;
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can't set another QCPErrorBars instance as data plottable";
return;
}
if (plottable && !plottable->interface1D())
{
mDataPlottable = nullptr;
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed plottable doesn't implement 1d interface, can't associate with QCPErrorBars";
return;
}
mDataPlottable = plottable;
}
/*!
Sets in which orientation the error bars shall appear on the data points. If your data needs both
error dimensions, create two \ref QCPErrorBars with different \a type.
*/
void QCPErrorBars::setErrorType(ErrorType type)
{
mErrorType = type;
}
/*!
Sets the width of the whiskers (the short bars at the end of the actual error bar backbones) to
\a pixels.
*/
void QCPErrorBars::setWhiskerWidth(double pixels)
{
mWhiskerWidth = pixels;
}
/*!
Sets the gap diameter around the data points that will be left out when drawing the error bar
backbones. This gap prevents that error bars are drawn too close to or even through scatter
points.
*/
void QCPErrorBars::setSymbolGap(double pixels)
{
mSymbolGap = pixels;
}
/*! \overload
Adds symmetrical error values as specified in \a error. The errors will be associated one-to-one
by the data point index to the associated data plottable (\ref setDataPlottable).
You can directly access and manipulate the error bar data via \ref data.
\see setData
*/
void QCPErrorBars::addData(const QVector<double> &error)
{
addData(error, error);
}
/*! \overload
Adds asymmetrical errors as specified in \a errorMinus and \a errorPlus. The errors will be
associated one-to-one by the data point index to the associated data plottable (\ref
setDataPlottable).
You can directly access and manipulate the error bar data via \ref data.
\see setData
*/
void QCPErrorBars::addData(const QVector<double> &errorMinus, const QVector<double> &errorPlus)
{
if (errorMinus.size() != errorPlus.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "minus and plus error vectors have different sizes:" << errorMinus.size() << errorPlus.size();
const int n = qMin(errorMinus.size(), errorPlus.size());
mDataContainer->reserve(n);
for (int i=0; i<n; ++i)
mDataContainer->append(QCPErrorBarsData(errorMinus.at(i), errorPlus.at(i)));
}
/*! \overload
Adds a single symmetrical error bar as specified in \a error. The errors will be associated
one-to-one by the data point index to the associated data plottable (\ref setDataPlottable).
You can directly access and manipulate the error bar data via \ref data.
\see setData
*/
void QCPErrorBars::addData(double error)
{
mDataContainer->append(QCPErrorBarsData(error));
}
/*! \overload
Adds a single asymmetrical error bar as specified in \a errorMinus and \a errorPlus. The errors
will be associated one-to-one by the data point index to the associated data plottable (\ref
setDataPlottable).
You can directly access and manipulate the error bar data via \ref data.
\see setData
*/
void QCPErrorBars::addData(double errorMinus, double errorPlus)
{
mDataContainer->append(QCPErrorBarsData(errorMinus, errorPlus));
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
int QCPErrorBars::dataCount() const
{
return mDataContainer->size();
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPErrorBars::dataMainKey(int index) const
{
if (mDataPlottable)
return mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainKey(index);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no data plottable set";
return 0;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPErrorBars::dataSortKey(int index) const
{
if (mDataPlottable)
return mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataSortKey(index);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no data plottable set";
return 0;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPErrorBars::dataMainValue(int index) const
{
if (mDataPlottable)
return mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainValue(index);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no data plottable set";
return 0;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPErrorBars::dataValueRange(int index) const
{
if (mDataPlottable)
{
const double value = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainValue(index);
if (index >= 0 && index < mDataContainer->size() && mErrorType == etValueError)
return {value-mDataContainer->at(index).errorMinus, value+mDataContainer->at(index).errorPlus};
else
return {value, value};
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no data plottable set";
return {};
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QPointF QCPErrorBars::dataPixelPosition(int index) const
{
if (mDataPlottable)
return mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataPixelPosition(index);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no data plottable set";
return {};
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
bool QCPErrorBars::sortKeyIsMainKey() const
{
if (mDataPlottable)
{
return mDataPlottable->interface1D()->sortKeyIsMainKey();
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no data plottable set";
return true;
}
}
/*!
\copydoc QCPPlottableInterface1D::selectTestRect
*/
QCPDataSelection QCPErrorBars::selectTestRect(const QRectF &rect, bool onlySelectable) const
{
QCPDataSelection result;
if (!mDataPlottable)
return result;
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return result;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return result;
QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator visibleBegin, visibleEnd;
getVisibleDataBounds(visibleBegin, visibleEnd, QCPDataRange(0, dataCount()));
QVector<QLineF> backbones, whiskers;
for (QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it=visibleBegin; it!=visibleEnd; ++it)
{
backbones.clear();
whiskers.clear();
getErrorBarLines(it, backbones, whiskers);
foreach (const QLineF &backbone, backbones)
{
if (rectIntersectsLine(rect, backbone))
{
result.addDataRange(QCPDataRange(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()), int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()+1)), false);
break;
}
}
}
result.simplify();
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
int QCPErrorBars::findBegin(double sortKey, bool expandedRange) const
{
if (mDataPlottable)
{
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return 0;
int beginIndex = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->findBegin(sortKey, expandedRange);
if (beginIndex >= mDataContainer->size())
beginIndex = mDataContainer->size()-1;
return beginIndex;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no data plottable set";
return 0;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
int QCPErrorBars::findEnd(double sortKey, bool expandedRange) const
{
if (mDataPlottable)
{
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return 0;
int endIndex = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->findEnd(sortKey, expandedRange);
if (endIndex > mDataContainer->size())
endIndex = mDataContainer->size();
return endIndex;
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no data plottable set";
return 0;
}
/*!
Implements a selectTest specific to this plottable's point geometry.
If \a details is not 0, it will be set to a \ref QCPDataSelection, describing the closest data
point to \a pos.
\seebaseclassmethod \ref QCPAbstractPlottable::selectTest
*/
double QCPErrorBars::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
if (!mDataPlottable) return -1;
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return -1;
if (mKeyAxis.data()->axisRect()->rect().contains(pos.toPoint()) || mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iSelectPlottablesBeyondAxisRect))
{
QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator closestDataPoint = mDataContainer->constEnd();
double result = pointDistance(pos, closestDataPoint);
if (details)
{
int pointIndex = int(closestDataPoint-mDataContainer->constBegin());
details->setValue(QCPDataSelection(QCPDataRange(pointIndex, pointIndex+1)));
}
return result;
} else
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPErrorBars::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (!mDataPlottable) return;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (mKeyAxis.data()->range().size() <= 0 || mDataContainer->isEmpty()) return;
// if the sort key isn't the main key, we must check the visibility for each data point/error bar individually
// (getVisibleDataBounds applies range restriction, but otherwise can only return full data range):
bool checkPointVisibility = !mDataPlottable->interface1D()->sortKeyIsMainKey();
// check data validity if flag set:
#ifdef QCUSTOMPLOT_CHECK_DATA
QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it;
for (it = mDataContainer->constBegin(); it != mDataContainer->constEnd(); ++it)
{
if (QCP::isInvalidData(it->errorMinus, it->errorPlus))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Data point at index" << it-mDataContainer->constBegin() << "invalid." << "Plottable name:" << name();
}
#endif
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
// loop over and draw segments of unselected/selected data:
QList<QCPDataRange> selectedSegments, unselectedSegments, allSegments;
getDataSegments(selectedSegments, unselectedSegments);
allSegments << unselectedSegments << selectedSegments;
QVector<QLineF> backbones, whiskers;
for (int i=0; i<allSegments.size(); ++i)
{
QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator begin, end;
getVisibleDataBounds(begin, end, allSegments.at(i));
if (begin == end)
continue;
bool isSelectedSegment = i >= unselectedSegments.size();
if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
else
painter->setPen(mPen);
if (painter->pen().capStyle() == Qt::SquareCap)
{
QPen capFixPen(painter->pen());
capFixPen.setCapStyle(Qt::FlatCap);
painter->setPen(capFixPen);
}
backbones.clear();
whiskers.clear();
for (QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
if (!checkPointVisibility || errorBarVisible(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin())))
getErrorBarLines(it, backbones, whiskers);
}
painter->drawLines(backbones);
painter->drawLines(whiskers);
}
// draw other selection decoration that isn't just line/scatter pens and brushes:
if (mSelectionDecorator)
mSelectionDecorator->drawDecoration(painter, selection());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPErrorBars::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRectF &rect) const
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setPen(mPen);
if (mErrorType == etValueError && mValueAxis && mValueAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.center().x(), rect.top()+2, rect.center().x(), rect.bottom()-1));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.center().x()-4, rect.top()+2, rect.center().x()+4, rect.top()+2));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.center().x()-4, rect.bottom()-1, rect.center().x()+4, rect.bottom()-1));
} else
{
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.left()+2, rect.center().y(), rect.right()-2, rect.center().y()));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.left()+2, rect.center().y()-4, rect.left()+2, rect.center().y()+4));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.right()-2, rect.center().y()-4, rect.right()-2, rect.center().y()+4));
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPErrorBars::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const
{
if (!mDataPlottable)
{
foundRange = false;
return {};
}
QCPRange range;
bool haveLower = false;
bool haveUpper = false;
QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it;
for (it = mDataContainer->constBegin(); it != mDataContainer->constEnd(); ++it)
{
if (mErrorType == etValueError)
{
// error bar doesn't extend in key dimension (except whisker but we ignore that here), so only use data point center
const double current = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainKey(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()));
if (qIsNaN(current)) continue;
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdBoth || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative && current < 0) || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive && current > 0))
{
if (current < range.lower || !haveLower)
{
range.lower = current;
haveLower = true;
}
if (current > range.upper || !haveUpper)
{
range.upper = current;
haveUpper = true;
}
}
} else // mErrorType == etKeyError
{
const double dataKey = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainKey(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()));
if (qIsNaN(dataKey)) continue;
// plus error:
double current = dataKey + (qIsNaN(it->errorPlus) ? 0 : it->errorPlus);
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdBoth || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative && current < 0) || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive && current > 0))
{
if (current > range.upper || !haveUpper)
{
range.upper = current;
haveUpper = true;
}
}
// minus error:
current = dataKey - (qIsNaN(it->errorMinus) ? 0 : it->errorMinus);
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdBoth || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative && current < 0) || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive && current > 0))
{
if (current < range.lower || !haveLower)
{
range.lower = current;
haveLower = true;
}
}
}
}
if (haveUpper && !haveLower)
{
range.lower = range.upper;
haveLower = true;
} else if (haveLower && !haveUpper)
{
range.upper = range.lower;
haveUpper = true;
}
foundRange = haveLower && haveUpper;
return range;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPErrorBars::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const
{
if (!mDataPlottable)
{
foundRange = false;
return {};
}
QCPRange range;
const bool restrictKeyRange = inKeyRange != QCPRange();
bool haveLower = false;
bool haveUpper = false;
QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator itBegin = mDataContainer->constBegin();
QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator itEnd = mDataContainer->constEnd();
if (mDataPlottable->interface1D()->sortKeyIsMainKey() && restrictKeyRange)
{
itBegin = mDataContainer->constBegin()+findBegin(inKeyRange.lower, false);
itEnd = mDataContainer->constBegin()+findEnd(inKeyRange.upper, false);
}
for (QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it = itBegin; it != itEnd; ++it)
{
if (restrictKeyRange)
{
const double dataKey = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainKey(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()));
if (dataKey < inKeyRange.lower || dataKey > inKeyRange.upper)
continue;
}
if (mErrorType == etValueError)
{
const double dataValue = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainValue(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()));
if (qIsNaN(dataValue)) continue;
// plus error:
double current = dataValue + (qIsNaN(it->errorPlus) ? 0 : it->errorPlus);
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdBoth || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative && current < 0) || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive && current > 0))
{
if (current > range.upper || !haveUpper)
{
range.upper = current;
haveUpper = true;
}
}
// minus error:
current = dataValue - (qIsNaN(it->errorMinus) ? 0 : it->errorMinus);
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdBoth || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative && current < 0) || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive && current > 0))
{
if (current < range.lower || !haveLower)
{
range.lower = current;
haveLower = true;
}
}
} else // mErrorType == etKeyError
{
// error bar doesn't extend in value dimension (except whisker but we ignore that here), so only use data point center
const double current = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainValue(int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin()));
if (qIsNaN(current)) continue;
if (inSignDomain == QCP::sdBoth || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdNegative && current < 0) || (inSignDomain == QCP::sdPositive && current > 0))
{
if (current < range.lower || !haveLower)
{
range.lower = current;
haveLower = true;
}
if (current > range.upper || !haveUpper)
{
range.upper = current;
haveUpper = true;
}
}
}
}
if (haveUpper && !haveLower)
{
range.lower = range.upper;
haveLower = true;
} else if (haveLower && !haveUpper)
{
range.upper = range.lower;
haveUpper = true;
}
foundRange = haveLower && haveUpper;
return range;
}
/*! \internal
Calculates the lines that make up the error bar belonging to the data point \a it.
The resulting lines are added to \a backbones and \a whiskers. The vectors are not cleared, so
calling this method with different \a it but the same \a backbones and \a whiskers allows to
accumulate lines for multiple data points.
This method assumes that \a it is a valid iterator within the bounds of this \ref QCPErrorBars
instance and within the bounds of the associated data plottable.
*/
void QCPErrorBars::getErrorBarLines(QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it, QVector<QLineF> &backbones, QVector<QLineF> &whiskers) const
{
if (!mDataPlottable) return;
int index = int(it-mDataContainer->constBegin());
QPointF centerPixel = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataPixelPosition(index);
if (qIsNaN(centerPixel.x()) || qIsNaN(centerPixel.y()))
return;
QCPAxis *errorAxis = mErrorType == etValueError ? mValueAxis.data() : mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *orthoAxis = mErrorType == etValueError ? mKeyAxis.data() : mValueAxis.data();
const double centerErrorAxisPixel = errorAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? centerPixel.x() : centerPixel.y();
const double centerOrthoAxisPixel = orthoAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? centerPixel.x() : centerPixel.y();
const double centerErrorAxisCoord = errorAxis->pixelToCoord(centerErrorAxisPixel); // depending on plottable, this might be different from just mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataMainKey/Value
const double symbolGap = mSymbolGap*0.5*errorAxis->pixelOrientation();
// plus error:
double errorStart, errorEnd;
if (!qIsNaN(it->errorPlus))
{
errorStart = centerErrorAxisPixel+symbolGap;
errorEnd = errorAxis->coordToPixel(centerErrorAxisCoord+it->errorPlus);
if (errorAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
if ((errorStart > errorEnd) != errorAxis->rangeReversed())
backbones.append(QLineF(centerOrthoAxisPixel, errorStart, centerOrthoAxisPixel, errorEnd));
whiskers.append(QLineF(centerOrthoAxisPixel-mWhiskerWidth*0.5, errorEnd, centerOrthoAxisPixel+mWhiskerWidth*0.5, errorEnd));
} else
{
if ((errorStart < errorEnd) != errorAxis->rangeReversed())
backbones.append(QLineF(errorStart, centerOrthoAxisPixel, errorEnd, centerOrthoAxisPixel));
whiskers.append(QLineF(errorEnd, centerOrthoAxisPixel-mWhiskerWidth*0.5, errorEnd, centerOrthoAxisPixel+mWhiskerWidth*0.5));
}
}
// minus error:
if (!qIsNaN(it->errorMinus))
{
errorStart = centerErrorAxisPixel-symbolGap;
errorEnd = errorAxis->coordToPixel(centerErrorAxisCoord-it->errorMinus);
if (errorAxis->orientation() == Qt::Vertical)
{
if ((errorStart < errorEnd) != errorAxis->rangeReversed())
backbones.append(QLineF(centerOrthoAxisPixel, errorStart, centerOrthoAxisPixel, errorEnd));
whiskers.append(QLineF(centerOrthoAxisPixel-mWhiskerWidth*0.5, errorEnd, centerOrthoAxisPixel+mWhiskerWidth*0.5, errorEnd));
} else
{
if ((errorStart > errorEnd) != errorAxis->rangeReversed())
backbones.append(QLineF(errorStart, centerOrthoAxisPixel, errorEnd, centerOrthoAxisPixel));
whiskers.append(QLineF(errorEnd, centerOrthoAxisPixel-mWhiskerWidth*0.5, errorEnd, centerOrthoAxisPixel+mWhiskerWidth*0.5));
}
}
}
/*! \internal
This method outputs the currently visible data range via \a begin and \a end. The returned range
will also never exceed \a rangeRestriction.
Since error bars with type \ref etKeyError may extend to arbitrarily positive and negative key
coordinates relative to their data point key, this method checks all outer error bars whether
they truly don't reach into the visible portion of the axis rect, by calling \ref
errorBarVisible. On the other hand error bars with type \ref etValueError that are associated
with data plottables whose sort key is equal to the main key (see \ref qcpdatacontainer-datatype
"QCPDataContainer DataType") can be handled very efficiently by finding the visible range of
error bars through binary search (\ref QCPPlottableInterface1D::findBegin and \ref
QCPPlottableInterface1D::findEnd).
If the plottable's sort key is not equal to the main key, this method returns the full data
range, only restricted by \a rangeRestriction. Drawing optimization then has to be done on a
point-by-point basis in the \ref draw method.
*/
void QCPErrorBars::getVisibleDataBounds(QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator &end, const QCPDataRange &rangeRestriction) const
{
QCPAxis *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPAxis *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis";
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
begin = end;
return;
}
if (!mDataPlottable || rangeRestriction.isEmpty())
{
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
begin = end;
return;
}
if (!mDataPlottable->interface1D()->sortKeyIsMainKey())
{
// if the sort key isn't the main key, it's not possible to find a contiguous range of visible
// data points, so this method then only applies the range restriction and otherwise returns
// the full data range. Visibility checks must be done on a per-datapoin-basis during drawing
QCPDataRange dataRange(0, mDataContainer->size());
dataRange = dataRange.bounded(rangeRestriction);
begin = mDataContainer->constBegin()+dataRange.begin();
end = mDataContainer->constBegin()+dataRange.end();
return;
}
// get visible data range via interface from data plottable, and then restrict to available error data points:
const int n = qMin(mDataContainer->size(), mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataCount());
int beginIndex = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->findBegin(keyAxis->range().lower);
int endIndex = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->findEnd(keyAxis->range().upper);
int i = beginIndex;
while (i > 0 && i < n && i > rangeRestriction.begin())
{
if (errorBarVisible(i))
beginIndex = i;
--i;
}
i = endIndex;
while (i >= 0 && i < n && i < rangeRestriction.end())
{
if (errorBarVisible(i))
endIndex = i+1;
++i;
}
QCPDataRange dataRange(beginIndex, endIndex);
dataRange = dataRange.bounded(rangeRestriction.bounded(QCPDataRange(0, mDataContainer->size())));
begin = mDataContainer->constBegin()+dataRange.begin();
end = mDataContainer->constBegin()+dataRange.end();
}
/*! \internal
Calculates the minimum distance in pixels the error bars' representation has from the given \a
pixelPoint. This is used to determine whether the error bar was clicked or not, e.g. in \ref
selectTest. The closest data point to \a pixelPoint is returned in \a closestData.
*/
double QCPErrorBars::pointDistance(const QPointF &pixelPoint, QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator &closestData) const
{
closestData = mDataContainer->constEnd();
if (!mDataPlottable || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1.0;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis";
return -1.0;
}
QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator begin, end;
getVisibleDataBounds(begin, end, QCPDataRange(0, dataCount()));
// calculate minimum distances to error backbones (whiskers are ignored for speed) and find closestData iterator:
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
QVector<QLineF> backbones, whiskers;
for (QCPErrorBarsDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
getErrorBarLines(it, backbones, whiskers);
foreach (const QLineF &backbone, backbones)
{
const double currentDistSqr = QCPVector2D(pixelPoint).distanceSquaredToLine(backbone);
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestData = it;
}
}
}
return qSqrt(minDistSqr);
}
/*! \internal
\note This method is identical to \ref QCPAbstractPlottable1D::getDataSegments but needs to be
reproduced here since the \ref QCPErrorBars plottable, as a special case that doesn't have its
own key/value data coordinates, doesn't derive from \ref QCPAbstractPlottable1D. See the
documentation there for details.
*/
void QCPErrorBars::getDataSegments(QList<QCPDataRange> &selectedSegments, QList<QCPDataRange> &unselectedSegments) const
{
selectedSegments.clear();
unselectedSegments.clear();
if (mSelectable == QCP::stWhole) // stWhole selection type draws the entire plottable with selected style if mSelection isn't empty
{
if (selected())
selectedSegments << QCPDataRange(0, dataCount());
else
unselectedSegments << QCPDataRange(0, dataCount());
} else
{
QCPDataSelection sel(selection());
sel.simplify();
selectedSegments = sel.dataRanges();
unselectedSegments = sel.inverse(QCPDataRange(0, dataCount())).dataRanges();
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns whether the error bar at the specified \a index is visible within the current key axis
range.
This method assumes for performance reasons without checking that the key axis, the value axis,
and the data plottable (\ref setDataPlottable) are not \c nullptr and that \a index is within
valid bounds of this \ref QCPErrorBars instance and the bounds of the data plottable.
*/
bool QCPErrorBars::errorBarVisible(int index) const
{
QPointF centerPixel = mDataPlottable->interface1D()->dataPixelPosition(index);
const double centerKeyPixel = mKeyAxis->orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? centerPixel.x() : centerPixel.y();
if (qIsNaN(centerKeyPixel))
return false;
double keyMin, keyMax;
if (mErrorType == etKeyError)
{
const double centerKey = mKeyAxis->pixelToCoord(centerKeyPixel);
const double errorPlus = mDataContainer->at(index).errorPlus;
const double errorMinus = mDataContainer->at(index).errorMinus;
keyMax = centerKey+(qIsNaN(errorPlus) ? 0 : errorPlus);
keyMin = centerKey-(qIsNaN(errorMinus) ? 0 : errorMinus);
} else // mErrorType == etValueError
{
keyMax = mKeyAxis->pixelToCoord(centerKeyPixel+mWhiskerWidth*0.5*mKeyAxis->pixelOrientation());
keyMin = mKeyAxis->pixelToCoord(centerKeyPixel-mWhiskerWidth*0.5*mKeyAxis->pixelOrientation());
}
return ((keyMax > mKeyAxis->range().lower) && (keyMin < mKeyAxis->range().upper));
}
/*! \internal
Returns whether \a line intersects (or is contained in) \a pixelRect.
\a line is assumed to be either perfectly horizontal or perfectly vertical, as is the case for
error bar lines.
*/
bool QCPErrorBars::rectIntersectsLine(const QRectF &pixelRect, const QLineF &line) const
{
if (pixelRect.left() > line.x1() && pixelRect.left() > line.x2())
return false;
else if (pixelRect.right() < line.x1() && pixelRect.right() < line.x2())
return false;
else if (pixelRect.top() > line.y1() && pixelRect.top() > line.y2())
return false;
else if (pixelRect.bottom() < line.y1() && pixelRect.bottom() < line.y2())
return false;
else
return true;
}
/* end of 'src/plottables/plottable-errorbar.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-straightline.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 7596 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemStraightLine
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemStraightLine
\brief A straight line that spans infinitely in both directions
\image html QCPItemStraightLine.png "Straight line example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
It has two positions, \a point1 and \a point2, which define the straight line.
*/
/*!
Creates a straight line item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemStraightLine::QCPItemStraightLine(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
point1(createPosition(QLatin1String("point1"))),
point2(createPosition(QLatin1String("point2")))
{
point1->setCoords(0, 0);
point2->setCoords(1, 1);
setPen(QPen(Qt::black));
setSelectedPen(QPen(Qt::blue,2));
}
QCPItemStraightLine::~QCPItemStraightLine()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line
\see setSelectedPen
*/
void QCPItemStraightLine::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line when selected
\see setPen, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemStraightLine::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemStraightLine::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
return QCPVector2D(pos).distanceToStraightLine(point1->pixelPosition(), point2->pixelPosition()-point1->pixelPosition());
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemStraightLine::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QCPVector2D start(point1->pixelPosition());
QCPVector2D end(point2->pixelPosition());
// get visible segment of straight line inside clipRect:
int clipPad = qCeil(mainPen().widthF());
QLineF line = getRectClippedStraightLine(start, end-start, clipRect().adjusted(-clipPad, -clipPad, clipPad, clipPad));
// paint visible segment, if existent:
if (!line.isNull())
{
painter->setPen(mainPen());
painter->drawLine(line);
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the section of the straight line defined by \a base and direction vector \a
vec, that is visible in the specified \a rect.
This is a helper function for \ref draw.
*/
QLineF QCPItemStraightLine::getRectClippedStraightLine(const QCPVector2D &base, const QCPVector2D &vec, const QRect &rect) const
{
double bx, by;
double gamma;
QLineF result;
if (vec.x() == 0 && vec.y() == 0)
return result;
if (qFuzzyIsNull(vec.x())) // line is vertical
{
// check top of rect:
bx = rect.left();
by = rect.top();
gamma = base.x()-bx + (by-base.y())*vec.x()/vec.y();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.width())
result.setLine(bx+gamma, rect.top(), bx+gamma, rect.bottom()); // no need to check bottom because we know line is vertical
} else if (qFuzzyIsNull(vec.y())) // line is horizontal
{
// check left of rect:
bx = rect.left();
by = rect.top();
gamma = base.y()-by + (bx-base.x())*vec.y()/vec.x();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.height())
result.setLine(rect.left(), by+gamma, rect.right(), by+gamma); // no need to check right because we know line is horizontal
} else // line is skewed
{
QList<QCPVector2D> pointVectors;
// check top of rect:
bx = rect.left();
by = rect.top();
gamma = base.x()-bx + (by-base.y())*vec.x()/vec.y();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.width())
pointVectors.append(QCPVector2D(bx+gamma, by));
// check bottom of rect:
bx = rect.left();
by = rect.bottom();
gamma = base.x()-bx + (by-base.y())*vec.x()/vec.y();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.width())
pointVectors.append(QCPVector2D(bx+gamma, by));
// check left of rect:
bx = rect.left();
by = rect.top();
gamma = base.y()-by + (bx-base.x())*vec.y()/vec.x();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.height())
pointVectors.append(QCPVector2D(bx, by+gamma));
// check right of rect:
bx = rect.right();
by = rect.top();
gamma = base.y()-by + (bx-base.x())*vec.y()/vec.x();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.height())
pointVectors.append(QCPVector2D(bx, by+gamma));
// evaluate points:
if (pointVectors.size() == 2)
{
result.setPoints(pointVectors.at(0).toPointF(), pointVectors.at(1).toPointF());
} else if (pointVectors.size() > 2)
{
// line probably goes through corner of rect, and we got two points there. single out the point pair with greatest distance:
double distSqrMax = 0;
QCPVector2D pv1, pv2;
for (int i=0; i<pointVectors.size()-1; ++i)
{
for (int k=i+1; k<pointVectors.size(); ++k)
{
double distSqr = (pointVectors.at(i)-pointVectors.at(k)).lengthSquared();
if (distSqr > distSqrMax)
{
pv1 = pointVectors.at(i);
pv2 = pointVectors.at(k);
distSqrMax = distSqr;
}
}
}
result.setPoints(pv1.toPointF(), pv2.toPointF());
}
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the
item is not selected and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemStraightLine::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-straightline.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-line.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 8525 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemLine
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemLine
\brief A line from one point to another
\image html QCPItemLine.png "Line example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
It has two positions, \a start and \a end, which define the end points of the line.
With \ref setHead and \ref setTail you may set different line ending styles, e.g. to create an arrow.
*/
/*!
Creates a line item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemLine::QCPItemLine(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
start(createPosition(QLatin1String("start"))),
end(createPosition(QLatin1String("end")))
{
start->setCoords(0, 0);
end->setCoords(1, 1);
setPen(QPen(Qt::black));
setSelectedPen(QPen(Qt::blue,2));
}
QCPItemLine::~QCPItemLine()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line
\see setSelectedPen
*/
void QCPItemLine::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line when selected
\see setPen, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemLine::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the line ending style of the head. The head corresponds to the \a end position.
Note that due to the overloaded QCPLineEnding constructor, you may directly specify
a QCPLineEnding::EndingStyle here, e.g. \code setHead(QCPLineEnding::esSpikeArrow) \endcode
\see setTail
*/
void QCPItemLine::setHead(const QCPLineEnding &head)
{
mHead = head;
}
/*!
Sets the line ending style of the tail. The tail corresponds to the \a start position.
Note that due to the overloaded QCPLineEnding constructor, you may directly specify
a QCPLineEnding::EndingStyle here, e.g. \code setTail(QCPLineEnding::esSpikeArrow) \endcode
\see setHead
*/
void QCPItemLine::setTail(const QCPLineEnding &tail)
{
mTail = tail;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemLine::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
return qSqrt(QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(start->pixelPosition(), end->pixelPosition()));
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemLine::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QCPVector2D startVec(start->pixelPosition());
QCPVector2D endVec(end->pixelPosition());
if (qFuzzyIsNull((startVec-endVec).lengthSquared()))
return;
// get visible segment of straight line inside clipRect:
int clipPad = int(qMax(mHead.boundingDistance(), mTail.boundingDistance()));
clipPad = qMax(clipPad, qCeil(mainPen().widthF()));
QLineF line = getRectClippedLine(startVec, endVec, clipRect().adjusted(-clipPad, -clipPad, clipPad, clipPad));
// paint visible segment, if existent:
if (!line.isNull())
{
painter->setPen(mainPen());
painter->drawLine(line);
painter->setBrush(Qt::SolidPattern);
if (mTail.style() != QCPLineEnding::esNone)
mTail.draw(painter, startVec, startVec-endVec);
if (mHead.style() != QCPLineEnding::esNone)
mHead.draw(painter, endVec, endVec-startVec);
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the section of the line defined by \a start and \a end, that is visible in the specified
\a rect.
This is a helper function for \ref draw.
*/
QLineF QCPItemLine::getRectClippedLine(const QCPVector2D &start, const QCPVector2D &end, const QRect &rect) const
{
bool containsStart = rect.contains(qRound(start.x()), qRound(start.y()));
bool containsEnd = rect.contains(qRound(end.x()), qRound(end.y()));
if (containsStart && containsEnd)
return {start.toPointF(), end.toPointF()};
QCPVector2D base = start;
QCPVector2D vec = end-start;
double bx, by;
double gamma, mu;
QLineF result;
QList<QCPVector2D> pointVectors;
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(vec.y())) // line is not horizontal
{
// check top of rect:
bx = rect.left();
by = rect.top();
mu = (by-base.y())/vec.y();
if (mu >= 0 && mu <= 1)
{
gamma = base.x()-bx + mu*vec.x();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.width())
pointVectors.append(QCPVector2D(bx+gamma, by));
}
// check bottom of rect:
bx = rect.left();
by = rect.bottom();
mu = (by-base.y())/vec.y();
if (mu >= 0 && mu <= 1)
{
gamma = base.x()-bx + mu*vec.x();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.width())
pointVectors.append(QCPVector2D(bx+gamma, by));
}
}
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(vec.x())) // line is not vertical
{
// check left of rect:
bx = rect.left();
by = rect.top();
mu = (bx-base.x())/vec.x();
if (mu >= 0 && mu <= 1)
{
gamma = base.y()-by + mu*vec.y();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.height())
pointVectors.append(QCPVector2D(bx, by+gamma));
}
// check right of rect:
bx = rect.right();
by = rect.top();
mu = (bx-base.x())/vec.x();
if (mu >= 0 && mu <= 1)
{
gamma = base.y()-by + mu*vec.y();
if (gamma >= 0 && gamma <= rect.height())
pointVectors.append(QCPVector2D(bx, by+gamma));
}
}
if (containsStart)
pointVectors.append(start);
if (containsEnd)
pointVectors.append(end);
// evaluate points:
if (pointVectors.size() == 2)
{
result.setPoints(pointVectors.at(0).toPointF(), pointVectors.at(1).toPointF());
} else if (pointVectors.size() > 2)
{
// line probably goes through corner of rect, and we got two points there. single out the point pair with greatest distance:
double distSqrMax = 0;
QCPVector2D pv1, pv2;
for (int i=0; i<pointVectors.size()-1; ++i)
{
for (int k=i+1; k<pointVectors.size(); ++k)
{
double distSqr = (pointVectors.at(i)-pointVectors.at(k)).lengthSquared();
if (distSqr > distSqrMax)
{
pv1 = pointVectors.at(i);
pv2 = pointVectors.at(k);
distSqrMax = distSqr;
}
}
}
result.setPoints(pv1.toPointF(), pv2.toPointF());
}
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the
item is not selected and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemLine::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-line.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-curve.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 7273 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemCurve
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemCurve
\brief A curved line from one point to another
\image html QCPItemCurve.png "Curve example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
It has four positions, \a start and \a end, which define the end points of the line, and two
control points which define the direction the line exits from the start and the direction from
which it approaches the end: \a startDir and \a endDir.
With \ref setHead and \ref setTail you may set different line ending styles, e.g. to create an
arrow.
Often it is desirable for the control points to stay at fixed relative positions to the start/end
point. This can be achieved by setting the parent anchor e.g. of \a startDir simply to \a start,
and then specify the desired pixel offset with QCPItemPosition::setCoords on \a startDir.
*/
/*!
Creates a curve item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemCurve::QCPItemCurve(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
start(createPosition(QLatin1String("start"))),
startDir(createPosition(QLatin1String("startDir"))),
endDir(createPosition(QLatin1String("endDir"))),
end(createPosition(QLatin1String("end")))
{
start->setCoords(0, 0);
startDir->setCoords(0.5, 0);
endDir->setCoords(0, 0.5);
end->setCoords(1, 1);
setPen(QPen(Qt::black));
setSelectedPen(QPen(Qt::blue,2));
}
QCPItemCurve::~QCPItemCurve()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line
\see setSelectedPen
*/
void QCPItemCurve::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line when selected
\see setPen, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemCurve::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the line ending style of the head. The head corresponds to the \a end position.
Note that due to the overloaded QCPLineEnding constructor, you may directly specify
a QCPLineEnding::EndingStyle here, e.g. \code setHead(QCPLineEnding::esSpikeArrow) \endcode
\see setTail
*/
void QCPItemCurve::setHead(const QCPLineEnding &head)
{
mHead = head;
}
/*!
Sets the line ending style of the tail. The tail corresponds to the \a start position.
Note that due to the overloaded QCPLineEnding constructor, you may directly specify
a QCPLineEnding::EndingStyle here, e.g. \code setTail(QCPLineEnding::esSpikeArrow) \endcode
\see setHead
*/
void QCPItemCurve::setTail(const QCPLineEnding &tail)
{
mTail = tail;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemCurve::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
QPointF startVec(start->pixelPosition());
QPointF startDirVec(startDir->pixelPosition());
QPointF endDirVec(endDir->pixelPosition());
QPointF endVec(end->pixelPosition());
QPainterPath cubicPath(startVec);
cubicPath.cubicTo(startDirVec, endDirVec, endVec);
QList<QPolygonF> polygons = cubicPath.toSubpathPolygons();
if (polygons.isEmpty())
return -1;
const QPolygonF polygon = polygons.first();
QCPVector2D p(pos);
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
for (int i=1; i<polygon.size(); ++i)
{
double distSqr = p.distanceSquaredToLine(polygon.at(i-1), polygon.at(i));
if (distSqr < minDistSqr)
minDistSqr = distSqr;
}
return qSqrt(minDistSqr);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemCurve::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QCPVector2D startVec(start->pixelPosition());
QCPVector2D startDirVec(startDir->pixelPosition());
QCPVector2D endDirVec(endDir->pixelPosition());
QCPVector2D endVec(end->pixelPosition());
if ((endVec-startVec).length() > 1e10) // too large curves cause crash
return;
QPainterPath cubicPath(startVec.toPointF());
cubicPath.cubicTo(startDirVec.toPointF(), endDirVec.toPointF(), endVec.toPointF());
// paint visible segment, if existent:
const int clipEnlarge = qCeil(mainPen().widthF());
QRect clip = clipRect().adjusted(-clipEnlarge, -clipEnlarge, clipEnlarge, clipEnlarge);
QRect cubicRect = cubicPath.controlPointRect().toRect();
if (cubicRect.isEmpty()) // may happen when start and end exactly on same x or y position
cubicRect.adjust(0, 0, 1, 1);
if (clip.intersects(cubicRect))
{
painter->setPen(mainPen());
painter->drawPath(cubicPath);
painter->setBrush(Qt::SolidPattern);
if (mTail.style() != QCPLineEnding::esNone)
mTail.draw(painter, startVec, M_PI-cubicPath.angleAtPercent(0)/180.0*M_PI);
if (mHead.style() != QCPLineEnding::esNone)
mHead.draw(painter, endVec, -cubicPath.angleAtPercent(1)/180.0*M_PI);
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the
item is not selected and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemCurve::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-curve.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-rect.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 6472 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemRect
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemRect
\brief A rectangle
\image html QCPItemRect.png "Rectangle example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
It has two positions, \a topLeft and \a bottomRight, which define the rectangle.
*/
/*!
Creates a rectangle item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemRect::QCPItemRect(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
topLeft(createPosition(QLatin1String("topLeft"))),
bottomRight(createPosition(QLatin1String("bottomRight"))),
top(createAnchor(QLatin1String("top"), aiTop)),
topRight(createAnchor(QLatin1String("topRight"), aiTopRight)),
right(createAnchor(QLatin1String("right"), aiRight)),
bottom(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottom"), aiBottom)),
bottomLeft(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottomLeft"), aiBottomLeft)),
left(createAnchor(QLatin1String("left"), aiLeft))
{
topLeft->setCoords(0, 1);
bottomRight->setCoords(1, 0);
setPen(QPen(Qt::black));
setSelectedPen(QPen(Qt::blue,2));
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setSelectedBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
}
QCPItemRect::~QCPItemRect()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line of the rectangle
\see setSelectedPen, setBrush
*/
void QCPItemRect::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line of the rectangle when selected
\see setPen, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemRect::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to fill the rectangle. To disable filling, set \a brush to
Qt::NoBrush.
\see setSelectedBrush, setPen
*/
void QCPItemRect::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to fill the rectangle when selected. To disable filling, set \a
brush to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setBrush
*/
void QCPItemRect::setSelectedBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mSelectedBrush = brush;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemRect::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
QRectF rect = QRectF(topLeft->pixelPosition(), bottomRight->pixelPosition()).normalized();
bool filledRect = mBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush && mBrush.color().alpha() != 0;
return rectDistance(rect, pos, filledRect);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemRect::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QPointF p1 = topLeft->pixelPosition();
QPointF p2 = bottomRight->pixelPosition();
if (p1.toPoint() == p2.toPoint())
return;
QRectF rect = QRectF(p1, p2).normalized();
double clipPad = mainPen().widthF();
QRectF boundingRect = rect.adjusted(-clipPad, -clipPad, clipPad, clipPad);
if (boundingRect.intersects(clipRect())) // only draw if bounding rect of rect item is visible in cliprect
{
painter->setPen(mainPen());
painter->setBrush(mainBrush());
painter->drawRect(rect);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QPointF QCPItemRect::anchorPixelPosition(int anchorId) const
{
QRectF rect = QRectF(topLeft->pixelPosition(), bottomRight->pixelPosition());
switch (anchorId)
{
case aiTop: return (rect.topLeft()+rect.topRight())*0.5;
case aiTopRight: return rect.topRight();
case aiRight: return (rect.topRight()+rect.bottomRight())*0.5;
case aiBottom: return (rect.bottomLeft()+rect.bottomRight())*0.5;
case aiBottomLeft: return rect.bottomLeft();
case aiLeft: return (rect.topLeft()+rect.bottomLeft())*0.5;
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid anchorId" << anchorId;
return {};
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the item is not selected
and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemRect::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the brush that should be used for drawing fills of the item. Returns mBrush when the item
is not selected and mSelectedBrush when it is.
*/
QBrush QCPItemRect::mainBrush() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedBrush : mBrush;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-rect.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-text.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 13335 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemText
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemText
\brief A text label
\image html QCPItemText.png "Text example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
Its position is defined by the member \a position and the setting of \ref setPositionAlignment.
The latter controls which part of the text rect shall be aligned with \a position.
The text alignment itself (i.e. left, center, right) can be controlled with \ref
setTextAlignment.
The text may be rotated around the \a position point with \ref setRotation.
*/
/*!
Creates a text item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemText::QCPItemText(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
position(createPosition(QLatin1String("position"))),
topLeft(createAnchor(QLatin1String("topLeft"), aiTopLeft)),
top(createAnchor(QLatin1String("top"), aiTop)),
topRight(createAnchor(QLatin1String("topRight"), aiTopRight)),
right(createAnchor(QLatin1String("right"), aiRight)),
bottomRight(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottomRight"), aiBottomRight)),
bottom(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottom"), aiBottom)),
bottomLeft(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottomLeft"), aiBottomLeft)),
left(createAnchor(QLatin1String("left"), aiLeft)),
mText(QLatin1String("text")),
mPositionAlignment(Qt::AlignCenter),
mTextAlignment(Qt::AlignTop|Qt::AlignHCenter),
mRotation(0)
{
position->setCoords(0, 0);
setPen(Qt::NoPen);
setSelectedPen(Qt::NoPen);
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setSelectedBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setColor(Qt::black);
setSelectedColor(Qt::blue);
}
QCPItemText::~QCPItemText()
{
}
/*!
Sets the color of the text.
*/
void QCPItemText::setColor(const QColor &color)
{
mColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the color of the text that will be used when the item is selected.
*/
void QCPItemText::setSelectedColor(const QColor &color)
{
mSelectedColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used do draw a rectangular border around the text. To disable the
border, set \a pen to Qt::NoPen.
\see setSelectedPen, setBrush, setPadding
*/
void QCPItemText::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used do draw a rectangular border around the text, when the item is
selected. To disable the border, set \a pen to Qt::NoPen.
\see setPen
*/
void QCPItemText::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used do fill the background of the text. To disable the
background, set \a brush to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setSelectedBrush, setPen, setPadding
*/
void QCPItemText::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used do fill the background of the text, when the item is selected. To disable the
background, set \a brush to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setBrush
*/
void QCPItemText::setSelectedBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mSelectedBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the font of the text.
\see setSelectedFont, setColor
*/
void QCPItemText::setFont(const QFont &font)
{
mFont = font;
}
/*!
Sets the font of the text that will be used when the item is selected.
\see setFont
*/
void QCPItemText::setSelectedFont(const QFont &font)
{
mSelectedFont = font;
}
/*!
Sets the text that will be displayed. Multi-line texts are supported by inserting a line break
character, e.g. '\n'.
\see setFont, setColor, setTextAlignment
*/
void QCPItemText::setText(const QString &text)
{
mText = text;
}
/*!
Sets which point of the text rect shall be aligned with \a position.
Examples:
\li If \a alignment is <tt>Qt::AlignHCenter | Qt::AlignTop</tt>, the text will be positioned such
that the top of the text rect will be horizontally centered on \a position.
\li If \a alignment is <tt>Qt::AlignLeft | Qt::AlignBottom</tt>, \a position will indicate the
bottom left corner of the text rect.
If you want to control the alignment of (multi-lined) text within the text rect, use \ref
setTextAlignment.
*/
void QCPItemText::setPositionAlignment(Qt::Alignment alignment)
{
mPositionAlignment = alignment;
}
/*!
Controls how (multi-lined) text is aligned inside the text rect (typically Qt::AlignLeft, Qt::AlignCenter or Qt::AlignRight).
*/
void QCPItemText::setTextAlignment(Qt::Alignment alignment)
{
mTextAlignment = alignment;
}
/*!
Sets the angle in degrees by which the text (and the text rectangle, if visible) will be rotated
around \a position.
*/
void QCPItemText::setRotation(double degrees)
{
mRotation = degrees;
}
/*!
Sets the distance between the border of the text rectangle and the text. The appearance (and
visibility) of the text rectangle can be controlled with \ref setPen and \ref setBrush.
*/
void QCPItemText::setPadding(const QMargins &padding)
{
mPadding = padding;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemText::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
// The rect may be rotated, so we transform the actual clicked pos to the rotated
// coordinate system, so we can use the normal rectDistance function for non-rotated rects:
QPointF positionPixels(position->pixelPosition());
QTransform inputTransform;
inputTransform.translate(positionPixels.x(), positionPixels.y());
inputTransform.rotate(-mRotation);
inputTransform.translate(-positionPixels.x(), -positionPixels.y());
QPointF rotatedPos = inputTransform.map(pos);
QFontMetrics fontMetrics(mFont);
QRect textRect = fontMetrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip|mTextAlignment, mText);
QRect textBoxRect = textRect.adjusted(-mPadding.left(), -mPadding.top(), mPadding.right(), mPadding.bottom());
QPointF textPos = getTextDrawPoint(positionPixels, textBoxRect, mPositionAlignment);
textBoxRect.moveTopLeft(textPos.toPoint());
return rectDistance(textBoxRect, rotatedPos, true);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemText::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QPointF pos(position->pixelPosition());
QTransform transform = painter->transform();
transform.translate(pos.x(), pos.y());
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(mRotation))
transform.rotate(mRotation);
painter->setFont(mainFont());
QRect textRect = painter->fontMetrics().boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip|mTextAlignment, mText);
QRect textBoxRect = textRect.adjusted(-mPadding.left(), -mPadding.top(), mPadding.right(), mPadding.bottom());
QPointF textPos = getTextDrawPoint(QPointF(0, 0), textBoxRect, mPositionAlignment); // 0, 0 because the transform does the translation
textRect.moveTopLeft(textPos.toPoint()+QPoint(mPadding.left(), mPadding.top()));
textBoxRect.moveTopLeft(textPos.toPoint());
int clipPad = qCeil(mainPen().widthF());
QRect boundingRect = textBoxRect.adjusted(-clipPad, -clipPad, clipPad, clipPad);
if (transform.mapRect(boundingRect).intersects(painter->transform().mapRect(clipRect())))
{
painter->setTransform(transform);
if ((mainBrush().style() != Qt::NoBrush && mainBrush().color().alpha() != 0) ||
(mainPen().style() != Qt::NoPen && mainPen().color().alpha() != 0))
{
painter->setPen(mainPen());
painter->setBrush(mainBrush());
painter->drawRect(textBoxRect);
}
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
painter->setPen(QPen(mainColor()));
painter->drawText(textRect, Qt::TextDontClip|mTextAlignment, mText);
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QPointF QCPItemText::anchorPixelPosition(int anchorId) const
{
// get actual rect points (pretty much copied from draw function):
QPointF pos(position->pixelPosition());
QTransform transform;
transform.translate(pos.x(), pos.y());
if (!qFuzzyIsNull(mRotation))
transform.rotate(mRotation);
QFontMetrics fontMetrics(mainFont());
QRect textRect = fontMetrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, 0, Qt::TextDontClip|mTextAlignment, mText);
QRectF textBoxRect = textRect.adjusted(-mPadding.left(), -mPadding.top(), mPadding.right(), mPadding.bottom());
QPointF textPos = getTextDrawPoint(QPointF(0, 0), textBoxRect, mPositionAlignment); // 0, 0 because the transform does the translation
textBoxRect.moveTopLeft(textPos.toPoint());
QPolygonF rectPoly = transform.map(QPolygonF(textBoxRect));
switch (anchorId)
{
case aiTopLeft: return rectPoly.at(0);
case aiTop: return (rectPoly.at(0)+rectPoly.at(1))*0.5;
case aiTopRight: return rectPoly.at(1);
case aiRight: return (rectPoly.at(1)+rectPoly.at(2))*0.5;
case aiBottomRight: return rectPoly.at(2);
case aiBottom: return (rectPoly.at(2)+rectPoly.at(3))*0.5;
case aiBottomLeft: return rectPoly.at(3);
case aiLeft: return (rectPoly.at(3)+rectPoly.at(0))*0.5;
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid anchorId" << anchorId;
return {};
}
/*! \internal
Returns the point that must be given to the QPainter::drawText function (which expects the top
left point of the text rect), according to the position \a pos, the text bounding box \a rect and
the requested \a positionAlignment.
For example, if \a positionAlignment is <tt>Qt::AlignLeft | Qt::AlignBottom</tt> the returned point
will be shifted upward by the height of \a rect, starting from \a pos. So if the text is finally
drawn at that point, the lower left corner of the resulting text rect is at \a pos.
*/
QPointF QCPItemText::getTextDrawPoint(const QPointF &pos, const QRectF &rect, Qt::Alignment positionAlignment) const
{
if (positionAlignment == 0 || positionAlignment == (Qt::AlignLeft|Qt::AlignTop))
return pos;
QPointF result = pos; // start at top left
if (positionAlignment.testFlag(Qt::AlignHCenter))
result.rx() -= rect.width()/2.0;
else if (positionAlignment.testFlag(Qt::AlignRight))
result.rx() -= rect.width();
if (positionAlignment.testFlag(Qt::AlignVCenter))
result.ry() -= rect.height()/2.0;
else if (positionAlignment.testFlag(Qt::AlignBottom))
result.ry() -= rect.height();
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the font that should be used for drawing text. Returns mFont when the item is not selected
and mSelectedFont when it is.
*/
QFont QCPItemText::mainFont() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedFont : mFont;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the color that should be used for drawing text. Returns mColor when the item is not
selected and mSelectedColor when it is.
*/
QColor QCPItemText::mainColor() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedColor : mColor;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the item is not selected
and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemText::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the brush that should be used for drawing fills of the item. Returns mBrush when the item
is not selected and mSelectedBrush when it is.
*/
QBrush QCPItemText::mainBrush() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedBrush : mBrush;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-text.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-ellipse.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 7881 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemEllipse
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemEllipse
\brief An ellipse
\image html QCPItemEllipse.png "Ellipse example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
It has two positions, \a topLeft and \a bottomRight, which define the rect the ellipse will be drawn in.
*/
/*!
Creates an ellipse item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemEllipse::QCPItemEllipse(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
topLeft(createPosition(QLatin1String("topLeft"))),
bottomRight(createPosition(QLatin1String("bottomRight"))),
topLeftRim(createAnchor(QLatin1String("topLeftRim"), aiTopLeftRim)),
top(createAnchor(QLatin1String("top"), aiTop)),
topRightRim(createAnchor(QLatin1String("topRightRim"), aiTopRightRim)),
right(createAnchor(QLatin1String("right"), aiRight)),
bottomRightRim(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottomRightRim"), aiBottomRightRim)),
bottom(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottom"), aiBottom)),
bottomLeftRim(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottomLeftRim"), aiBottomLeftRim)),
left(createAnchor(QLatin1String("left"), aiLeft)),
center(createAnchor(QLatin1String("center"), aiCenter))
{
topLeft->setCoords(0, 1);
bottomRight->setCoords(1, 0);
setPen(QPen(Qt::black));
setSelectedPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2));
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setSelectedBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
}
QCPItemEllipse::~QCPItemEllipse()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line of the ellipse
\see setSelectedPen, setBrush
*/
void QCPItemEllipse::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line of the ellipse when selected
\see setPen, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemEllipse::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to fill the ellipse. To disable filling, set \a brush to
Qt::NoBrush.
\see setSelectedBrush, setPen
*/
void QCPItemEllipse::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to fill the ellipse when selected. To disable filling, set \a
brush to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setBrush
*/
void QCPItemEllipse::setSelectedBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mSelectedBrush = brush;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemEllipse::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
QPointF p1 = topLeft->pixelPosition();
QPointF p2 = bottomRight->pixelPosition();
QPointF center((p1+p2)/2.0);
double a = qAbs(p1.x()-p2.x())/2.0;
double b = qAbs(p1.y()-p2.y())/2.0;
double x = pos.x()-center.x();
double y = pos.y()-center.y();
// distance to border:
double c = 1.0/qSqrt(x*x/(a*a)+y*y/(b*b));
double result = qAbs(c-1)*qSqrt(x*x+y*y);
// filled ellipse, allow click inside to count as hit:
if (result > mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99 && mBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush && mBrush.color().alpha() != 0)
{
if (x*x/(a*a) + y*y/(b*b) <= 1)
result = mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
return result;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemEllipse::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QPointF p1 = topLeft->pixelPosition();
QPointF p2 = bottomRight->pixelPosition();
if (p1.toPoint() == p2.toPoint())
return;
QRectF ellipseRect = QRectF(p1, p2).normalized();
const int clipEnlarge = qCeil(mainPen().widthF());
QRect clip = clipRect().adjusted(-clipEnlarge, -clipEnlarge, clipEnlarge, clipEnlarge);
if (ellipseRect.intersects(clip)) // only draw if bounding rect of ellipse is visible in cliprect
{
painter->setPen(mainPen());
painter->setBrush(mainBrush());
#ifdef __EXCEPTIONS
try // drawEllipse sometimes throws exceptions if ellipse is too big
{
#endif
painter->drawEllipse(ellipseRect);
#ifdef __EXCEPTIONS
} catch (...)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Item too large for memory, setting invisible";
setVisible(false);
}
#endif
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QPointF QCPItemEllipse::anchorPixelPosition(int anchorId) const
{
QRectF rect = QRectF(topLeft->pixelPosition(), bottomRight->pixelPosition());
switch (anchorId)
{
case aiTopLeftRim: return rect.center()+(rect.topLeft()-rect.center())*1/qSqrt(2);
case aiTop: return (rect.topLeft()+rect.topRight())*0.5;
case aiTopRightRim: return rect.center()+(rect.topRight()-rect.center())*1/qSqrt(2);
case aiRight: return (rect.topRight()+rect.bottomRight())*0.5;
case aiBottomRightRim: return rect.center()+(rect.bottomRight()-rect.center())*1/qSqrt(2);
case aiBottom: return (rect.bottomLeft()+rect.bottomRight())*0.5;
case aiBottomLeftRim: return rect.center()+(rect.bottomLeft()-rect.center())*1/qSqrt(2);
case aiLeft: return (rect.topLeft()+rect.bottomLeft())*0.5;
case aiCenter: return (rect.topLeft()+rect.bottomRight())*0.5;
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid anchorId" << anchorId;
return {};
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the item is not selected
and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemEllipse::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the brush that should be used for drawing fills of the item. Returns mBrush when the item
is not selected and mSelectedBrush when it is.
*/
QBrush QCPItemEllipse::mainBrush() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedBrush : mBrush;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-ellipse.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-pixmap.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 10622 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemPixmap
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemPixmap
\brief An arbitrary pixmap
\image html QCPItemPixmap.png "Pixmap example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
It has two positions, \a topLeft and \a bottomRight, which define the rectangle the pixmap will
be drawn in. Depending on the scale setting (\ref setScaled), the pixmap will be either scaled to
fit the rectangle or be drawn aligned to the topLeft position.
If scaling is enabled and \a topLeft is further to the bottom/right than \a bottomRight (as shown
on the right side of the example image), the pixmap will be flipped in the respective
orientations.
*/
/*!
Creates a rectangle item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemPixmap::QCPItemPixmap(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
topLeft(createPosition(QLatin1String("topLeft"))),
bottomRight(createPosition(QLatin1String("bottomRight"))),
top(createAnchor(QLatin1String("top"), aiTop)),
topRight(createAnchor(QLatin1String("topRight"), aiTopRight)),
right(createAnchor(QLatin1String("right"), aiRight)),
bottom(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottom"), aiBottom)),
bottomLeft(createAnchor(QLatin1String("bottomLeft"), aiBottomLeft)),
left(createAnchor(QLatin1String("left"), aiLeft)),
mScaled(false),
mScaledPixmapInvalidated(true),
mAspectRatioMode(Qt::KeepAspectRatio),
mTransformationMode(Qt::SmoothTransformation)
{
topLeft->setCoords(0, 1);
bottomRight->setCoords(1, 0);
setPen(Qt::NoPen);
setSelectedPen(QPen(Qt::blue));
}
QCPItemPixmap::~QCPItemPixmap()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pixmap that will be displayed.
*/
void QCPItemPixmap::setPixmap(const QPixmap &pixmap)
{
mPixmap = pixmap;
mScaledPixmapInvalidated = true;
if (mPixmap.isNull())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "pixmap is null";
}
/*!
Sets whether the pixmap will be scaled to fit the rectangle defined by the \a topLeft and \a
bottomRight positions.
*/
void QCPItemPixmap::setScaled(bool scaled, Qt::AspectRatioMode aspectRatioMode, Qt::TransformationMode transformationMode)
{
mScaled = scaled;
mAspectRatioMode = aspectRatioMode;
mTransformationMode = transformationMode;
mScaledPixmapInvalidated = true;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw a border around the pixmap.
\see setSelectedPen, setBrush
*/
void QCPItemPixmap::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw a border around the pixmap when selected
\see setPen, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemPixmap::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemPixmap::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
return rectDistance(getFinalRect(), pos, true);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemPixmap::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
bool flipHorz = false;
bool flipVert = false;
QRect rect = getFinalRect(&flipHorz, &flipVert);
int clipPad = mainPen().style() == Qt::NoPen ? 0 : qCeil(mainPen().widthF());
QRect boundingRect = rect.adjusted(-clipPad, -clipPad, clipPad, clipPad);
if (boundingRect.intersects(clipRect()))
{
updateScaledPixmap(rect, flipHorz, flipVert);
painter->drawPixmap(rect.topLeft(), mScaled ? mScaledPixmap : mPixmap);
QPen pen = mainPen();
if (pen.style() != Qt::NoPen)
{
painter->setPen(pen);
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
painter->drawRect(rect);
}
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QPointF QCPItemPixmap::anchorPixelPosition(int anchorId) const
{
bool flipHorz = false;
bool flipVert = false;
QRect rect = getFinalRect(&flipHorz, &flipVert);
// we actually want denormal rects (negative width/height) here, so restore
// the flipped state:
if (flipHorz)
rect.adjust(rect.width(), 0, -rect.width(), 0);
if (flipVert)
rect.adjust(0, rect.height(), 0, -rect.height());
switch (anchorId)
{
case aiTop: return (rect.topLeft()+rect.topRight())*0.5;
case aiTopRight: return rect.topRight();
case aiRight: return (rect.topRight()+rect.bottomRight())*0.5;
case aiBottom: return (rect.bottomLeft()+rect.bottomRight())*0.5;
case aiBottomLeft: return rect.bottomLeft();
case aiLeft: return (rect.topLeft()+rect.bottomLeft())*0.5;
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid anchorId" << anchorId;
return {};
}
/*! \internal
Creates the buffered scaled image (\a mScaledPixmap) to fit the specified \a finalRect. The
parameters \a flipHorz and \a flipVert control whether the resulting image shall be flipped
horizontally or vertically. (This is used when \a topLeft is further to the bottom/right than \a
bottomRight.)
This function only creates the scaled pixmap when the buffered pixmap has a different size than
the expected result, so calling this function repeatedly, e.g. in the \ref draw function, does
not cause expensive rescaling every time.
If scaling is disabled, sets mScaledPixmap to a null QPixmap.
*/
void QCPItemPixmap::updateScaledPixmap(QRect finalRect, bool flipHorz, bool flipVert)
{
if (mPixmap.isNull())
return;
if (mScaled)
{
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
double devicePixelRatio = mPixmap.devicePixelRatio();
#else
double devicePixelRatio = 1.0;
#endif
if (finalRect.isNull())
finalRect = getFinalRect(&flipHorz, &flipVert);
if (mScaledPixmapInvalidated || finalRect.size() != mScaledPixmap.size()/devicePixelRatio)
{
mScaledPixmap = mPixmap.scaled(finalRect.size()*devicePixelRatio, mAspectRatioMode, mTransformationMode);
if (flipHorz || flipVert)
mScaledPixmap = QPixmap::fromImage(mScaledPixmap.toImage().mirrored(flipHorz, flipVert));
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
mScaledPixmap.setDevicePixelRatio(devicePixelRatio);
#endif
}
} else if (!mScaledPixmap.isNull())
mScaledPixmap = QPixmap();
mScaledPixmapInvalidated = false;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the final (tight) rect the pixmap is drawn in, depending on the current item positions
and scaling settings.
The output parameters \a flippedHorz and \a flippedVert return whether the pixmap should be drawn
flipped horizontally or vertically in the returned rect. (The returned rect itself is always
normalized, i.e. the top left corner of the rect is actually further to the top/left than the
bottom right corner). This is the case when the item position \a topLeft is further to the
bottom/right than \a bottomRight.
If scaling is disabled, returns a rect with size of the original pixmap and the top left corner
aligned with the item position \a topLeft. The position \a bottomRight is ignored.
*/
QRect QCPItemPixmap::getFinalRect(bool *flippedHorz, bool *flippedVert) const
{
QRect result;
bool flipHorz = false;
bool flipVert = false;
QPoint p1 = topLeft->pixelPosition().toPoint();
QPoint p2 = bottomRight->pixelPosition().toPoint();
if (p1 == p2)
return {p1, QSize(0, 0)};
if (mScaled)
{
QSize newSize = QSize(p2.x()-p1.x(), p2.y()-p1.y());
QPoint topLeft = p1;
if (newSize.width() < 0)
{
flipHorz = true;
newSize.rwidth() *= -1;
topLeft.setX(p2.x());
}
if (newSize.height() < 0)
{
flipVert = true;
newSize.rheight() *= -1;
topLeft.setY(p2.y());
}
QSize scaledSize = mPixmap.size();
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
scaledSize /= mPixmap.devicePixelRatio();
scaledSize.scale(newSize*mPixmap.devicePixelRatio(), mAspectRatioMode);
#else
scaledSize.scale(newSize, mAspectRatioMode);
#endif
result = QRect(topLeft, scaledSize);
} else
{
#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED
result = QRect(p1, mPixmap.size()/mPixmap.devicePixelRatio());
#else
result = QRect(p1, mPixmap.size());
#endif
}
if (flippedHorz)
*flippedHorz = flipHorz;
if (flippedVert)
*flippedVert = flipVert;
return result;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the item is not selected
and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemPixmap::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-pixmap.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-tracer.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 14645 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemTracer
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemTracer
\brief Item that sticks to QCPGraph data points
\image html QCPItemTracer.png "Tracer example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
The tracer can be connected with a QCPGraph via \ref setGraph. Then it will automatically adopt
the coordinate axes of the graph and update its \a position to be on the graph's data. This means
the key stays controllable via \ref setGraphKey, but the value will follow the graph data. If a
QCPGraph is connected, note that setting the coordinates of the tracer item directly via \a
position will have no effect because they will be overriden in the next redraw (this is when the
coordinate update happens).
If the specified key in \ref setGraphKey is outside the key bounds of the graph, the tracer will
stay at the corresponding end of the graph.
With \ref setInterpolating you may specify whether the tracer may only stay exactly on data
points or whether it interpolates data points linearly, if given a key that lies between two data
points of the graph.
The tracer has different visual styles, see \ref setStyle. It is also possible to make the tracer
have no own visual appearance (set the style to \ref tsNone), and just connect other item
positions to the tracer \a position (used as an anchor) via \ref
QCPItemPosition::setParentAnchor.
\note The tracer position is only automatically updated upon redraws. So when the data of the
graph changes and immediately afterwards (without a redraw) the position coordinates of the
tracer are retrieved, they will not reflect the updated data of the graph. In this case \ref
updatePosition must be called manually, prior to reading the tracer coordinates.
*/
/*!
Creates a tracer item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemTracer::QCPItemTracer(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
position(createPosition(QLatin1String("position"))),
mSize(6),
mStyle(tsCrosshair),
mGraph(nullptr),
mGraphKey(0),
mInterpolating(false)
{
position->setCoords(0, 0);
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setSelectedBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setPen(QPen(Qt::black));
setSelectedPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2));
}
QCPItemTracer::~QCPItemTracer()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line of the tracer
\see setSelectedPen, setBrush
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the line of the tracer when selected
\see setPen, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to draw any fills of the tracer
\see setSelectedBrush, setPen
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the brush that will be used to draw any fills of the tracer, when selected.
\see setBrush, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setSelectedBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mSelectedBrush = brush;
}
/*!
Sets the size of the tracer in pixels, if the style supports setting a size (e.g. \ref tsSquare
does, \ref tsCrosshair does not).
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setSize(double size)
{
mSize = size;
}
/*!
Sets the style/visual appearance of the tracer.
If you only want to use the tracer \a position as an anchor for other items, set \a style to
\ref tsNone.
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setStyle(QCPItemTracer::TracerStyle style)
{
mStyle = style;
}
/*!
Sets the QCPGraph this tracer sticks to. The tracer \a position will be set to type
QCPItemPosition::ptPlotCoords and the axes will be set to the axes of \a graph.
To free the tracer from any graph, set \a graph to \c nullptr. The tracer \a position can then be
placed freely like any other item position. This is the state the tracer will assume when its
graph gets deleted while still attached to it.
\see setGraphKey
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setGraph(QCPGraph *graph)
{
if (graph)
{
if (graph->parentPlot() == mParentPlot)
{
position->setType(QCPItemPosition::ptPlotCoords);
position->setAxes(graph->keyAxis(), graph->valueAxis());
mGraph = graph;
updatePosition();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "graph isn't in same QCustomPlot instance as this item";
} else
{
mGraph = nullptr;
}
}
/*!
Sets the key of the graph's data point the tracer will be positioned at. This is the only free
coordinate of a tracer when attached to a graph.
Depending on \ref setInterpolating, the tracer will be either positioned on the data point
closest to \a key, or will stay exactly at \a key and interpolate the value linearly.
\see setGraph, setInterpolating
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setGraphKey(double key)
{
mGraphKey = key;
}
/*!
Sets whether the value of the graph's data points shall be interpolated, when positioning the
tracer.
If \a enabled is set to false and a key is given with \ref setGraphKey, the tracer is placed on
the data point of the graph which is closest to the key, but which is not necessarily exactly
there. If \a enabled is true, the tracer will be positioned exactly at the specified key, and
the appropriate value will be interpolated from the graph's data points linearly.
\see setGraph, setGraphKey
*/
void QCPItemTracer::setInterpolating(bool enabled)
{
mInterpolating = enabled;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemTracer::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
QPointF center(position->pixelPosition());
double w = mSize/2.0;
QRect clip = clipRect();
switch (mStyle)
{
case tsNone: return -1;
case tsPlus:
{
if (clipRect().intersects(QRectF(center-QPointF(w, w), center+QPointF(w, w)).toRect()))
return qSqrt(qMin(QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(center+QPointF(-w, 0), center+QPointF(w, 0)),
QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(center+QPointF(0, -w), center+QPointF(0, w))));
break;
}
case tsCrosshair:
{
return qSqrt(qMin(QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(clip.left(), center.y()), QCPVector2D(clip.right(), center.y())),
QCPVector2D(pos).distanceSquaredToLine(QCPVector2D(center.x(), clip.top()), QCPVector2D(center.x(), clip.bottom()))));
}
case tsCircle:
{
if (clip.intersects(QRectF(center-QPointF(w, w), center+QPointF(w, w)).toRect()))
{
// distance to border:
double centerDist = QCPVector2D(center-pos).length();
double circleLine = w;
double result = qAbs(centerDist-circleLine);
// filled ellipse, allow click inside to count as hit:
if (result > mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99 && mBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush && mBrush.color().alpha() != 0)
{
if (centerDist <= circleLine)
result = mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
return result;
}
break;
}
case tsSquare:
{
if (clip.intersects(QRectF(center-QPointF(w, w), center+QPointF(w, w)).toRect()))
{
QRectF rect = QRectF(center-QPointF(w, w), center+QPointF(w, w));
bool filledRect = mBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush && mBrush.color().alpha() != 0;
return rectDistance(rect, pos, filledRect);
}
break;
}
}
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemTracer::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
updatePosition();
if (mStyle == tsNone)
return;
painter->setPen(mainPen());
painter->setBrush(mainBrush());
QPointF center(position->pixelPosition());
double w = mSize/2.0;
QRect clip = clipRect();
switch (mStyle)
{
case tsNone: return;
case tsPlus:
{
if (clip.intersects(QRectF(center-QPointF(w, w), center+QPointF(w, w)).toRect()))
{
painter->drawLine(QLineF(center+QPointF(-w, 0), center+QPointF(w, 0)));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(center+QPointF(0, -w), center+QPointF(0, w)));
}
break;
}
case tsCrosshair:
{
if (center.y() > clip.top() && center.y() < clip.bottom())
painter->drawLine(QLineF(clip.left(), center.y(), clip.right(), center.y()));
if (center.x() > clip.left() && center.x() < clip.right())
painter->drawLine(QLineF(center.x(), clip.top(), center.x(), clip.bottom()));
break;
}
case tsCircle:
{
if (clip.intersects(QRectF(center-QPointF(w, w), center+QPointF(w, w)).toRect()))
painter->drawEllipse(center, w, w);
break;
}
case tsSquare:
{
if (clip.intersects(QRectF(center-QPointF(w, w), center+QPointF(w, w)).toRect()))
painter->drawRect(QRectF(center-QPointF(w, w), center+QPointF(w, w)));
break;
}
}
}
/*!
If the tracer is connected with a graph (\ref setGraph), this function updates the tracer's \a
position to reside on the graph data, depending on the configured key (\ref setGraphKey).
It is called automatically on every redraw and normally doesn't need to be called manually. One
exception is when you want to read the tracer coordinates via \a position and are not sure that
the graph's data (or the tracer key with \ref setGraphKey) hasn't changed since the last redraw.
In that situation, call this function before accessing \a position, to make sure you don't get
out-of-date coordinates.
If there is no graph set on this tracer, this function does nothing.
*/
void QCPItemTracer::updatePosition()
{
if (mGraph)
{
if (mParentPlot->hasPlottable(mGraph))
{
if (mGraph->data()->size() > 1)
{
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator first = mGraph->data()->constBegin();
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator last = mGraph->data()->constEnd()-1;
if (mGraphKey <= first->key)
position->setCoords(first->key, first->value);
else if (mGraphKey >= last->key)
position->setCoords(last->key, last->value);
else
{
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it = mGraph->data()->findBegin(mGraphKey);
if (it != mGraph->data()->constEnd()) // mGraphKey is not exactly on last iterator, but somewhere between iterators
{
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator prevIt = it;
++it; // won't advance to constEnd because we handled that case (mGraphKey >= last->key) before
if (mInterpolating)
{
// interpolate between iterators around mGraphKey:
double slope = 0;
if (!qFuzzyCompare(double(it->key), double(prevIt->key)))
slope = (it->value-prevIt->value)/(it->key-prevIt->key);
position->setCoords(mGraphKey, (mGraphKey-prevIt->key)*slope+prevIt->value);
} else
{
// find iterator with key closest to mGraphKey:
if (mGraphKey < (prevIt->key+it->key)*0.5)
position->setCoords(prevIt->key, prevIt->value);
else
position->setCoords(it->key, it->value);
}
} else // mGraphKey is exactly on last iterator (should actually be caught when comparing first/last keys, but this is a failsafe for fp uncertainty)
position->setCoords(it->key, it->value);
}
} else if (mGraph->data()->size() == 1)
{
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it = mGraph->data()->constBegin();
position->setCoords(it->key, it->value);
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "graph has no data";
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "graph not contained in QCustomPlot instance (anymore)";
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the item is not selected
and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemTracer::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the brush that should be used for drawing fills of the item. Returns mBrush when the item
is not selected and mSelectedBrush when it is.
*/
QBrush QCPItemTracer::mainBrush() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedBrush : mBrush;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-tracer.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/items/item-bracket.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 10705 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPItemBracket
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPItemBracket
\brief A bracket for referencing/highlighting certain parts in the plot.
\image html QCPItemBracket.png "Bracket example. Blue dotted circles are anchors, solid blue discs are positions."
It has two positions, \a left and \a right, which define the span of the bracket. If \a left is
actually farther to the left than \a right, the bracket is opened to the bottom, as shown in the
example image.
The bracket supports multiple styles via \ref setStyle. The length, i.e. how far the bracket
stretches away from the embraced span, can be controlled with \ref setLength.
\image html QCPItemBracket-length.png
<center>Demonstrating the effect of different values for \ref setLength, for styles \ref
bsCalligraphic and \ref bsSquare. Anchors and positions are displayed for reference.</center>
It provides an anchor \a center, to allow connection of other items, e.g. an arrow (QCPItemLine
or QCPItemCurve) or a text label (QCPItemText), to the bracket.
*/
/*!
Creates a bracket item and sets default values.
The created item is automatically registered with \a parentPlot. This QCustomPlot instance takes
ownership of the item, so do not delete it manually but use QCustomPlot::removeItem() instead.
*/
QCPItemBracket::QCPItemBracket(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPAbstractItem(parentPlot),
left(createPosition(QLatin1String("left"))),
right(createPosition(QLatin1String("right"))),
center(createAnchor(QLatin1String("center"), aiCenter)),
mLength(8),
mStyle(bsCalligraphic)
{
left->setCoords(0, 0);
right->setCoords(1, 1);
setPen(QPen(Qt::black));
setSelectedPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2));
}
QCPItemBracket::~QCPItemBracket()
{
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the bracket.
Note that when the style is \ref bsCalligraphic, only the color will be taken from the pen, the
stroke and width are ignored. To change the apparent stroke width of a calligraphic bracket, use
\ref setLength, which has a similar effect.
\see setSelectedPen
*/
void QCPItemBracket::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that will be used to draw the bracket when selected
\see setPen, setSelected
*/
void QCPItemBracket::setSelectedPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the \a length in pixels how far the bracket extends in the direction towards the embraced
span of the bracket (i.e. perpendicular to the <i>left</i>-<i>right</i>-direction)
\image html QCPItemBracket-length.png
<center>Demonstrating the effect of different values for \ref setLength, for styles \ref
bsCalligraphic and \ref bsSquare. Anchors and positions are displayed for reference.</center>
*/
void QCPItemBracket::setLength(double length)
{
mLength = length;
}
/*!
Sets the style of the bracket, i.e. the shape/visual appearance.
\see setPen
*/
void QCPItemBracket::setStyle(QCPItemBracket::BracketStyle style)
{
mStyle = style;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPItemBracket::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable && !mSelectable)
return -1;
QCPVector2D p(pos);
QCPVector2D leftVec(left->pixelPosition());
QCPVector2D rightVec(right->pixelPosition());
if (leftVec.toPoint() == rightVec.toPoint())
return -1;
QCPVector2D widthVec = (rightVec-leftVec)*0.5;
QCPVector2D lengthVec = widthVec.perpendicular().normalized()*mLength;
QCPVector2D centerVec = (rightVec+leftVec)*0.5-lengthVec;
switch (mStyle)
{
case QCPItemBracket::bsSquare:
case QCPItemBracket::bsRound:
{
double a = p.distanceSquaredToLine(centerVec-widthVec, centerVec+widthVec);
double b = p.distanceSquaredToLine(centerVec-widthVec+lengthVec, centerVec-widthVec);
double c = p.distanceSquaredToLine(centerVec+widthVec+lengthVec, centerVec+widthVec);
return qSqrt(qMin(qMin(a, b), c));
}
case QCPItemBracket::bsCurly:
case QCPItemBracket::bsCalligraphic:
{
double a = p.distanceSquaredToLine(centerVec-widthVec*0.75+lengthVec*0.15, centerVec+lengthVec*0.3);
double b = p.distanceSquaredToLine(centerVec-widthVec+lengthVec*0.7, centerVec-widthVec*0.75+lengthVec*0.15);
double c = p.distanceSquaredToLine(centerVec+widthVec*0.75+lengthVec*0.15, centerVec+lengthVec*0.3);
double d = p.distanceSquaredToLine(centerVec+widthVec+lengthVec*0.7, centerVec+widthVec*0.75+lengthVec*0.15);
return qSqrt(qMin(qMin(a, b), qMin(c, d)));
}
}
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPItemBracket::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
QCPVector2D leftVec(left->pixelPosition());
QCPVector2D rightVec(right->pixelPosition());
if (leftVec.toPoint() == rightVec.toPoint())
return;
QCPVector2D widthVec = (rightVec-leftVec)*0.5;
QCPVector2D lengthVec = widthVec.perpendicular().normalized()*mLength;
QCPVector2D centerVec = (rightVec+leftVec)*0.5-lengthVec;
QPolygon boundingPoly;
boundingPoly << leftVec.toPoint() << rightVec.toPoint()
<< (rightVec-lengthVec).toPoint() << (leftVec-lengthVec).toPoint();
const int clipEnlarge = qCeil(mainPen().widthF());
QRect clip = clipRect().adjusted(-clipEnlarge, -clipEnlarge, clipEnlarge, clipEnlarge);
if (clip.intersects(boundingPoly.boundingRect()))
{
painter->setPen(mainPen());
switch (mStyle)
{
case bsSquare:
{
painter->drawLine((centerVec+widthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec-widthVec).toPointF());
painter->drawLine((centerVec+widthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec+widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
painter->drawLine((centerVec-widthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec-widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
break;
}
case bsRound:
{
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
QPainterPath path;
path.moveTo((centerVec+widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
path.cubicTo((centerVec+widthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec+widthVec).toPointF(), centerVec.toPointF());
path.cubicTo((centerVec-widthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec-widthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec-widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
painter->drawPath(path);
break;
}
case bsCurly:
{
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
QPainterPath path;
path.moveTo((centerVec+widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
path.cubicTo((centerVec+widthVec-lengthVec*0.8).toPointF(), (centerVec+0.4*widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF(), centerVec.toPointF());
path.cubicTo((centerVec-0.4*widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec-widthVec-lengthVec*0.8).toPointF(), (centerVec-widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
painter->drawPath(path);
break;
}
case bsCalligraphic:
{
painter->setPen(Qt::NoPen);
painter->setBrush(QBrush(mainPen().color()));
QPainterPath path;
path.moveTo((centerVec+widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
path.cubicTo((centerVec+widthVec-lengthVec*0.8).toPointF(), (centerVec+0.4*widthVec+0.8*lengthVec).toPointF(), centerVec.toPointF());
path.cubicTo((centerVec-0.4*widthVec+0.8*lengthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec-widthVec-lengthVec*0.8).toPointF(), (centerVec-widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
path.cubicTo((centerVec-widthVec-lengthVec*0.5).toPointF(), (centerVec-0.2*widthVec+1.2*lengthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec+lengthVec*0.2).toPointF());
path.cubicTo((centerVec+0.2*widthVec+1.2*lengthVec).toPointF(), (centerVec+widthVec-lengthVec*0.5).toPointF(), (centerVec+widthVec+lengthVec).toPointF());
painter->drawPath(path);
break;
}
}
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QPointF QCPItemBracket::anchorPixelPosition(int anchorId) const
{
QCPVector2D leftVec(left->pixelPosition());
QCPVector2D rightVec(right->pixelPosition());
if (leftVec.toPoint() == rightVec.toPoint())
return leftVec.toPointF();
QCPVector2D widthVec = (rightVec-leftVec)*0.5;
QCPVector2D lengthVec = widthVec.perpendicular().normalized()*mLength;
QCPVector2D centerVec = (rightVec+leftVec)*0.5-lengthVec;
switch (anchorId)
{
case aiCenter:
return centerVec.toPointF();
}
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid anchorId" << anchorId;
return {};
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that should be used for drawing lines. Returns mPen when the
item is not selected and mSelectedPen when it is.
*/
QPen QCPItemBracket::mainPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedPen : mPen;
}
/* end of 'src/items/item-bracket.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/polar/radialaxis.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 49415 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPolarAxisRadial
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPolarAxisRadial
\brief The radial axis inside a radial plot
\warning In this QCustomPlot version, polar plots are a tech preview. Expect documentation and
functionality to be incomplete, as well as changing public interfaces in the future.
Each axis holds an instance of QCPAxisTicker which is used to generate the tick coordinates and
tick labels. You can access the currently installed \ref ticker or set a new one (possibly one of
the specialized subclasses, or your own subclass) via \ref setTicker. For details, see the
documentation of QCPAxisTicker.
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QSharedPointer<QCPAxisTicker> QCPPolarAxisRadial::ticker() const
Returns a modifiable shared pointer to the currently installed axis ticker. The axis ticker is
responsible for generating the tick positions and tick labels of this axis. You can access the
\ref QCPAxisTicker with this method and modify basic properties such as the approximate tick count
(\ref QCPAxisTicker::setTickCount).
You can gain more control over the axis ticks by setting a different \ref QCPAxisTicker subclass, see
the documentation there. A new axis ticker can be set with \ref setTicker.
Since the ticker is stored in the axis as a shared pointer, multiple axes may share the same axis
ticker simply by passing the same shared pointer to multiple axes.
\see setTicker
*/
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/* start of documentation of signals */
/*! \fn void QCPPolarAxisRadial::rangeChanged(const QCPRange &newRange)
This signal is emitted when the range of this axis has changed. You can connect it to the \ref
setRange slot of another axis to communicate the new range to the other axis, in order for it to
be synchronized.
You may also manipulate/correct the range with \ref setRange in a slot connected to this signal.
This is useful if for example a maximum range span shall not be exceeded, or if the lower/upper
range shouldn't go beyond certain values (see \ref QCPRange::bounded). For example, the following
slot would limit the x axis to ranges between 0 and 10:
\code
customPlot->xAxis->setRange(newRange.bounded(0, 10))
\endcode
*/
/*! \fn void QCPPolarAxisRadial::rangeChanged(const QCPRange &newRange, const QCPRange &oldRange)
\overload
Additionally to the new range, this signal also provides the previous range held by the axis as
\a oldRange.
*/
/*! \fn void QCPPolarAxisRadial::scaleTypeChanged(QCPPolarAxisRadial::ScaleType scaleType);
This signal is emitted when the scale type changes, by calls to \ref setScaleType
*/
/*! \fn void QCPPolarAxisRadial::selectionChanged(QCPPolarAxisRadial::SelectableParts selection)
This signal is emitted when the selection state of this axis has changed, either by user interaction
or by a direct call to \ref setSelectedParts.
*/
/*! \fn void QCPPolarAxisRadial::selectableChanged(const QCPPolarAxisRadial::SelectableParts &parts);
This signal is emitted when the selectability changes, by calls to \ref setSelectableParts
*/
/* end of documentation of signals */
/*!
Constructs an Axis instance of Type \a type for the axis rect \a parent.
Usually it isn't necessary to instantiate axes directly, because you can let QCustomPlot create
them for you with \ref QCPAxisRect::addAxis. If you want to use own QCPAxis-subclasses however,
create them manually and then inject them also via \ref QCPAxisRect::addAxis.
*/
QCPPolarAxisRadial::QCPPolarAxisRadial(QCPPolarAxisAngular *parent) :
QCPLayerable(parent->parentPlot(), QString(), parent),
mRangeDrag(true),
mRangeZoom(true),
mRangeZoomFactor(0.85),
// axis base:
mAngularAxis(parent),
mAngle(45),
mAngleReference(arAngularAxis),
mSelectableParts(spAxis | spTickLabels | spAxisLabel),
mSelectedParts(spNone),
mBasePen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedBasePen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
// axis label:
mLabelPadding(0),
mLabel(),
mLabelFont(mParentPlot->font()),
mSelectedLabelFont(QFont(mLabelFont.family(), mLabelFont.pointSize(), QFont::Bold)),
mLabelColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedLabelColor(Qt::blue),
// tick labels:
// mTickLabelPadding(0), in label painter
mTickLabels(true),
// mTickLabelRotation(0), in label painter
mTickLabelFont(mParentPlot->font()),
mSelectedTickLabelFont(QFont(mTickLabelFont.family(), mTickLabelFont.pointSize(), QFont::Bold)),
mTickLabelColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedTickLabelColor(Qt::blue),
mNumberPrecision(6),
mNumberFormatChar('g'),
mNumberBeautifulPowers(true),
mNumberMultiplyCross(false),
// ticks and subticks:
mTicks(true),
mSubTicks(true),
mTickLengthIn(5),
mTickLengthOut(0),
mSubTickLengthIn(2),
mSubTickLengthOut(0),
mTickPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedTickPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
mSubTickPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedSubTickPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
// scale and range:
mRange(0, 5),
mRangeReversed(false),
mScaleType(stLinear),
// internal members:
mRadius(1), // non-zero initial value, will be overwritten in ::update() according to inner rect
mTicker(new QCPAxisTicker),
mLabelPainter(mParentPlot)
{
setParent(parent);
setAntialiased(true);
setTickLabelPadding(5);
setTickLabelRotation(0);
setTickLabelMode(lmUpright);
mLabelPainter.setAnchorReferenceType(QCPLabelPainterPrivate::artTangent);
mLabelPainter.setAbbreviateDecimalPowers(false);
}
QCPPolarAxisRadial::~QCPPolarAxisRadial()
{
}
QCPPolarAxisRadial::LabelMode QCPPolarAxisRadial::tickLabelMode() const
{
switch (mLabelPainter.anchorMode())
{
case QCPLabelPainterPrivate::amSkewedUpright: return lmUpright;
case QCPLabelPainterPrivate::amSkewedRotated: return lmRotated;
default: qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid mode for polar axis"; break;
}
return lmUpright;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
QString QCPPolarAxisRadial::numberFormat() const
{
QString result;
result.append(mNumberFormatChar);
if (mNumberBeautifulPowers)
{
result.append(QLatin1Char('b'));
if (mNumberMultiplyCross)
result.append(QLatin1Char('c'));
}
return result;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPPolarAxisRadial::tickLengthIn() const
{
return mTickLengthIn;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPPolarAxisRadial::tickLengthOut() const
{
return mTickLengthOut;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPPolarAxisRadial::subTickLengthIn() const
{
return mSubTickLengthIn;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPPolarAxisRadial::subTickLengthOut() const
{
return mSubTickLengthOut;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
int QCPPolarAxisRadial::labelPadding() const
{
return mLabelPadding;
}
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRangeDrag(bool enabled)
{
mRangeDrag = enabled;
}
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRangeZoom(bool enabled)
{
mRangeZoom = enabled;
}
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRangeZoomFactor(double factor)
{
mRangeZoomFactor = factor;
}
/*!
Sets whether the axis uses a linear scale or a logarithmic scale.
Note that this method controls the coordinate transformation. For logarithmic scales, you will
likely also want to use a logarithmic tick spacing and labeling, which can be achieved by setting
the axis ticker to an instance of \ref QCPAxisTickerLog :
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp qcpaxisticker-log-creation
See the documentation of \ref QCPAxisTickerLog about the details of logarithmic axis tick
creation.
\ref setNumberPrecision
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setScaleType(QCPPolarAxisRadial::ScaleType type)
{
if (mScaleType != type)
{
mScaleType = type;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
setRange(mRange.sanitizedForLogScale());
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
emit scaleTypeChanged(mScaleType);
}
}
/*!
Sets the range of the axis.
This slot may be connected with the \ref rangeChanged signal of another axis so this axis
is always synchronized with the other axis range, when it changes.
To invert the direction of an axis, use \ref setRangeReversed.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRange(const QCPRange &range)
{
if (range.lower == mRange.lower && range.upper == mRange.upper)
return;
if (!QCPRange::validRange(range)) return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
{
mRange = range.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
{
mRange = range.sanitizedForLinScale();
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets whether the user can (de-)select the parts in \a selectable by clicking on the QCustomPlot surface.
(When \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains iSelectAxes.)
However, even when \a selectable is set to a value not allowing the selection of a specific part,
it is still possible to set the selection of this part manually, by calling \ref setSelectedParts
directly.
\see SelectablePart, setSelectedParts
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectableParts(const SelectableParts &selectable)
{
if (mSelectableParts != selectable)
{
mSelectableParts = selectable;
emit selectableChanged(mSelectableParts);
}
}
/*!
Sets the selected state of the respective axis parts described by \ref SelectablePart. When a part
is selected, it uses a different pen/font.
The entire selection mechanism for axes is handled automatically when \ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains iSelectAxes. You only need to call this function when you
wish to change the selection state manually.
This function can change the selection state of a part, independent of the \ref setSelectableParts setting.
emits the \ref selectionChanged signal when \a selected is different from the previous selection state.
\see SelectablePart, setSelectableParts, selectTest, setSelectedBasePen, setSelectedTickPen, setSelectedSubTickPen,
setSelectedTickLabelFont, setSelectedLabelFont, setSelectedTickLabelColor, setSelectedLabelColor
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectedParts(const SelectableParts &selected)
{
if (mSelectedParts != selected)
{
mSelectedParts = selected;
emit selectionChanged(mSelectedParts);
}
}
/*!
\overload
Sets the lower and upper bound of the axis range.
To invert the direction of an axis, use \ref setRangeReversed.
There is also a slot to set a range, see \ref setRange(const QCPRange &range).
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRange(double lower, double upper)
{
if (lower == mRange.lower && upper == mRange.upper)
return;
if (!QCPRange::validRange(lower, upper)) return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.lower = lower;
mRange.upper = upper;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
\overload
Sets the range of the axis.
The \a position coordinate indicates together with the \a alignment parameter, where the new
range will be positioned. \a size defines the size of the new axis range. \a alignment may be
Qt::AlignLeft, Qt::AlignRight or Qt::AlignCenter. This will cause the left border, right border,
or center of the range to be aligned with \a position. Any other values of \a alignment will
default to Qt::AlignCenter.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRange(double position, double size, Qt::AlignmentFlag alignment)
{
if (alignment == Qt::AlignLeft)
setRange(position, position+size);
else if (alignment == Qt::AlignRight)
setRange(position-size, position);
else // alignment == Qt::AlignCenter
setRange(position-size/2.0, position+size/2.0);
}
/*!
Sets the lower bound of the axis range. The upper bound is not changed.
\see setRange
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRangeLower(double lower)
{
if (mRange.lower == lower)
return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.lower = lower;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets the upper bound of the axis range. The lower bound is not changed.
\see setRange
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRangeUpper(double upper)
{
if (mRange.upper == upper)
return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.upper = upper;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
{
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets whether the axis range (direction) is displayed reversed. Normally, the values on horizontal
axes increase left to right, on vertical axes bottom to top. When \a reversed is set to true, the
direction of increasing values is inverted.
Note that the range and data interface stays the same for reversed axes, e.g. the \a lower part
of the \ref setRange interface will still reference the mathematically smaller number than the \a
upper part.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setRangeReversed(bool reversed)
{
mRangeReversed = reversed;
}
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setAngle(double degrees)
{
mAngle = degrees;
}
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setAngleReference(AngleReference reference)
{
mAngleReference = reference;
}
/*!
The axis ticker is responsible for generating the tick positions and tick labels. See the
documentation of QCPAxisTicker for details on how to work with axis tickers.
You can change the tick positioning/labeling behaviour of this axis by setting a different
QCPAxisTicker subclass using this method. If you only wish to modify the currently installed axis
ticker, access it via \ref ticker.
Since the ticker is stored in the axis as a shared pointer, multiple axes may share the same axis
ticker simply by passing the same shared pointer to multiple axes.
\see ticker
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTicker(QSharedPointer<QCPAxisTicker> ticker)
{
if (ticker)
mTicker = ticker;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can not set 0 as axis ticker";
// no need to invalidate margin cache here because produced tick labels are checked for changes in setupTickVector
}
/*!
Sets whether tick marks are displayed.
Note that setting \a show to false does not imply that tick labels are invisible, too. To achieve
that, see \ref setTickLabels.
\see setSubTicks
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTicks(bool show)
{
if (mTicks != show)
{
mTicks = show;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets whether tick labels are displayed. Tick labels are the numbers drawn next to tick marks.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLabels(bool show)
{
if (mTickLabels != show)
{
mTickLabels = show;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
if (!mTickLabels)
mTickVectorLabels.clear();
}
}
/*!
Sets the distance between the axis base line (including any outward ticks) and the tick labels.
\see setLabelPadding, setPadding
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLabelPadding(int padding)
{
mLabelPainter.setPadding(padding);
}
/*!
Sets the font of the tick labels.
\see setTickLabels, setTickLabelColor
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (font != mTickLabelFont)
{
mTickLabelFont = font;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the color of the tick labels.
\see setTickLabels, setTickLabelFont
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mTickLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the rotation of the tick labels. If \a degrees is zero, the labels are drawn normally. Else,
the tick labels are drawn rotated by \a degrees clockwise. The specified angle is bound to values
from -90 to 90 degrees.
If \a degrees is exactly -90, 0 or 90, the tick labels are centered on the tick coordinate. For
other angles, the label is drawn with an offset such that it seems to point toward or away from
the tick mark.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLabelRotation(double degrees)
{
mLabelPainter.setRotation(degrees);
}
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLabelMode(LabelMode mode)
{
switch (mode)
{
case lmUpright: mLabelPainter.setAnchorMode(QCPLabelPainterPrivate::amSkewedUpright); break;
case lmRotated: mLabelPainter.setAnchorMode(QCPLabelPainterPrivate::amSkewedRotated); break;
}
}
/*!
Sets the number format for the numbers in tick labels. This \a formatCode is an extended version
of the format code used e.g. by QString::number() and QLocale::toString(). For reference about
that, see the "Argument Formats" section in the detailed description of the QString class.
\a formatCode is a string of one, two or three characters. The first character is identical to
the normal format code used by Qt. In short, this means: 'e'/'E' scientific format, 'f' fixed
format, 'g'/'G' scientific or fixed, whichever is shorter.
The second and third characters are optional and specific to QCustomPlot:\n
If the first char was 'e' or 'g', numbers are/might be displayed in the scientific format, e.g.
"5.5e9", which is ugly in a plot. So when the second char of \a formatCode is set to 'b' (for
"beautiful"), those exponential numbers are formatted in a more natural way, i.e. "5.5
[multiplication sign] 10 [superscript] 9". By default, the multiplication sign is a centered dot.
If instead a cross should be shown (as is usual in the USA), the third char of \a formatCode can
be set to 'c'. The inserted multiplication signs are the UTF-8 characters 215 (0xD7) for the
cross and 183 (0xB7) for the dot.
Examples for \a formatCode:
\li \c g normal format code behaviour. If number is small, fixed format is used, if number is large,
normal scientific format is used
\li \c gb If number is small, fixed format is used, if number is large, scientific format is used with
beautifully typeset decimal powers and a dot as multiplication sign
\li \c ebc All numbers are in scientific format with beautifully typeset decimal power and a cross as
multiplication sign
\li \c fb illegal format code, since fixed format doesn't support (or need) beautifully typeset decimal
powers. Format code will be reduced to 'f'.
\li \c hello illegal format code, since first char is not 'e', 'E', 'f', 'g' or 'G'. Current format
code will not be changed.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setNumberFormat(const QString &formatCode)
{
if (formatCode.isEmpty())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Passed formatCode is empty";
return;
}
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
// interpret first char as number format char:
QString allowedFormatChars(QLatin1String("eEfgG"));
if (allowedFormatChars.contains(formatCode.at(0)))
{
mNumberFormatChar = QLatin1Char(formatCode.at(0).toLatin1());
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (first char not in 'eEfgG'):" << formatCode;
return;
}
if (formatCode.length() < 2)
{
mNumberBeautifulPowers = false;
mNumberMultiplyCross = false;
} else
{
// interpret second char as indicator for beautiful decimal powers:
if (formatCode.at(1) == QLatin1Char('b') && (mNumberFormatChar == QLatin1Char('e') || mNumberFormatChar == QLatin1Char('g')))
mNumberBeautifulPowers = true;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (second char not 'b' or first char neither 'e' nor 'g'):" << formatCode;
if (formatCode.length() < 3)
{
mNumberMultiplyCross = false;
} else
{
// interpret third char as indicator for dot or cross multiplication symbol:
if (formatCode.at(2) == QLatin1Char('c'))
mNumberMultiplyCross = true;
else if (formatCode.at(2) == QLatin1Char('d'))
mNumberMultiplyCross = false;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (third char neither 'c' nor 'd'):" << formatCode;
}
}
mLabelPainter.setSubstituteExponent(mNumberBeautifulPowers);
mLabelPainter.setMultiplicationSymbol(mNumberMultiplyCross ? QCPLabelPainterPrivate::SymbolCross : QCPLabelPainterPrivate::SymbolDot);
}
/*!
Sets the precision of the tick label numbers. See QLocale::toString(double i, char f, int prec)
for details. The effect of precisions are most notably for number Formats starting with 'e', see
\ref setNumberFormat
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setNumberPrecision(int precision)
{
if (mNumberPrecision != precision)
{
mNumberPrecision = precision;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the ticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the ticks will reach inside the
plot and \a outside is the length they will reach outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than
zero, the tick labels and axis label will increase their distance to the axis accordingly, so
they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setSubTickLength, setTickLengthIn, setTickLengthOut
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLength(int inside, int outside)
{
setTickLengthIn(inside);
setTickLengthOut(outside);
}
/*!
Sets the length of the inward ticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the ticks will reach
inside the plot.
\see setTickLengthOut, setTickLength, setSubTickLength
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLengthIn(int inside)
{
if (mTickLengthIn != inside)
{
mTickLengthIn = inside;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the outward ticks in pixels. \a outside is the length the ticks will reach
outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than zero, the tick labels and axis label will
increase their distance to the axis accordingly, so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setTickLengthIn, setTickLength, setSubTickLength
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickLengthOut(int outside)
{
if (mTickLengthOut != outside)
{
mTickLengthOut = outside;
//mCachedMarginValid = false; // only outside tick length can change margin
}
}
/*!
Sets whether sub tick marks are displayed.
Sub ticks are only potentially visible if (major) ticks are also visible (see \ref setTicks)
\see setTicks
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSubTicks(bool show)
{
if (mSubTicks != show)
{
mSubTicks = show;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the subticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the subticks will reach inside
the plot and \a outside is the length they will reach outside the plot. If \a outside is greater
than zero, the tick labels and axis label will increase their distance to the axis accordingly,
so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setTickLength, setSubTickLengthIn, setSubTickLengthOut
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSubTickLength(int inside, int outside)
{
setSubTickLengthIn(inside);
setSubTickLengthOut(outside);
}
/*!
Sets the length of the inward subticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the subticks will reach inside
the plot.
\see setSubTickLengthOut, setSubTickLength, setTickLength
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSubTickLengthIn(int inside)
{
if (mSubTickLengthIn != inside)
{
mSubTickLengthIn = inside;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the outward subticks in pixels. \a outside is the length the subticks will reach
outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than zero, the tick labels will increase their
distance to the axis accordingly, so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setSubTickLengthIn, setSubTickLength, setTickLength
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSubTickLengthOut(int outside)
{
if (mSubTickLengthOut != outside)
{
mSubTickLengthOut = outside;
//mCachedMarginValid = false; // only outside tick length can change margin
}
}
/*!
Sets the pen, the axis base line is drawn with.
\see setTickPen, setSubTickPen
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setBasePen(const QPen &pen)
{
mBasePen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen, tick marks will be drawn with.
\see setTickLength, setBasePen
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen, subtick marks will be drawn with.
\see setSubTickCount, setSubTickLength, setBasePen
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSubTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSubTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the font of the axis label.
\see setLabelColor
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (mLabelFont != font)
{
mLabelFont = font;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the color of the axis label.
\see setLabelFont
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the text of the axis label that will be shown below/above or next to the axis, depending on
its orientation. To disable axis labels, pass an empty string as \a str.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setLabel(const QString &str)
{
if (mLabel != str)
{
mLabel = str;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the distance between the tick labels and the axis label.
\see setTickLabelPadding, setPadding
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setLabelPadding(int padding)
{
if (mLabelPadding != padding)
{
mLabelPadding = padding;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the font that is used for tick labels when they are selected.
\see setTickLabelFont, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectedTickLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (font != mSelectedTickLabelFont)
{
mSelectedTickLabelFont = font;
// don't set mCachedMarginValid to false here because margin calculation is always done with non-selected fonts
}
}
/*!
Sets the font that is used for the axis label when it is selected.
\see setLabelFont, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectedLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
mSelectedLabelFont = font;
// don't set mCachedMarginValid to false here because margin calculation is always done with non-selected fonts
}
/*!
Sets the color that is used for tick labels when they are selected.
\see setTickLabelColor, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectedTickLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
if (color != mSelectedTickLabelColor)
{
mSelectedTickLabelColor = color;
}
}
/*!
Sets the color that is used for the axis label when it is selected.
\see setLabelColor, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectedLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mSelectedLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the axis base line when selected.
\see setBasePen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectedBasePen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedBasePen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the (major) ticks when selected.
\see setTickPen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectedTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the subticks when selected.
\see setSubTickPen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setSelectedSubTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedSubTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
If the scale type (\ref setScaleType) is \ref stLinear, \a diff is added to the lower and upper
bounds of the range. The range is simply moved by \a diff.
If the scale type is \ref stLogarithmic, the range bounds are multiplied by \a diff. This
corresponds to an apparent "linear" move in logarithmic scaling by a distance of log(diff).
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::moveRange(double diff)
{
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
mRange.lower += diff;
mRange.upper += diff;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
mRange.lower *= diff;
mRange.upper *= diff;
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Scales the range of this axis by \a factor around the center of the current axis range. For
example, if \a factor is 2.0, then the axis range will double its size, and the point at the axis
range center won't have changed its position in the QCustomPlot widget (i.e. coordinates around
the center will have moved symmetrically closer).
If you wish to scale around a different coordinate than the current axis range center, use the
overload \ref scaleRange(double factor, double center).
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::scaleRange(double factor)
{
scaleRange(factor, range().center());
}
/*! \overload
Scales the range of this axis by \a factor around the coordinate \a center. For example, if \a
factor is 2.0, \a center is 1.0, then the axis range will double its size, and the point at
coordinate 1.0 won't have changed its position in the QCustomPlot widget (i.e. coordinates
around 1.0 will have moved symmetrically closer to 1.0).
\see scaleRange(double factor)
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::scaleRange(double factor, double center)
{
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
QCPRange newRange;
newRange.lower = (mRange.lower-center)*factor + center;
newRange.upper = (mRange.upper-center)*factor + center;
if (QCPRange::validRange(newRange))
mRange = newRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
if ((mRange.upper < 0 && center < 0) || (mRange.upper > 0 && center > 0)) // make sure center has same sign as range
{
QCPRange newRange;
newRange.lower = qPow(mRange.lower/center, factor)*center;
newRange.upper = qPow(mRange.upper/center, factor)*center;
if (QCPRange::validRange(newRange))
mRange = newRange.sanitizedForLogScale();
} else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Center of scaling operation doesn't lie in same logarithmic sign domain as range:" << center;
}
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Changes the axis range such that all plottables associated with this axis are fully visible in
that dimension.
\see QCPAbstractPlottable::rescaleAxes, QCustomPlot::rescaleAxes
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::rescale(bool onlyVisiblePlottables)
{
Q_UNUSED(onlyVisiblePlottables)
/* TODO
QList<QCPAbstractPlottable*> p = plottables();
QCPRange newRange;
bool haveRange = false;
for (int i=0; i<p.size(); ++i)
{
if (!p.at(i)->realVisibility() && onlyVisiblePlottables)
continue;
QCPRange plottableRange;
bool currentFoundRange;
QCP::SignDomain signDomain = QCP::sdBoth;
if (mScaleType == stLogarithmic)
signDomain = (mRange.upper < 0 ? QCP::sdNegative : QCP::sdPositive);
if (p.at(i)->keyAxis() == this)
plottableRange = p.at(i)->getKeyRange(currentFoundRange, signDomain);
else
plottableRange = p.at(i)->getValueRange(currentFoundRange, signDomain);
if (currentFoundRange)
{
if (!haveRange)
newRange = plottableRange;
else
newRange.expand(plottableRange);
haveRange = true;
}
}
if (haveRange)
{
if (!QCPRange::validRange(newRange)) // likely due to range being zero (plottable has only constant data in this axis dimension), shift current range to at least center the plottable
{
double center = (newRange.lower+newRange.upper)*0.5; // upper and lower should be equal anyway, but just to make sure, incase validRange returned false for other reason
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
newRange.lower = center-mRange.size()/2.0;
newRange.upper = center+mRange.size()/2.0;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
newRange.lower = center/qSqrt(mRange.upper/mRange.lower);
newRange.upper = center*qSqrt(mRange.upper/mRange.lower);
}
}
setRange(newRange);
}
*/
}
/*!
Transforms \a value, in pixel coordinates of the QCustomPlot widget, to axis coordinates.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::pixelToCoord(QPointF pixelPos, double &angleCoord, double &radiusCoord) const
{
QCPVector2D posVector(pixelPos-mCenter);
radiusCoord = radiusToCoord(posVector.length());
angleCoord = mAngularAxis->angleRadToCoord(posVector.angle());
}
/*!
Transforms \a value, in coordinates of the axis, to pixel coordinates of the QCustomPlot widget.
*/
QPointF QCPPolarAxisRadial::coordToPixel(double angleCoord, double radiusCoord) const
{
const double radiusPixel = coordToRadius(radiusCoord);
const double angleRad = mAngularAxis->coordToAngleRad(angleCoord);
return QPointF(mCenter.x()+qCos(angleRad)*radiusPixel, mCenter.y()+qSin(angleRad)*radiusPixel);
}
double QCPPolarAxisRadial::coordToRadius(double coord) const
{
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return (coord-mRange.lower)/mRange.size()*mRadius;
else
return (mRange.upper-coord)/mRange.size()*mRadius;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
if (coord >= 0.0 && mRange.upper < 0.0) // invalid value for logarithmic scale, just return outside visible range
return !mRangeReversed ? mRadius+200 : mRadius-200;
else if (coord <= 0.0 && mRange.upper >= 0.0) // invalid value for logarithmic scale, just return outside visible range
return !mRangeReversed ? mRadius-200 :mRadius+200;
else
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return qLn(coord/mRange.lower)/qLn(mRange.upper/mRange.lower)*mRadius;
else
return qLn(mRange.upper/coord)/qLn(mRange.upper/mRange.lower)*mRadius;
}
}
}
double QCPPolarAxisRadial::radiusToCoord(double radius) const
{
if (mScaleType == stLinear)
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return (radius)/mRadius*mRange.size()+mRange.lower;
else
return -(radius)/mRadius*mRange.size()+mRange.upper;
} else // mScaleType == stLogarithmic
{
if (!mRangeReversed)
return qPow(mRange.upper/mRange.lower, (radius)/mRadius)*mRange.lower;
else
return qPow(mRange.upper/mRange.lower, (-radius)/mRadius)*mRange.upper;
}
}
/*!
Returns the part of the axis that is hit by \a pos (in pixels). The return value of this function
is independent of the user-selectable parts defined with \ref setSelectableParts. Further, this
function does not change the current selection state of the axis.
If the axis is not visible (\ref setVisible), this function always returns \ref spNone.
\see setSelectedParts, setSelectableParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
QCPPolarAxisRadial::SelectablePart QCPPolarAxisRadial::getPartAt(const QPointF &pos) const
{
Q_UNUSED(pos) // TODO remove later
if (!mVisible)
return spNone;
/*
TODO:
if (mAxisPainter->axisSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spAxis;
else if (mAxisPainter->tickLabelsSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spTickLabels;
else if (mAxisPainter->labelSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spAxisLabel;
else */
return spNone;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPPolarAxisRadial::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
if (!mParentPlot) return -1;
SelectablePart part = getPartAt(pos);
if ((onlySelectable && !mSelectableParts.testFlag(part)) || part == spNone)
return -1;
if (details)
details->setValue(part);
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
SelectablePart part = details.value<SelectablePart>();
if (mSelectableParts.testFlag(part))
{
SelectableParts selBefore = mSelectedParts;
setSelectedParts(additive ? mSelectedParts^part : part);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelectedParts != selBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
SelectableParts selBefore = mSelectedParts;
setSelectedParts(mSelectedParts & ~mSelectableParts);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelectedParts != selBefore;
}
/*! \internal
This mouse event reimplementation provides the functionality to let the user drag individual axes
exclusively, by startig the drag on top of the axis.
For the axis to accept this event and perform the single axis drag, the parent \ref QCPAxisRect
must be configured accordingly, i.e. it must allow range dragging in the orientation of this axis
(\ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeDrag) and this axis must be a draggable axis (\ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeDragAxes)
\seebaseclassmethod
\note The dragging of possibly multiple axes at once by starting the drag anywhere in the axis
rect is handled by the axis rect's mouse event, e.g. \ref QCPAxisRect::mousePressEvent.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (!mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeDrag))
{
event->ignore();
return;
}
if (event->buttons() & Qt::LeftButton)
{
mDragging = true;
// initialize antialiasing backup in case we start dragging:
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
{
mAADragBackup = mParentPlot->antialiasedElements();
mNotAADragBackup = mParentPlot->notAntialiasedElements();
}
// Mouse range dragging interaction:
if (mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeDrag))
mDragStartRange = mRange;
}
}
/*! \internal
This mouse event reimplementation provides the functionality to let the user drag individual axes
exclusively, by startig the drag on top of the axis.
\seebaseclassmethod
\note The dragging of possibly multiple axes at once by starting the drag anywhere in the axis
rect is handled by the axis rect's mouse event, e.g. \ref QCPAxisRect::mousePressEvent.
\see QCPAxis::mousePressEvent
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(event) // TODO remove later
Q_UNUSED(startPos) // TODO remove later
if (mDragging)
{
/* TODO
const double startPixel = orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? startPos.x() : startPos.y();
const double currentPixel = orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? event->pos().x() : event->pos().y();
if (mScaleType == QCPPolarAxisRadial::stLinear)
{
const double diff = pixelToCoord(startPixel) - pixelToCoord(currentPixel);
setRange(mDragStartRange.lower+diff, mDragStartRange.upper+diff);
} else if (mScaleType == QCPPolarAxisRadial::stLogarithmic)
{
const double diff = pixelToCoord(startPixel) / pixelToCoord(currentPixel);
setRange(mDragStartRange.lower*diff, mDragStartRange.upper*diff);
}
*/
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
mParentPlot->setNotAntialiasedElements(QCP::aeAll);
mParentPlot->replot(QCustomPlot::rpQueuedReplot);
}
}
/*! \internal
This mouse event reimplementation provides the functionality to let the user drag individual axes
exclusively, by startig the drag on top of the axis.
\seebaseclassmethod
\note The dragging of possibly multiple axes at once by starting the drag anywhere in the axis
rect is handled by the axis rect's mouse event, e.g. \ref QCPAxisRect::mousePressEvent.
\see QCPAxis::mousePressEvent
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
Q_UNUSED(startPos)
mDragging = false;
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
{
mParentPlot->setAntialiasedElements(mAADragBackup);
mParentPlot->setNotAntialiasedElements(mNotAADragBackup);
}
}
/*! \internal
This mouse event reimplementation provides the functionality to let the user zoom individual axes
exclusively, by performing the wheel event on top of the axis.
For the axis to accept this event and perform the single axis zoom, the parent \ref QCPAxisRect
must be configured accordingly, i.e. it must allow range zooming in the orientation of this axis
(\ref QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoom) and this axis must be a zoomable axis (\ref
QCPAxisRect::setRangeZoomAxes)
\seebaseclassmethod
\note The zooming of possibly multiple axes at once by performing the wheel event anywhere in the
axis rect is handled by the axis rect's mouse event, e.g. \ref QCPAxisRect::wheelEvent.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::wheelEvent(QWheelEvent *event)
{
// Mouse range zooming interaction:
if (!mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeZoom))
{
event->ignore();
return;
}
// TODO:
//const double wheelSteps = event->delta()/120.0; // a single step delta is +/-120 usually
//const double factor = qPow(mRangeZoomFactor, wheelSteps);
//scaleRange(factor, pixelToCoord(orientation() == Qt::Horizontal ? event->pos().x() : event->pos().y()));
mParentPlot->replot();
}
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::updateGeometry(const QPointF ¢er, double radius)
{
mCenter = center;
mRadius = radius;
if (mRadius < 1) mRadius = 1;
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing axis lines.
This is the antialiasing state the painter passed to the \ref draw method is in by default.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\seebaseclassmethod
\see setAntialiased
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeAxes);
}
/*! \internal
Draws the axis with the specified \a painter, using the internal QCPAxisPainterPrivate instance.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
const double axisAngleRad = (mAngle+(mAngleReference==arAngularAxis ? mAngularAxis->angle() : 0))/180.0*M_PI;
const QPointF axisVector(qCos(axisAngleRad), qSin(axisAngleRad)); // semantically should be QCPVector2D, but we save time in loops when we keep it as QPointF
const QPointF tickNormal = QCPVector2D(axisVector).perpendicular().toPointF(); // semantically should be QCPVector2D, but we save time in loops when we keep it as QPointF
// draw baseline:
painter->setPen(getBasePen());
painter->drawLine(QLineF(mCenter, mCenter+axisVector*(mRadius-0.5)));
// draw subticks:
if (!mSubTickVector.isEmpty())
{
painter->setPen(getSubTickPen());
for (int i=0; i<mSubTickVector.size(); ++i)
{
const QPointF tickPosition = mCenter+axisVector*coordToRadius(mSubTickVector.at(i));
painter->drawLine(QLineF(tickPosition-tickNormal*mSubTickLengthIn, tickPosition+tickNormal*mSubTickLengthOut));
}
}
// draw ticks and labels:
if (!mTickVector.isEmpty())
{
mLabelPainter.setAnchorReference(mCenter-axisVector); // subtract (normalized) axisVector, just to prevent degenerate tangents for tick label at exact lower axis range
mLabelPainter.setFont(getTickLabelFont());
mLabelPainter.setColor(getTickLabelColor());
const QPen ticksPen = getTickPen();
painter->setPen(ticksPen);
for (int i=0; i<mTickVector.size(); ++i)
{
const double r = coordToRadius(mTickVector.at(i));
const QPointF tickPosition = mCenter+axisVector*r;
painter->drawLine(QLineF(tickPosition-tickNormal*mTickLengthIn, tickPosition+tickNormal*mTickLengthOut));
// possibly draw tick labels:
if (!mTickVectorLabels.isEmpty())
{
if ((!mRangeReversed && (i < mTickVectorLabels.count()-1 || mRadius-r > 10)) ||
(mRangeReversed && (i > 0 || mRadius-r > 10))) // skip last label if it's closer than 10 pixels to angular axis
mLabelPainter.drawTickLabel(painter, tickPosition+tickNormal*mSubTickLengthOut, mTickVectorLabels.at(i));
}
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Prepares the internal tick vector, sub tick vector and tick label vector. This is done by calling
QCPAxisTicker::generate on the currently installed ticker.
If a change in the label text/count is detected, the cached axis margin is invalidated to make
sure the next margin calculation recalculates the label sizes and returns an up-to-date value.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisRadial::setupTickVectors()
{
if (!mParentPlot) return;
if ((!mTicks && !mTickLabels) || mRange.size() <= 0) return;
mTicker->generate(mRange, mParentPlot->locale(), mNumberFormatChar, mNumberPrecision, mTickVector, mSubTicks ? &mSubTickVector : 0, mTickLabels ? &mTickVectorLabels : 0);
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the axis base line. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedBasePen or mBasePen.
*/
QPen QCPPolarAxisRadial::getBasePen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedBasePen : mBasePen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the (major) ticks. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickPen or mTickPen.
*/
QPen QCPPolarAxisRadial::getTickPen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedTickPen : mTickPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the subticks. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedSubTickPen or mSubTickPen.
*/
QPen QCPPolarAxisRadial::getSubTickPen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedSubTickPen : mSubTickPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the font that is used to draw the tick labels. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickLabelFont or mTickLabelFont.
*/
QFont QCPPolarAxisRadial::getTickLabelFont() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spTickLabels) ? mSelectedTickLabelFont : mTickLabelFont;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the font that is used to draw the axis label. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedLabelFont or mLabelFont.
*/
QFont QCPPolarAxisRadial::getLabelFont() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxisLabel) ? mSelectedLabelFont : mLabelFont;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the color that is used to draw the tick labels. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickLabelColor or mTickLabelColor.
*/
QColor QCPPolarAxisRadial::getTickLabelColor() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spTickLabels) ? mSelectedTickLabelColor : mTickLabelColor;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the color that is used to draw the axis label. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedLabelColor or mLabelColor.
*/
QColor QCPPolarAxisRadial::getLabelColor() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxisLabel) ? mSelectedLabelColor : mLabelColor;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCP::Interaction QCPPolarAxisRadial::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectAxes;
}
/* end of 'src/polar/radialaxis.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/polar/layoutelement-angularaxis.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 57266 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPolarAxisAngular
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPolarAxisAngular
\brief The main container for polar plots, representing the angular axis as a circle
\warning In this QCustomPlot version, polar plots are a tech preview. Expect documentation and
functionality to be incomplete, as well as changing public interfaces in the future.
*/
/* start documentation of inline functions */
/*! \fn QCPLayoutInset *QCPPolarAxisAngular::insetLayout() const
Returns the inset layout of this axis rect. It can be used to place other layout elements (or
even layouts with multiple other elements) inside/on top of an axis rect.
\see QCPLayoutInset
*/
/*! \fn int QCPPolarAxisAngular::left() const
Returns the pixel position of the left border of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into
account here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPPolarAxisAngular::right() const
Returns the pixel position of the right border of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into
account here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPPolarAxisAngular::top() const
Returns the pixel position of the top border of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into
account here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPPolarAxisAngular::bottom() const
Returns the pixel position of the bottom border of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into
account here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPPolarAxisAngular::width() const
Returns the pixel width of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into account here, so the
returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn int QCPPolarAxisAngular::height() const
Returns the pixel height of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into account here, so the
returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QSize QCPPolarAxisAngular::size() const
Returns the pixel size of this axis rect. Margins are not taken into account here, so the
returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPPolarAxisAngular::topLeft() const
Returns the top left corner of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account here,
so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPPolarAxisAngular::topRight() const
Returns the top right corner of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account
here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPPolarAxisAngular::bottomLeft() const
Returns the bottom left corner of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account
here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPPolarAxisAngular::bottomRight() const
Returns the bottom right corner of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account
here, so the returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/*! \fn QPoint QCPPolarAxisAngular::center() const
Returns the center of this axis rect in pixels. Margins are not taken into account here, so the
returned value is with respect to the inner \ref rect.
*/
/* end documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Creates a QCPPolarAxis instance and sets default values. An axis is added for each of the four
sides, the top and right axes are set invisible initially.
*/
QCPPolarAxisAngular::QCPPolarAxisAngular(QCustomPlot *parentPlot) :
QCPLayoutElement(parentPlot),
mBackgroundBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mBackgroundScaled(true),
mBackgroundScaledMode(Qt::KeepAspectRatioByExpanding),
mInsetLayout(new QCPLayoutInset),
mRangeDrag(false),
mRangeZoom(false),
mRangeZoomFactor(0.85),
// axis base:
mAngle(-90),
mAngleRad(mAngle/180.0*M_PI),
mSelectableParts(spAxis | spTickLabels | spAxisLabel),
mSelectedParts(spNone),
mBasePen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedBasePen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
// axis label:
mLabelPadding(0),
mLabel(),
mLabelFont(mParentPlot->font()),
mSelectedLabelFont(QFont(mLabelFont.family(), mLabelFont.pointSize(), QFont::Bold)),
mLabelColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedLabelColor(Qt::blue),
// tick labels:
//mTickLabelPadding(0), in label painter
mTickLabels(true),
//mTickLabelRotation(0), in label painter
mTickLabelFont(mParentPlot->font()),
mSelectedTickLabelFont(QFont(mTickLabelFont.family(), mTickLabelFont.pointSize(), QFont::Bold)),
mTickLabelColor(Qt::black),
mSelectedTickLabelColor(Qt::blue),
mNumberPrecision(6),
mNumberFormatChar('g'),
mNumberBeautifulPowers(true),
mNumberMultiplyCross(false),
// ticks and subticks:
mTicks(true),
mSubTicks(true),
mTickLengthIn(5),
mTickLengthOut(0),
mSubTickLengthIn(2),
mSubTickLengthOut(0),
mTickPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedTickPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
mSubTickPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0, Qt::SolidLine, Qt::SquareCap)),
mSelectedSubTickPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 2)),
// scale and range:
mRange(0, 360),
mRangeReversed(false),
// internal members:
mRadius(1), // non-zero initial value, will be overwritten in ::update() according to inner rect
mGrid(new QCPPolarGrid(this)),
mTicker(new QCPAxisTickerFixed),
mDragging(false),
mLabelPainter(parentPlot)
{
// TODO:
//mInsetLayout->initializeParentPlot(mParentPlot);
//mInsetLayout->setParentLayerable(this);
//mInsetLayout->setParent(this);
if (QCPAxisTickerFixed *fixedTicker = mTicker.dynamicCast<QCPAxisTickerFixed>().data())
{
fixedTicker->setTickStep(30);
}
setAntialiased(true);
setLayer(mParentPlot->currentLayer()); // it's actually on that layer already, but we want it in front of the grid, so we place it on there again
setTickLabelPadding(5);
setTickLabelRotation(0);
setTickLabelMode(lmUpright);
mLabelPainter.setAnchorReferenceType(QCPLabelPainterPrivate::artNormal);
mLabelPainter.setAbbreviateDecimalPowers(false);
mLabelPainter.setCacheSize(24); // so we can cache up to 15-degree intervals, polar angular axis uses a bit larger cache than normal axes
setMinimumSize(50, 50);
setMinimumMargins(QMargins(30, 30, 30, 30));
addRadialAxis();
mGrid->setRadialAxis(radialAxis());
}
QCPPolarAxisAngular::~QCPPolarAxisAngular()
{
delete mGrid; // delete grid here instead of via parent ~QObject for better defined deletion order
mGrid = 0;
delete mInsetLayout;
mInsetLayout = 0;
QList<QCPPolarAxisRadial*> radialAxesList = radialAxes();
for (int i=0; i<radialAxesList.size(); ++i)
removeRadialAxis(radialAxesList.at(i));
}
QCPPolarAxisAngular::LabelMode QCPPolarAxisAngular::tickLabelMode() const
{
switch (mLabelPainter.anchorMode())
{
case QCPLabelPainterPrivate::amSkewedUpright: return lmUpright;
case QCPLabelPainterPrivate::amSkewedRotated: return lmRotated;
default: qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid mode for polar axis"; break;
}
return lmUpright;
}
/* No documentation as it is a property getter */
QString QCPPolarAxisAngular::numberFormat() const
{
QString result;
result.append(mNumberFormatChar);
if (mNumberBeautifulPowers)
{
result.append(QLatin1Char('b'));
if (mLabelPainter.multiplicationSymbol() == QCPLabelPainterPrivate::SymbolCross)
result.append(QLatin1Char('c'));
}
return result;
}
/*!
Returns the number of axes on the axis rect side specified with \a type.
\see axis
*/
int QCPPolarAxisAngular::radialAxisCount() const
{
return mRadialAxes.size();
}
/*!
Returns the axis with the given \a index on the axis rect side specified with \a type.
\see axisCount, axes
*/
QCPPolarAxisRadial *QCPPolarAxisAngular::radialAxis(int index) const
{
if (index >= 0 && index < mRadialAxes.size())
{
return mRadialAxes.at(index);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Axis index out of bounds:" << index;
return 0;
}
}
/*!
Returns all axes on the axis rect sides specified with \a types.
\a types may be a single \ref QCPAxis::AxisType or an <tt>or</tt>-combination, to get the axes of
multiple sides.
\see axis
*/
QList<QCPPolarAxisRadial*> QCPPolarAxisAngular::radialAxes() const
{
return mRadialAxes;
}
/*!
Adds a new axis to the axis rect side specified with \a type, and returns it. If \a axis is 0, a
new QCPAxis instance is created internally. QCustomPlot owns the returned axis, so if you want to
remove an axis, use \ref removeAxis instead of deleting it manually.
You may inject QCPAxis instances (or subclasses of QCPAxis) by setting \a axis to an axis that was
previously created outside QCustomPlot. It is important to note that QCustomPlot takes ownership
of the axis, so you may not delete it afterwards. Further, the \a axis must have been created
with this axis rect as parent and with the same axis type as specified in \a type. If this is not
the case, a debug output is generated, the axis is not added, and the method returns 0.
This method can not be used to move \a axis between axis rects. The same \a axis instance must
not be added multiple times to the same or different axis rects.
If an axis rect side already contains one or more axes, the lower and upper endings of the new
axis (\ref QCPAxis::setLowerEnding, \ref QCPAxis::setUpperEnding) are set to \ref
QCPLineEnding::esHalfBar.
\see addAxes, setupFullAxesBox
*/
QCPPolarAxisRadial *QCPPolarAxisAngular::addRadialAxis(QCPPolarAxisRadial *axis)
{
QCPPolarAxisRadial *newAxis = axis;
if (!newAxis)
{
newAxis = new QCPPolarAxisRadial(this);
} else // user provided existing axis instance, do some sanity checks
{
if (newAxis->angularAxis() != this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed radial axis doesn't have this angular axis as parent angular axis";
return 0;
}
if (radialAxes().contains(newAxis))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed axis is already owned by this angular axis";
return 0;
}
}
mRadialAxes.append(newAxis);
return newAxis;
}
/*!
Removes the specified \a axis from the axis rect and deletes it.
Returns true on success, i.e. if \a axis was a valid axis in this axis rect.
\see addAxis
*/
bool QCPPolarAxisAngular::removeRadialAxis(QCPPolarAxisRadial *radialAxis)
{
if (mRadialAxes.contains(radialAxis))
{
mRadialAxes.removeOne(radialAxis);
delete radialAxis;
return true;
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Radial axis isn't associated with this angular axis:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(radialAxis);
return false;
}
}
QRegion QCPPolarAxisAngular::exactClipRegion() const
{
return QRegion(mCenter.x()-mRadius, mCenter.y()-mRadius, qRound(2*mRadius), qRound(2*mRadius), QRegion::Ellipse);
}
/*!
If the scale type (\ref setScaleType) is \ref stLinear, \a diff is added to the lower and upper
bounds of the range. The range is simply moved by \a diff.
If the scale type is \ref stLogarithmic, the range bounds are multiplied by \a diff. This
corresponds to an apparent "linear" move in logarithmic scaling by a distance of log(diff).
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::moveRange(double diff)
{
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.lower += diff;
mRange.upper += diff;
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Scales the range of this axis by \a factor around the center of the current axis range. For
example, if \a factor is 2.0, then the axis range will double its size, and the point at the axis
range center won't have changed its position in the QCustomPlot widget (i.e. coordinates around
the center will have moved symmetrically closer).
If you wish to scale around a different coordinate than the current axis range center, use the
overload \ref scaleRange(double factor, double center).
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::scaleRange(double factor)
{
scaleRange(factor, range().center());
}
/*! \overload
Scales the range of this axis by \a factor around the coordinate \a center. For example, if \a
factor is 2.0, \a center is 1.0, then the axis range will double its size, and the point at
coordinate 1.0 won't have changed its position in the QCustomPlot widget (i.e. coordinates
around 1.0 will have moved symmetrically closer to 1.0).
\see scaleRange(double factor)
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::scaleRange(double factor, double center)
{
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
QCPRange newRange;
newRange.lower = (mRange.lower-center)*factor + center;
newRange.upper = (mRange.upper-center)*factor + center;
if (QCPRange::validRange(newRange))
mRange = newRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Changes the axis range such that all plottables associated with this axis are fully visible in
that dimension.
\see QCPAbstractPlottable::rescaleAxes, QCustomPlot::rescaleAxes
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::rescale(bool onlyVisiblePlottables)
{
QCPRange newRange;
bool haveRange = false;
for (int i=0; i<mGraphs.size(); ++i)
{
if (!mGraphs.at(i)->realVisibility() && onlyVisiblePlottables)
continue;
QCPRange range;
bool currentFoundRange;
if (mGraphs.at(i)->keyAxis() == this)
range = mGraphs.at(i)->getKeyRange(currentFoundRange, QCP::sdBoth);
else
range = mGraphs.at(i)->getValueRange(currentFoundRange, QCP::sdBoth);
if (currentFoundRange)
{
if (!haveRange)
newRange = range;
else
newRange.expand(range);
haveRange = true;
}
}
if (haveRange)
{
if (!QCPRange::validRange(newRange)) // likely due to range being zero (plottable has only constant data in this axis dimension), shift current range to at least center the plottable
{
double center = (newRange.lower+newRange.upper)*0.5; // upper and lower should be equal anyway, but just to make sure, incase validRange returned false for other reason
newRange.lower = center-mRange.size()/2.0;
newRange.upper = center+mRange.size()/2.0;
}
setRange(newRange);
}
}
/*!
Transforms \a value, in pixel coordinates of the QCustomPlot widget, to axis coordinates.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::pixelToCoord(QPointF pixelPos, double &angleCoord, double &radiusCoord) const
{
if (!mRadialAxes.isEmpty())
mRadialAxes.first()->pixelToCoord(pixelPos, angleCoord, radiusCoord);
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no radial axis configured";
}
/*!
Transforms \a value, in coordinates of the axis, to pixel coordinates of the QCustomPlot widget.
*/
QPointF QCPPolarAxisAngular::coordToPixel(double angleCoord, double radiusCoord) const
{
if (!mRadialAxes.isEmpty())
{
return mRadialAxes.first()->coordToPixel(angleCoord, radiusCoord);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "no radial axis configured";
return QPointF();
}
}
/*!
Returns the part of the axis that is hit by \a pos (in pixels). The return value of this function
is independent of the user-selectable parts defined with \ref setSelectableParts. Further, this
function does not change the current selection state of the axis.
If the axis is not visible (\ref setVisible), this function always returns \ref spNone.
\see setSelectedParts, setSelectableParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
QCPPolarAxisAngular::SelectablePart QCPPolarAxisAngular::getPartAt(const QPointF &pos) const
{
Q_UNUSED(pos) // TODO remove later
if (!mVisible)
return spNone;
/*
TODO:
if (mAxisPainter->axisSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spAxis;
else if (mAxisPainter->tickLabelsSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spTickLabels;
else if (mAxisPainter->labelSelectionBox().contains(pos.toPoint()))
return spAxisLabel;
else */
return spNone;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
double QCPPolarAxisAngular::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
/*
if (!mParentPlot) return -1;
SelectablePart part = getPartAt(pos);
if ((onlySelectable && !mSelectableParts.testFlag(part)) || part == spNone)
return -1;
if (details)
details->setValue(part);
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
*/
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (onlySelectable)
return -1;
if (QRectF(mOuterRect).contains(pos))
{
if (mParentPlot)
return mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()*0.99;
else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "parent plot not defined";
return -1;
}
} else
return -1;
}
/*!
This method is called automatically upon replot and doesn't need to be called by users of
QCPPolarAxisAngular.
Calls the base class implementation to update the margins (see \ref QCPLayoutElement::update),
and finally passes the \ref rect to the inset layout (\ref insetLayout) and calls its
QCPInsetLayout::update function.
\seebaseclassmethod
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::update(UpdatePhase phase)
{
QCPLayoutElement::update(phase);
switch (phase)
{
case upPreparation:
{
setupTickVectors();
for (int i=0; i<mRadialAxes.size(); ++i)
mRadialAxes.at(i)->setupTickVectors();
break;
}
case upLayout:
{
mCenter = mRect.center();
mRadius = 0.5*qMin(qAbs(mRect.width()), qAbs(mRect.height()));
if (mRadius < 1) mRadius = 1; // prevent cases where radius might become 0 which causes trouble
for (int i=0; i<mRadialAxes.size(); ++i)
mRadialAxes.at(i)->updateGeometry(mCenter, mRadius);
mInsetLayout->setOuterRect(rect());
break;
}
default: break;
}
// pass update call on to inset layout (doesn't happen automatically, because QCPPolarAxis doesn't derive from QCPLayout):
mInsetLayout->update(phase);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> QCPPolarAxisAngular::elements(bool recursive) const
{
QList<QCPLayoutElement*> result;
if (mInsetLayout)
{
result << mInsetLayout;
if (recursive)
result << mInsetLayout->elements(recursive);
}
return result;
}
bool QCPPolarAxisAngular::removeGraph(QCPPolarGraph *graph)
{
if (!mGraphs.contains(graph))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "graph not in list:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(graph);
return false;
}
// remove plottable from legend:
graph->removeFromLegend();
// remove plottable:
delete graph;
mGraphs.removeOne(graph);
return true;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeAxes);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
drawBackground(painter, mCenter, mRadius);
// draw baseline circle:
painter->setPen(getBasePen());
painter->drawEllipse(mCenter, mRadius, mRadius);
// draw subticks:
if (!mSubTickVector.isEmpty())
{
painter->setPen(getSubTickPen());
for (int i=0; i<mSubTickVector.size(); ++i)
{
painter->drawLine(mCenter+mSubTickVectorCosSin.at(i)*(mRadius-mSubTickLengthIn),
mCenter+mSubTickVectorCosSin.at(i)*(mRadius+mSubTickLengthOut));
}
}
// draw ticks and labels:
if (!mTickVector.isEmpty())
{
mLabelPainter.setAnchorReference(mCenter);
mLabelPainter.setFont(getTickLabelFont());
mLabelPainter.setColor(getTickLabelColor());
const QPen ticksPen = getTickPen();
painter->setPen(ticksPen);
for (int i=0; i<mTickVector.size(); ++i)
{
const QPointF outerTick = mCenter+mTickVectorCosSin.at(i)*(mRadius+mTickLengthOut);
painter->drawLine(mCenter+mTickVectorCosSin.at(i)*(mRadius-mTickLengthIn), outerTick);
// draw tick labels:
if (!mTickVectorLabels.isEmpty())
{
if (i < mTickVectorLabels.count()-1 || (mTickVectorCosSin.at(i)-mTickVectorCosSin.first()).manhattanLength() > 5/180.0*M_PI) // skip last label if it's closer than approx 5 degrees to first
mLabelPainter.drawTickLabel(painter, outerTick, mTickVectorLabels.at(i));
}
}
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCP::Interaction QCPPolarAxisAngular::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectAxes;
}
/*!
Sets \a pm as the axis background pixmap. The axis background pixmap will be drawn inside the
axis rect. Since axis rects place themselves on the "background" layer by default, the axis rect
backgrounds are usually drawn below everything else.
For cases where the provided pixmap doesn't have the same size as the axis rect, scaling can be
enabled with \ref setBackgroundScaled and the scaling mode (i.e. whether and how the aspect ratio
is preserved) can be set with \ref setBackgroundScaledMode. To set all these options in one call,
consider using the overloaded version of this function.
Below the pixmap, the axis rect may be optionally filled with a brush, if specified with \ref
setBackground(const QBrush &brush).
\see setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode, setBackground(const QBrush &brush)
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setBackground(const QPixmap &pm)
{
mBackgroundPixmap = pm;
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = QPixmap();
}
/*! \overload
Sets \a brush as the background brush. The axis rect background will be filled with this brush.
Since axis rects place themselves on the "background" layer by default, the axis rect backgrounds
are usually drawn below everything else.
The brush will be drawn before (under) any background pixmap, which may be specified with \ref
setBackground(const QPixmap &pm).
To disable drawing of a background brush, set \a brush to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setBackground(const QPixmap &pm)
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setBackground(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBackgroundBrush = brush;
}
/*! \overload
Allows setting the background pixmap of the axis rect, whether it shall be scaled and how it
shall be scaled in one call.
\see setBackground(const QPixmap &pm), setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setBackground(const QPixmap &pm, bool scaled, Qt::AspectRatioMode mode)
{
mBackgroundPixmap = pm;
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = QPixmap();
mBackgroundScaled = scaled;
mBackgroundScaledMode = mode;
}
/*!
Sets whether the axis background pixmap shall be scaled to fit the axis rect or not. If \a scaled
is set to true, you may control whether and how the aspect ratio of the original pixmap is
preserved with \ref setBackgroundScaledMode.
Note that the scaled version of the original pixmap is buffered, so there is no performance
penalty on replots. (Except when the axis rect dimensions are changed continuously.)
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setBackgroundScaled(bool scaled)
{
mBackgroundScaled = scaled;
}
/*!
If scaling of the axis background pixmap is enabled (\ref setBackgroundScaled), use this function to
define whether and how the aspect ratio of the original pixmap passed to \ref setBackground is preserved.
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaled
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setBackgroundScaledMode(Qt::AspectRatioMode mode)
{
mBackgroundScaledMode = mode;
}
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRangeDrag(bool enabled)
{
mRangeDrag = enabled;
}
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRangeZoom(bool enabled)
{
mRangeZoom = enabled;
}
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRangeZoomFactor(double factor)
{
mRangeZoomFactor = factor;
}
/*!
Sets the range of the axis.
This slot may be connected with the \ref rangeChanged signal of another axis so this axis
is always synchronized with the other axis range, when it changes.
To invert the direction of an axis, use \ref setRangeReversed.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRange(const QCPRange &range)
{
if (range.lower == mRange.lower && range.upper == mRange.upper)
return;
if (!QCPRange::validRange(range)) return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange = range.sanitizedForLinScale();
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets whether the user can (de-)select the parts in \a selectable by clicking on the QCustomPlot surface.
(When \ref QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains iSelectAxes.)
However, even when \a selectable is set to a value not allowing the selection of a specific part,
it is still possible to set the selection of this part manually, by calling \ref setSelectedParts
directly.
\see SelectablePart, setSelectedParts
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectableParts(const SelectableParts &selectable)
{
if (mSelectableParts != selectable)
{
mSelectableParts = selectable;
emit selectableChanged(mSelectableParts);
}
}
/*!
Sets the selected state of the respective axis parts described by \ref SelectablePart. When a part
is selected, it uses a different pen/font.
The entire selection mechanism for axes is handled automatically when \ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains iSelectAxes. You only need to call this function when you
wish to change the selection state manually.
This function can change the selection state of a part, independent of the \ref setSelectableParts setting.
emits the \ref selectionChanged signal when \a selected is different from the previous selection state.
\see SelectablePart, setSelectableParts, selectTest, setSelectedBasePen, setSelectedTickPen, setSelectedSubTickPen,
setSelectedTickLabelFont, setSelectedLabelFont, setSelectedTickLabelColor, setSelectedLabelColor
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectedParts(const SelectableParts &selected)
{
if (mSelectedParts != selected)
{
mSelectedParts = selected;
emit selectionChanged(mSelectedParts);
}
}
/*!
\overload
Sets the lower and upper bound of the axis range.
To invert the direction of an axis, use \ref setRangeReversed.
There is also a slot to set a range, see \ref setRange(const QCPRange &range).
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRange(double lower, double upper)
{
if (lower == mRange.lower && upper == mRange.upper)
return;
if (!QCPRange::validRange(lower, upper)) return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.lower = lower;
mRange.upper = upper;
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
\overload
Sets the range of the axis.
The \a position coordinate indicates together with the \a alignment parameter, where the new
range will be positioned. \a size defines the size of the new axis range. \a alignment may be
Qt::AlignLeft, Qt::AlignRight or Qt::AlignCenter. This will cause the left border, right border,
or center of the range to be aligned with \a position. Any other values of \a alignment will
default to Qt::AlignCenter.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRange(double position, double size, Qt::AlignmentFlag alignment)
{
if (alignment == Qt::AlignLeft)
setRange(position, position+size);
else if (alignment == Qt::AlignRight)
setRange(position-size, position);
else // alignment == Qt::AlignCenter
setRange(position-size/2.0, position+size/2.0);
}
/*!
Sets the lower bound of the axis range. The upper bound is not changed.
\see setRange
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRangeLower(double lower)
{
if (mRange.lower == lower)
return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.lower = lower;
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets the upper bound of the axis range. The lower bound is not changed.
\see setRange
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRangeUpper(double upper)
{
if (mRange.upper == upper)
return;
QCPRange oldRange = mRange;
mRange.upper = upper;
mRange = mRange.sanitizedForLinScale();
emit rangeChanged(mRange);
emit rangeChanged(mRange, oldRange);
}
/*!
Sets whether the axis range (direction) is displayed reversed. Normally, the values on horizontal
axes increase left to right, on vertical axes bottom to top. When \a reversed is set to true, the
direction of increasing values is inverted.
Note that the range and data interface stays the same for reversed axes, e.g. the \a lower part
of the \ref setRange interface will still reference the mathematically smaller number than the \a
upper part.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setRangeReversed(bool reversed)
{
mRangeReversed = reversed;
}
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setAngle(double degrees)
{
mAngle = degrees;
mAngleRad = mAngle/180.0*M_PI;
}
/*!
The axis ticker is responsible for generating the tick positions and tick labels. See the
documentation of QCPAxisTicker for details on how to work with axis tickers.
You can change the tick positioning/labeling behaviour of this axis by setting a different
QCPAxisTicker subclass using this method. If you only wish to modify the currently installed axis
ticker, access it via \ref ticker.
Since the ticker is stored in the axis as a shared pointer, multiple axes may share the same axis
ticker simply by passing the same shared pointer to multiple axes.
\see ticker
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTicker(QSharedPointer<QCPAxisTicker> ticker)
{
if (ticker)
mTicker = ticker;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "can not set 0 as axis ticker";
// no need to invalidate margin cache here because produced tick labels are checked for changes in setupTickVector
}
/*!
Sets whether tick marks are displayed.
Note that setting \a show to false does not imply that tick labels are invisible, too. To achieve
that, see \ref setTickLabels.
\see setSubTicks
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTicks(bool show)
{
if (mTicks != show)
{
mTicks = show;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets whether tick labels are displayed. Tick labels are the numbers drawn next to tick marks.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLabels(bool show)
{
if (mTickLabels != show)
{
mTickLabels = show;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
if (!mTickLabels)
mTickVectorLabels.clear();
}
}
/*!
Sets the distance between the axis base line (including any outward ticks) and the tick labels.
\see setLabelPadding, setPadding
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLabelPadding(int padding)
{
mLabelPainter.setPadding(padding);
}
/*!
Sets the font of the tick labels.
\see setTickLabels, setTickLabelColor
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
mTickLabelFont = font;
}
/*!
Sets the color of the tick labels.
\see setTickLabels, setTickLabelFont
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mTickLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the rotation of the tick labels. If \a degrees is zero, the labels are drawn normally. Else,
the tick labels are drawn rotated by \a degrees clockwise. The specified angle is bound to values
from -90 to 90 degrees.
If \a degrees is exactly -90, 0 or 90, the tick labels are centered on the tick coordinate. For
other angles, the label is drawn with an offset such that it seems to point toward or away from
the tick mark.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLabelRotation(double degrees)
{
mLabelPainter.setRotation(degrees);
}
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLabelMode(LabelMode mode)
{
switch (mode)
{
case lmUpright: mLabelPainter.setAnchorMode(QCPLabelPainterPrivate::amSkewedUpright); break;
case lmRotated: mLabelPainter.setAnchorMode(QCPLabelPainterPrivate::amSkewedRotated); break;
}
}
/*!
Sets the number format for the numbers in tick labels. This \a formatCode is an extended version
of the format code used e.g. by QString::number() and QLocale::toString(). For reference about
that, see the "Argument Formats" section in the detailed description of the QString class.
\a formatCode is a string of one, two or three characters. The first character is identical to
the normal format code used by Qt. In short, this means: 'e'/'E' scientific format, 'f' fixed
format, 'g'/'G' scientific or fixed, whichever is shorter.
The second and third characters are optional and specific to QCustomPlot:\n If the first char was
'e' or 'g', numbers are/might be displayed in the scientific format, e.g. "5.5e9", which might be
visually unappealing in a plot. So when the second char of \a formatCode is set to 'b' (for
"beautiful"), those exponential numbers are formatted in a more natural way, i.e. "5.5
[multiplication sign] 10 [superscript] 9". By default, the multiplication sign is a centered dot.
If instead a cross should be shown (as is usual in the USA), the third char of \a formatCode can
be set to 'c'. The inserted multiplication signs are the UTF-8 characters 215 (0xD7) for the
cross and 183 (0xB7) for the dot.
Examples for \a formatCode:
\li \c g normal format code behaviour. If number is small, fixed format is used, if number is large,
normal scientific format is used
\li \c gb If number is small, fixed format is used, if number is large, scientific format is used with
beautifully typeset decimal powers and a dot as multiplication sign
\li \c ebc All numbers are in scientific format with beautifully typeset decimal power and a cross as
multiplication sign
\li \c fb illegal format code, since fixed format doesn't support (or need) beautifully typeset decimal
powers. Format code will be reduced to 'f'.
\li \c hello illegal format code, since first char is not 'e', 'E', 'f', 'g' or 'G'. Current format
code will not be changed.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setNumberFormat(const QString &formatCode)
{
if (formatCode.isEmpty())
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Passed formatCode is empty";
return;
}
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
// interpret first char as number format char:
QString allowedFormatChars(QLatin1String("eEfgG"));
if (allowedFormatChars.contains(formatCode.at(0)))
{
mNumberFormatChar = QLatin1Char(formatCode.at(0).toLatin1());
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (first char not in 'eEfgG'):" << formatCode;
return;
}
if (formatCode.length() < 2)
{
mNumberBeautifulPowers = false;
mNumberMultiplyCross = false;
} else
{
// interpret second char as indicator for beautiful decimal powers:
if (formatCode.at(1) == QLatin1Char('b') && (mNumberFormatChar == QLatin1Char('e') || mNumberFormatChar == QLatin1Char('g')))
mNumberBeautifulPowers = true;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (second char not 'b' or first char neither 'e' nor 'g'):" << formatCode;
if (formatCode.length() < 3)
{
mNumberMultiplyCross = false;
} else
{
// interpret third char as indicator for dot or cross multiplication symbol:
if (formatCode.at(2) == QLatin1Char('c'))
mNumberMultiplyCross = true;
else if (formatCode.at(2) == QLatin1Char('d'))
mNumberMultiplyCross = false;
else
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Invalid number format code (third char neither 'c' nor 'd'):" << formatCode;
}
}
mLabelPainter.setSubstituteExponent(mNumberBeautifulPowers);
mLabelPainter.setMultiplicationSymbol(mNumberMultiplyCross ? QCPLabelPainterPrivate::SymbolCross : QCPLabelPainterPrivate::SymbolDot);
}
/*!
Sets the precision of the tick label numbers. See QLocale::toString(double i, char f, int prec)
for details. The effect of precisions are most notably for number Formats starting with 'e', see
\ref setNumberFormat
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setNumberPrecision(int precision)
{
if (mNumberPrecision != precision)
{
mNumberPrecision = precision;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the ticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the ticks will reach inside the
plot and \a outside is the length they will reach outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than
zero, the tick labels and axis label will increase their distance to the axis accordingly, so
they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setSubTickLength, setTickLengthIn, setTickLengthOut
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLength(int inside, int outside)
{
setTickLengthIn(inside);
setTickLengthOut(outside);
}
/*!
Sets the length of the inward ticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the ticks will reach
inside the plot.
\see setTickLengthOut, setTickLength, setSubTickLength
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLengthIn(int inside)
{
if (mTickLengthIn != inside)
{
mTickLengthIn = inside;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the outward ticks in pixels. \a outside is the length the ticks will reach
outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than zero, the tick labels and axis label will
increase their distance to the axis accordingly, so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setTickLengthIn, setTickLength, setSubTickLength
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickLengthOut(int outside)
{
if (mTickLengthOut != outside)
{
mTickLengthOut = outside;
//mCachedMarginValid = false; // only outside tick length can change margin
}
}
/*!
Sets whether sub tick marks are displayed.
Sub ticks are only potentially visible if (major) ticks are also visible (see \ref setTicks)
\see setTicks
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSubTicks(bool show)
{
if (mSubTicks != show)
{
mSubTicks = show;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the subticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the subticks will reach inside
the plot and \a outside is the length they will reach outside the plot. If \a outside is greater
than zero, the tick labels and axis label will increase their distance to the axis accordingly,
so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setTickLength, setSubTickLengthIn, setSubTickLengthOut
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSubTickLength(int inside, int outside)
{
setSubTickLengthIn(inside);
setSubTickLengthOut(outside);
}
/*!
Sets the length of the inward subticks in pixels. \a inside is the length the subticks will reach inside
the plot.
\see setSubTickLengthOut, setSubTickLength, setTickLength
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSubTickLengthIn(int inside)
{
if (mSubTickLengthIn != inside)
{
mSubTickLengthIn = inside;
}
}
/*!
Sets the length of the outward subticks in pixels. \a outside is the length the subticks will reach
outside the plot. If \a outside is greater than zero, the tick labels will increase their
distance to the axis accordingly, so they won't collide with the ticks.
\see setSubTickLengthIn, setSubTickLength, setTickLength
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSubTickLengthOut(int outside)
{
if (mSubTickLengthOut != outside)
{
mSubTickLengthOut = outside;
//mCachedMarginValid = false; // only outside tick length can change margin
}
}
/*!
Sets the pen, the axis base line is drawn with.
\see setTickPen, setSubTickPen
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setBasePen(const QPen &pen)
{
mBasePen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen, tick marks will be drawn with.
\see setTickLength, setBasePen
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen, subtick marks will be drawn with.
\see setSubTickCount, setSubTickLength, setBasePen
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSubTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSubTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the font of the axis label.
\see setLabelColor
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (mLabelFont != font)
{
mLabelFont = font;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the color of the axis label.
\see setLabelFont
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the text of the axis label that will be shown below/above or next to the axis, depending on
its orientation. To disable axis labels, pass an empty string as \a str.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setLabel(const QString &str)
{
if (mLabel != str)
{
mLabel = str;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the distance between the tick labels and the axis label.
\see setTickLabelPadding, setPadding
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setLabelPadding(int padding)
{
if (mLabelPadding != padding)
{
mLabelPadding = padding;
//mCachedMarginValid = false;
}
}
/*!
Sets the font that is used for tick labels when they are selected.
\see setTickLabelFont, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectedTickLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
if (font != mSelectedTickLabelFont)
{
mSelectedTickLabelFont = font;
// don't set mCachedMarginValid to false here because margin calculation is always done with non-selected fonts
}
}
/*!
Sets the font that is used for the axis label when it is selected.
\see setLabelFont, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectedLabelFont(const QFont &font)
{
mSelectedLabelFont = font;
// don't set mCachedMarginValid to false here because margin calculation is always done with non-selected fonts
}
/*!
Sets the color that is used for tick labels when they are selected.
\see setTickLabelColor, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectedTickLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
if (color != mSelectedTickLabelColor)
{
mSelectedTickLabelColor = color;
}
}
/*!
Sets the color that is used for the axis label when it is selected.
\see setLabelColor, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectedLabelColor(const QColor &color)
{
mSelectedLabelColor = color;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the axis base line when selected.
\see setBasePen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectedBasePen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedBasePen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the (major) ticks when selected.
\see setTickPen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectedTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedTickPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen that is used to draw the subticks when selected.
\see setSubTickPen, setSelectableParts, setSelectedParts, QCustomPlot::setInteractions
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setSelectedSubTickPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mSelectedSubTickPen = pen;
}
/*! \internal
Draws the background of this axis rect. It may consist of a background fill (a QBrush) and a
pixmap.
If a brush was given via \ref setBackground(const QBrush &brush), this function first draws an
according filling inside the axis rect with the provided \a painter.
Then, if a pixmap was provided via \ref setBackground, this function buffers the scaled version
depending on \ref setBackgroundScaled and \ref setBackgroundScaledMode and then draws it inside
the axis rect with the provided \a painter. The scaled version is buffered in
mScaledBackgroundPixmap to prevent expensive rescaling at every redraw. It is only updated, when
the axis rect has changed in a way that requires a rescale of the background pixmap (this is
dependent on the \ref setBackgroundScaledMode), or when a differend axis background pixmap was
set.
\see setBackground, setBackgroundScaled, setBackgroundScaledMode
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::drawBackground(QCPPainter *painter, const QPointF ¢er, double radius)
{
// draw background fill (don't use circular clip, looks bad):
if (mBackgroundBrush != Qt::NoBrush)
{
QPainterPath ellipsePath;
ellipsePath.addEllipse(center, radius, radius);
painter->fillPath(ellipsePath, mBackgroundBrush);
}
// draw background pixmap (on top of fill, if brush specified):
if (!mBackgroundPixmap.isNull())
{
QRegion clipCircle(center.x()-radius, center.y()-radius, qRound(2*radius), qRound(2*radius), QRegion::Ellipse);
QRegion originalClip = painter->clipRegion();
painter->setClipRegion(clipCircle);
if (mBackgroundScaled)
{
// check whether mScaledBackground needs to be updated:
QSize scaledSize(mBackgroundPixmap.size());
scaledSize.scale(mRect.size(), mBackgroundScaledMode);
if (mScaledBackgroundPixmap.size() != scaledSize)
mScaledBackgroundPixmap = mBackgroundPixmap.scaled(mRect.size(), mBackgroundScaledMode, Qt::SmoothTransformation);
painter->drawPixmap(mRect.topLeft()+QPoint(0, -1), mScaledBackgroundPixmap, QRect(0, 0, mRect.width(), mRect.height()) & mScaledBackgroundPixmap.rect());
} else
{
painter->drawPixmap(mRect.topLeft()+QPoint(0, -1), mBackgroundPixmap, QRect(0, 0, mRect.width(), mRect.height()));
}
painter->setClipRegion(originalClip);
}
}
/*! \internal
Prepares the internal tick vector, sub tick vector and tick label vector. This is done by calling
QCPAxisTicker::generate on the currently installed ticker.
If a change in the label text/count is detected, the cached axis margin is invalidated to make
sure the next margin calculation recalculates the label sizes and returns an up-to-date value.
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::setupTickVectors()
{
if (!mParentPlot) return;
if ((!mTicks && !mTickLabels && !mGrid->visible()) || mRange.size() <= 0) return;
mSubTickVector.clear(); // since we might not pass it to mTicker->generate(), and we don't want old data in there
mTicker->generate(mRange, mParentPlot->locale(), mNumberFormatChar, mNumberPrecision, mTickVector, mSubTicks ? &mSubTickVector : 0, mTickLabels ? &mTickVectorLabels : 0);
// fill cos/sin buffers which will be used by draw() and QCPPolarGrid::draw(), so we don't have to calculate it twice:
mTickVectorCosSin.resize(mTickVector.size());
for (int i=0; i<mTickVector.size(); ++i)
{
const double theta = coordToAngleRad(mTickVector.at(i));
mTickVectorCosSin[i] = QPointF(qCos(theta), qSin(theta));
}
mSubTickVectorCosSin.resize(mSubTickVector.size());
for (int i=0; i<mSubTickVector.size(); ++i)
{
const double theta = coordToAngleRad(mSubTickVector.at(i));
mSubTickVectorCosSin[i] = QPointF(qCos(theta), qSin(theta));
}
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the axis base line. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedBasePen or mBasePen.
*/
QPen QCPPolarAxisAngular::getBasePen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedBasePen : mBasePen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the (major) ticks. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickPen or mTickPen.
*/
QPen QCPPolarAxisAngular::getTickPen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedTickPen : mTickPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the pen that is used to draw the subticks. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedSubTickPen or mSubTickPen.
*/
QPen QCPPolarAxisAngular::getSubTickPen() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxis) ? mSelectedSubTickPen : mSubTickPen;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the font that is used to draw the tick labels. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickLabelFont or mTickLabelFont.
*/
QFont QCPPolarAxisAngular::getTickLabelFont() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spTickLabels) ? mSelectedTickLabelFont : mTickLabelFont;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the font that is used to draw the axis label. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedLabelFont or mLabelFont.
*/
QFont QCPPolarAxisAngular::getLabelFont() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxisLabel) ? mSelectedLabelFont : mLabelFont;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the color that is used to draw the tick labels. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedTickLabelColor or mTickLabelColor.
*/
QColor QCPPolarAxisAngular::getTickLabelColor() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spTickLabels) ? mSelectedTickLabelColor : mTickLabelColor;
}
/*! \internal
Returns the color that is used to draw the axis label. Depending on the selection state, this
is either mSelectedLabelColor or mLabelColor.
*/
QColor QCPPolarAxisAngular::getLabelColor() const
{
return mSelectedParts.testFlag(spAxisLabel) ? mSelectedLabelColor : mLabelColor;
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when a mouse button is pressed on the axis rect. If the left mouse button is
pressed, the range dragging interaction is initialized (the actual range manipulation happens in
the \ref mouseMoveEvent).
The mDragging flag is set to true and some anchor points are set that are needed to determine the
distance the mouse was dragged in the mouse move/release events later.
\see mouseMoveEvent, mouseReleaseEvent
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QVariant &details)
{
Q_UNUSED(details)
if (event->buttons() & Qt::LeftButton)
{
mDragging = true;
// initialize antialiasing backup in case we start dragging:
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
{
mAADragBackup = mParentPlot->antialiasedElements();
mNotAADragBackup = mParentPlot->notAntialiasedElements();
}
// Mouse range dragging interaction:
if (mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeDrag))
{
mDragAngularStart = range();
mDragRadialStart.clear();
for (int i=0; i<mRadialAxes.size(); ++i)
mDragRadialStart.append(mRadialAxes.at(i)->range());
}
}
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for when the mouse is moved on the axis rect. If range dragging was activated in a
preceding \ref mousePressEvent, the range is moved accordingly.
\see mousePressEvent, mouseReleaseEvent
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(startPos)
bool doReplot = false;
// Mouse range dragging interaction:
if (mDragging && mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeDrag))
{
if (mRangeDrag)
{
doReplot = true;
double angleCoordStart, radiusCoordStart;
double angleCoord, radiusCoord;
pixelToCoord(startPos, angleCoordStart, radiusCoordStart);
pixelToCoord(event->pos(), angleCoord, radiusCoord);
double diff = angleCoordStart - angleCoord;
setRange(mDragAngularStart.lower+diff, mDragAngularStart.upper+diff);
}
for (int i=0; i<mRadialAxes.size(); ++i)
{
QCPPolarAxisRadial *ax = mRadialAxes.at(i);
if (!ax->rangeDrag())
continue;
doReplot = true;
double angleCoordStart, radiusCoordStart;
double angleCoord, radiusCoord;
ax->pixelToCoord(startPos, angleCoordStart, radiusCoordStart);
ax->pixelToCoord(event->pos(), angleCoord, radiusCoord);
if (ax->scaleType() == QCPPolarAxisRadial::stLinear)
{
double diff = radiusCoordStart - radiusCoord;
ax->setRange(mDragRadialStart.at(i).lower+diff, mDragRadialStart.at(i).upper+diff);
} else if (ax->scaleType() == QCPPolarAxisRadial::stLogarithmic)
{
if (radiusCoord != 0)
{
double diff = radiusCoordStart/radiusCoord;
ax->setRange(mDragRadialStart.at(i).lower*diff, mDragRadialStart.at(i).upper*diff);
}
}
}
if (doReplot) // if either vertical or horizontal drag was enabled, do a replot
{
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
mParentPlot->setNotAntialiasedElements(QCP::aeAll);
mParentPlot->replot(QCustomPlot::rpQueuedReplot);
}
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event, const QPointF &startPos)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
Q_UNUSED(startPos)
mDragging = false;
if (mParentPlot->noAntialiasingOnDrag())
{
mParentPlot->setAntialiasedElements(mAADragBackup);
mParentPlot->setNotAntialiasedElements(mNotAADragBackup);
}
}
/*! \internal
Event handler for mouse wheel events. If rangeZoom is Qt::Horizontal, Qt::Vertical or both, the
ranges of the axes defined as rangeZoomHorzAxis and rangeZoomVertAxis are scaled. The center of
the scaling operation is the current cursor position inside the axis rect. The scaling factor is
dependent on the mouse wheel delta (which direction the wheel was rotated) to provide a natural
zooming feel. The Strength of the zoom can be controlled via \ref setRangeZoomFactor.
Note, that event->delta() is usually +/-120 for single rotation steps. However, if the mouse
wheel is turned rapidly, many steps may bunch up to one event, so the event->delta() may then be
multiples of 120. This is taken into account here, by calculating \a wheelSteps and using it as
exponent of the range zoom factor. This takes care of the wheel direction automatically, by
inverting the factor, when the wheel step is negative (f^-1 = 1/f).
*/
void QCPPolarAxisAngular::wheelEvent(QWheelEvent *event)
{
bool doReplot = false;
// Mouse range zooming interaction:
if (mParentPlot->interactions().testFlag(QCP::iRangeZoom))
{
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 0, 0)
const double delta = event->delta();
#else
const double delta = event->angleDelta().y();
#endif
#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(5, 14, 0)
const QPointF pos = event->pos();
#else
const QPointF pos = event->position();
#endif
const double wheelSteps = delta/120.0; // a single step delta is +/-120 usually
if (mRangeZoom)
{
double angleCoord, radiusCoord;
pixelToCoord(pos, angleCoord, radiusCoord);
scaleRange(qPow(mRangeZoomFactor, wheelSteps), angleCoord);
}
for (int i=0; i<mRadialAxes.size(); ++i)
{
QCPPolarAxisRadial *ax = mRadialAxes.at(i);
if (!ax->rangeZoom())
continue;
doReplot = true;
double angleCoord, radiusCoord;
ax->pixelToCoord(pos, angleCoord, radiusCoord);
ax->scaleRange(qPow(ax->rangeZoomFactor(), wheelSteps), radiusCoord);
}
}
if (doReplot)
mParentPlot->replot();
}
bool QCPPolarAxisAngular::registerPolarGraph(QCPPolarGraph *graph)
{
if (mGraphs.contains(graph))
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "plottable already added:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(graph);
return false;
}
if (graph->keyAxis() != this)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "plottable not created with this as axis:" << reinterpret_cast<quintptr>(graph);
return false;
}
mGraphs.append(graph);
// possibly add plottable to legend:
if (mParentPlot->autoAddPlottableToLegend())
graph->addToLegend();
if (!graph->layer()) // usually the layer is already set in the constructor of the plottable (via QCPLayerable constructor)
graph->setLayer(mParentPlot->currentLayer());
return true;
}
/* end of 'src/polar/layoutelement-angularaxis.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/polar/polargrid.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 7493 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPolarGrid
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPolarGrid
\brief The grid in both angular and radial dimensions for polar plots
\warning In this QCustomPlot version, polar plots are a tech preview. Expect documentation and
functionality to be incomplete, as well as changing public interfaces in the future.
*/
/*!
Creates a QCPPolarGrid instance and sets default values.
You shouldn't instantiate grids on their own, since every axis brings its own grid.
*/
QCPPolarGrid::QCPPolarGrid(QCPPolarAxisAngular *parentAxis) :
QCPLayerable(parentAxis->parentPlot(), QString(), parentAxis),
mType(gtNone),
mSubGridType(gtNone),
mAntialiasedSubGrid(true),
mAntialiasedZeroLine(true),
mParentAxis(parentAxis)
{
// warning: this is called in QCPPolarAxisAngular constructor, so parentAxis members should not be accessed/called
setParent(parentAxis);
setType(gtAll);
setSubGridType(gtNone);
setAngularPen(QPen(QColor(200,200,200), 0, Qt::DotLine));
setAngularSubGridPen(QPen(QColor(220,220,220), 0, Qt::DotLine));
setRadialPen(QPen(QColor(200,200,200), 0, Qt::DotLine));
setRadialSubGridPen(QPen(QColor(220,220,220), 0, Qt::DotLine));
setRadialZeroLinePen(QPen(QColor(200,200,200), 0, Qt::SolidLine));
setAntialiased(true);
}
void QCPPolarGrid::setRadialAxis(QCPPolarAxisRadial *axis)
{
mRadialAxis = axis;
}
void QCPPolarGrid::setType(GridTypes type)
{
mType = type;
}
void QCPPolarGrid::setSubGridType(GridTypes type)
{
mSubGridType = type;
}
/*!
Sets whether sub grid lines are drawn antialiased.
*/
void QCPPolarGrid::setAntialiasedSubGrid(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiasedSubGrid = enabled;
}
/*!
Sets whether zero lines are drawn antialiased.
*/
void QCPPolarGrid::setAntialiasedZeroLine(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiasedZeroLine = enabled;
}
/*!
Sets the pen with which (major) grid lines are drawn.
*/
void QCPPolarGrid::setAngularPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mAngularPen = pen;
}
/*!
Sets the pen with which sub grid lines are drawn.
*/
void QCPPolarGrid::setAngularSubGridPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mAngularSubGridPen = pen;
}
void QCPPolarGrid::setRadialPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mRadialPen = pen;
}
void QCPPolarGrid::setRadialSubGridPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mRadialSubGridPen = pen;
}
void QCPPolarGrid::setRadialZeroLinePen(const QPen &pen)
{
mRadialZeroLinePen = pen;
}
/*! \internal
A convenience function to easily set the QPainter::Antialiased hint on the provided \a painter
before drawing the major grid lines.
This is the antialiasing state the painter passed to the \ref draw method is in by default.
This function takes into account the local setting of the antialiasing flag as well as the
overrides set with \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
\see setAntialiased
*/
void QCPPolarGrid::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aeGrid);
}
/*! \internal
Draws grid lines and sub grid lines at the positions of (sub) ticks of the parent axis, spanning
over the complete axis rect. Also draws the zero line, if appropriate (\ref setZeroLinePen).
*/
void QCPPolarGrid::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (!mParentAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid parent axis"; return; }
const QPointF center = mParentAxis->mCenter;
const double radius = mParentAxis->mRadius;
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
// draw main angular grid:
if (mType.testFlag(gtAngular))
drawAngularGrid(painter, center, radius, mParentAxis->mTickVectorCosSin, mAngularPen);
// draw main radial grid:
if (mType.testFlag(gtRadial) && mRadialAxis)
drawRadialGrid(painter, center, mRadialAxis->tickVector(), mRadialPen, mRadialZeroLinePen);
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedSubGrid, QCP::aeGrid);
// draw sub angular grid:
if (mSubGridType.testFlag(gtAngular))
drawAngularGrid(painter, center, radius, mParentAxis->mSubTickVectorCosSin, mAngularSubGridPen);
// draw sub radial grid:
if (mSubGridType.testFlag(gtRadial) && mRadialAxis)
drawRadialGrid(painter, center, mRadialAxis->subTickVector(), mRadialSubGridPen);
}
void QCPPolarGrid::drawRadialGrid(QCPPainter *painter, const QPointF ¢er, const QVector<double> &coords, const QPen &pen, const QPen &zeroPen)
{
if (!mRadialAxis) return;
if (coords.isEmpty()) return;
const bool drawZeroLine = zeroPen != Qt::NoPen;
const double zeroLineEpsilon = qAbs(coords.last()-coords.first())*1e-6;
painter->setPen(pen);
for (int i=0; i<coords.size(); ++i)
{
const double r = mRadialAxis->coordToRadius(coords.at(i));
if (drawZeroLine && qAbs(coords.at(i)) < zeroLineEpsilon)
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedZeroLine, QCP::aeZeroLine);
painter->setPen(zeroPen);
painter->drawEllipse(center, r, r);
painter->setPen(pen);
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
} else
{
painter->drawEllipse(center, r, r);
}
}
}
void QCPPolarGrid::drawAngularGrid(QCPPainter *painter, const QPointF ¢er, double radius, const QVector<QPointF> &ticksCosSin, const QPen &pen)
{
if (ticksCosSin.isEmpty()) return;
painter->setPen(pen);
for (int i=0; i<ticksCosSin.size(); ++i)
painter->drawLine(center, center+ticksCosSin.at(i)*radius);
}
/* end of 'src/polar/polargrid.cpp' */
/* including file 'src/polar/polargraph.cpp' */
/* modified 2021-03-29T02:30:44, size 44035 */
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPolarLegendItem
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPolarLegendItem
\brief A legend item for polar plots
\warning In this QCustomPlot version, polar plots are a tech preview. Expect documentation and
functionality to be incomplete, as well as changing public interfaces in the future.
*/
QCPPolarLegendItem::QCPPolarLegendItem(QCPLegend *parent, QCPPolarGraph *graph) :
QCPAbstractLegendItem(parent),
mPolarGraph(graph)
{
setAntialiased(false);
}
void QCPPolarLegendItem::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (!mPolarGraph) return;
painter->setFont(getFont());
painter->setPen(QPen(getTextColor()));
QSizeF iconSize = mParentLegend->iconSize();
QRectF textRect = painter->fontMetrics().boundingRect(0, 0, 0, iconSize.height(), Qt::TextDontClip, mPolarGraph->name());
QRectF iconRect(mRect.topLeft(), iconSize);
int textHeight = qMax(textRect.height(), iconSize.height()); // if text has smaller height than icon, center text vertically in icon height, else align tops
painter->drawText(mRect.x()+iconSize.width()+mParentLegend->iconTextPadding(), mRect.y(), textRect.width(), textHeight, Qt::TextDontClip, mPolarGraph->name());
// draw icon:
painter->save();
painter->setClipRect(iconRect, Qt::IntersectClip);
mPolarGraph->drawLegendIcon(painter, iconRect);
painter->restore();
// draw icon border:
if (getIconBorderPen().style() != Qt::NoPen)
{
painter->setPen(getIconBorderPen());
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
int halfPen = qCeil(painter->pen().widthF()*0.5)+1;
painter->setClipRect(mOuterRect.adjusted(-halfPen, -halfPen, halfPen, halfPen)); // extend default clip rect so thicker pens (especially during selection) are not clipped
painter->drawRect(iconRect);
}
}
QSize QCPPolarLegendItem::minimumOuterSizeHint() const
{
if (!mPolarGraph) return QSize();
QSize result(0, 0);
QRect textRect;
QFontMetrics fontMetrics(getFont());
QSize iconSize = mParentLegend->iconSize();
textRect = fontMetrics.boundingRect(0, 0, 0, iconSize.height(), Qt::TextDontClip, mPolarGraph->name());
result.setWidth(iconSize.width() + mParentLegend->iconTextPadding() + textRect.width());
result.setHeight(qMax(textRect.height(), iconSize.height()));
result.rwidth() += mMargins.left()+mMargins.right();
result.rheight() += mMargins.top()+mMargins.bottom();
return result;
}
QPen QCPPolarLegendItem::getIconBorderPen() const
{
return mSelected ? mParentLegend->selectedIconBorderPen() : mParentLegend->iconBorderPen();
}
QColor QCPPolarLegendItem::getTextColor() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedTextColor : mTextColor;
}
QFont QCPPolarLegendItem::getFont() const
{
return mSelected ? mSelectedFont : mFont;
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//////////////////// QCPPolarGraph
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/*! \class QCPPolarGraph
\brief A radial graph used to display data in polar plots
\warning In this QCustomPlot version, polar plots are a tech preview. Expect documentation and
functionality to be incomplete, as well as changing public interfaces in the future.
*/
/* start of documentation of inline functions */
// TODO
/* end of documentation of inline functions */
/*!
Constructs a graph which uses \a keyAxis as its angular and \a valueAxis as its radial axis. \a
keyAxis and \a valueAxis must reside in the same QCustomPlot, and the radial axis must be
associated with the angular axis. If either of these restrictions is violated, a corresponding
message is printed to the debug output (qDebug), the construction is not aborted, though.
The created QCPPolarGraph is automatically registered with the QCustomPlot instance inferred from
\a keyAxis. This QCustomPlot instance takes ownership of the QCPPolarGraph, so do not delete it
manually but use QCPPolarAxisAngular::removeGraph() instead.
To directly create a QCPPolarGraph inside a plot, you shoud use the QCPPolarAxisAngular::addGraph
method.
*/
QCPPolarGraph::QCPPolarGraph(QCPPolarAxisAngular *keyAxis, QCPPolarAxisRadial *valueAxis) :
QCPLayerable(keyAxis->parentPlot(), QString(), keyAxis),
mDataContainer(new QCPGraphDataContainer),
mName(),
mAntialiasedFill(true),
mAntialiasedScatters(true),
mPen(Qt::black),
mBrush(Qt::NoBrush),
mPeriodic(true),
mKeyAxis(keyAxis),
mValueAxis(valueAxis),
mSelectable(QCP::stWhole)
//mSelectionDecorator(0) // TODO
{
if (keyAxis->parentPlot() != valueAxis->parentPlot())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Parent plot of keyAxis is not the same as that of valueAxis.";
mKeyAxis->registerPolarGraph(this);
//setSelectionDecorator(new QCPSelectionDecorator); // TODO
setPen(QPen(Qt::blue, 0));
setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
setLineStyle(lsLine);
}
QCPPolarGraph::~QCPPolarGraph()
{
/* TODO
if (mSelectionDecorator)
{
delete mSelectionDecorator;
mSelectionDecorator = 0;
}
*/
}
/*!
The name is the textual representation of this plottable as it is displayed in the legend
(\ref QCPLegend). It may contain any UTF-8 characters, including newlines.
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setName(const QString &name)
{
mName = name;
}
/*!
Sets whether fills of this plottable are drawn antialiased or not.
Note that this setting may be overridden by \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setAntialiasedFill(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiasedFill = enabled;
}
/*!
Sets whether the scatter symbols of this plottable are drawn antialiased or not.
Note that this setting may be overridden by \ref QCustomPlot::setAntialiasedElements and \ref
QCustomPlot::setNotAntialiasedElements.
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setAntialiasedScatters(bool enabled)
{
mAntialiasedScatters = enabled;
}
/*!
The pen is used to draw basic lines that make up the plottable representation in the
plot.
For example, the \ref QCPGraph subclass draws its graph lines with this pen.
\see setBrush
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setPen(const QPen &pen)
{
mPen = pen;
}
/*!
The brush is used to draw basic fills of the plottable representation in the
plot. The Fill can be a color, gradient or texture, see the usage of QBrush.
For example, the \ref QCPGraph subclass draws the fill under the graph with this brush, when
it's not set to Qt::NoBrush.
\see setPen
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setBrush(const QBrush &brush)
{
mBrush = brush;
}
void QCPPolarGraph::setPeriodic(bool enabled)
{
mPeriodic = enabled;
}
/*!
The key axis of a plottable can be set to any axis of a QCustomPlot, as long as it is orthogonal
to the plottable's value axis. This function performs no checks to make sure this is the case.
The typical mathematical choice is to use the x-axis (QCustomPlot::xAxis) as key axis and the
y-axis (QCustomPlot::yAxis) as value axis.
Normally, the key and value axes are set in the constructor of the plottable (or \ref
QCustomPlot::addGraph when working with QCPGraphs through the dedicated graph interface).
\see setValueAxis
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setKeyAxis(QCPPolarAxisAngular *axis)
{
mKeyAxis = axis;
}
/*!
The value axis of a plottable can be set to any axis of a QCustomPlot, as long as it is
orthogonal to the plottable's key axis. This function performs no checks to make sure this is the
case. The typical mathematical choice is to use the x-axis (QCustomPlot::xAxis) as key axis and
the y-axis (QCustomPlot::yAxis) as value axis.
Normally, the key and value axes are set in the constructor of the plottable (or \ref
QCustomPlot::addGraph when working with QCPGraphs through the dedicated graph interface).
\see setKeyAxis
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setValueAxis(QCPPolarAxisRadial *axis)
{
mValueAxis = axis;
}
/*!
Sets whether and to which granularity this plottable can be selected.
A selection can happen by clicking on the QCustomPlot surface (When \ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains \ref QCP::iSelectPlottables), by dragging a selection rect
(When \ref QCustomPlot::setSelectionRectMode is \ref QCP::srmSelect), or programmatically by
calling \ref setSelection.
\see setSelection, QCP::SelectionType
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setSelectable(QCP::SelectionType selectable)
{
if (mSelectable != selectable)
{
mSelectable = selectable;
QCPDataSelection oldSelection = mSelection;
mSelection.enforceType(mSelectable);
emit selectableChanged(mSelectable);
if (mSelection != oldSelection)
{
emit selectionChanged(selected());
emit selectionChanged(mSelection);
}
}
}
/*!
Sets which data ranges of this plottable are selected. Selected data ranges are drawn differently
(e.g. color) in the plot. This can be controlled via the selection decorator (see \ref
selectionDecorator).
The entire selection mechanism for plottables is handled automatically when \ref
QCustomPlot::setInteractions contains iSelectPlottables. You only need to call this function when
you wish to change the selection state programmatically.
Using \ref setSelectable you can further specify for each plottable whether and to which
granularity it is selectable. If \a selection is not compatible with the current \ref
QCP::SelectionType set via \ref setSelectable, the resulting selection will be adjusted
accordingly (see \ref QCPDataSelection::enforceType).
emits the \ref selectionChanged signal when \a selected is different from the previous selection state.
\see setSelectable, selectTest
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setSelection(QCPDataSelection selection)
{
selection.enforceType(mSelectable);
if (mSelection != selection)
{
mSelection = selection;
emit selectionChanged(selected());
emit selectionChanged(mSelection);
}
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data container with the provided \a data container.
Since a QSharedPointer is used, multiple QCPPolarGraphs may share the same data container safely.
Modifying the data in the container will then affect all graphs that share the container. Sharing
can be achieved by simply exchanging the data containers wrapped in shared pointers:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp QCPPolarGraph-datasharing-1
If you do not wish to share containers, but create a copy from an existing container, rather use
the \ref QCPDataContainer<DataType>::set method on the graph's data container directly:
\snippet documentation/doc-code-snippets/mainwindow.cpp QCPPolarGraph-datasharing-2
\see addData
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setData(QSharedPointer<QCPGraphDataContainer> data)
{
mDataContainer = data;
}
/*! \overload
Replaces the current data with the provided points in \a keys and \a values. The provided
vectors should have equal length. Else, the number of added points will be the size of the
smallest vector.
If you can guarantee that the passed data points are sorted by \a keys in ascending order, you
can set \a alreadySorted to true, to improve performance by saving a sorting run.
\see addData
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values, bool alreadySorted)
{
mDataContainer->clear();
addData(keys, values, alreadySorted);
}
/*!
Sets how the single data points are connected in the plot. For scatter-only plots, set \a ls to
\ref lsNone and \ref setScatterStyle to the desired scatter style.
\see setScatterStyle
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setLineStyle(LineStyle ls)
{
mLineStyle = ls;
}
/*!
Sets the visual appearance of single data points in the plot. If set to \ref QCPScatterStyle::ssNone, no scatter points
are drawn (e.g. for line-only-plots with appropriate line style).
\see QCPScatterStyle, setLineStyle
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::setScatterStyle(const QCPScatterStyle &style)
{
mScatterStyle = style;
}
void QCPPolarGraph::addData(const QVector<double> &keys, const QVector<double> &values, bool alreadySorted)
{
if (keys.size() != values.size())
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "keys and values have different sizes:" << keys.size() << values.size();
const int n = qMin(keys.size(), values.size());
QVector<QCPGraphData> tempData(n);
QVector<QCPGraphData>::iterator it = tempData.begin();
const QVector<QCPGraphData>::iterator itEnd = tempData.end();
int i = 0;
while (it != itEnd)
{
it->key = keys[i];
it->value = values[i];
++it;
++i;
}
mDataContainer->add(tempData, alreadySorted); // don't modify tempData beyond this to prevent copy on write
}
void QCPPolarGraph::addData(double key, double value)
{
mDataContainer->add(QCPGraphData(key, value));
}
/*!
Use this method to set an own QCPSelectionDecorator (subclass) instance. This allows you to
customize the visual representation of selected data ranges further than by using the default
QCPSelectionDecorator.
The plottable takes ownership of the \a decorator.
The currently set decorator can be accessed via \ref selectionDecorator.
*/
/*
void QCPPolarGraph::setSelectionDecorator(QCPSelectionDecorator *decorator)
{
if (decorator)
{
if (decorator->registerWithPlottable(this))
{
if (mSelectionDecorator) // delete old decorator if necessary
delete mSelectionDecorator;
mSelectionDecorator = decorator;
}
} else if (mSelectionDecorator) // just clear decorator
{
delete mSelectionDecorator;
mSelectionDecorator = 0;
}
}
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::coordsToPixels(double key, double value, double &x, double &y) const
{
if (mValueAxis)
{
const QPointF point = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(key, value);
x = point.x();
y = point.y();
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis";
}
}
const QPointF QCPPolarGraph::coordsToPixels(double key, double value) const
{
if (mValueAxis)
{
return mValueAxis->coordToPixel(key, value);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis";
return QPointF();
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::pixelsToCoords(double x, double y, double &key, double &value) const
{
if (mValueAxis)
{
mValueAxis->pixelToCoord(QPointF(x, y), key, value);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis";
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::pixelsToCoords(const QPointF &pixelPos, double &key, double &value) const
{
if (mValueAxis)
{
mValueAxis->pixelToCoord(pixelPos, key, value);
} else
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis";
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::rescaleAxes(bool onlyEnlarge) const
{
rescaleKeyAxis(onlyEnlarge);
rescaleValueAxis(onlyEnlarge);
}
void QCPPolarGraph::rescaleKeyAxis(bool onlyEnlarge) const
{
QCPPolarAxisAngular *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key axis"; return; }
bool foundRange;
QCPRange newRange = getKeyRange(foundRange, QCP::sdBoth);
if (foundRange)
{
if (onlyEnlarge)
newRange.expand(keyAxis->range());
if (!QCPRange::validRange(newRange)) // likely due to range being zero (plottable has only constant data in this axis dimension), shift current range to at least center the plottable
{
double center = (newRange.lower+newRange.upper)*0.5; // upper and lower should be equal anyway, but just to make sure, incase validRange returned false for other reason
newRange.lower = center-keyAxis->range().size()/2.0;
newRange.upper = center+keyAxis->range().size()/2.0;
}
keyAxis->setRange(newRange);
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::rescaleValueAxis(bool onlyEnlarge, bool inKeyRange) const
{
QCPPolarAxisAngular *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPPolarAxisRadial *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
QCP::SignDomain signDomain = QCP::sdBoth;
if (valueAxis->scaleType() == QCPPolarAxisRadial::stLogarithmic)
signDomain = (valueAxis->range().upper < 0 ? QCP::sdNegative : QCP::sdPositive);
bool foundRange;
QCPRange newRange = getValueRange(foundRange, signDomain, inKeyRange ? keyAxis->range() : QCPRange());
if (foundRange)
{
if (onlyEnlarge)
newRange.expand(valueAxis->range());
if (!QCPRange::validRange(newRange)) // likely due to range being zero (plottable has only constant data in this axis dimension), shift current range to at least center the plottable
{
double center = (newRange.lower+newRange.upper)*0.5; // upper and lower should be equal anyway, but just to make sure, incase validRange returned false for other reason
if (valueAxis->scaleType() == QCPPolarAxisRadial::stLinear)
{
newRange.lower = center-valueAxis->range().size()/2.0;
newRange.upper = center+valueAxis->range().size()/2.0;
} else // scaleType() == stLogarithmic
{
newRange.lower = center/qSqrt(valueAxis->range().upper/valueAxis->range().lower);
newRange.upper = center*qSqrt(valueAxis->range().upper/valueAxis->range().lower);
}
}
valueAxis->setRange(newRange);
}
}
bool QCPPolarGraph::addToLegend(QCPLegend *legend)
{
if (!legend)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed legend is null";
return false;
}
if (legend->parentPlot() != mParentPlot)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed legend isn't in the same QCustomPlot as this plottable";
return false;
}
//if (!legend->hasItemWithPlottable(this)) // TODO
//{
legend->addItem(new QCPPolarLegendItem(legend, this));
return true;
//} else
// return false;
}
bool QCPPolarGraph::addToLegend()
{
if (!mParentPlot || !mParentPlot->legend)
return false;
else
return addToLegend(mParentPlot->legend);
}
bool QCPPolarGraph::removeFromLegend(QCPLegend *legend) const
{
if (!legend)
{
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "passed legend is null";
return false;
}
QCPPolarLegendItem *removableItem = 0;
for (int i=0; i<legend->itemCount(); ++i) // TODO: reduce this to code in QCPAbstractPlottable::removeFromLegend once unified
{
if (QCPPolarLegendItem *pli = qobject_cast<QCPPolarLegendItem*>(legend->item(i)))
{
if (pli->polarGraph() == this)
{
removableItem = pli;
break;
}
}
}
if (removableItem)
return legend->removeItem(removableItem);
else
return false;
}
bool QCPPolarGraph::removeFromLegend() const
{
if (!mParentPlot || !mParentPlot->legend)
return false;
else
return removeFromLegend(mParentPlot->legend);
}
double QCPPolarGraph::selectTest(const QPointF &pos, bool onlySelectable, QVariant *details) const
{
if ((onlySelectable && mSelectable == QCP::stNone) || mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1;
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis)
return -1;
if (mKeyAxis->rect().contains(pos.toPoint()))
{
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator closestDataPoint = mDataContainer->constEnd();
double result = pointDistance(pos, closestDataPoint);
if (details)
{
int pointIndex = closestDataPoint-mDataContainer->constBegin();
details->setValue(QCPDataSelection(QCPDataRange(pointIndex, pointIndex+1)));
}
return result;
} else
return -1;
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPPolarGraph::getKeyRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain) const
{
return mDataContainer->keyRange(foundRange, inSignDomain);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QCPRange QCPPolarGraph::getValueRange(bool &foundRange, QCP::SignDomain inSignDomain, const QCPRange &inKeyRange) const
{
return mDataContainer->valueRange(foundRange, inSignDomain, inKeyRange);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
QRect QCPPolarGraph::clipRect() const
{
if (mKeyAxis)
return mKeyAxis.data()->rect();
else
return QRect();
}
void QCPPolarGraph::draw(QCPPainter *painter)
{
if (!mKeyAxis || !mValueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (mKeyAxis.data()->range().size() <= 0 || mDataContainer->isEmpty()) return;
if (mLineStyle == lsNone && mScatterStyle.isNone()) return;
painter->setClipRegion(mKeyAxis->exactClipRegion());
QVector<QPointF> lines, scatters; // line and (if necessary) scatter pixel coordinates will be stored here while iterating over segments
// loop over and draw segments of unselected/selected data:
QList<QCPDataRange> selectedSegments, unselectedSegments, allSegments;
getDataSegments(selectedSegments, unselectedSegments);
allSegments << unselectedSegments << selectedSegments;
for (int i=0; i<allSegments.size(); ++i)
{
bool isSelectedSegment = i >= unselectedSegments.size();
// get line pixel points appropriate to line style:
QCPDataRange lineDataRange = isSelectedSegment ? allSegments.at(i) : allSegments.at(i).adjusted(-1, 1); // unselected segments extend lines to bordering selected data point (safe to exceed total data bounds in first/last segment, getLines takes care)
getLines(&lines, lineDataRange);
// check data validity if flag set:
#ifdef QCUSTOMPLOT_CHECK_DATA
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it;
for (it = mDataContainer->constBegin(); it != mDataContainer->constEnd(); ++it)
{
if (QCP::isInvalidData(it->key, it->value))
qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "Data point at" << it->key << "invalid." << "Plottable name:" << name();
}
#endif
// draw fill of graph:
//if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
// mSelectionDecorator->applyBrush(painter);
//else
painter->setBrush(mBrush);
painter->setPen(Qt::NoPen);
drawFill(painter, &lines);
// draw line:
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
//if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
// mSelectionDecorator->applyPen(painter);
//else
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
drawLinePlot(painter, lines);
}
// draw scatters:
QCPScatterStyle finalScatterStyle = mScatterStyle;
//if (isSelectedSegment && mSelectionDecorator)
// finalScatterStyle = mSelectionDecorator->getFinalScatterStyle(mScatterStyle);
if (!finalScatterStyle.isNone())
{
getScatters(&scatters, allSegments.at(i));
drawScatterPlot(painter, scatters, finalScatterStyle);
}
}
// draw other selection decoration that isn't just line/scatter pens and brushes:
//if (mSelectionDecorator)
// mSelectionDecorator->drawDecoration(painter, selection());
}
QCP::Interaction QCPPolarGraph::selectionCategory() const
{
return QCP::iSelectPlottables;
}
void QCPPolarGraph::applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiased, QCP::aePlottables);
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPolarGraph::selectEvent(QMouseEvent *event, bool additive, const QVariant &details, bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
Q_UNUSED(event)
if (mSelectable != QCP::stNone)
{
QCPDataSelection newSelection = details.value<QCPDataSelection>();
QCPDataSelection selectionBefore = mSelection;
if (additive)
{
if (mSelectable == QCP::stWhole) // in whole selection mode, we toggle to no selection even if currently unselected point was hit
{
if (selected())
setSelection(QCPDataSelection());
else
setSelection(newSelection);
} else // in all other selection modes we toggle selections of homogeneously selected/unselected segments
{
if (mSelection.contains(newSelection)) // if entire newSelection is already selected, toggle selection
setSelection(mSelection-newSelection);
else
setSelection(mSelection+newSelection);
}
} else
setSelection(newSelection);
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelection != selectionBefore;
}
}
/* inherits documentation from base class */
void QCPPolarGraph::deselectEvent(bool *selectionStateChanged)
{
if (mSelectable != QCP::stNone)
{
QCPDataSelection selectionBefore = mSelection;
setSelection(QCPDataSelection());
if (selectionStateChanged)
*selectionStateChanged = mSelection != selectionBefore;
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws lines between the points in \a lines, given in pixel coordinates.
\see drawScatterPlot, drawImpulsePlot, QCPAbstractPlottable1D::drawPolyline
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::drawLinePlot(QCPPainter *painter, const QVector<QPointF> &lines) const
{
if (painter->pen().style() != Qt::NoPen && painter->pen().color().alpha() != 0)
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
drawPolyline(painter, lines);
}
}
/*! \internal
Draws the fill of the graph using the specified \a painter, with the currently set brush.
Depending on whether a normal fill or a channel fill (\ref setChannelFillGraph) is needed, \ref
getFillPolygon or \ref getChannelFillPolygon are used to find the according fill polygons.
In order to handle NaN Data points correctly (the fill needs to be split into disjoint areas),
this method first determines a list of non-NaN segments with \ref getNonNanSegments, on which to
operate. In the channel fill case, \ref getOverlappingSegments is used to consolidate the non-NaN
segments of the two involved graphs, before passing the overlapping pairs to \ref
getChannelFillPolygon.
Pass the points of this graph's line as \a lines, in pixel coordinates.
\see drawLinePlot, drawImpulsePlot, drawScatterPlot
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::drawFill(QCPPainter *painter, QVector<QPointF> *lines) const
{
applyFillAntialiasingHint(painter);
if (painter->brush().style() != Qt::NoBrush && painter->brush().color().alpha() != 0)
painter->drawPolygon(QPolygonF(*lines));
}
/*! \internal
Draws scatter symbols at every point passed in \a scatters, given in pixel coordinates. The
scatters will be drawn with \a painter and have the appearance as specified in \a style.
\see drawLinePlot, drawImpulsePlot
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::drawScatterPlot(QCPPainter *painter, const QVector<QPointF> &scatters, const QCPScatterStyle &style) const
{
applyScattersAntialiasingHint(painter);
style.applyTo(painter, mPen);
for (int i=0; i<scatters.size(); ++i)
style.drawShape(painter, scatters.at(i).x(), scatters.at(i).y());
}
void QCPPolarGraph::drawLegendIcon(QCPPainter *painter, const QRectF &rect) const
{
// draw fill:
if (mBrush.style() != Qt::NoBrush)
{
applyFillAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->fillRect(QRectF(rect.left(), rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0, rect.width(), rect.height()/3.0), mBrush);
}
// draw line vertically centered:
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
applyDefaultAntialiasingHint(painter);
painter->setPen(mPen);
painter->drawLine(QLineF(rect.left(), rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0, rect.right()+5, rect.top()+rect.height()/2.0)); // +5 on x2 else last segment is missing from dashed/dotted pens
}
// draw scatter symbol:
if (!mScatterStyle.isNone())
{
applyScattersAntialiasingHint(painter);
// scale scatter pixmap if it's too large to fit in legend icon rect:
if (mScatterStyle.shape() == QCPScatterStyle::ssPixmap && (mScatterStyle.pixmap().size().width() > rect.width() || mScatterStyle.pixmap().size().height() > rect.height()))
{
QCPScatterStyle scaledStyle(mScatterStyle);
scaledStyle.setPixmap(scaledStyle.pixmap().scaled(rect.size().toSize(), Qt::KeepAspectRatio, Qt::SmoothTransformation));
scaledStyle.applyTo(painter, mPen);
scaledStyle.drawShape(painter, QRectF(rect).center());
} else
{
mScatterStyle.applyTo(painter, mPen);
mScatterStyle.drawShape(painter, QRectF(rect).center());
}
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::applyFillAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedFill, QCP::aeFills);
}
void QCPPolarGraph::applyScattersAntialiasingHint(QCPPainter *painter) const
{
applyAntialiasingHint(painter, mAntialiasedScatters, QCP::aeScatters);
}
double QCPPolarGraph::pointDistance(const QPointF &pixelPoint, QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &closestData) const
{
closestData = mDataContainer->constEnd();
if (mDataContainer->isEmpty())
return -1.0;
if (mLineStyle == lsNone && mScatterStyle.isNone())
return -1.0;
// calculate minimum distances to graph data points and find closestData iterator:
double minDistSqr = (std::numeric_limits<double>::max)();
// determine which key range comes into question, taking selection tolerance around pos into account:
double posKeyMin, posKeyMax, dummy;
pixelsToCoords(pixelPoint-QPointF(mParentPlot->selectionTolerance(), mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()), posKeyMin, dummy);
pixelsToCoords(pixelPoint+QPointF(mParentPlot->selectionTolerance(), mParentPlot->selectionTolerance()), posKeyMax, dummy);
if (posKeyMin > posKeyMax)
qSwap(posKeyMin, posKeyMax);
// iterate over found data points and then choose the one with the shortest distance to pos:
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator begin = mDataContainer->findBegin(posKeyMin, true);
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator end = mDataContainer->findEnd(posKeyMax, true);
for (QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it=begin; it!=end; ++it)
{
const double currentDistSqr = QCPVector2D(coordsToPixels(it->key, it->value)-pixelPoint).lengthSquared();
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
{
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
closestData = it;
}
}
// calculate distance to graph line if there is one (if so, will probably be smaller than distance to closest data point):
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
{
// line displayed, calculate distance to line segments:
QVector<QPointF> lineData;
getLines(&lineData, QCPDataRange(0, dataCount()));
QCPVector2D p(pixelPoint);
for (int i=0; i<lineData.size()-1; ++i)
{
const double currentDistSqr = p.distanceSquaredToLine(lineData.at(i), lineData.at(i+1));
if (currentDistSqr < minDistSqr)
minDistSqr = currentDistSqr;
}
}
return qSqrt(minDistSqr);
}
int QCPPolarGraph::dataCount() const
{
return mDataContainer->size();
}
void QCPPolarGraph::getDataSegments(QList<QCPDataRange> &selectedSegments, QList<QCPDataRange> &unselectedSegments) const
{
selectedSegments.clear();
unselectedSegments.clear();
if (mSelectable == QCP::stWhole) // stWhole selection type draws the entire plottable with selected style if mSelection isn't empty
{
if (selected())
selectedSegments << QCPDataRange(0, dataCount());
else
unselectedSegments << QCPDataRange(0, dataCount());
} else
{
QCPDataSelection sel(selection());
sel.simplify();
selectedSegments = sel.dataRanges();
unselectedSegments = sel.inverse(QCPDataRange(0, dataCount())).dataRanges();
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::drawPolyline(QCPPainter *painter, const QVector<QPointF> &lineData) const
{
// if drawing solid line and not in PDF, use much faster line drawing instead of polyline:
if (mParentPlot->plottingHints().testFlag(QCP::phFastPolylines) &&
painter->pen().style() == Qt::SolidLine &&
!painter->modes().testFlag(QCPPainter::pmVectorized) &&
!painter->modes().testFlag(QCPPainter::pmNoCaching))
{
int i = 0;
bool lastIsNan = false;
const int lineDataSize = lineData.size();
while (i < lineDataSize && (qIsNaN(lineData.at(i).y()) || qIsNaN(lineData.at(i).x()))) // make sure first point is not NaN
++i;
++i; // because drawing works in 1 point retrospect
while (i < lineDataSize)
{
if (!qIsNaN(lineData.at(i).y()) && !qIsNaN(lineData.at(i).x())) // NaNs create a gap in the line
{
if (!lastIsNan)
painter->drawLine(lineData.at(i-1), lineData.at(i));
else
lastIsNan = false;
} else
lastIsNan = true;
++i;
}
} else
{
int segmentStart = 0;
int i = 0;
const int lineDataSize = lineData.size();
while (i < lineDataSize)
{
if (qIsNaN(lineData.at(i).y()) || qIsNaN(lineData.at(i).x()) || qIsInf(lineData.at(i).y())) // NaNs create a gap in the line. Also filter Infs which make drawPolyline block
{
painter->drawPolyline(lineData.constData()+segmentStart, i-segmentStart); // i, because we don't want to include the current NaN point
segmentStart = i+1;
}
++i;
}
// draw last segment:
painter->drawPolyline(lineData.constData()+segmentStart, lineDataSize-segmentStart);
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::getVisibleDataBounds(QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &end, const QCPDataRange &rangeRestriction) const
{
if (rangeRestriction.isEmpty())
{
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
begin = end;
} else
{
QCPPolarAxisAngular *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPPolarAxisRadial *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
// get visible data range:
if (mPeriodic)
{
begin = mDataContainer->constBegin();
end = mDataContainer->constEnd();
} else
{
begin = mDataContainer->findBegin(keyAxis->range().lower);
end = mDataContainer->findEnd(keyAxis->range().upper);
}
// limit lower/upperEnd to rangeRestriction:
mDataContainer->limitIteratorsToDataRange(begin, end, rangeRestriction); // this also ensures rangeRestriction outside data bounds doesn't break anything
}
}
/*! \internal
This method retrieves an optimized set of data points via \ref getOptimizedLineData, an branches
out to the line style specific functions such as \ref dataToLines, \ref dataToStepLeftLines, etc.
according to the line style of the graph.
\a lines will be filled with points in pixel coordinates, that can be drawn with the according
draw functions like \ref drawLinePlot and \ref drawImpulsePlot. The points returned in \a lines
aren't necessarily the original data points. For example, step line styles require additional
points to form the steps when drawn. If the line style of the graph is \ref lsNone, the \a
lines vector will be empty.
\a dataRange specifies the beginning and ending data indices that will be taken into account for
conversion. In this function, the specified range may exceed the total data bounds without harm:
a correspondingly trimmed data range will be used. This takes the burden off the user of this
function to check for valid indices in \a dataRange, e.g. when extending ranges coming from \ref
getDataSegments.
\see getScatters
*/
void QCPPolarGraph::getLines(QVector<QPointF> *lines, const QCPDataRange &dataRange) const
{
if (!lines) return;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator begin, end;
getVisibleDataBounds(begin, end, dataRange);
if (begin == end)
{
lines->clear();
return;
}
QVector<QCPGraphData> lineData;
if (mLineStyle != lsNone)
getOptimizedLineData(&lineData, begin, end);
switch (mLineStyle)
{
case lsNone: lines->clear(); break;
case lsLine: *lines = dataToLines(lineData); break;
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::getScatters(QVector<QPointF> *scatters, const QCPDataRange &dataRange) const
{
QCPPolarAxisAngular *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPPolarAxisRadial *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return; }
if (!scatters) return;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator begin, end;
getVisibleDataBounds(begin, end, dataRange);
if (begin == end)
{
scatters->clear();
return;
}
QVector<QCPGraphData> data;
getOptimizedScatterData(&data, begin, end);
scatters->resize(data.size());
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
{
if (!qIsNaN(data.at(i).value))
(*scatters)[i] = valueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key, data.at(i).value);
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::getOptimizedLineData(QVector<QCPGraphData> *lineData, const QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &begin, const QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator &end) const
{
lineData->clear();
// TODO: fix for log axes and thick line style
const QCPRange range = mValueAxis->range();
bool reversed = mValueAxis->rangeReversed();
const double clipMargin = range.size()*0.05; // extra distance from visible circle, so optimized outside lines can cover more angle before having to place a dummy point to prevent tangents
const double upperClipValue = range.upper + (reversed ? 0 : range.size()*0.05+clipMargin); // clip slightly outside of actual range to avoid line thicknesses to peek into visible circle
const double lowerClipValue = range.lower - (reversed ? range.size()*0.05+clipMargin : 0); // clip slightly outside of actual range to avoid line thicknesses to peek into visible circle
const double maxKeySkip = qAsin(qSqrt(clipMargin*(clipMargin+2*range.size()))/(range.size()+clipMargin))/M_PI*mKeyAxis->range().size(); // the maximum angle between two points on outer circle (r=clipValue+clipMargin) before connecting line becomes tangent to inner circle (r=clipValue)
double skipBegin = 0;
bool belowRange = false;
bool aboveRange = false;
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin;
while (it != end)
{
if (it->value < lowerClipValue)
{
if (aboveRange) // jumped directly from above to below visible range, draw previous point so entry angle is correct
{
aboveRange = false;
if (!reversed) // TODO: with inner radius, we'll need else case here with projected border point
lineData->append(*(it-1));
}
if (!belowRange)
{
skipBegin = it->key;
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(it->key, lowerClipValue));
belowRange = true;
}
if (it->key-skipBegin > maxKeySkip) // add dummy point if we're exceeding the maximum skippable angle (to prevent unintentional intersections with visible circle)
{
skipBegin += maxKeySkip;
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(skipBegin, lowerClipValue));
}
} else if (it->value > upperClipValue)
{
if (belowRange) // jumped directly from below to above visible range, draw previous point so entry angle is correct (if lower means outer, so if reversed axis)
{
belowRange = false;
if (reversed)
lineData->append(*(it-1));
}
if (!aboveRange)
{
skipBegin = it->key;
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(it->key, upperClipValue));
aboveRange = true;
}
if (it->key-skipBegin > maxKeySkip) // add dummy point if we're exceeding the maximum skippable angle (to prevent unintentional intersections with visible circle)
{
skipBegin += maxKeySkip;
lineData->append(QCPGraphData(skipBegin, upperClipValue));
}
} else // value within bounds where we don't optimize away points
{
if (aboveRange)
{
aboveRange = false;
if (!reversed)
lineData->append(*(it-1)); // just entered from above, draw previous point so entry angle is correct (if above means outer, so if not reversed axis)
}
if (belowRange)
{
belowRange = false;
if (reversed)
lineData->append(*(it-1)); // just entered from below, draw previous point so entry angle is correct (if below means outer, so if reversed axis)
}
lineData->append(*it); // inside visible circle, add point normally
}
++it;
}
// to make fill not erratic, add last point normally if it was outside visible circle:
if (aboveRange)
{
aboveRange = false;
if (!reversed)
lineData->append(*(it-1)); // just entered from above, draw previous point so entry angle is correct (if above means outer, so if not reversed axis)
}
if (belowRange)
{
belowRange = false;
if (reversed)
lineData->append(*(it-1)); // just entered from below, draw previous point so entry angle is correct (if below means outer, so if reversed axis)
}
}
void QCPPolarGraph::getOptimizedScatterData(QVector<QCPGraphData> *scatterData, QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator begin, QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator end) const
{
scatterData->clear();
const QCPRange range = mValueAxis->range();
bool reversed = mValueAxis->rangeReversed();
const double clipMargin = range.size()*0.05;
const double upperClipValue = range.upper + (reversed ? 0 : clipMargin); // clip slightly outside of actual range to avoid scatter size to peek into visible circle
const double lowerClipValue = range.lower - (reversed ? clipMargin : 0); // clip slightly outside of actual range to avoid scatter size to peek into visible circle
QCPGraphDataContainer::const_iterator it = begin;
while (it != end)
{
if (it->value > lowerClipValue && it->value < upperClipValue)
scatterData->append(*it);
++it;
}
}
/*! \internal
Takes raw data points in plot coordinates as \a data, and returns a vector containing pixel
coordinate points which are suitable for drawing the line style \ref lsLine.
The source of \a data is usually \ref getOptimizedLineData, and this method is called in \a
getLines if the line style is set accordingly.
\see dataToStepLeftLines, dataToStepRightLines, dataToStepCenterLines, dataToImpulseLines, getLines, drawLinePlot
*/
QVector<QPointF> QCPPolarGraph::dataToLines(const QVector<QCPGraphData> &data) const
{
QVector<QPointF> result;
QCPPolarAxisAngular *keyAxis = mKeyAxis.data();
QCPPolarAxisRadial *valueAxis = mValueAxis.data();
if (!keyAxis || !valueAxis) { qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid key or value axis"; return result; }
// transform data points to pixels:
result.resize(data.size());
for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i)
result[i] = mValueAxis->coordToPixel(data.at(i).key, data.at(i).value);
return result;
}
/* end of 'src/polar/polargraph.cpp' */
|