 | CMVUCDIPixelPlot Method |
Create a color pixel-style plot of CDI data.
Namespace:
GeoEngine.Core.GXNetX
Assembly:
geoengine.core.gxnetx (in geoengine.core.gxnetx.dll) Version: 2024.2.0.25
Syntaxpublic static void CDIPixelPlot(
CGXNETCore gxNetShared,
CMVIEW mview,
string group,
CVA data_va,
CVA elev_va,
CVV xvv,
CITR itr
)
public static void CDIPixelPlot(
CGXNETCore gxNetShared,
CMVIEW mview,
string group,
CVA data_va,
CVA elev_va,
CVV xvv,
CITR itr
)
Public Shared Sub CDIPixelPlot (
gxNetShared As CGXNETCore,
mview As CMVIEW,
group As String,
data_va As CVA,
elev_va As CVA,
xvv As CVV,
itr As CITR
)
Public Shared Sub CDIPixelPlot (
gxNetShared As CGXNETCore,
mview As CMVIEW,
group As String,
data_va As CVA,
elev_va As CVA,
xvv As CVV,
itr As CITR
)
public:
static void CDIPixelPlot(
CGXNETCore^ gxNetShared,
CMVIEW^ mview,
String^ group,
CVA^ data_va,
CVA^ elev_va,
CVV^ xvv,
CITR^ itr
)
public:
static void CDIPixelPlot(
CGXNETCore^ gxNetShared,
CMVIEW^ mview,
String^ group,
CVA^ data_va,
CVA^ elev_va,
CVV^ xvv,
CITR^ itr
)
static member CDIPixelPlot :
gxNetShared : CGXNETCore *
mview : CMVIEW *
group : string *
data_va : CVA *
elev_va : CVA *
xvv : CVV *
itr : CITR -> unit
static member CDIPixelPlot :
gxNetShared : CGXNETCore *
mview : CMVIEW *
group : string *
data_va : CVA *
elev_va : CVA *
xvv : CVV *
itr : CITR -> unit
Parameters
- gxNetShared
- Type: GeoEngine.Core.GXNetXCGXNETCore
A shared CGXNETCore - mview
- Type: GeoEngine.Core.GXNetXCMVIEW
View - group
- Type: SystemString
Name of the group to create - data_va
- Type: GeoEngine.Core.GXNetXCVA
Data [lNR x lNC] - elev_va
- Type: GeoEngine.Core.GXNetXCVA
Elevations (Y) [lNR x lNC] - xvv
- Type: GeoEngine.Core.GXNetXCVV
Position (X) [lNC] - itr
- Type: GeoEngine.Core.GXNetXCITR
Data color transform
Remarks
Draws a single colored rectangle for each data point in
Conductivity-Depth data (for example). It is similar to the
result you get if you plot a grid with Pixel=1, but in this
data the row and column widths are not necessarily constant,
and the data can move up and down with topography. The pixels
are sized so that the boundaries are half-way between adjacent
data, both vertically and horizontally.
See Also