Set cmap1 colors using a piece-wise linear relationship
plscmap1l(itype, npts, intensity, coord1, coord2, coord3, alt_hue_path)
Set cmap1 colors using a piece-wise linear relationship between intensity index (from 0. to 1.) of cmap1 and position in HLS or RGB color space (see the PLplot documentation). May be called at any time.
The idea here is to specify a number of control points that define the mapping between input cmap1 intensity indices and HLS (or RGB). Between these points, linear interpolation is used which gives a smooth variation of color with intensity index. Any number of control points may be specified, located at arbitrary positions, although typically 2 - 4 are enough. Another way of stating this is that we are traversing a given number of lines through HLS (or RGB) space as we move through cmap1 intensity indices. The control points at the minimum and maximum position (0 and 1) must always be specified. By adding more control points you can get more variation. One good technique for plotting functions that vary about some expected average is to use an additional 2 control points in the center (position ~= 0.5) that are the same lightness as the background (typically white for paper output, black for crt), and same hue as the boundary control points. This allows the highs and lows to be very easily distinguished.
Each control point must specify the cmap1 intensity index and the associated three coordinates in HLS or RGB space. The first point must correspond to position = 0, and the last to position = 1.
The default behaviour is for the hue to be linearly interpolated between the control points. Since the hue lies in the range [0, 360] this corresponds to interpolation around the "front" of the color wheel (red<->green<->blue<->red). If alt_hue_path[i] is true, then an alternative interpolation is used between control points i and i+1. If hue[i+1]-hue[i] > 0 then interpolation is between hue[i] and hue[i+1] - 360, otherwise between hue[i] and hue[i+1] + 360. You can consider this as interpolation around the "back" or "reverse" of the color wheel. Specifying alt_hue_path=NULL is equivalent to setting alt_hue_path[] = false for every control point.
Examples of interpolation Huealt_hue_pathcolor scheme[120 240]falsegreen-cyan-blue[240 120]falseblue-cyan-green[120 240]truegreen-yellow-red-magenta-blue[240 120]trueblue-magenta-red-yellow-green
Bounds on coordinatesRGBR[0, 1]magnitudeRGBG[0, 1]magnitudeRGBB[0, 1]magnitudeHLShue[0, 360]degreesHLSlightness[0, 1]magnitudeHLSsaturation[0, 1]magnitude
Redacted form: plscmap1l(itype, intensity, coord1, coord2, coord3, alt_hue_path)
This function is used in examples 8,11,12,15,20,21.
itype (PLBOOL, input)
true: RGB, false: HLS.
npts (PLINT, input)
number of control points
intensity (const PLFLT *, input)
intensity index for each control point (between 0.0 and 1.0, in ascending order)
coord1 (const PLFLT *, input)
first coordinate (H or R) for each control point
coord2 (const PLFLT *, input)
second coordinate (L or G) for each control point
coord3 (const PLFLT *, input)
third coordinate (S or B) for each control point
alt_hue_path (const PLBOOL *, input)
alternative interpolation method flag for each control point. (alt_hue_path[i] refers to the interpolation interval between the i and i + 1 control points).
Many developers (who are credited at http://plplot.sourceforge.net/credits.php) have contributed to PLplot over its long history.
PLplot documentation at http://plplot.sourceforge.net/documentation.php.