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Diffstat (limited to 'ui/qt/widgets/qcustomplot.cpp')
-rw-r--r-- | ui/qt/widgets/qcustomplot.cpp | 35541 |
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diff --git a/ui/qt/widgets/qcustomplot.cpp b/ui/qt/widgets/qcustomplot.cpp new file mode 100644 index 00000000..e686fce4 --- /dev/null +++ b/ui/qt/widgets/qcustomplot.cpp @@ -0,0 +1,35541 @@ +/*************************************************************************** +** ** +** QCustomPlot, an easy to use, modern plotting widget for Qt ** +** Copyright (C) 2011-2022 Emanuel Eichhammer ** +** ** +**************************************************************************** +** Author: Emanuel Eichhammer ** +** Website/Contact: https://www.qcustomplot.com/ ** +** Date: 06.11.22 ** +** Version: 2.1.1 ** +** ** +** Emanuel Eichhammer has granted Wireshark permission to use QCustomPlot ** +** under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2. ** +** Date: 22.12.15 (V1.3.2) ** +** 13.09.19 (V2.0.1) ** +** ** +** SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later ** +****************************************************************************/ + +#include "qcustomplot.h" + + +/* including file 'src/vector2d.cpp' */ +/* modified 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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::Antialiasing); +#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::Antialiasing); + 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::Antialiasing); +#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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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=static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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=static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, size 27519 */ + + +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// +//////////////////// QCPLabelPainterPrivate +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// + +/*! 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 static_cast<int>(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); + default: qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid mode for anchor side: " << mAnchorSide; break; + } + break; + } + case amSkewedUpright: + // fall through + case amSkewedRotated: + { + QCPVector2D anchorNormal(tickPos-mAnchorReference); + if (mAnchorReferenceType == artTangent) + anchorNormal = anchorNormal.perpendicular(); + anchorNormal.normalize(); + return tickPos+(anchorNormal*mPadding).toPointF(); + } + default: qDebug() << Q_FUNC_INFO << "invalid mode for anchor mode: " << mAnchorMode; break; + } + 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 = static_cast<int>(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), 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, size 18693 */ + +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// +//////////////////// 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=static_cast<int>(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, static_cast<int>(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 = std::pow(10.0, std::floor(std::log10(input))); + 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 = static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, size 99911 */ + + +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// +//////////////////// 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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(text.indexOf(QString(mParentPlot->locale().exponential()))); + 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, size 127625 */ + +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// +//////////////////// 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 + https://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 true value 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); + 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 = static_cast<int>(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 static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 static_cast<int>(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 static_cast<int>(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 static_cast<int>(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. + + \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) + + // detect if the device pixel ratio has changed (e.g. moving window between different DPI screens), and adapt buffers if necessary: +#ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_SUPPORTED +# ifdef QCP_DEVICEPIXELRATIO_FLOAT + double newDpr = devicePixelRatioF(); +# else + double newDpr = devicePixelRatio(); +# endif + if (!qFuzzyCompare(mBufferDevicePixelRatio, newDpr)) + { + setBufferDevicePixelRatio(newDpr); + replot(QCustomPlot::rpQueuedRefresh); + return; + } +#endif + + QCPPainter painter(this); + if (painter.isActive()) + { +#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(6, 0, 0) + painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing); // 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(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=static_cast<int>(mLayers.size())-1; layerIndex>=0; --layerIndex) + { + const QList<QCPLayerable*> layerables = mLayers.at(layerIndex)->children(); + for (int i=static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, size 25408 */ + + +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// +//////////////////// 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)) + { + qint64 index = qint64((!logarithmic ? value-range.lower : qLn(value/range.lower)) * posToIndexFactor); + if (!mPeriodic) + { + index = qBound(qint64(0), index, qint64(mLevelCount-1)); + } else + { + index %= mLevelCount; + if (index < 0) + index += mLevelCount; + } +#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(6, 0, 0) + scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.at(static_cast<int>(index)); +#else + scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.at(index); +#endif + } 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)) + { + qint64 index = qint64((!logarithmic ? value-range.lower : qLn(value/range.lower)) * posToIndexFactor); + if (!mPeriodic) + { + index = qBound(qint64(0), index, qint64(mLevelCount-1)); + } else + { + index %= mLevelCount; + if (index < 0) + index += mLevelCount; + } + if (alpha[dataIndexFactor*i] == 255) + { +#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(6, 0, 0) + scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.at(static_cast<int>(index)); +#else + scanLine[i] = mColorBuffer.at(index); +#endif + } else + { +#if QT_VERSION < QT_VERSION_CHECK(6, 0, 0) + const QRgb rgb = mColorBuffer.at(static_cast<int>(index)); +#else + const QRgb rgb = mColorBuffer.at(index); +#endif + 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 = const_cast<const QMap<double, QColor>*>(&mColorStops)->lowerBound(position); // force using the const lowerBound method + 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 handled 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:57, size 74926 */ + +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// +//////////////////// 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 = static_cast<int>(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 QCPGraphData ¤t = data.at(i); + if (!qIsNaN(current.value)) + { + const double key = keyAxis->coordToPixel(current.key); + result[i*2+0].setX(valueAxis->coordToPixel(0)); + result[i*2+0].setY(key); + result[i*2+1].setX(valueAxis->coordToPixel(current.value)); + result[i*2+1].setY(key); + } else + { + result[i*2+0] = QPointF(0, 0); + result[i*2+1] = QPointF(0, 0); + } + } + } else // key axis is horizontal + { + for (int i=0; i<data.size(); ++i) + { + const QCPGraphData ¤t = data.at(i); + if (!qIsNaN(current.value)) + { + 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)); + } else + { + result[i*2+0] = QPointF(0, 0); + result[i*2+1] = QPointF(0, 0); + } + } + } + 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): + // [ However, make sure that the span is at least 1 pixel ] + double valuePixelSpan = qMax(1.0, qAbs(valueAxis->coordToPixel(minValue)-valueAxis->coordToPixel(maxValue))); + double pointsToAdd = valuePixelSpan/4.0; // add approximately one data point for every 4 value pixels + int dataModulo = qMax(1, qRound(intervalDataCount/pointsToAdd)); + 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): + // [ However, make sure that the span is at least 1 pixel ] + double valuePixelSpan = qAbs(valueAxis->coordToPixel(minValue)-valueAxis->coordToPixel(maxValue)); + double pointsToAdd = valuePixelSpan/4.0; // add approximately one data point for every 4 value pixels + int dataModulo = qMax(1, qRound(intervalDataCount/pointsToAdd)); + 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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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=static_cast<int>(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=static_cast<int>(data->size())-1; i>=0; --i) + { + if (data->at(i).x() < x) + { + if (i<data->size()-1) + return i+1; + else + return static_cast<int>(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=static_cast<int>(data->size())-1; i>=0; --i) + { + if (data->at(i).y() < y) + { + if (i<data->size()-1) + return i+1; + else + return static_cast<int>(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 = 0.0, posKeyMax = 0.0, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 = (static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:57, 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 = static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, size 48189 */ + +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// +//////////////////// 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 && other.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 = std::numeric_limits<double>::max(); + double maxHeight = -std::numeric_limits<double>::max(); + 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; + memset(mData, z, dataCount*sizeof(*mData)); + 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; + memset(mAlpha, alpha, dataCount*sizeof(*mAlpha)); + 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 = 0.0, posValue = 0.0; + 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 2022-11-06T12:45:57, 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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 = 0.0, posValue = 0.0; + 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 = 0.0, posValue = 0.0; + 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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<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 = static_cast<int>(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 static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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, static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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, static_cast<int>(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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:56, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:57, 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; + */ + 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 2022-11-06T12:45:57, 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 static_cast<int>(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; + return spNone; + */ + 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 = 0.0, radiusCoord = 0.0; + 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 = 0.0, radiusCoord = 0.0; + 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 2022-11-06T12:45:57, 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 2022-11-06T12:45:57, size 44035 */ + + +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// +//////////////////// QCPPolarLegendItem +//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// + +/*! 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 = static_cast<int>(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 = int(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 = 0.0, posKeyMax = 0.0, 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 = static_cast<int>(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 = static_cast<int>(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; // Dead store + 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; // Dead store + 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' */ + + |