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Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?
From: |
Michael Goffioul |
Subject: |
Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"? |
Date: |
Thu, 8 Nov 2007 15:23:04 +0100 |
Matlab sets it to [1 1 1] by default, which looks better.
Other remarks concerning "mesh":
1) axes properties ("view") should only be changed if the axes object
is not in hold mode (that is gca.nextplot is not "add")
2) box should be disabled and grid should be enabled (again only in
non-hold mode)
The above remarks actually applies to any standard function producing
3D plots (surf, mesh, bar3...).
Michael.
- Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?,
Michael Goffioul <=
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, Kai Habel, 2007/11/08
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, David Bateman, 2007/11/09
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, David Bateman, 2007/11/09
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, John W. Eaton, 2007/11/09
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, David Bateman, 2007/11/09
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, John W. Eaton, 2007/11/09
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, David Bateman, 2007/11/09
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, John W. Eaton, 2007/11/09
- Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, David Bateman, 2007/11/09
Re: Why does "mesh " set surface "facecolor" to "none"?, Kai Habel, 2007/11/08