I just stumbled across this interesting blog:
http://berkgeveci.github.io/2015/01/08/h5py-writer-reader/

If you have some kind of python knowledge, especially the "HDF5Reader" part should be very interesting for you.
For this you don't even need the XDMF files.

-Armin



On 01/28/2015 10:55 PM, Martin Huarte Espinosa wrote:
Dear Armin and Dave: thanks for your replies. I will try.

Martin.

On Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 2:30 PM, Armin Wehrfritz <dkxl...@gmail.com
<mailto:dkxl...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    For such kind of data I typically write a custom made XDMF [1] file.
    XDMF is basically a XML wrapper that contains the description of the
    HDF5 data file.
    What comes in handy in your cases, is that you have the heavy data
    already in a HDF5 file.

    I typically write the XDMF file with a hand crafted python script
    since I typically deal with data sets from various source.
    However, there is also a XDMF library [2,3], which should provide
    some convenient advantages.

    The XDMF file format is very well supported by ParaView, or VisIt
    for that matter.

    I attached 2 XDMF files, so you get an idea what I'm talking of (the
    HDF5 data files are missing though).

    -Armin

    [1] http://www.xdmf.org/index.php/__Main_Page
    <http://www.xdmf.org/index.php/Main_Page>
    [2] http://www.xdmf.org/index.php/__Get_Xdmf
    <http://www.xdmf.org/index.php/Get_Xdmf>
    [3] http://www.xdmf.org/index.php/__Write_Xdmf
    <http://www.xdmf.org/index.php/Write_Xdmf>



    On 01/28/2015 09:52 PM, Martín Huarte E wrote:

        Dear Paraview community: Good day. I need assistance on
        visualizing a
        matlab file? Any tips will be greatly appreciated. Thanks.


        Details:
        I need to visualize temperature distribution in a volume.  The
        volume is
        a wedge-like slice of a hollow cylinder (shown in the attached
        schematic).

        The calculations are made in MATLAB.  The three-dimensional
        matrices of
        the solution (T) and the node-coordinates (X, Y and Z) are saved
        in a
        HDF5 file.

        So far, I have not been able to make ParaView to visualize the
        result in
        the actual geometry. They get the length, width and height of
        the volume
        and simply build a cuboid out of them.

        Thanks

        My best, Martín
        __
        /Martín Huarte-Espinosa, Ph.D./
        /Computational Physicist  - //High Performance Computing Specialist/
        /linkedin.com/pub/martin-__huarte-espinosa/59/6b7/13a
        <http://linkedin.com/pub/martin-huarte-espinosa/59/6b7/13a>
        <http://linkedin.com/pub/__martin-huarte-espinosa/59/6b7/__13a
        <http://linkedin.com/pub/martin-huarte-espinosa/59/6b7/13a>>/





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--

My best, Martín
__
/Martín Huarte-Espinosa, Ph.D./
/Computational Physicist  - //High Performance Computing Specialist/
/linkedin.com/pub/martin-huarte-espinosa/59/6b7/13a
<http://linkedin.com/pub/martin-huarte-espinosa/59/6b7/13a>/
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