Hi Huidae,
El jue., 27 dic. 2018 22:17, Huidae Cho escribió:
> Hello Vero,
>
> Actually, 3b has a complete rectangle (NW in red, SE in blue)
>
Right :)
I overlooked the blue part. Still, IMHO, case 3b it's confusing.
Best,
Vero
On Thu, Dec 27, 2018 at 7:24 PM Veronica Andreo
> wrote:
>
>>
Hello Vero,
Actually, 3b has a complete rectangle (NW in red, SE in blue).
Regards,
Huidae
On Thu, Dec 27, 2018 at 7:24 PM Veronica Andreo
wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> +1 for showing computational region by default! It is a super handy
> feature :)
>
> Regarding the different colors, I do not have a
Hi all,
+1 for showing computational region by default! It is a super handy feature
:)
Regarding the different colors, I do not have a very strong opinion. I was
already used to blue for full region extent coincident with display and red
when display is different from region extent.
Case 3b
Maybe, this figure is easier to understand. blue for comp region and red
for partial version.
Black: display
Blue: full comp region
Red: partial intersection of display and full comp region
In this color scheme, it's very clear what we're looking at in the display.
[image: image.png]
Huidae
So how does it work now in one color?
1. display == full comp region: red box
2. display > and contains full comp region: red box smaller than display
3. display < and inside full comp region: no box at all? (can be confusing
with cases 4 & 5) or red box (can be confusing with case 1). I think we
On Mon, 24 Dec 2018, Micha Silver wrote:
I'd like to see the region displayed by default. Usually the first thing I
do is show the computational region in the map display. It's such a
fundamental part of how GRASS works...
+1
Rich
___
grass-user
On 24/12/2018 14:01, Martin Landa
wrote:
Hi,
st 26. 9. 2018 v 20:27 odesílatel Anna Petrášová napsal:
I think it changes color depending if you are zoomed inside or outside of the region. I find this behavior little bit confusing, perhaps
Hi,
st 26. 9. 2018 v 20:27 odesílatel Anna Petrášová napsal:
> I think it changes color depending if you are zoomed inside or outside of the
> region. I find this behavior little bit confusing, perhaps just having one
> color would be enough, and maybe don't show it when you are zoomed inside?
Ok, so blue means the current display is the full computational region
(OK). Red means the current display is a subset of the region (zoomed in,
OK). What about when you zoom out and the display contains and is bigger
than the computational region? It is still red. Not blue even if you are
seeing
On Wed, Sep 26, 2018 at 1:50 PM Huidae Cho wrote:
> This is a great feature, but I was wondering why it turns red on zoom
> in/out.
>
>
I think it changes color depending if you are zoomed inside or outside of
the region. I find this behavior little bit confusing, perhaps just having
one color
This is a great feature, but I was wondering why it turns red on zoom
in/out.
On Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 4:32 PM Markus Neteler wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 10:28 PM Veronica Andreo
> wrote:
> >
> > That's the computational region limits which are now visible by default
> in Map display and
On Tue, 25 Sep 2018, Markus Neteler wrote:
Just disable it at left bottom of the display window -> the trick is that
you need to *first* switch to "Show comp. extent" which isn't obvious:
Well, that is certainly well hidden. :-)
But I think that the "Show computational extent" should
El mar., 25 sept. 2018 a las 22:32, Markus Neteler ()
escribió:
> On Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 10:28 PM Veronica Andreo
> wrote:
> >
> > That's the computational region limits which are now visible by default
> in Map display and wx monitors.
> > However, I agree that an option to make it invisible
On Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 10:28 PM Veronica Andreo
wrote:
>
> That's the computational region limits which are now visible by default
in Map display and wx monitors.
> However, I agree that an option to make it invisible as before would make
sense.
Just disable it at left bottom of the display
That's the computational region limits which are now visible by default in
Map display and wx monitors.
However, I agree that an option to make it invisible as before would make
sense.
You can open a ticket for this
Vero
El mar., 25 sep. 2018 14:24, Rich Shepard
escribió:
> On Tue, 25 Sep
On Tue, 25 Sep 2018, Rich Shepard wrote:
Just built the latest release from 7.7.svn (I think it's 73396) and when I
run 'd.mon start=wx0' I see a vertical rectangle with a blue border in the
center (see attached screenshot.png). d.erase does nothing to it and
trying to print it as content
Just built the latest release from 7.7.svn (I think it's 73396) and when I
run 'd.mon start=wx0' I see a vertical rectangle with a blue border in the
center (see attached screenshot.png). d.erase does nothing to it and trying
to print it as content fails; there's nothing to print.
Any ideas
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