Thought the rest of you might be interested in this one, since I found
the solution.
All you would need, is to include the *surveys* in your map, then use
"symbol-hide group centreline" to hide them from the render, so the map
looks like this:
map foo
subsectionmap@subsection
othersubsection
Hmmm... OK, one more WILD idea:
Print the colored map as an atlas. There are a lot of parameters that go into
generating an atlas. I suspect with some playing around you could get somewhat
close to getting the portion of the cave you want on one page of the atlas.
>From there it is a simple
> Would the colours for the specific altitudes not be fixed if you used
> lookup?
They would, but the intention was that - rather than having to manually
select all the colours to get the perfect graduation of colours (which
you have to do if you use a lookup table), you could get Therion to
autom
gards,
Alastair Gott.
alastairg...@hotmail.com,
M: 07931779380.
From: Therion on behalf of Tarquin Wilton-Jones via
Therion
Sent: 02 December 2019 21:08
To: therion@speleo.sk
Cc: Tarquin Wilton-Jones
Subject: Re: [Therion] Colouring an elevation based on surveys
> It is quite easy to turn a PDF into a JPG, especially on Linux. Once
> that is done, then any decent photo editor can crop it. The legend will
> be a problem. I suppose you could crop out two sections (the legend and
> the cave portion you want) and paste them into a single image.
Thanks for the
Regarding the map-image: As far as I know, Therion will not produce a JPG file.
However ...
It is quite easy to turn a PDF into a JPG, especially on Linux. Once that is
done, then any decent photo editor can crop it. The legend will be a problem.
I suppose you could crop out two sections (t
Hi folks,
When you colour a survey by depth (color map-fg altitude), it colours it
based on the scraps that have been selected. This is normally useful.
When you produce an output with only one part of the survey (eg. a
zoomed-in section of a more complex part of the survey), however, it
would be