Mercurial > octave-nkf
view doc/interpreter/macros.texi @ 20320:6db2ea5556a4
Make use of the axes "ticklabelinterpreter" property (bug #45438)
* plot.txi: add an anchor pointing to usage of interpreter property
* genpropdoc.m: document axes "ticklabelinterpreter" property and text "interpreter" property
* gl-render.h: new private attribute "interpreter" that stores the interperter to be used in text_to_pixels
* gl-render.h (set_interpreter): new protected virtual method to set "interpreter"
* gl-render.cc (opengl_renderer::draw_axes): set interpreter before rendering tick labels
* gl-render.cc (opengl_renderer::text_to_pixels): make use of interpreter attribute
* graphics.cc (axes::properties::set_defaults): initialize "ticklabelinterpreter" instead of unused "interpreter"
* graphics.in.h (axes::properties): fix doubly defined defaults for "ticklabelinterpreter" and "interpreter" properties
author | Pantxo Diribarne <pantxo.diribarne@gmail.com> |
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date | Tue, 23 Jun 2015 22:21:50 +0200 |
parents | 4197fc428c7d |
children |
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@c Copyright (C) 2012-2015 John W. Eaton @c @c This file is part of Octave. @c @c Octave is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it @c under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the @c Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at @c your option) any later version. @c @c Octave is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT @c ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or @c FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License @c for more details. @c @c You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License @c along with Octave; see the file COPYING. If not, see @c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. @c The following macro marks words that aspell should ignore during @c spellchecking. Within Texinfo it has no effect as it merely replaces @c the macro call with the argument itself. @macro nospell {arg} \arg\ @end macro @c The following macro works around the Info/plain text expansion of @code{XXX} @c which is `XXX'. This looks particularly bad when the macro body is @c single or double-quoted text, such as a property value `"position"' @ifinfo @macro qcode{arg} \arg\ @end macro @end ifinfo @ifnotinfo @macro qcode{arg} @code{\arg\} @end macro @end ifnotinfo @c The following macro is used for the on-line help system, but we don't @c want lots of `See also: foo, bar, and baz' strings cluttering the @c printed manual (that information should be in the supporting text for @c each group of functions and variables). @c @c Implementation Note: @c For TeX, @vskip produces a nice separation. @c For Texinfo, '@sp 1' should work, but in practice produces ugly results @c for HTML. We use a simple blank line to produce the correct behavior. @macro seealso {args} @iftex @vskip 2pt @end iftex @ifnottex @end ifnottex @ifnotinfo @noindent @strong{See also:} \args\. @end ifnotinfo @ifinfo @noindent See also: \args\. @end ifinfo @end macro @c The following macro works around a situation where the Info/plain text @c expansion of the @code{XXX} macro is `XXX'. The use of the apostrophe @c can be confusing if the code segment itself ends with a transpose operator. @ifinfo @macro tcode{arg} \arg\ @end macro @end ifinfo @ifnotinfo @macro tcode{arg} @code{\arg\} @end macro @end ifnotinfo @c FIXME: someday, when Texinfo 5.X is standard, we might replace this with @c @backslashchar, which is a new addition to Texinfo. @macro xbackslashchar \\ @end macro