Plane

DESCRIPTION

The Plane application displays a 2 or 3 dimensional data set as a raster image on a plane. Optionally, it can use the same or a second data set to represent a perspective height. The image may be either a single slice or a three slice RGB composite. One or two data sets may be loaded; their names are given in the upper left corner of the window. If there is just one data set, then it will also act as the height field.  The rendered image is three dimensional and may be rotated, panned and zoomed. The application window may be resized with the size of the rendered plane adjusting accordingly.
 

Controls

Buttons
Rotate: This button brings up the 2AxisRotator tool already linked to Plane without the need to go to the Tools menu. This control may not be unlinked from Plane, although it may be used to drive other applications. The 2AxisRotator may be killed by clicking on the button again.

Pan Zoom: This button brings up the PanZoom Slider tool already linked to Plane without the need to go to the Tools menu. This control may not be unlinked from Plane, although it may be used to drive other applications. The PanZoom Slider may be killed by clicking on the button again.

LightTool: This button brings up a LightTool already linked into Plane that will control details of the lighting calculations. See documentation on the LightTool application for more information.

Image: Renders a color image on the plane when on. A wire mesh is drawn when off. Making manipulations with the image off may be convenient with a big data set because moderate delays occur before drawing images from large data sets.

RGB: This button drastically affects how Plane displays its data. When RGB mode is turned on (by pressing the button---green means on), three slices are displayed simultaneously. One slice is displayed in monochrome red, one in green, and one in blue. Use an RGBSlider to choose three different slices for this mode. If all three slices are the same one, then RGB mode just turns the image monochrome grey. That's probably not what you want.

Lights On: Hitting this button will turn on simulated lighting. The plane is drawn with one light source which apparently comes from over the user's right shoulder. Turning on lights will make small surface details much more noticeable at the cost of some display time. Use the Light tool to change some of the lighting parameters.

Thumb Wheels

Height: The data are rendered not at a constant elevation, but rather with a height determined by the data in the height field.  The scale of the height is controlled by the thumbwheel with upward rotation producing greater heights.

Menus
Menu

Expand/Normal Colors temporarily changes the color palette used to display the image. If the colors are expanded, the palette covers only the range of data values in the current slice. If the colors are normal, the palette covers all the data values in the whole database.

Flat Shading/Gouraud : The plane will be rendered without/with Gouraud shading.  Gouraud shading makes color intensities vary smoothly by interpolating the color between data points. The difference will be most noticeable when the plane is large or when the number of data points in the original data set is small. In addition, when  height is enabled, the Gouraud shaded plane will be smoothly drawn, while with Gouraud shading off each data point will be rendered as a distinct square at a separate height. The Gouraud shading also determines whether the height is interpolated.

Overlays

The Overlay menu allows the addition of overlay graphics onto the image drawn. Standard overlays include a grid, 2 coastline projections (one for longitudes 0-360, one for longitudes labeled -180 to 180). If an overlay is selected, it will be drawn, reselecting it removes it. For more information, see overlays.

Applications to Connect to This Application

Any Data Object may be connected via the "drag 'n drop" button to this application. The Color Tool will change the palette used in Plane without changing the database's palette. Histogram can be linked in to limit the palette used in Plane. RGBSlider will control Plane in RGB mode; Slider will control Plane in normal mode. Each will control which slice of the database Plane is to display. The Animator can use Plane to display its output. A 2AxisRotator controls the angle from which the Plane is viewed. When the rotator is in "track" mode the Plane will be drawn as the more quickly rendered autodecimated view to allow interactive positioning. The 3AxisRotator rotates the Plane about any of three orthogonal axes. There are three separate sliders, one for each axis. The PanZoom Slider also controls the view of Plane. Panning changes the view by translation of the viewer along the screen. Zooming translates the viewer perpendicular to the screen allowing for close up or far away views of Plane. Contour will determine isovalue lines on a given slice. These may then be drawn on Plane if the Contour tool is linked in . The LightTool allows for manipulations of the lighting of the Plane when the "Lights On" button is pressed.
 
 
 

Applications to Connect This Application to

None

Tricks and Gotchas

If the image is only partially drawn, try resizing the window slightly to force a re-draw.


WebWinds Home / Oct 5, 2001