[yt-users] xstick label in yt slice plot
Nathan Goldbaum
nathan12343 at gmail.com
Fri May 20 12:09:06 PDT 2016
Hi Yanfei,
So I looked a little closer at the code. It looks like the 'domain' origin
sets the origin of the plot at the lower-left-hand corner of the *domain*,
which for your dataset is *not* the same thing as setting the origin of the
plot at the origin of the simulation's coordinate system.
What you want is to set the origin to 'native', which sets the origin to be
the same as the origin of the simulation coordinate system. Here is an
example with that choice:
https://gist.github.com/e61ac07b44e5083ea88fcf1bf24a3459
Hope that's helpful,
Nathan
On Thu, May 19, 2016 at 3:29 PM, Jiang, Yanfei <yanfei.jiang at cfa.harvard.edu
> wrote:
> Hi Nathan,
>
> Here is a much smaller data file that you can try:
>
>
> https://drive.google.com/file/d/0ByTG4wYr-7aOdUxUR0dMWGZVQmM/view?usp=sharing
>
> Now the inner boundary is 28 and it is labeled as 0.
>
>
> On Thu, May 19, 2016 at 3:07 PM, Nathan Goldbaum <nathan12343 at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi Yanfei,
>>
>> John ZuHone gave me access to your dataset - I think the issue is that
>> ds.domain_left_edge is [2, 0, 0], and that is confusing the code that
>> generates the plot coordinates for spherical geometries.
>>
>> I don't think this is an issue with the frontend, but a general issue
>> with plotting data in spherical coordinates with an inner radial boundary.
>>
>> I don't have any test datasets besides yours that look like this, and
>> yours is pretty large, so it would be nice to have a smaller dataset to
>> play with.
>>
>> -Nathan
>>
>> On Thu, May 19, 2016 at 10:59 AM, Jiang, Yanfei <
>> yanfei.jiang at cfa.harvard.edu> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I am trying to make a slice plot with the new capability for
>>> spherical polar grid in Athena++ data John developed. The attached
>>> notebook.png shows what I am doing. I take a slice and the origin is set to
>>> "domain". The image.png is the image from the notebook. In the slice image,
>>> the empty space near the center corresponds to the inner radial boundary of
>>> the original spherical coordinate, which is 2 in this case. Therefore, I
>>> think the x stick where is 0 in the plot should be 2. Do you know any way
>>> to fix this?
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Yan-Fei Jiang
>>>
>>> Einstein Fellow
>>> Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
>>> 60 Garden Street, Cambridge MA USA 02138
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> yt-users mailing list
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>>> http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-users-spacepope.org
>>>
>>>
>>
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>
>
> --
> Yan-Fei Jiang
>
> Einstein Fellow
> Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
> 60 Garden Street, Cambridge MA USA 02138
>
> _______________________________________________
> yt-users mailing list
> yt-users at lists.spacepope.org
> http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-users-spacepope.org
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>
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