Re: Panel

From: Dennis Shea <shea_at_nyahnyahspammersnyahnyah>
Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2008 07:37:46 -0700

Hello

This is offline

You may have to ftp the script and data.
ftp ftp.cgd.ucar.edu
anonymous
email
cd incoming
put ...
put ...
quit

Then send haley_at_ucar.edu and shea_at_ucar.edu
an email naming that the files have been sent.

Regards
Gabrielle Ferreira Pires wrote:
> Hello all!
> The situation is:
> I have several netCDF files, but each one has a different interval.
> For example:
> the first file has values between 1.122 and 1.954, the second from
> 0.839 to 1.807
> and so on. But, as I need to compare the data of this files, I need to
> make a panel
> so that I'll have a common labelbar. But, whatever I try, it's not
> working.
> I receive a message saying that
>
> X axis failed: consider adjusting trXTensionF value
> warning:IrTransSetValues: error creating spline approximation for
> trXCoordPoints; defaulting to linear
> warning:_NhlCreateSplineCoordApprox: Attempt to create spline
> approximation for X axis failed: consider adjusting trXTensionF value
>
>
> I don't know if it is happening, maybe, because I don't have a fixed
> interval of values in each archive. But as I see in the panel
> examples, there are plots with different interval of values too.
>
> When I use either res_at_cnLevelSelectionMode = "ExplicitLevels" or
> res_at_cnLevelSelectionMode = "ManualLevels" to enforce the countour
> levels desired, the map gets red, or simply don't show up.
> Can you help me figure out what I'm missing?
> Thanks.
> --
> ---------------------------------------------------------
> Gabrielle Ferreira Pires
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> _______________________________________________
> ncl-talk mailing list
> ncl-talk_at_ucar.edu
> http://mailman.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/ncl-talk
>
Received on Wed Jan 16 2008 - 07:37:46 MST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Thu Jan 17 2008 - 12:33:19 MST