Circles#
- class sage.plot.circle.Circle(x, y, r, options)#
Bases:
GraphicPrimitive
Primitive class for the Circle graphics type. See circle? for information about actually plotting circles.
INPUT:
x – \(x\)-coordinate of center of Circle
y – \(y\)-coordinate of center of Circle
r – radius of Circle object
options – dict of valid plot options to pass to constructor
EXAMPLES:
Note this should normally be used indirectly via
circle
:sage: from sage.plot.circle import Circle sage: C = Circle(2,3,5,{'zorder':2}) sage: C Circle defined by (2.0,3.0) with r=5.0 sage: C.options()['zorder'] 2 sage: C.r 5.0
- get_minmax_data()#
Returns a dictionary with the bounding box data.
EXAMPLES:
sage: p = circle((3, 3), 1) sage: d = p.get_minmax_data() sage: d['xmin'] 2.0 sage: d['ymin'] 2.0
- plot3d(z=0, **kwds)#
Plots a 2D circle (actually a 50-gon) in 3D, with default height zero.
INPUT:
z
- optional 3D height above \(xy\)-plane.
EXAMPLES:
sage: circle((0,0), 1).plot3d() Graphics3d Object
This example uses this method implicitly, but does not pass the optional parameter z to this method:
sage: sum([circle((random(),random()), random()).plot3d(z=random()) for _ in range(20)]) Graphics3d Object
These examples are explicit, and pass z to this method:
sage: C = circle((2,pi), 2, hue=.8, alpha=.3, fill=True) sage: c = C[0] sage: d = c.plot3d(z=2) sage: d.texture.opacity 0.3
sage: C = circle((2,pi), 2, hue=.8, alpha=.3, linestyle='dotted') sage: c = C[0] sage: d = c.plot3d(z=2) sage: d.jmol_repr(d.testing_render_params())[0][-1] 'color $line_1 translucent 0.7 [204,0,255]'
- sage.plot.circle.circle(center, radius, alpha=1, fill=False, thickness=1, edgecolor='blue', facecolor='blue', linestyle='solid', zorder=5, legend_label=None, legend_color=None, clip=True, aspect_ratio=1.0, **options)#
Return a circle at a point center = \((x,y)\) (or \((x,y,z)\) and parallel to the \(xy\)-plane) with radius = \(r\). Type
circle.options
to see all options.OPTIONS:
alpha
- default: 1fill
- default: Falsethickness
- default: 1linestyle
- default:'solid'
(2D plotting only) The style of the line, which is one of'dashed'
,'dotted'
,'solid'
,'dashdot'
, or'--'
,':'
,'-'
,'-.'
, respectively.edgecolor
- default: ‘blue’ (2D plotting only)facecolor
- default: ‘blue’ (2D plotting only, useful only iffill=True
)rgbcolor
- 2D or 3D plotting. This option overridesedgecolor
andfacecolor
for 2D plotting.legend_label
- the label for this item in the legendlegend_color
- the color for the legend label
EXAMPLES:
The default color is blue, the default linestyle is solid, but this is easy to change:
sage: c = circle((1,1), 1) sage: c Graphics object consisting of 1 graphics primitive
sage: c = circle((1,1), 1, rgbcolor=(1,0,0), linestyle='-.') sage: c Graphics object consisting of 1 graphics primitive
We can also use this command to plot three-dimensional circles parallel to the \(xy\)-plane:
sage: c = circle((1,1,3), 1, rgbcolor=(1,0,0)) sage: c Graphics3d Object sage: type(c) <class 'sage.plot.plot3d.base.TransformGroup'>
To correct the aspect ratio of certain graphics, it is necessary to show with a
figsize
of square dimensions:sage: c.show(figsize=[5,5],xmin=-1,xmax=3,ymin=-1,ymax=3)
Here we make a more complicated plot, with many circles of different colors:
sage: g = Graphics() sage: step=6; ocur=1/5; paths=16 sage: PI = math.pi # numerical for speed -- fine for graphics sage: for r in range(1,paths+1): ....: for x,y in [((r+ocur)*math.cos(n), (r+ocur)*math.sin(n)) for n in srange(0, 2*PI+PI/step, PI/step)]: ....: g += circle((x,y), ocur, rgbcolor=hue(r/paths)) ....: rnext = (r+1)^2 ....: ocur = (rnext-r)-ocur sage: g.show(xmin=-(paths+1)^2, xmax=(paths+1)^2, ymin=-(paths+1)^2, ymax=(paths+1)^2, figsize=[6,6])
Note that the
rgbcolor
option overrides the other coloring options. This produces red fill in a blue circle:sage: circle((2,3), 1, fill=True, edgecolor='blue', facecolor='red') Graphics object consisting of 1 graphics primitive
This produces an all-green filled circle:
sage: circle((2,3), 1, fill=True, edgecolor='blue', rgbcolor='green') Graphics object consisting of 1 graphics primitive
The option
hue
overrides all other options, so be careful with its use. This produces a purplish filled circle:sage: circle((2,3), 1, fill=True, edgecolor='blue', rgbcolor='green', hue=.8) Graphics object consisting of 1 graphics primitive
And circles with legends:
sage: circle((4,5), 1, rgbcolor='yellow', fill=True, legend_label='the sun').show(xmin=0, ymin=0)
sage: circle((4,5), 1, legend_label='the sun', legend_color='yellow').show(xmin=0, ymin=0)
Extra options will get passed on to show(), as long as they are valid:
sage: circle((0, 0), 2, figsize=[10,10]) # That circle is huge! Graphics object consisting of 1 graphics primitive
sage: circle((0, 0), 2).show(figsize=[10,10]) # These are equivalent