Mapping a list into a phase plot












4












$begingroup$


Consider the following list



list = {{1,1,1},{1,2,1},{1,3,2},{1,4,2},
{2,1,1},{2,2,2},{2,3,2},{2,4,2},
{3,1,1},{3,2,2},{3,3,3},{3,4,3},
{4,1,2},{4,2,3},{4,3,3},{4,4,3}};


The list is composed of sublists in the form of {x,y,value}, where the first and second element are the coordinates, and the third element is a value which should be assigned in the phase plot.



In the example above, I would a different color to be assigned to a different number (say 1 - blue, 2 - red, 3 - green).



The result should look like the following



enter image description here



This is a simplified example of a much larger data set, with very small spacings between the {x,y} values, which should eventually produce several colors that represent phases.










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$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Why do you call this a "phase plot"?
    $endgroup$
    – David G. Stork
    10 hours ago
















4












$begingroup$


Consider the following list



list = {{1,1,1},{1,2,1},{1,3,2},{1,4,2},
{2,1,1},{2,2,2},{2,3,2},{2,4,2},
{3,1,1},{3,2,2},{3,3,3},{3,4,3},
{4,1,2},{4,2,3},{4,3,3},{4,4,3}};


The list is composed of sublists in the form of {x,y,value}, where the first and second element are the coordinates, and the third element is a value which should be assigned in the phase plot.



In the example above, I would a different color to be assigned to a different number (say 1 - blue, 2 - red, 3 - green).



The result should look like the following



enter image description here



This is a simplified example of a much larger data set, with very small spacings between the {x,y} values, which should eventually produce several colors that represent phases.










share|improve this question









$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Why do you call this a "phase plot"?
    $endgroup$
    – David G. Stork
    10 hours ago














4












4








4





$begingroup$


Consider the following list



list = {{1,1,1},{1,2,1},{1,3,2},{1,4,2},
{2,1,1},{2,2,2},{2,3,2},{2,4,2},
{3,1,1},{3,2,2},{3,3,3},{3,4,3},
{4,1,2},{4,2,3},{4,3,3},{4,4,3}};


The list is composed of sublists in the form of {x,y,value}, where the first and second element are the coordinates, and the third element is a value which should be assigned in the phase plot.



In the example above, I would a different color to be assigned to a different number (say 1 - blue, 2 - red, 3 - green).



The result should look like the following



enter image description here



This is a simplified example of a much larger data set, with very small spacings between the {x,y} values, which should eventually produce several colors that represent phases.










share|improve this question









$endgroup$




Consider the following list



list = {{1,1,1},{1,2,1},{1,3,2},{1,4,2},
{2,1,1},{2,2,2},{2,3,2},{2,4,2},
{3,1,1},{3,2,2},{3,3,3},{3,4,3},
{4,1,2},{4,2,3},{4,3,3},{4,4,3}};


The list is composed of sublists in the form of {x,y,value}, where the first and second element are the coordinates, and the third element is a value which should be assigned in the phase plot.



In the example above, I would a different color to be assigned to a different number (say 1 - blue, 2 - red, 3 - green).



The result should look like the following



enter image description here



This is a simplified example of a much larger data set, with very small spacings between the {x,y} values, which should eventually produce several colors that represent phases.







plotting list-manipulation






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share|improve this question










asked 11 hours ago









jarheadjarhead

771414




771414








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Why do you call this a "phase plot"?
    $endgroup$
    – David G. Stork
    10 hours ago














  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Why do you call this a "phase plot"?
    $endgroup$
    – David G. Stork
    10 hours ago








2




2




$begingroup$
Why do you call this a "phase plot"?
$endgroup$
– David G. Stork
10 hours ago




$begingroup$
Why do you call this a "phase plot"?
$endgroup$
– David G. Stork
10 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















8












$begingroup$

E.g.



Graphics[{{Blue, Red, Green}[[#3]], Disk[{#2, #}, 1/3]} & @@@ list,
AxesOrigin -> {1, 1}/2, FrameStyle -> FontSize -> 28,
FrameTicks -> {Range[4], Range[4], None, None}, Frame -> True,
FrameLabel -> {Style["Y", 24], Rotate[Style["X", 24], -90 °]}]







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Perhaps it is personal preference, but would it be better practice to use the option RotateLabel -> False rather than rotate the "X" label manually?
    $endgroup$
    – lastresort
    4 hours ago











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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









8












$begingroup$

E.g.



Graphics[{{Blue, Red, Green}[[#3]], Disk[{#2, #}, 1/3]} & @@@ list,
AxesOrigin -> {1, 1}/2, FrameStyle -> FontSize -> 28,
FrameTicks -> {Range[4], Range[4], None, None}, Frame -> True,
FrameLabel -> {Style["Y", 24], Rotate[Style["X", 24], -90 °]}]







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Perhaps it is personal preference, but would it be better practice to use the option RotateLabel -> False rather than rotate the "X" label manually?
    $endgroup$
    – lastresort
    4 hours ago
















8












$begingroup$

E.g.



Graphics[{{Blue, Red, Green}[[#3]], Disk[{#2, #}, 1/3]} & @@@ list,
AxesOrigin -> {1, 1}/2, FrameStyle -> FontSize -> 28,
FrameTicks -> {Range[4], Range[4], None, None}, Frame -> True,
FrameLabel -> {Style["Y", 24], Rotate[Style["X", 24], -90 °]}]







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Perhaps it is personal preference, but would it be better practice to use the option RotateLabel -> False rather than rotate the "X" label manually?
    $endgroup$
    – lastresort
    4 hours ago














8












8








8





$begingroup$

E.g.



Graphics[{{Blue, Red, Green}[[#3]], Disk[{#2, #}, 1/3]} & @@@ list,
AxesOrigin -> {1, 1}/2, FrameStyle -> FontSize -> 28,
FrameTicks -> {Range[4], Range[4], None, None}, Frame -> True,
FrameLabel -> {Style["Y", 24], Rotate[Style["X", 24], -90 °]}]







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



E.g.



Graphics[{{Blue, Red, Green}[[#3]], Disk[{#2, #}, 1/3]} & @@@ list,
AxesOrigin -> {1, 1}/2, FrameStyle -> FontSize -> 28,
FrameTicks -> {Range[4], Range[4], None, None}, Frame -> True,
FrameLabel -> {Style["Y", 24], Rotate[Style["X", 24], -90 °]}]








share|improve this answer












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share|improve this answer










answered 11 hours ago









CoolwaterCoolwater

15.2k32553




15.2k32553












  • $begingroup$
    Perhaps it is personal preference, but would it be better practice to use the option RotateLabel -> False rather than rotate the "X" label manually?
    $endgroup$
    – lastresort
    4 hours ago


















  • $begingroup$
    Perhaps it is personal preference, but would it be better practice to use the option RotateLabel -> False rather than rotate the "X" label manually?
    $endgroup$
    – lastresort
    4 hours ago
















$begingroup$
Perhaps it is personal preference, but would it be better practice to use the option RotateLabel -> False rather than rotate the "X" label manually?
$endgroup$
– lastresort
4 hours ago




$begingroup$
Perhaps it is personal preference, but would it be better practice to use the option RotateLabel -> False rather than rotate the "X" label manually?
$endgroup$
– lastresort
4 hours ago


















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