Curve Colors
Posted: Sat May 22, 2004 10:30 am
Let me say that I was trying to make some graphs fast, downloaded the program, and with a few posts here was able to do what I needed without reading any of the directions. This says a lot about how easy the program is to use.
I would suggest though that the default colors for the curves be organized so that each succesive color is different, not just a different shade or hue. For example, the default, on mine is for curve 1 to be dark red and curve 2 is a lighter red and curve 3 is magenta or pink. The first XY plot I made you could hardly tell the difference between the two curves I was using.
My suggestion is to make them something like:
1 - Red
2 - Blue
3 - Green
4 - Yellow (although you can't see this very well on a white background)
5- Light Red
6 - Light Blue
7 - Light Green
etc.
It may be best to stick with shades of red, blue, and green since you can see these in almost any shade. It may also help to go Dark, Lightest, Lighter than dark, Darker than lightest, etc. This would ensure that the less colors you use, the more they stand apart, the more colors you have, the better the chance, regardless of how you pick the colors, that they can't be picked apart from each other.
Of course the first 3-4 colors would seem most important for simple graphs and someone looking to get some output with minimal alterations. I'm only speaking from my point of view and simple XY graphs, I'm sure there is a lot more the program can do and this may not work for everyone.
With all that said, it's certainly not hard to change the colors to what you want.
I would suggest though that the default colors for the curves be organized so that each succesive color is different, not just a different shade or hue. For example, the default, on mine is for curve 1 to be dark red and curve 2 is a lighter red and curve 3 is magenta or pink. The first XY plot I made you could hardly tell the difference between the two curves I was using.
My suggestion is to make them something like:
1 - Red
2 - Blue
3 - Green
4 - Yellow (although you can't see this very well on a white background)
5- Light Red
6 - Light Blue
7 - Light Green
etc.
It may be best to stick with shades of red, blue, and green since you can see these in almost any shade. It may also help to go Dark, Lightest, Lighter than dark, Darker than lightest, etc. This would ensure that the less colors you use, the more they stand apart, the more colors you have, the better the chance, regardless of how you pick the colors, that they can't be picked apart from each other.
Of course the first 3-4 colors would seem most important for simple graphs and someone looking to get some output with minimal alterations. I'm only speaking from my point of view and simple XY graphs, I'm sure there is a lot more the program can do and this may not work for everyone.
With all that said, it's certainly not hard to change the colors to what you want.