wxWidgets/wxPython/samples/wxPIA_book/Chapter-12/radargraph.py
2006-11-01 22:36:23 +00:00

171 lines
5.4 KiB
Python

import wx
import math
import random
class RadarGraph(wx.Window):
"""
A simple radar graph that plots a collection of values in the
range of 0-100 onto a polar coordinate system designed to easily
show outliers, etc. You might use this kind of graph to monitor
some sort of resource allocation metrics, and a quick glance at
the graph can tell you when conditions are good (within some
accepted tolerance level) or approaching critical levels (total
resource consumption).
"""
def __init__(self, parent, title, labels):
wx.Window.__init__(self, parent)
self.title = title
self.labels = labels
self.data = [0.0] * len(labels)
self.titleFont = wx.Font(14, wx.SWISS, wx.NORMAL, wx.BOLD)
self.labelFont = wx.Font(10, wx.SWISS, wx.NORMAL, wx.NORMAL)
self.InitBuffer()
self.Bind(wx.EVT_SIZE, self.OnSize)
self.Bind(wx.EVT_PAINT, self.OnPaint)
def OnSize(self, evt):
# When the window size changes we need a new buffer.
self.InitBuffer()
def OnPaint(self, evt):
# This automatically Blits self.buffer to a wx.PaintDC when
# the dc is destroyed, and so nothing else needs done.
dc = wx.BufferedPaintDC(self, self.buffer)
def InitBuffer(self):
# Create the buffer bitmap to be the same size as the window,
# then draw our graph to it. Since we use wx.BufferedDC
# whatever is drawn to the buffer is also drawn to the window.
w, h = self.GetClientSize()
self.buffer = wx.EmptyBitmap(w, h)
dc = wx.BufferedDC(wx.ClientDC(self), self.buffer)
self.DrawGraph(dc)
def GetData(self):
return self.data
def SetData(self, newData):
assert len(newData) == len(self.data)
self.data = newData[:]
# The data has changed, so update the buffer and the window
dc = wx.BufferedDC(wx.ClientDC(self), self.buffer)
self.DrawGraph(dc)
def PolarToCartesian(self, radius, angle, cx, cy):
x = radius * math.cos(math.radians(angle))
y = radius * math.sin(math.radians(angle))
return (cx+x, cy-y)
def DrawGraph(self, dc):
spacer = 10
scaledmax = 150.0
dc.SetBackground(wx.Brush(self.GetBackgroundColour()))
dc.Clear()
dw, dh = dc.GetSize()
# Find out where to draw the title and do it
dc.SetFont(self.titleFont)
tw, th = dc.GetTextExtent(self.title)
dc.DrawText(self.title, (dw-tw)/2, spacer)
# find the center of the space below the title
th = th + 2*spacer
cx = dw/2
cy = (dh-th)/2 + th
# calculate a scale factor to use for drawing the graph based
# on the minimum available width or height
mindim = min(cx, (dh-th)/2)
scale = mindim/scaledmax
# draw the graph axis and "bulls-eye" with rings at scaled 25,
# 50, 75 and 100 positions
dc.SetPen(wx.Pen("black", 1))
dc.SetBrush(wx.TRANSPARENT_BRUSH)
dc.DrawCircle(cx,cy, 25*scale)
dc.DrawCircle(cx,cy, 50*scale)
dc.DrawCircle(cx,cy, 75*scale)
dc.DrawCircle(cx,cy, 100*scale)
dc.SetPen(wx.Pen("black", 2))
dc.DrawLine(cx-110*scale, cy, cx+110*scale, cy)
dc.DrawLine(cx, cy-110*scale, cx, cy+110*scale)
# Now find the coordinates for each data point, draw the
# labels, and find the max data point
dc.SetFont(self.labelFont)
maxval = 0
angle = 0
polypoints = []
for i, label in enumerate(self.labels):
val = self.data[i]
point = self.PolarToCartesian(val*scale, angle, cx, cy)
polypoints.append(point)
x, y = self.PolarToCartesian(125*scale, angle, cx,cy)
dc.DrawText(label, x, y)
if val > maxval:
maxval = val
angle = angle + 360/len(self.labels)
# Set the brush color based on the max value (green is good,
# red is bad)
c = "forest green"
if maxval > 70:
c = "yellow"
if maxval > 95:
c = "red"
# Finally, draw the plot data as a filled polygon
dc.SetBrush(wx.Brush(c))
dc.SetPen(wx.Pen("navy", 3))
dc.DrawPolygon(polypoints)
class TestFrame(wx.Frame):
def __init__(self):
wx.Frame.__init__(self, None, title="Double Buffered Drawing",
size=(480,480))
self.plot = RadarGraph(self, "Sample 'Radar' Plot",
["A", "B", "C", "D", "E", "F", "G", "H"])
# Set some random initial data values
data = []
for d in self.plot.GetData():
data.append(random.randint(0, 75))
self.plot.SetData(data)
# Create a timer to update the data values
self.Bind(wx.EVT_TIMER, self.OnTimeout)
self.timer = wx.Timer(self)
self.timer.Start(500)
def OnTimeout(self, evt):
# simulate the positive or negative growth of each data value
data = []
for d in self.plot.GetData():
val = d + random.uniform(-5, 5)
if val < 0:
val = 0
if val > 110:
val = 110
data.append(val)
self.plot.SetData(data)
app = wx.PySimpleApp()
frm = TestFrame()
frm.Show()
app.MainLoop()