Jeroen van Langen

Oct 20, 2022 08:21
the code you've posted is not the same as what i wrote.. can you use my code?
Oct 20, 2022 08:18
what if you use (if value <0 value = 0 else if value >= 1 value = 0.99999)
Oct 20, 2022 08:18
meaning your min and max are not corresponding with the values you are passing into...
Oct 20, 2022 08:17
"Value of '-5' is strange... it should be in the range of 0..1
Oct 20, 2022 08:17
there is a caveat. the loop goes from x < bitmap.Width so x will never be bitmap.Width. if you put in the value 1 in the GetRainbowColor you'll get an error..
Oct 20, 2022 08:13
which error?
Oct 20, 2022 08:07
put your own values in min and max
Oct 20, 2022 08:06
You already had code to convert with a min and max.

// transform x (0..width) to 0..1
double min = 0;
double max = bitmap.Width;
var value = (x - min) / (max - min);

// get the color corresponding to 0.5 of all colors.
var color = GetRainbowColor(value, colors);
Oct 20, 2022 08:05
Here's a link to the direct code:
https://github.com/jvanlangen/WinformsRainbow/blob/main/Gradient/Form1.cs
Oct 20, 2022 08:04
can you try again plz?
Oct 20, 2022 08:03
omg, it's probably private.. i'll change it.. sorry
Oct 20, 2022 07:58
Here is a working example how I draw a rainbow on a picturebox
Oct 20, 2022 07:48
i'm creating an example in winforms with a bitmap/picturebox
Oct 20, 2022 07:47
do you use a bitmap and picturebox?
Oct 20, 2022 07:45
can you post it in a pastebin? (or does it contain business-critical information)
Oct 20, 2022 07:44
oef.. -4 means that the input is not ok... the input should be between 0..1
Oct 20, 2022 07:43
is there a way that i can see what you've done? (teamviewer?)
Oct 20, 2022 07:40
I see there's a bug:
return LerpColor(residualValue, colors[startIndex], colors[startIndex]);
should be:
return LerpColor(residualValue, colors[startIndex], colors[startIndex+1]);
Oct 20, 2022 07:38
is it windows forms? or wpf
Oct 20, 2022 07:37
probably the a argument needs to be set to 255 or 0
Oct 20, 2022 07:37
public Color LerpColor(double value, Color startColor, Color endColor)
{
// reuse some code from the HeatMapColor

int r = (int)((endColor.R * value) + (startColor.R * (1-value)));
int g = (int)((endColor.G * value) + (startColor.G * (1-value)));
int b = (int)((endColor.B * value) + (startColor.B * (1-value)));

return Color.FromRgb(r, g, b);
}
Oct 20, 2022 07:36
you might need to cast it back to int
Oct 20, 2022 07:35
I didn't test the complete solution, but you can try this:

public Color LerpColor(double value, Color startColor, Color endColor)
{
// reuse some code from the HeatMapColor

int r = (endColor.R * value) + (startColor.R * (1-value));
int g = (endColor.G * value) + (startColor.G * (1-value));
int b = (endColor.B * value) + (startColor.B * (1-value));

return Color.FromRgb(r, g, b);
}
Oct 20, 2022 07:31
Hi there
Oct 20, 2022 07:31
h.Floor(255 * (2 - val))); ret this doesn't look right... the LerpColor gets a value between 0..1 for each color[start], color[end]. The trick is that the input value (0..1) is converted to 0..3. The non-decimal value is used for the index and the residual is used to check the value between the colors.
Oct 20, 2022 07:31
See the: (there is NO range checking, you should implement it) so when you pass a value below 0 or above 1, you need to clamp them (if value<0 value = 0)
Oct 20, 2022 07:31
@SimonGiesen I would not combine a min and max in that function. Just create a small function that converts 100 (where min = 0, max = 200) to 0.5 yours double val = (value - min) / (max - min);
 
Apr 3, 2017 07:09
I'll add some to my answer
Apr 3, 2017 07:09
You need a json library for your c#
Apr 3, 2017 07:08
You might return json from the function
Apr 3, 2017 07:06
I'm not that familiar with ajax/web
Apr 3, 2017 07:06
You could create some JSON
Apr 3, 2017 07:03
@VVVV Depends on the API, whois calling this method?
Apr 3, 2017 07:03
@vvv How are they separated? by spaces?
Apr 3, 2017 07:03
@VVVV So, this is a webmethod? How are the results separated? You should added it on your question.
 

C#

General discussions about the c# language, Squirrels | gist.gi...
Aug 27, 2013 19:50
hi all
 
Aug 24, 2013 22:38
good lock ;)
Aug 24, 2013 22:37
Ok, good luck
Aug 24, 2013 22:36
The ConcurrentDictionary uses multiple locks
Aug 24, 2013 22:35
I would use a HashSet<> with a lock
Aug 24, 2013 22:35
i'll look it up...
Aug 24, 2013 22:34
a concurrent queue uses a lock
Aug 24, 2013 22:33
that is much faster than locking the queue and dequeue per item.
Aug 24, 2013 22:33
something like .. T[] items; lock(_itemList) { items = _itemList.ToArray(); _itemList.Clear(); } Parallel.ForEach(items, (item) => { HandleItem(item); "});
Aug 24, 2013 22:32
much faster, and the _list is free to be modified by other threads.
Aug 24, 2013 22:32
i normally use myself a 1 time lock and use a ToArray to iterate the items.
Aug 24, 2013 22:31
why not do a .ToArray() and _list.clear?
Aug 24, 2013 22:30
then the items are in the dontcare parameter
Aug 24, 2013 22:30
yes i noticed, but why generate an integer array? you could pass the item array?