Octave has the functions triplot, trimesh, and trisurf
to plot the Delaunay triangulation of a 2-dimensional set of points.
tetramesh will plot the triangulation of a 3-dimensional set of points.
Plot a triangular mesh in 2D. The variable tri is the triangular meshing of the points
(x,y)which is returned fromdelaunay. If given, linespec determines the properties to use for the lines.The optional return value h is a graphics handle to the created plot.
Plot a triangular mesh in 3D. The variable tri is the triangular meshing of the points
(x,y)which is returned fromdelaunay. The variable z is value at the point(x,y).The optional return value h is a graphics handle to the created plot.
Plot a triangular surface in 3D. The variable tri is the triangular meshing of the points
(x,y)which is returned fromdelaunay. The variable z is value at the point(x,y).The optional return value h is a graphics handle to the created plot.
Display the tetrahedrons defined in the m-by-4 matrix T as 3-D patches. T is typically the output of a Delaunay triangulation of a 3-D set of points. Every row of T contains four indices into the n-by-3 matrix X of the vertices of a tetrahedron. Every row in X represents one point in 3-D space.
The vector C specifies the color of each tetrahedron as an index into the current colormap. The default value is 1:m where m is the number of tetrahedrons; the indices are scaled to map to the full range of the colormap. If there are more tetrahedrons than colors in the colormap then the values in C are cyclically repeated.
Calling
tetramesh (..., "property", "value", ...)passes all property/value pairs directly to the patch function as additional arguments.The optional return value h is a vector of patch handles where each handle represents one tetrahedron in the order given by T. A typical use case for h is to turn the respective patch "visible" property "on" or "off".
Type
demo tetrameshto see examples on usingtetramesh.
The difference between triplot, and trimesh or triplot,
is that the former only plots the 2-dimensional triangulation itself, whereas
the second two plot the value of a function f (x, y). An
example of the use of the triplot function is
rand ("state", 2)
x = rand (20, 1);
y = rand (20, 1);
tri = delaunay (x, y);
triplot (tri, x, y);
which plots the Delaunay triangulation of a set of random points in 2-dimensions. The output of the above can be seen in fig:triplot.