Wrap node labels - cytoscape.js

Is there any way to make node label text wrap? I have some nodes with very long labels, and they would be more readable if wrapped onto 2 or 3 lines. I tried using CSS but it doesn't seem to have any effect.

As of 2015, you can use text-wrap: http://js.cytoscape.org/#style/labels

Related

How to remove all text color attributes from a QTextDocument?

I've got a QTextDocument read from an HTML file; given a QString of HTML data named topicFileData, I do topicFileTextDocument.setHtml(topicFileData);. I then want to strip off all of the color information, making the whole document just use the default foreground and background brush. (I do not want to explicitly set the text to be black text on a white background; I want to remove the color information from the document.) (Background info: the reason I need to do this is that there are spans within the document that are erroneously set with a black foreground color, rather than just having no color information set, and that causes those spans to display as black-on-black when my app is running in "dark mode", when Qt changes the default text background brush to be black instead of white.)
Here's what I tried:
QTextCursor tc(&topicFileTextDocument);
tc.select(QTextCursor::Document);
QTextCharFormat noColorFormat;
noColorFormat.clearForeground();
noColorFormat.clearBackground();
tc.mergeCharFormat(noColorFormat);
This does not work, unfortunately; it looks like mergeCharFormat() does not understand that I want the clearForeground() and clearBackground() actions to be merged in to strip off those attributes.
I can do tc.setCharFormat(noColorFormat); instead, of course, and that does strip off the color attributes correctly; but it also obliterates all of the other character format info (font, etc.), which is not acceptable.
So, ideally I'd like to find an API that lets me explicitly remove a given text attribute from a QTextDocument. Alternatively, I guess I need to loop through all the spans of the QTextDocument one by one, get the char format of the current span, remove the color attributes from the format, and set the modified format back onto the span. That would be fine; but I have no idea how to loop over spans in that way. Thanks for any help.
Instead of creating a new instance of QTextCharFormat, update the current format and reapply it on the QTextEdit;
default = QTextCharFormat()
charFormat = self.textCursor().charFormat()
charFormat.setBackground(default.background())
charFormat.setForeground(default.foreground())
self.textCursor().mergeCharFormat(charFormat)
A sub-optimal solution that I have found as a workaround is to actually edit the HTML data string before I create the QTextDocument, using a regex:
topicFileData.replace(QRegularExpression("(;? ?color: ?#[0-9a-f][0-9a-f][0-9a-f][0-9a-f][0-9a-f][0-9a-f])"), "");
This works for my situation, because all of the colors in my HTML file are set with color: #XXXXXX style attributes that can be stripped out of the HTML itself. This is fragile, however; colors specified in other ways would not be stripped, and if the body text of the HTML document happened to contain text that matched the regex, the regex would modify it and thus corrupt the content of the document. So I don't recommend this solution, and I won't be accepting it. If somebody can offer a better solution that would be preferable.

Graphics from arrays in LabVIEW

I have attached a picture of what I have tried.
Starting from an array with values to graph and another array with the names of these values, I would want to graph them all. For later, from the front panel, I want to be able to choose which ones I want to visualize and which not. In the attached image is what I have tried and it does not work only know how to graph the 1 value with the first name but not the others.
The property you need for setting the names is "Active Plot".
The key to writing multiple plots is the "Bundle" node (or "Bundle By Name").
Result:

How to assign a label to go.layout.Shape(type="line"...)?

I produce the following figure.
The figure has a number of add_trace applied to it with go.Scatter as arguments.
A list of 4 go.layout.Shape, type="line", with fixed color attributes, is created and the figure layout is updated with that list: fig.update_layout(..., shapes=...)
The traces have labels assigned to them that we can see to the extreme right.
Is there a way to add labels to assign to the lines as well?
You would like your lines to appear in the legend of the figure (https://plot.ly/python/legend/). However, only traces can appear in the legend, not shapes which are a kind of annotation. What you could do is to create the lines using go.Scatter(..., mode='lines'), and then they would appear in the legend. You just need to give the starting and end points in go.Scatter (see https://plot.ly/python/line-and-scatter/).

How to align a number to the right in Jupyter notebook math mode

Apologies if this is a stupid question, but I searched a lot and couldn't find out how to do this. In math mode if I'm trying to write the equations
$$x=2 x=3$$
How do I align the x=3 to the right side of the page? I tried \hfill but it didn't seem to do anything. Thanks!
Placing right-align text with markdown code is not possible. However, if you add a \tag{xx}, i.e. for equation number, you get the tag's content on the right side. And the the equation in the center. For example:-
$$x=2 x=3 \tag{2.a}$$
You get something like: x=2 x=3 (2.a)
To get what you want, you need to use HTML code instead. For example, write this code:
<div style='text-align: right'><em>x=2 x=3</em></div>
in a markdown cell and run it, you should get the result you want.

What does setTextMatrix of contentByte class in iText do?

I am using iText and am very new to it. There have been several situations where I think I could have figured out the problem with my code if I knew what I was doing - I use examples without knowing the workings behind the code, and even as I look at the source I can't figure out what the programmer was thinking.
What does setTextMatrix of contentByteArray in iText do? And how do I figure out the parameter values I need?
For example:
cb.setTextMatrix(1, 0);
The input parameters are x,y coordinates in points, unless CTM scaling was defined.
0,0 would be the bottom left of the template you are referencing.
The position is the 'baseline' of the text, rather than the top or the bottom.
Transcribed from this source:
https://sourceforge.net/p/itext/mailman/message/12855218/
first parameter sets left margin, second parameter sets bottom margin.