Sathish,
I'm sorry, Sathish, but I simply don't see this behavior, on any of
the computers I have tried.
I have no trouble putting the cursor on the point in question. It can
be a little tricky getting the cursor on, for example, one of the
points from 6750 to 6770. That is because of the details of the
algorithm that tries to find the actual data point that is closest to
whatever point was clicked on. For a data point that is not a distant
outlier, pretty good aim is required.
That said, the two points near 6864 are distant outliers. Hitting one
and not the other might be hard, but hitting one of them is easy.
I am not disputing that you are having trouble. I am just saying that
given the data you sent and the explanation you gave, I cannot
reproduce the behavior, so I don't know what I can do to help.
B
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: Demeter deglitch problem
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 2013 14:59:09 +0100
From: Sathish Mayanna
To: Bruce Ravel
Dear Bruce
Thanks a lot for your time.
I am sorry, I am a beginner in the field of XAS, thus was confused.
Please find the attachment of one of my glitch data and an image showing
the randomly chosen point at 6705 eV by software even though i double
clicked at 6864 eV and in addition, I cannot move the position of
randomly chosen point.
I have tried both in my windows laptop and PC, it does not work in both
cases. I hope this time I have provided the details you expected?
Thanks
Sathish
On Tue, Dec 10, 2013 at 8:13 PM, Bruce Ravel mailto:bravel@bnl.gov> wrote:
On 12/10/2013 12:58 PM, Sathish Mayanna wrote:
Dear Bruce
I am sorry to contact you here, I watched your whole XAS
workshop 2011
at Diamond, it was very helpful.
Regarding the problem, I could not understand your message, I
read the
link to reports bug, I understand you cannot reproduce my
problem also,
I just wanted to know, if anybody had same problem like me and
have any
solutions.
I am just wondering, does your message also means that I should
send the
rawdata or print screen?
--
Sathish
Look, I'm happy to help, but you have to give me something to work
with. Obviously, I think deglitching works, otherwise I would have
said something different.
If you cannot give me some way of reproducing what you see on one my
own computers, there is no way that I can help you. I'm not asking
for a differently detailed explanation, I am asking for data and a
recipe that reproduces the problem. Without that, what could I
possibly do to help?
B
--
Bruce Ravel ------------------------------__------ bravel@bnl.gov
mailto:bravel@bnl.gov
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Synchrotron Science Group at NSLS --- Beamlines U7A, X24A, X23A2
Building 535A
Upton NY, 11973
Homepage: http://xafs.org/BruceRavel
Software: https://github.com/bruceravel
--
Satty