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author | Frank Baker <fbaker@hdfgroup.org> | 1999-04-26 21:00:15 (GMT) |
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committer | Frank Baker <fbaker@hdfgroup.org> | 1999-04-26 21:00:15 (GMT) |
commit | f1a01e0f25d9d229830224236cdb7dadcf6e53d2 (patch) | |
tree | 0cdd1fc7e73cd2c79749ab634e44fb1f7970fdc8 /doc/html/Dataspaces.html | |
parent | 877a437ad6a028813e0df35ff4e8b19bb341c0cf (diff) | |
download | hdf5-f1a01e0f25d9d229830224236cdb7dadcf6e53d2.zip hdf5-f1a01e0f25d9d229830224236cdb7dadcf6e53d2.tar.gz hdf5-f1a01e0f25d9d229830224236cdb7dadcf6e53d2.tar.bz2 |
[svn-r1219] Dataspaces.html
Fixed Bug #292 -- Errors in array-order transversal (C and Fortran orders
were reversed) and a minor copy edit.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/html/Dataspaces.html')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/html/Dataspaces.html | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/html/Dataspaces.html b/doc/html/Dataspaces.html index 97feff6..d1ae3d1 100644 --- a/doc/html/Dataspaces.html +++ b/doc/html/Dataspaces.html @@ -223,14 +223,14 @@ would look like this: <br><strong>Example 3: Non-contiguous selection with 1,1 offset</strong> </center> -<P>Selections also have an linearization ordering of the points selected +<P>Selections also have a linearization ordering of the points selected (defaulting to "C" order, ie. last dimension changing fastest). The linearization order may be specified for each point or it may be chosen by the axis of the dataspace. For example, with the default "C" ordering, -example 1's selected points are iterated through in this order: (1,1), (2,1), -(3,1), (1,2), (2,2), etc. With "FORTRAN" ordering, example 1's selected points -would be iterated through in this order: (1,1), (1,2), (1,3), (1,4), (1,5), -(2,1), (2,2), etc. +example 1's selected points are iterated through in this order: (1,1), (1,2), +(1,3), (2,1), (2,2), etc. With "FORTRAN" ordering, example 1's selected points +would be iterated through in this order: (1,1), (2,1), (3,1), (4,1), (5,1), +(1,2), (2,2), etc. <P>A dataspace may be stored in the file as a permanent object, to allow many datasets to use a commonly defined dataspace. Dataspaces with extendable |