From 7af18d10dc23084ae8390241c2e9951d530248f7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Chris Buechler Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2011 05:20:28 -0500 Subject: archive some more dead packages --- .../pear/Image/Graph/DataPreprocessor/Array.php | 103 --------------------- 1 file changed, 103 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 config/dspam/pear/Image/Graph/DataPreprocessor/Array.php (limited to 'config/dspam/pear/Image/Graph/DataPreprocessor/Array.php') diff --git a/config/dspam/pear/Image/Graph/DataPreprocessor/Array.php b/config/dspam/pear/Image/Graph/DataPreprocessor/Array.php deleted file mode 100644 index 08e62378..00000000 --- a/config/dspam/pear/Image/Graph/DataPreprocessor/Array.php +++ /dev/null @@ -1,103 +0,0 @@ - - * @copyright Copyright (C) 2003, 2004 Jesper Veggerby Hansen - * @license http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html LGPL License 2.1 - * @version CVS: $Id$ - * @link http://pear.php.net/package/Image_Graph - */ - -/** - * Include file Image/Graph/DataPreprocessor.php - */ -require_once 'Image/Graph/DataPreprocessor.php'; - -/** - * Format data as looked up in an array. - * - * ArrayData is useful when a numercal value is to be translated to - * something thats cannot directly be calculated from this value, this could for - * example be a dataset meant to plot population of various countries. Since x- - * values are numerical and they should really be country names, but there is no - * linear correlation between the number and the name, we use an array to 'map' - * the numbers to the name, i.e. $array[0] = 'Denmark'; $array[1] = 'Sweden'; - * ..., where the indexes are the numerical values from the dataset. This is NOT - * usefull when the x-values are a large domain, i.e. to map unix timestamps to - * date-strings for an x-axis. This is because the x-axis will selecte arbitrary - * values for labels, which would in principle require the ArrayData to hold - * values for every unix timestamp. However ArrayData can still be used to solve - * such a situation, since one can use another value for X-data in the dataset - * and then map this (smaller domain) value to a date. That is we for example - * instead of using the unix-timestamp we use value 0 to represent the 1st date, - * 1 to represent the next date, etc. - * - * @category Images - * @package Image_Graph - * @subpackage DataPreprocessor - * @author Jesper Veggerby - * @copyright Copyright (C) 2003, 2004 Jesper Veggerby Hansen - * @license http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html LGPL License 2.1 - * @version Release: @package_version@ - * @link http://pear.php.net/package/Image_Graph - */ -class Image_Graph_DataPreprocessor_Array extends Image_Graph_DataPreprocessor -{ - - /** - * The data label array - * @var array - * @access private - */ - var $_dataArray; - - /** - * Image_Graph_ArrayData [Constructor]. - * - * @param array $array The array to use as a lookup table - */ - function Image_Graph_DataPreprocessor_Array($array) - { - parent::Image_Graph_DataPreprocessor(); - $this->_dataArray = $array; - } - - /** - * Process the value - * - * @param var $value The value to process/format - * @return string The processed value - * @access private - */ - function _process($value) - { - if ((is_array($this->_dataArray)) && (isset ($this->_dataArray[$value]))) { - return $this->_dataArray[$value]; - } else { - return $value; - } - } - -} - -?> \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3