How to color a zone in TikzHow does one draw a cylindrical shell in TikZ?How to draw a diagonal rectangle with TikZ?how to draw automata with 4 statesHow to draw graph with TiKz?How to draw countour integration?How to draw two concentric simple closed curves using tikzHow draw this figure (spiral) in tikz?how to draw a sine wavesPlot curves and color space regions in LaTeXBox half filled color
Have I saved too much for retirement so far?
Lifted its hind leg on or lifted its hind leg towards?
Organic chemistry Iodoform Reaction
Partial sums of primes
Invariance of results when scaling explanatory variables in logistic regression, is there a proof?
Can a malicious addon access internet history and such in chrome/firefox?
Word describing multiple paths to the same abstract outcome
Are Warlocks Arcane or Divine?
Is there an wasy way to program in Tikz something like the one in the image?
Resetting two CD4017 counters simultaneously, only one resets
Lightning Web Component - do I need to track changes for every single input field in a form
Teaching indefinite integrals that require special-casing
Greatest common substring
Are taller landing gear bad for aircraft, particulary large airliners?
Can the harmonic series explain the origin of the major scale?
For airliners, what prevents wing strikes on landing in bad weather?
How do I repair my stair bannister?
Is it okay / does it make sense for another player to join a running game of Munchkin?
Why are all the doors on Ferenginar (the Ferengi home world) far shorter than the average Ferengi?
Can a Bard use an arcane focus?
What does the "3am" section means in manpages?
A known event to a history junkie
Perfect riffle shuffles
Is there enough fresh water in the world to eradicate the drinking water crisis?
How to color a zone in Tikz
How does one draw a cylindrical shell in TikZ?How to draw a diagonal rectangle with TikZ?how to draw automata with 4 statesHow to draw graph with TiKz?How to draw countour integration?How to draw two concentric simple closed curves using tikzHow draw this figure (spiral) in tikz?how to draw a sine wavesPlot curves and color space regions in LaTeXBox half filled color
I have this image:
That is made with this code:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
usepackageamssymb,amsthm,amsmath
usetikzlibraryshapes,positioning,intersections,quotes
begindocument
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
filldraw[black] (1.2,0) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
filldraw[black] (-1.2,0) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
filldraw[black] (0,1.2) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
filldraw[black] (0,-1.2) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
filldraw[black] (-1,2.1) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
And I want to know if there is a way to color in gray the zone that is between the 2 lines (in both zones). Any ideas? Thanks.
draw
add a comment |
I have this image:
That is made with this code:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
usepackageamssymb,amsthm,amsmath
usetikzlibraryshapes,positioning,intersections,quotes
begindocument
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
filldraw[black] (1.2,0) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
filldraw[black] (-1.2,0) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
filldraw[black] (0,1.2) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
filldraw[black] (0,-1.2) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
filldraw[black] (-1,2.1) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
And I want to know if there is a way to color in gray the zone that is between the 2 lines (in both zones). Any ideas? Thanks.
draw
add a comment |
I have this image:
That is made with this code:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
usepackageamssymb,amsthm,amsmath
usetikzlibraryshapes,positioning,intersections,quotes
begindocument
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
filldraw[black] (1.2,0) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
filldraw[black] (-1.2,0) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
filldraw[black] (0,1.2) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
filldraw[black] (0,-1.2) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
filldraw[black] (-1,2.1) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
And I want to know if there is a way to color in gray the zone that is between the 2 lines (in both zones). Any ideas? Thanks.
draw
I have this image:
That is made with this code:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
usepackageamssymb,amsthm,amsmath
usetikzlibraryshapes,positioning,intersections,quotes
begindocument
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
filldraw[black] (1.2,0) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
filldraw[black] (-1.2,0) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
filldraw[black] (0,1.2) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
filldraw[black] (0,-1.2) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
filldraw[black] (-1,2.1) circle (0pt)
node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
And I want to know if there is a way to color in gray the zone that is between the 2 lines (in both zones). Any ideas? Thanks.
draw
draw
asked 2 hours ago
J.RodriguezJ.Rodriguez
735
735
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
begindocument
section*Two methods that do not require libraries
subsection*Method 1: clip
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
clip (0,0) circle[radius=2cm-pgflinewidth/2];
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
endtikzpicture
endcenter
subsection*Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
pgfmathsetmacromyangleOneatan2(1.9,-1.1547)
%pgfmathsetmacromyradiusveclen(1.9,-1.1547)
pgfmathsetmacromyangleTwoatan2(2,-1.01)
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
%typeoutmyangleOne,myangleTwo
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
Wow, thanks, actually I don't use the polar plots becouse I am just learning to use Tikz. But I will look for it.
– J.Rodriguez
1 hour ago
@J.Rodriguez In this situation they may be very useful. Anyway, I added a second method (clip) in case you do not want to use them.
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "85"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f481454%2fhow-to-color-a-zone-in-tikz%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
begindocument
section*Two methods that do not require libraries
subsection*Method 1: clip
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
clip (0,0) circle[radius=2cm-pgflinewidth/2];
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
endtikzpicture
endcenter
subsection*Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
pgfmathsetmacromyangleOneatan2(1.9,-1.1547)
%pgfmathsetmacromyradiusveclen(1.9,-1.1547)
pgfmathsetmacromyangleTwoatan2(2,-1.01)
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
%typeoutmyangleOne,myangleTwo
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
Wow, thanks, actually I don't use the polar plots becouse I am just learning to use Tikz. But I will look for it.
– J.Rodriguez
1 hour ago
@J.Rodriguez In this situation they may be very useful. Anyway, I added a second method (clip) in case you do not want to use them.
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
begindocument
section*Two methods that do not require libraries
subsection*Method 1: clip
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
clip (0,0) circle[radius=2cm-pgflinewidth/2];
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
endtikzpicture
endcenter
subsection*Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
pgfmathsetmacromyangleOneatan2(1.9,-1.1547)
%pgfmathsetmacromyradiusveclen(1.9,-1.1547)
pgfmathsetmacromyangleTwoatan2(2,-1.01)
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
%typeoutmyangleOne,myangleTwo
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
Wow, thanks, actually I don't use the polar plots becouse I am just learning to use Tikz. But I will look for it.
– J.Rodriguez
1 hour ago
@J.Rodriguez In this situation they may be very useful. Anyway, I added a second method (clip) in case you do not want to use them.
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
begindocument
section*Two methods that do not require libraries
subsection*Method 1: clip
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
clip (0,0) circle[radius=2cm-pgflinewidth/2];
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
endtikzpicture
endcenter
subsection*Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
pgfmathsetmacromyangleOneatan2(1.9,-1.1547)
%pgfmathsetmacromyradiusveclen(1.9,-1.1547)
pgfmathsetmacromyangleTwoatan2(2,-1.01)
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
%typeoutmyangleOne,myangleTwo
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)
documentclassarticle
usepackagetikz
begindocument
section*Two methods that do not require libraries
subsection*Method 1: clip
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
clip (0,0) circle[radius=2cm-pgflinewidth/2];
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (-1.01,2) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
endtikzpicture
endcenter
subsection*Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them
begincenter
begintikzpicture
draw [rotate=270] (0,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw [rotate=270] (-2,0) arc (180:0:1);
draw (0,0) circle (2cm);
draw[dashed] (0,2.5) -- (0,-2.5);
draw[dashed](-2.5,0) -- (2.5,0);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw (0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
pgfmathsetmacromyangleOneatan2(1.9,-1.1547)
%pgfmathsetmacromyradiusveclen(1.9,-1.1547)
pgfmathsetmacromyangleTwoatan2(2,-1.01)
draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
%typeoutmyangleOne,myangleTwo
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.1547,1.9);
draw [rotate=120](0,0) -- (-1.01,2);
draw[fill=gray,rotate=120] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
--cycle;
path (1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_0$;
path (-1.2,0) node[anchor=west] $S_3$;
path (0,1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_1$;
path (0,-1.2) node[anchor=west] $S_2$;
path (-1,2.1) node[anchor=west] tiny$R_1$;
endtikzpicture
endcenter
enddocument
edited 1 hour ago
answered 1 hour ago
marmotmarmot
111k5140264
111k5140264
Wow, thanks, actually I don't use the polar plots becouse I am just learning to use Tikz. But I will look for it.
– J.Rodriguez
1 hour ago
@J.Rodriguez In this situation they may be very useful. Anyway, I added a second method (clip) in case you do not want to use them.
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Wow, thanks, actually I don't use the polar plots becouse I am just learning to use Tikz. But I will look for it.
– J.Rodriguez
1 hour ago
@J.Rodriguez In this situation they may be very useful. Anyway, I added a second method (clip) in case you do not want to use them.
– marmot
1 hour ago
Wow, thanks, actually I don't use the polar plots becouse I am just learning to use Tikz. But I will look for it.
– J.Rodriguez
1 hour ago
Wow, thanks, actually I don't use the polar plots becouse I am just learning to use Tikz. But I will look for it.
– J.Rodriguez
1 hour ago
@J.Rodriguez In this situation they may be very useful. Anyway, I added a second method (clip) in case you do not want to use them.
– marmot
1 hour ago
@J.Rodriguez In this situation they may be very useful. Anyway, I added a second method (clip) in case you do not want to use them.
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f481454%2fhow-to-color-a-zone-in-tikz%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown