How to color a zone in Tikz












4















I have this image: enter image description here



That is made with this code:



     documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
usepackage{amssymb,amsthm,amsmath}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,positioning,intersections,quotes}

begin{document}

begin{center}
begin{tikzpicture}
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{$R_1$}};
end{tikzpicture}
end{center}




end{document}


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.










share|improve this question



























    4















    I have this image: enter image description here



    That is made with this code:



         documentclass{article}
    usepackage{tikz}
    usepackage{amssymb,amsthm,amsmath}
    usetikzlibrary{shapes,positioning,intersections,quotes}

    begin{document}

    begin{center}
    begin{tikzpicture}
    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{$R_1$}};
    end{tikzpicture}
    end{center}




    end{document}


    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.










    share|improve this question

























      4












      4








      4








      I have this image: enter image description here



      That is made with this code:



           documentclass{article}
      usepackage{tikz}
      usepackage{amssymb,amsthm,amsmath}
      usetikzlibrary{shapes,positioning,intersections,quotes}

      begin{document}

      begin{center}
      begin{tikzpicture}
      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{$R_1$}};
      end{tikzpicture}
      end{center}




      end{document}


      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.










      share|improve this question














      I have this image: enter image description here



      That is made with this code:



           documentclass{article}
      usepackage{tikz}
      usepackage{amssymb,amsthm,amsmath}
      usetikzlibrary{shapes,positioning,intersections,quotes}

      begin{document}

      begin{center}
      begin{tikzpicture}
      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{$R_1$}};
      end{tikzpicture}
      end{center}




      end{document}


      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






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 2 hours ago









      J.RodriguezJ.Rodriguez

      815




      815






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{tikz}
          begin{document}
          section*{Two methods that do not require libraries}
          subsection*{Method 1: clip}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          subsection*{Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleOne}{atan2(1.9,-1.1547)}
          %pgfmathsetmacro{myradius}{veclen(1.9,-1.1547)}
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleTwo}{atan2(2,-1.01)}
          draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
          --cycle;
          %typeout{myangleOne,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{$R_1$}};
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • 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
            2 hours 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











          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
          });


          }
          });














          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          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









          4














          Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{tikz}
          begin{document}
          section*{Two methods that do not require libraries}
          subsection*{Method 1: clip}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          subsection*{Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleOne}{atan2(1.9,-1.1547)}
          %pgfmathsetmacro{myradius}{veclen(1.9,-1.1547)}
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleTwo}{atan2(2,-1.01)}
          draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
          --cycle;
          %typeout{myangleOne,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{$R_1$}};
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • 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
            2 hours 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
















          4














          Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{tikz}
          begin{document}
          section*{Two methods that do not require libraries}
          subsection*{Method 1: clip}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          subsection*{Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleOne}{atan2(1.9,-1.1547)}
          %pgfmathsetmacro{myradius}{veclen(1.9,-1.1547)}
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleTwo}{atan2(2,-1.01)}
          draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
          --cycle;
          %typeout{myangleOne,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{$R_1$}};
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • 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
            2 hours 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














          4












          4








          4







          Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{tikz}
          begin{document}
          section*{Two methods that do not require libraries}
          subsection*{Method 1: clip}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          subsection*{Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleOne}{atan2(1.9,-1.1547)}
          %pgfmathsetmacro{myradius}{veclen(1.9,-1.1547)}
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleTwo}{atan2(2,-1.01)}
          draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
          --cycle;
          %typeout{myangleOne,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{$R_1$}};
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer















          Sure. (But why do you not use polar coordinates?)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{tikz}
          begin{document}
          section*{Two methods that do not require libraries}
          subsection*{Method 1: clip}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          subsection*{Method 2: compute the polar coordinates of the points and use them}
          begin{center}
          begin{tikzpicture}
          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);
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleOne}{atan2(1.9,-1.1547)}
          %pgfmathsetmacro{myradius}{veclen(1.9,-1.1547)}
          pgfmathsetmacro{myangleTwo}{atan2(2,-1.01)}
          draw[fill=gray] (0,0) -- (myangleOne:2) arc(myangleOne:myangleTwo:2)
          --cycle;
          %typeout{myangleOne,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{$R_1$}};
          end{tikzpicture}
          end{center}
          end{document}


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 1 hour ago

























          answered 2 hours ago









          marmotmarmot

          112k5140264




          112k5140264













          • 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
            2 hours 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
            2 hours 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
          2 hours 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
          2 hours 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


















          draft saved

          draft discarded




















































          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.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          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





















































          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







          Popular posts from this blog

          flock() on closed filehandle LOCK_FILE at /usr/bin/apt-mirror

          Mangá

           ⁒  ․,‪⁊‑⁙ ⁖, ⁇‒※‌, †,⁖‗‌⁝    ‾‸⁘,‖⁔⁣,⁂‾
”‑,‥–,‬ ,⁀‹⁋‴⁑ ‒ ,‴⁋”‼ ⁨,‷⁔„ ‰′,‐‚ ‥‡‎“‷⁃⁨⁅⁣,⁔
⁇‘⁔⁡⁏⁌⁡‿‶‏⁨ ⁣⁕⁖⁨⁩⁥‽⁀  ‴‬⁜‟ ⁃‣‧⁕‮ …‍⁨‴ ⁩,⁚⁖‫ ,‵ ⁀,‮⁝‣‣ ⁑  ⁂– ․, ‾‽ ‏⁁“⁗‸ ‾… ‹‡⁌⁎‸‘ ‡⁏⁌‪ ‵⁛ ‎⁨ ―⁦⁤⁄⁕