Custom Color Legend Heatmap (Coverage and SNR)
I would like to be able to define my own color legend for the heatmaps. This should also be independent and able to be separate for Coverage RSSI (Primary, Secondary, Tertiary), as well as the SNR map.
Prefer to be able to define it by hex with a range. Example so that my strongest signal is dark blue, going to light blue, to dark green, to light green, to yellow, to orange, to red being my cut off of RSSI, then a grey out saying my requirement is not longer met.
Comments: 10
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07 Nov, '22
Ruben Jenssen MergedHighlighted comment
Make the limits and color scale more editable.
Give the possibility to have signal strength below a "wanted level" greyed out.
E.g. if I want to design for -67dBm signal strength, then anything below this would be grey, anything above it would be according to the scale I set(e.g. green to yellow). -
03 Nov, '24
Joel Crane System"Editable color range for heatmap thresholds" (suggested by <Hidden> on 2022-11-07), including upvotes (1) and comments (0), was merged into this suggestion.
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15 Feb, '25
Mike RydalchAdd on to this to support for people that have Color blindness—also known as color vision deficiency (CVD).
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26 Mar, '25
William DaBollI would just like the ability to change the color range, and also how granular the color scale is... I prefer a blue on the top end transitions to green then red as the signal gets lower :D
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23 Apr, '25
Apu BarotI would like similar ability to change the threshould and flexibility with more granular for the color scale.
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07 Aug, '25
Joshua LeeThis is a must for me. I live and die by my color legend customization. It allows me to visualize falloff points in RF. Not just "green, good. red, bad." We need a fully customizable color legend to be able to properly analyze and design wifi for many different applications. It should be highly scalable as well. Not just 4 colors.
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17 Sep, '25
Dawn DouglassOn the interference heatmap, the option to have no color where there is no interfering RF above the interference threshold would be great.
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18 Sep, '25
Joel Crane AdminThanks for the comment, Dawn! This was the behavior for a long time, but whenever there was no interference on the heatmap, users were confused, thinking that the heatmap was broken or not working, so we switched it to "green" when there is no interference.
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19 Jan
Kyle NelsonI also would love this feature. It makes it much more simpler in my mind that blue = cold and red = hot. I think it also makes it more readable for a non-technical audience.