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-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1. gnuplot ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- GNUPLOT is a command-driven interactive function plotting program.
-
- For help on any topic, type help followed by the name of the topic.
-
- The new GNUPLOT user should begin by reading the introduction topic (type help
- introduction) and about the plot command (type help plot). Additional help can
- be obtained from the USENET newsgroup comp.graphics.gnuplot.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2. copyright ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Copyright (C) 1986 - 1993 Thomas Williams, Colin Kelley
-
- Permission to use, copy, and distribute this software and its
- documentation for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted,
- provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and
- that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear
- in supporting documentation.
-
- Permission to modify the software is granted, but not the right to
- distribute the modified code. Modifications are to be distributed
- as patches to released version.
-
- This software is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.
-
- AUTHORS
-
- Original Software:
- Thomas Williams, Colin Kelley.
-
- Gnuplot 2.0 additions:
- Russell Lang, Dave Kotz, John Campbell.
-
- Gnuplot 3.0 additions:
- Gershon Elber and many others.
-
- There is a mailing list for gnuplot users. Note, however, that the
- newsgroup
- comp.graphics.gnuplot
- is identical to the mailing list (they
- both carry the same set of messages). We prefer that you read the
- messages through that newsgroup, to subscribing to the mailing list.
- (If you can read that newsgroup, and are already on the mailing list,
- please send a message info-gnuplot-request@dartmouth.edu, asking to be
- removed from the mailing list.)
-
- The address for mailing to list members is
- info-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu
- and for mailing administrative requests is
- info-gnuplot-request@dartmouth.edu
- The mailing list for bug reports is
- bug-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu
- The list of those interested in beta-test versions is
- info-gnuplot-beta@dartmouth.edu
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 3. introduction ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- GNUPLOT is a command-driven interactive function plotting program. It is case
- sensitive (commands and function names written in lowercase are not the same as
- those written in CAPS). All command names may be abbreviated, as long as the
- abbreviation is not ambiguous. Any number of commands may appear on a line,
- separated by semicolons (;). Strings are indicated with quotes. They may be
- either single or double quotation marks, e.g.,
-
- load "filename"
- cd 'dir'
-
- Any command-line arguments are assumed to be names of files containing GNUPLOT
- commands, with the exception of standard X11 arguments, which are processed
- first. Each file is loaded with the load command, in the order specified.
- GNUPLOT exits after the last file is processed. When no load files are named,
- gnuplot enters into an interactive mode.
-
- Commands may extend over several input lines, by ending each line but the last
- with a backslash (\). The backslash must be the LAST character on each line.
- The effect is as if the backslash and newline were not there. That is, no white
- space is implied, nor is a comment terminated. Therefore, commenting out a
- continued line comments out the entire command (see comment).
-
- In this documentation, curly braces ({}) denote optional arguments to many
- commands, and a vertical bar (|) separates mutually exclusive choices. GNUPLOT
- keywords or help topics are indicated by backquotes or boldface (where
- available). Angle brackets (<>) are used to mark replaceable tokens.
-
- For help on any topic, type help followed by the name of the topic.
-
- The new GNUPLOT user should begin by reading about the plot command (type help
- plot).
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 4. cd ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The cd command changes the working directory.
-
- Syntax:
-
- cd "<directory-name>"
-
- The directory name must be enclosed in quotes.
-
- Examples:
-
- cd 'subdir'
- cd ".."
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 5. clear ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The clear command erases the current screen or output device as specified by
- set output. This usually generates a formfeed on hardcopy devices. Use set
- terminal to set the device type.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 6. command line-editing ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The Unix, Atari, VMS, MS-DOS and OS/2 versions of GNUPLOT support command
- line-editing. Also, a history mechanism allows previous commands to be edited,
- and re-executed. After the command line has been edited, a newline or carriage
- return will enter the entire line regardless of where the cursor is positioned.
-
- The editing commands are as follows:
-
- ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
- ΓöéLine EditingΓöé Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^B Γöémove back a single character. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^F Γöémove forward a single character. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^A Γöémove to the beginning of the line. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^E Γöémove to the end of the line. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^H, DEL Γöédelete the previous character. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^D Γöédelete the current character. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^K Γöédelete from current position to the end of line.Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^L, ^R Γöéredraw line in case it gets trashed. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^U Γöédelete the entire line. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^W Γöédelete from the current word to the end of line.Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéHistory Γöé Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^P Γöémove back through history. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^N Γöémove forward through history. Γöé
- ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
-
- On the IBM PC the use of a TSR program such as DOSEDIT or CED may be desired
- for line editing. For such a case GNUPLOT may be compiled with no line editing
- capability (default makefile setup). Set READLINE in the makefile and add
- readline.obj to the link file if GNUPLOT line editing is to be used for the IBM
- PC. The following arrow keys may be used on the IBM PC and Atari versions if
- readline is used:
-
- ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
- ΓöéLeft Arrow Γöésame as ^B.Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéRight Arrow Γöésame as ^F.Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéCtl Left Arrow Γöésame as ^A.Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéCtl Right ArrowΓöésame as ^E.Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéUp Arrow Γöésame as ^P.Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéDown Arrow Γöésame as ^N.Γöé
- ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
-
- The Atari version of readline defines some additional key aliases:
-
- ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
- ΓöéUndo Γöésame as ^L. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéHome Γöésame as ^A. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéCtrl HomeΓöésame as ^E. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéESC Γöésame as ^U. Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéHelp Γöéhelp plus return.Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- ΓöéCtrl HelpΓöéhelp . Γöé
- ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
-
- (The readline function in gnuplot is not the same as the readline used in GNU
- BASH and GNU EMACS. It is somewhat compatible however.)
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7. comment ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Comments are supported as follows: a # may appear in most places in a line and
- GNUPLOT will ignore the rest of the line. It will not have this effect inside
- quotes, inside numbers (including complex numbers), inside command
- substitutions, etc. In short, it works anywhere it makes sense to work.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 8. environment ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- A number of shell environment variables are understood by GNUPLOT. None of
- these are required, but may be useful.
-
- If GNUTERM is defined, it is used as the name of the terminal type to be used.
- This overrides any terminal type sensed by GNUPLOT on start up, but is itself
- overridden by the .gnuplot (or equivalent) start-up file (see start-up), and of
- course by later explicit changes.
-
- On Unix, AmigaDOS, AtariTOS, MS-DOS and OS/2, GNUHELP may be defined to be the
- pathname of the HELP file (gnuplot.gih).
-
- On VMS, the symbol GNUPLOT the help library for GNUPLOT.
-
- On Unix, HOME is used as the name of a directory to search for a .gnuplot file
- if none is found in the current directory. On AmigaDOS, AtariTOS, MS-DOS and
- OS/2, GNUPLOT is used. On VMS, SYS is used. See help start-up.
-
- On Unix, PAGER is used as an output filter for help messages.
-
- On Unix, AtariTOS and AmigaDOS, SHELL is used for the shell command. On MS-DOS
- and OS/2, COMSPEC is used for the shell command.
-
- On AmigaDOS, GNUFONT is used for the screen font. For example: "setenv GNUFONT
- sapphire/14".
-
- On MS-DOS, if the BGI interface is used, the variable BGI is used to point to
- the full path of the BGI drivers directory. Furthermore SVGA is used to name
- the Super VGA BGI driver in 800x600 res., and its mode of operation as
- 'Name.Mode'. E.g., if the Super VGA driver is C:\TC\BGI\SVGADRV.BGI and mode 3
- is used for 800x600 res., then: 'set BGI=C:\TC\BGI' and 'set SVGA=SVGADRV.3'.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9. exit ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The commands exit and quit and the END-OF-FILE character will exit GNUPLOT. All
- these commands will clear the output device (as the clear command does) before
- exiting.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10. expressions ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- In general, any mathematical expression accepted by C, FORTRAN, Pascal, or
- BASIC is valid. The precedence of these operators is determined by the
- specifications of the C programming language. White space (spaces and tabs) is
- ignored inside expressions.
-
- Complex constants may be expressed as the {<real>,<imag>}, where <real> and
- <imag> must be numerical constants. For example, {3,2} represents 3 + 2i; {0,1}
- represents i itself. The curly braces are explicitly required here.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1. functions ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The functions in GNUPLOT are the same as the corresponding functions in the
- Unix math library, except that all functions accept integer, real, and complex
- arguments, unless otherwise noted. The sgn function is also supported, as in
- BASIC.
-
- ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
- Γöéabs(x) Γöéany Γöéabsolute value of x, |x|; same type Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéabs(x) Γöécomplex Γöélength of x, Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéacos(x) Γöéany Γöé(inverse cosine) in radians Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéarg(x) Γöécomplex Γöéthe phase of x in radians Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéasin(x) Γöéany Γöé(inverse sin) in radians Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéatan(x) Γöéany Γöé(inverse tangent) in radians Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöébesj0(x) Γöéradians ΓöéBessel function of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöébesj1(x) Γöéradians ΓöéBessel function of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöébesy0(x) Γöéradians ΓöéBessel function of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöébesy1(x) Γöéradians ΓöéBessel function of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéceil(x) Γöéany Γöésmallest integer not less than x (real part) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöécos(x) Γöéradians Γöécosine of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöécosh(x) Γöéradians Γöéhyperbolic cosine of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéerf(x) Γöéany Γöéerror function of real (x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéerfc(x) Γöéany Γöé1.0 - error function of real (x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéexp(x) Γöéany Γöéexponential function of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéfloor(x) Γöéany Γöélargest integer not greater than x (real part)Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöégamma(x) Γöéany Γöégamma function of real (x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéibeta(p,q,x)Γöéany Γöéibeta function of real (p,q,x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéinverf(x) Γöéany Γöéinverse error function real(x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéigamma(a,x) Γöéany Γöéigamma function of real (a,x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéimag(x) Γöécomplex Γöéimaginary part of x as a real number Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéinvnorm(x) Γöéany Γöéinverse normal distribution function real(x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéint(x) Γöéreal Γöéinteger part of x, truncated toward zero Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöélgamma(x) Γöéany Γöélgamma function of real (x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöélog(x) Γöéany Γöénatural logarithm (base e) of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöélog10(x) Γöéany Γöélogarithm (base ) of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöénorm(x) Γöéany Γöénormal distribution function of real(x) Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöérand(x) Γöéany Γöépseudo random number generator Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéreal(x) Γöéany Γöéreal part of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöésgn(x) Γöéany Γöé1 if x > 0, -1 if x < 0, 0 if x = 0. ignored Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöésin(x) Γöéradians Γöésine of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöésinh(x) Γöéradians Γöéhyperbolic sine x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöésqrt(x) Γöéany Γöésquare root of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöétan(x) Γöéradians Γöétangent of x Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöétanh(x) Γöéradians Γöéhyperbolic tangent of x Γöé
- ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.1. abs ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The abs function returns the absolute value of its argument. The returned value
- is of the same type as the argument.
-
- For complex arguments, abs(x) is defined as the length of x in the complex
- plane [i.e., sqrt(real(x)**2 + imag(x)**2) ].
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.2. acos ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The acos function returns the arc cosine (inverse cosine) of its argument. acos
- returns its argument in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.3. arg ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The arg function returns the phase of a complex number, in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.4. asin ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The asin function returns the arc sin (inverse sin) of its argument. asin
- returns its argument in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.5. atan ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The atan function returns the arc tangent (inverse tangent) of its argument.
- atan returns its argument in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.6. besj0 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The besj0 function returns the j0th Bessel function of its argument. besj0
- expects its argument to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.7. besj1 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The besj1 function returns the j1st Bessel function of its argument. besj1
- expects its argument to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.8. besy0 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The besy0 function returns the y0th Bessel function of its argument. besy0
- expects its argument to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.9. besy1 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The besy1 function returns the y1st Bessel function of its argument. besy1
- expects its argument to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.10. ceil ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The ceil function returns the smallest integer that is not less than its
- argument. For complex numbers, ceil returns the smallest integer not less than
- the real part of its argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.11. cos ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The cos function returns the cosine of its argument. cos expects its argument
- to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.12. cosh ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The cosh function returns the hyperbolic cosine of its argument. cosh expects
- its argument to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.13. erf ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The erf function returns the error function of the real part of its argument.
- If the argument is a complex value, the imaginary component is ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.14. erfc ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The erfc function returns 1.0 - the error function of the real part of its
- argument. If the argument is a complex value, the imaginary component is
- ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.15. exp ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The exp function returns the exponential function of its argument (e raised to
- the power of its argument).
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.16. floor ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The floor function returns the largest integer not greater than its argument.
- For complex numbers, floor returns the largest integer not greater than the
- real part of its argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.17. gamma ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The gamma function returns the gamma function of the real part of its argument.
- For integer n, gamma(n+1) = n! . If the argument is a complex value, the
- imaginary component is ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.18. ibeta ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The ibeta function returns the incomplete beta function of the real parts of
- its arguments. p, q > 0 and x in [0:1] If the arguments are complex, the
- imaginary components are ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.19. inverf ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The inverf function returns the inverse error function of the real part of its
- argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.20. igamma ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The igamma function returns the incomplete gamma function of the real parts of
- its arguments. a > 0 and x >= 0 If the arguments are complex, the imaginary
- components are ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.21. imag ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The imag function returns the imaginary part of its argument as a real number.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.22. invnorm ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The invnorm function returns the inverse normal distribution function of the
- real part of its argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.23. int ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The int function returns the integer part of its argument, truncated toward
- zero.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.24. lgamma ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The lgamma function returns the natural logarithm of the gamma function of the
- real part of its argument. If the argument is a complex value, the imaginary
- component is ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.25. log ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The log function returns the natural logarithm (base e) of its argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.26. log10 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The log10 function returns the logarithm (base 10) of its argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.27. norm ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The norm function returns the normal distribution function (or Gaussian) of the
- real part of its argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.28. rand ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The rand function returns a pseudo random number in the interval [0:1] using
- the real part of its argument as a seed. If seed < 0 the sequence is
- (re)initialized. If the argument is a complex value, the imaginary component is
- ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.29. real ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The real function returns the real part of its argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.30. sgn ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The sgn function returns 1 if its argument is positive, -1 if its argument is
- negative, and 0 if its argument is 0. If the argument is a complex value, the
- imaginary component is ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.31. sin ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The sin function returns the sine of its argument. sin expects its argument to
- be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.32. sinh ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The sinh function returns the hyperbolic sine of its argument. sinh expects its
- argument to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.33. sqrt ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The sqrt function returns the square root of its argument.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.34. tan ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The tan function returns the tangent of its argument. tan expects its argument
- to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1.35. tanh ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The tanh function returns the hyperbolic tangent of its argument. tanh expects
- its argument to be in radians.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.2. operators ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The operators in GNUPLOT are the same as the corresponding operators in the C
- programming language, except that all operators accept integer, real, and
- complex arguments, unless otherwise noted. The ** operator (exponentiation) is
- supported, as in FORTRAN.
-
- Parentheses may be used to change order of evaluation.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.2.1. binary ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The following is a list of all the binary operators and their usages:
-
- ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
- Γöé** Γöéa**b Γöéexponentiation Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé* Γöéa*b Γöémultiplication Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé/ Γöéa/b Γöédivision Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöéa Γöéb Γöé* modulo Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé+ Γöéa+b Γöéaddition Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé- Γöéa-b Γöésubtraction Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé== Γöéa==b Γöéequality Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé!= Γöéa!=b Γöéinequality Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé& Γöéa&b Γöé* bitwise AND Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé^ Γöéa^b Γöé* bitwise exclusive ORΓöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé| Γöéa|b Γöé* bitwise inclusive ORΓöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé&& Γöéa&&b Γöé* logical AND Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé|| Γöéa||b Γöé* logical OR Γöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé?: Γöéa?b:c Γöé* ternary operation Γöé
- ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
- (*) Starred explanations indicate that the operator requires integer arguments.
-
- Logical AND (&&) and OR (||) short-circuit the way they do in C. That is, the
- second && operand is not evaluated if the first is false; the second || operand
- is not evaluated if the first is true.
-
- The ternary operator evaluates its first argument (a). If it is true (non-zero)
- the second argument (b) is evaluated and returned, otherwise the third argument
- (c) is evaluated and returned.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.2.2. unary ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The following is a list of all the unary operators and their usages:
-
- ΓöîΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
- Γöé~Γöé~aΓöé* one's complementΓöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé!Γöé!aΓöé* logical negationΓöé
- Γö£ΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
- Γöé!Γöéa!Γöé* factorial Γöé
- ΓööΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
- (*) Starred explanations indicate that the operator requires an integer
- argument.
-
- The factorial operator returns a real number to allow a greater range.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 11. help ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The help command displays on-line help. To specify information on a particular
- topic use the syntax:
-
- help {<topic>}
-
- If <topic> is not specified, a short message is printed about GNUPLOT. After
- help for the requested topic is given, help for a subtopic may be requested by
- typing its name, extending the help request. After that subtopic has been
- printed, the request may be extended again, or simply pressing return goes back
- one level to the previous topic. Eventually, the GNUPLOT command line will
- return.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 12. load ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The load command executes each line of the specified input file as if it had
- been typed in interactively. Files created by the save command can later be
- loaded. Any text file containing valid commands can be created and then
- executed by the load command. Files being loaded may themselves contain load
- commands. See comment for information about comments in commands.
-
- The load command must be the last command on the line.
-
- Syntax:
-
- load "<input-file>"
-
- The name of the input file must be enclosed in quotes.
-
- Examples:
-
- load 'work.gnu'
- load "func.dat"
-
- The load command is performed implicitly on any file names given as arguments
- to GNUPLOT. These are loaded in the order specified, and then GNUPLOT exits.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 13. pause ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The pause command displays any text associated with the command and then waits
- a specified amount of time or until the carriage return is pressed. pause is
- especially useful in conjunction with load files.
-
- Syntax:
-
- pause <time> {"<string>"}
-
- <time> may be any integer constant or expression. Choosing -1 will wait until a
- carriage return is hit, zero (0) won't pause at all, and a positive integer
- will wait the specified number of seconds.
-
- Note: Since pause is not part of the plot it may interact with different device
- drivers differently (depending upon how text and graphics are mixed).
-
- Examples:
-
- pause -1 # Wait until a carriage return is hit
- pause 3 # Wait three seconds
- pause -1 "Hit return to continue"
- pause 10 "Isn't this pretty? It's a cubic-spline."
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14. plot ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- plot and splot are the primary commands of the program. They plot functions and
- data in many, many ways. plot is used to plot 2-d functions and data, while
- splot plots 3-d surfaces and data.
-
- Syntax:
-
- plot {ranges} {<function> | {"<datafile>" {using ...}}}
- {title} {style} {, <function> {title} {style}...}
-
- splot {ranges} {<function> | {"<datafile>" {index i} {using ...}}}
- {title} {style} {, <function> {title} {style}...}
-
- where either a <function> or the name of a data file enclosed in quotes is
- supplied. A function is a mathematical expression, or a pair (plot) or triple
- (splot) of mathematical expressions in the case of parametric functions.
- User-defined functions and variables may also be defined here.
-
- plot and splot commands can be as simple as
-
- plot sin(x)
-
- and
-
- splot x * y
-
- or as complex as (!)
-
- plot [t=1:10] [-pi:pi*2] tan(t), "data.1" using 2:3 with lines,
- t**2 with points
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14.1. data-file ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Discrete data contained in a file can be displayed by specifying the name of
- the data file (enclosed in quotes) on the plot or splot command line. Data
- files should contain one data point per line. Lines beginning with # (or ! on
- VMS) will be treated as comments and ignored. For plots, each data point
- represents an (x,y) pair. For splots, each point is an (x,y,z) triple. For
- plots with error bars (see plot errorbars), each data point is either
- (x,y,ydelta) or (x,y,ylow,yhigh). In all cases, the numbers on each line of a
- data file must be separated by blank space. This blank space divides each line
- into columns.
-
- For plots the x value may be omitted, and for splots the x and y values may be
- omitted. In either case the omitted values are assigned the current coordinate
- number. Coordinate numbers start at 0 and are incremented for each data point
- read.
-
- To specify other formats, see plot datafile using.
-
- In the plot command, blank lines in the data file cause a break in the plot.
- There will be no line drawn between the preceding and following points if the
- plot style is lines or linespoints (see plot style). This does not change the
- plot style, as would plotting the data as separate curves.
-
- This example compares the data in the file population.dat to a theoretical
- curve:
-
- pop(x) = 103*exp((1965-x)/10)
- plot [1960:1990] 'population.dat', pop(x)
-
- The file population.dat might contain:
-
- # Gnu population in Antarctica since 1965
- 1965 103
- 1970 55
- 1975 34
- 1980 24
- 1985 10
-
- When a data file is plotted, samples and isosamples are ignored. Curves plotted
- using the plot command are automatically extended to hold the entire curve.
- Similarly grid data plotted using the splot command is automatically extended,
- using the assumption that isolines are separated by blank lines (a line with
- only a CR/LF in it).
-
- Implicitly, there are two types of 3-d datafiles. If all the isolines are of
- the same length, the data is assumed to be a grid data, i.e., the data has a
- grid topology. Cross isolines in the other parametric direction (the ith cross
- isoline passes through the ith point of all the provided isolines) will also be
- drawn for grid data. (Note contouring is available for grid data only.) If all
- the isolines are not of the same length, no cross isolines will be drawn and
- contouring that data is impossible.
-
- For splot, data files may contain more than one mesh and by default all meshes
- are plotted. Meshes are separated from each other, in the file, by double blank
- lines. To control and splot a single mesh from a multi mesh file, use the index
- modifier. See splot index for more.
-
- For splot if 3-d datafile and using format (see splot datafile using) specify
- only z (height field), a non parametric mode must be specified. If, on the
- other hand, x, y, and z are all specified, a parametric mode should be selected
- (see set parametric) since data is defining a parametric surface.
-
- A simple example of plotting a 3-d data file is
-
- set parametric
- splot 'glass.dat'
-
- or
-
- set noparametric
- splot 'datafile.dat'
-
- where the file datafile.dat might contain:
-
- # The valley of the Gnu.
- 10
- 10
- 10
-
- 10
- 5
- 10
-
- 10
- 1
- 10
-
- 10
- 0
- 10
-
- Note datafile.dat defines a 4 by 3 grid ( 4 rows of 3 points each ). Rows are
- separated by blank lines.
-
- On some computer systems with a popen function (UNIX), the datafile can be
- piped through a shell command by starting the file name with a '<'. For
- example:
-
- pop(x) = 103*exp(-x/10)
- plot '< awk "{print
-
- would plot the same information as the first population example but with years
- since 1965 as the x axis. If you want to execute this example, you have to
- delete all comments from the data file above or substitute the following
- command for the first part of the command above (the part up to the comma):
-
- plot '< awk "
-
- It is also possible to apply a single function to the "y" value only, e.g.
-
- plot 'population.dat' thru p(x)
-
- For more information about 3-d plotting, see splot.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14.1.1. using ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The format of data within a file can be selected with the using option. An
- explicit scanf string can be used, or simpler column choices can be made.
-
- Syntax:
-
- plot "datafile" { using { <ycol> |
- <xcol>:<ycol> |
- <xcol>:<ycol>:<ydelta> |
- <xcol>:<ycol>:<ylow>:<yhigh> |
- <xcol>:<ycol>:<ylow>:<yhigh>:<boxwidth> }
- {"<scanf string>"} } ...
-
- and
-
- splot "datafile" { using { <xcol>:<ycol>:<zcol> | <zcol> }
- {"<scanf string>"} } ...
-
- <xcol>, <ycol>, and <zcol> explicitly select the columns to plot from a space
- or tab separated multicolumn data file. If only <ycol> is selected for plot,
- <xcol> defaults to 1. If only <zcol> is selected for splot, then only that
- column is read from the file. An <xcol> of 0 forces <ycol> to be plotted versus
- its coordinate number. <xcol>, <ycol>, and <zcol> can be entered as constants
- or expressions.
-
- If errorbars (see also plot errorbars) are used for plots, ydelta (for example,
- a +/- error) should be provided as the third column, or ylow and yhigh as third
- and fourth columns.
-
- If boxes or boxerrorbars are used for plots, a fifth column to specify the
- width of the box may be given. This implies that columns three and four must
- also be provided even if they are not used. If you want to plot boxes from a
- data file with three columns, set ylow and yhigh to y using the following
- command:
-
- plot "datafile" using 1:2:2:2:3 with boxes
-
- Scanf strings override any <xcol>:<ycol>(:<zcol>) choices, except for ordering
- of input, e.g.,
-
- plot "datafile" using 2:1 "%f%*f%f"
- causes the first column to be y and the third column to be x.
-
- If the scanf string is omitted, the default is generated based on the
- <xcol>:<ycol>(:<zcol>) choices. If the using option is omitted, "%f%f" is used
- for plot ("%f%f%f%f" for errorbars plots) and "%f%f%f" is used for splot.
-
- Examples:
-
- plot "MyData" using "%*f%f%*20[^\n]%f" with lines
-
- Data are read from the file "MyData" using the format "%*f%f%*20[^\n]%f". The
- meaning of this format is: "%*f" ignore the first number, "%f" then read in the
- second and assign to x, "%*20[^\n]" then ignore 20 non-newline characters, "%f"
- then read in the y value.
-
- n=3;
- plot "MyData", "MyData" using n
-
- causes GNUPLOT to plot the second and third columns of MyData versus the first
- column. The command 'n=4; replot' would then plot the second and fourth columns
- of MyData versus the first column.
-
- splot "glass.dat" using 1
-
- causes GNUPLOT to plot the first coordinate of the points of glass.dat as the z
- coordinate while ignoring the other two coordinates.
-
- Note: GNUPLOT first reads a line of the data file into a buffer and then does a
-
- sscanf(input_buffer, scanf_string, &x, &y{, &z});
- where 'x', 'y', and 'z' are of type 'float'. Any scanf string that specifies
- two (three for splot, three or four for errorbars) float numbers may be used.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14.2. errorbars ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Error bars are supported for 2-d data file plots by reading one or two
- additional columns specifying ydelta or ylow and yhigh respectively. No support
- exists for x error bars or any error bars for splots.
-
- In the default situation, GNUPLOT expects to see three or four numbers on each
- line of the data file, either (x, y, ydelta) or (x, y, ylow, yhigh). The x
- coordinate must be specified. The order of the numbers must be exactly as given
- above. Data files in this format can easily be plotted with error bars:
-
- plot "data.dat" with errorbars
-
- The error bar is a vertical line plotted from (x, ylow) to (x, yhigh). If
- ydelta is specified instead of ylow and yhigh, ylow=y-ydelta and yhigh=y+ydelta
- are derived. If there are only two numbers on the line, yhigh and ylow are both
- set to y. To get lines plotted between the data points, plot the data file
- twice, once with errorbars and once with lines.
-
- If y autoscaling is on, the y range will be adjusted to fit the error bars.
-
- The using option may be used to specify how columns of the data file are to be
- assigned to x, y, ydelta, ylow, and yhigh. The x column must be provided and
- both the x and y columns must appear before the errorbar columns. If three
- column numbers are given, they are x, y, and ydelta. If four columns are given,
- they are x, y, ylow, and yhigh.
-
- Examples:
-
- plot "data.dat" using 1:2:3:4 with errorbars
- plot "data.dat" using 3:2:6 with errorbars
- plot "data.dat" using 3:4:8:7 with errorbars
-
- The first example reads, x, y, ylow, and yhigh, from columns 1, 2, 3, and 4.
- This is equivalent to the default. The second example reads x from the third
- column, y from second and ydelta from the sixth column. The third example reads
- x from the third column, y from the fourth, ylow from the eighth, and yhigh
- from seventh columns.
-
- See also plot using and plot style.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14.3. parametric ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- When in parametric mode (set parametric) mathematical expressions must be given
- in pairs for plot and in triplets for splot:
-
- plot sin(t),t**2
- or
-
- splot cos(u)*cos(v),cos(u)*sin(v),sin(u)
-
- Data files are plotted as before, except any preceding parametric function must
- be fully specified before a data file is given as a plot. In other words, the x
- parametric function (sin(t) above) and the y parametric function (t**2 above)
- must not be interrupted with any modifiers or data functions; doing so will
- generate a syntax error stating that the parametric function is not fully
- specified.
-
- Ranges take on a different meaning when in parametric mode. The first range on
- the plot command is the trange, the next is the xrange, and the last is the
- yrange. For splot the order is urange, vrange, xrange, yrange, and finally
- zrange. The following plot command shows setting the trange to [-pi:pi], the
- xrange to [-1.3:1.3] and the yrange to [-1:1] for the duration of the plot:
-
- plot [-pi:pi] [-1.3:1.3] [-1:1] sin(t),t**2
-
- Other modifiers, such as with and title, may be specified only after the
- parametric function has been completed:
-
- plot sin(t),t**2 title 'Parametric example' with linespoints
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14.4. ranges ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The optional range specifies the region of the plot that will be displayed.
-
- Ranges may be provided on the plot and splot command line and affect only that
- plot, or in the set xrange, set yrange, etc., commands, to change the default
- ranges for future plots.
-
- Syntax:
-
- [{<dummy-var> =} {<xmin> : <xmax>}] { [{<ymin> : <ymax>}] }
-
- where <dummy-var> is the independent variable (the defaults are x and y, but
- this may be changed with set dummy) and the min and max terms can be constant
- expressions.
-
- Both the min and max terms are optional. The ':' is also optional if neither a
- min nor a max term is specified. This allows '[ ]' to be used as a null range
- specification.
-
- Specifying a range in the plot command line turns autoscaling for that axis off
- for that plot. Using one of the set range commands turns autoscaling off for
- that axis for future plots, unless changed later. (See set autoscale).
-
- Examples:
-
- This uses the current ranges:
-
- plot cos(x)
-
- This sets the x range only:
-
- plot [-10:30] sin(pi*x)/(pi*x)
-
- This is the same, but uses t as the dummy-variable:
-
- plot [t = -10 :30] sin(pi*t)/(pi*t)
-
- This sets both the x and y ranges:
-
- plot [-pi:pi] [-3:3] tan(x), 1/x
-
- This sets only the y range, and turns off autoscaling on both axes:
-
- plot [ ] [-2:sin(5)*-8] sin(x)**besj0(x)
-
- This sets xmax and ymin only:
-
- plot [:200] [-pi:] exp(sin(x))
-
- This sets the x, y, and z ranges:
-
- splot [0:3] [1:4] [-1:1] x*y
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14.5. index ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Splotting of multi mesh data files can be controlled via the index modifier. A
- data file can contain more than one mesh, and in that case all meshes in the
- file will be splotted by default. Meshes are separated from each other, in the
- data file, by double blank lines. To splot a single mesh in a multi mesh file
- use the index modifier which specify which mesh to splot. First mesh is mesh 0.
-
- Example:
-
- splot "data1" index 2 with points
-
- will splot the third mesh in file data1 with points.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14.6. style ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Plots may be displayed in one of eight styles: lines, points, linespoints,
- impulses, dots, errorbars, steps, boxes, or boxerrorbars. The lines style
- connects adjacent points with lines. The points style displays a small symbol
- at each point. The linespoints style does both lines and points. The impulses
- style displays a vertical line from the x axis (or from the grid base for
- splot) to each point. The dots style plots a tiny dot at each point; this is
- useful for scatter plots with many points.
-
- The errorbars style is only relevant to 2-d data file plotting. It is treated
- like points for splots and function plots. For data plots, errorbars is like
- points, except that a vertical error bar is also drawn: for each point (x,y), a
- line is drawn from (x,ylow) to (x,yhigh). A tic mark is placed at the ends of
- the error bar. The ylow and yhigh values are read from the data file's columns,
- as specified with the using option to plot. See plot errorbars for more
- information.
-
- The boxes style is only relevant to 2-d plotting. Another style called
- boxerrorbars is also available and is only relevant to 2-d data file plotting.
- This style is a combination of the boxes and errorbars styles. The boxes style
- draws a box centred about the given x coordinate from the yaxis to the given y
- coordinate. The width of the box is obtained in one of three ways. First, if a
- data file has a fifth column, this will be used to set the width of the box.
- Columns 3 and 4 (for boxerrorbars) are necessary but ignored in this instance.
- Secondly, if a width has been set using the set boxwidth command, this will be
- used. Otherwise the width of each box will be calculated automatically so that
- it touches the adjacent boxes.
-
- The steps style is only relevant to 2-d plotting. This style connects
- consecutive points with two line segments: the first from (x1,y1) to (x2,y1)
- and the second from (x2,y1) to (x2,y2).
-
- Default styles are chosen with the set function style and set data style
- commands.
-
- By default, each function and data file will use a different line type and
- point type, up to the maximum number of available types. All terminal drivers
- support at least six different point types, and re-use them, in order, if more
- than six are required. The LaTeX driver supplies an additional six point types
- (all variants of a circle), and thus will only repeat after twelve curves are
- plotted with points.
-
- If desired, the style and (optionally) the line type and point type used for a
- curve can be specified.
-
- Syntax:
-
- with <style> {<linetype> {<pointtype>}}
-
- where <style> is either lines, points, linespoints, impulses, dots, steps, or
- errorbars. The <linetype> and <pointtype> are positive integer constants or
- expressions and specify the line type and point type to be used for the plot.
- Line type 1 is the first line type used by default, line type 2 is the second
- line type used by default, etc.
-
- Examples:
-
- This plots sin(x) with impulses:
-
- plot sin(x) with impulses
-
- This plots x*y with points, x**2 + y**2 default:
-
- splot x*y w points, x**2 + y**2
-
- This plots tan(x) with the default function style, "data.1" with lines:
-
- plot [ ] [-2:5] tan(x), "data.1" with l
-
- This plots "leastsq.dat" with impulses:
-
- plot 'leastsq.dat' w i
-
- This plots the data file 'population' with boxes:
-
- plot "population" with boxes
-
- This plots "exper.dat" with errorbars and lines connecting the points:
-
- plot 'exper.dat' w lines, 'exper.dat' w errorbars
-
- Here 'exper.dat' should have three or four data columns.
-
- This plots x**2 + y**2 and x**2 - y**2 with the same line type:
-
- splot x**2 + y**2 with line 1, x**2 - y**2 with line 1
-
- This plots sin(x) and cos(x) with linespoints, using the same line type but
- different point types:
-
- plot sin(x) with linesp 1 3, cos(x) with linesp 1 4
-
- This plots file "data" with points style 3:
-
- plot "data" with points 1 3
- Note that the line style must be specified when specifying the point style,
- even when it is irrelevant. Here the line style is 1 and the point style is 3,
- and the line style is irrelevant.
-
- See set style to change the default styles.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14.7. title ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- A title of each plot appears in the key. By default the title is the function
- or file name as it appears on the plot command line. The title can be changed
- by using the title option. This option should precede any with option.
-
- Syntax:
-
- title "<title>"
-
- where <title> is the new title of the plot and must be enclosed in quotes. The
- quotes will not be shown in the key.
-
- Examples:
-
- This plots y=x with the title 'x':
-
- plot x
-
- This plots the "glass.dat" file with the title 'surface of revolution':
-
- splot "glass.dat" title 'surface of revolution'
-
- This plots x squared with title "x^2" and "data.1" with title 'measured data':
-
- plot x**2 title "x^2", "data.1" t 'measured data'
-
- The title can be omitted from the key with the "notitle" option for plot and
- splot. This can be useful when some curves are plotted solely for decoration;
- for example, if one wanted a circular border for a polar plot, he could say:
-
- Example:
-
- set polar
- plot my_function(x), 1 notitle
-
- This would generate a key entry for "my_function" but not for "1". See the
- poldat.dem example.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15. print ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The print command prints the value of <expression> to the screen.
-
- Syntax:
-
- print <expression>
-
- See expressions.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 16. pwd ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The pwd command prints the name of the working directory to the screen.
-
- Syntax:
-
- pwd
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 17. quit ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The exit and quit commands and END-OF-FILE character will exit GNUPLOT. All
- these commands will clear the output device (as the clear command does) before
- exiting.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 18. replot ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The replot command without arguments repeats the last plot or splot command.
- This can be useful for viewing a plot with different set options, or when
- generating the same plot for several devices.
-
- Arguments specified after a replot command will be added onto the last plot
- (splot) command (with an implied ',' separator) before it is repeated. replot
- accepts the same arguments as the plot (splot) commands except that ranges
- cannot be specified. See command line-editing for ways to edit the last plot
- (splot) command.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 19. reread ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The reread command causes the current gnuplot command file, as specified by a
- load command or on the command line, to be reset to its starting point before
- further commands are read from it. This essentially implements an endless loop
- of the commands from the beginning of the command file to the reread command.
- The reread command has no effect if input from standard input.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 20. save ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The save command saves user-defined functions, variables, set options or all
- three plus the last plot (splot) command to the specified file.
-
- Syntax:
-
- save {<option>} "<filename>"
-
- where <option> is functions, variables or set. If no option is used, GNUPLOT
- saves functions, variables, set options and the last plot (splot) command.
-
- saved files are written in text format and may be read by the load command.
-
- The filename must be enclosed in quotes.
-
- Examples:
-
- save "work.gnu"
- save functions 'func.dat'
- save var 'var.dat'
- save set "options.dat"
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21. set-show ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set command sets LOTS of options.
-
- The show command shows their settings. show all shows all the settings.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.1. angles ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- By default, GNUPLOT assumes the independent variable in polar plots is in units
- of radians. If set angles degrees is specified before set polar then the
- default range is [0:360] and the independent variable has units of degrees.
- This is particularly useful for plots of data files. The angle setting also
- hold for the 3-d mapping as set via the set mapping command.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set angles { degrees | radians }
- show angles
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.2. arrow ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Arbitrary arrows can be placed on a plot using the set arrow command.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set arrow {<tag>} {from <sx>,<sy>{,<sz>}}
- {to <ex>,<ey>{,<ez>}} {{no}head}
- set noarrow {<tag>}
- show arrow
-
- Unspecified coordinates default to 0. The x, y, and z values are in the graph's
- coordinate system. The z coordinate is only used in splot commands. <tag> is an
- integer that identifies the arrow. If no tag is given, the lowest unused tag
- value is assigned automatically. The tag can be used to delete or change a
- specific arrow. To change any attribute of an existing arrow, use the set arrow
- command with the appropriate tag, and specify the parts of the arrow to be
- changed. Specifying nohead requests the arrow be drawn without a head (yielding
- a line segment). By default, arrows have heads.
-
- Arrows outside the plotted boundaries are permitted but may cause device
- errors.
-
- Examples:
-
- To set an arrow pointing from the origin to (1,2), use:
-
- set arrow to 1,2
- To set an arrow from (-10,4,2) to (-5,5,3), and tag the arrow number 3, use:
-
- set arrow 3 from -10,4,2 to -5,5,3
- To change the preceding arrow begin at 1,1,1, without an arrow head, use:
-
- set arrow 3 from 1,1,1 nohead
- To delete arrow number 2 use:
-
- set noarrow 2
- To delete all arrows use:
-
- set noarrow
- To show all arrows (in tag order) use:
-
- show arrow
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.3. autoscale ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Auto scaling may be set individually on the x, y or z axis or globally on all
- axes. The default is to autoscale all axes.
-
- When autoscaling, the plot range is automatically computed and the dependent
- axis (y for a plot and z for splot) is scaled to include the range of the
- function or data being plotted.
-
- If autoscaling of the dependent axis (y or z) is not set, the current y or z
- range is used.
-
- See set yrange or set zrange.
-
- Autoscaling the independent variables (x for plot and x,y for splot) is a
- request to set the domain to match any data file being plotted. If there are no
- data files then autoscaling an independent variable has no effect. In other
- words, in the absence of a data file, functions alone do not affect the x range
- (or the y range if plotting z = f(x,y)).
-
- See set xrange, or set yrange.
-
- The behavior of autoscaling remains consistent in parametric mode, however,
- there are more dependent variables and hence more control over x, y, and z plot
- scales. In parametric mode, the independent or dummy variable is t for plots
- and u,v for splots. Autoscale in parametric mode, then, controls all ranges
- (t, u, v, x, y, and z) and allows x, y, and z to be fully autoscaled.
-
- See set parametric.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set autoscale <axes>
- set noautoscale <axes>
- show autoscale
-
- where <axes> is either x, y, z or xy. If <axes> is not given then all axes are
- assumed.
-
- Examples:
-
- This sets autoscaling of the y axis. x axis autoscaling is not affected.
-
- set autoscale y
-
- This sets autoscaling of the x and y axes.
-
- set autoscale xy
-
- This sets autoscaling of the x, y and z axes.
-
- set autoscale
-
- This disables autoscaling of the x, y and z axes.
-
- set noautoscale
-
- This disables autoscaling of the z axis only.
-
- set noautoscale z
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.3.1. parametric mode ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- When in parametric mode (set parametric) the xrange is as fully scalable as the
- yrange. In other words, in parametric mode the x axis can be automatically
- scaled to fit the range of the parametric function that is being plotted. Of
- course, the y axis can also be automatically scaled just as in the
- non-parametric case. If autoscaling on the x axis is not set, the current x
- range is used.
-
- When there is a mix of data files and functions, the xrange of the functions is
- selected as that of the data files if autoscale is true for x. While this keeps
- the behavior compatible with non-parametric plotting, it may not be retained in
- the future. The problem is that, in parametric mode, the x and y ranges are not
- as distinguishable as in the non-parametric mode and this behavior may not be
- the most useful.
-
- For completeness a last command set autoscale t is accepted. However, the
- effect of this "scaling" is very minor. When GNUPLOT determines that the t
- range would be empty it makes a small adjustment if autoscaling is true.
- Otherwise, GNUPLOT gives an error. Such behavior may, in fact, not be very
- useful and the command set autoscale t is certainly questionable.
-
- splot extends the above idea similarly. If autoscaling is set then x, y, and z
- ranges are computed and each axis scaled to fit the resulting data.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.4. border ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set border and set noborder commands controls the display of the plot
- borders for the plot and splot commands.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set border
- set noborder
- show border
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.5. boxwidth ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set boxwidth command is used to set the default width of boxes in the boxes
- and boxerrorbars styles.
-
- If a data file is plotted without the width being specified in the fifth
- column, or a function is plotted, the width of each box is set by the set
- boxwidth command. If a width is given after the set boxwidth command then this
- is used as the width. Otherwise the width of each box will be calculated
- automatically so that it touches the adjacent boxes.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set boxwidth {<width>}
- show boxwidth
-
- To set the box width to automatic use the command
-
- set boxwidth
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.6. clabel ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- GNUPLOT will vary the linetype used for each contour level when clabel is set.
- When this option on (the default), a legend labels each linestyle with the z
- level it represents.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set clabel
- set noclabel
- show clabel
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.7. clip ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- GNUPLOT can clip data points and lines that are near the boundaries of a plot.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set clip <clip-type>
- set noclip <clip-type>
- show clip
-
- Three clip types are supported by GNUPLOT: points, one, and two. One, two, or
- all three clip types may be active for a single plot.
-
- The points clip type forces GNUPLOT to clip (actually, not plot at all) data
- points that fall within but too close to the boundaries (this is so the large
- symbols used for points will not extend outside the boundary lines). Without
- clipping points near the boundaries may look bad; try adjusting the x and y
- ranges.
-
- Setting the one clip type causes GNUPLOT to plot the line segments which have
- only one of the two endpoints within the plotting region. Only the in-range
- portion of the line is drawn. The alternative is to not draw any portion of
- the line segment.
-
- Some lines may have both endpoints out of range, but pass through the plotting
- area. Setting the two clip-type allows the visible portion of these lines to be
- drawn.
-
- In no case is a line drawn outside the plotting area.
-
- The defaults are noclip points, clip one, and noclip two.
-
- To check the state of all forms of clipping, use
-
- show clip
-
- For backward compatibility with older versions, the following forms are also
- permitted.
-
- set clip
- set noclip
- set clip is synonymous with set clip points. set noclip turns off all three
- types of clipping.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.8. cntrparam ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Sets the different parameters for the contouring plot (see also contour).
-
- Syntax:
-
- set cntrparam { { linear | cubicspline | bspline } |
- points <n> |
- order <n> |
- levels { [ auto ] <n> |
- discrete <z1>,<z2>, ... |
- incremental {<start>, <incr>{, <end>} } }
-
- Examples:
-
- set cntrparam bspline
- set cntrparam points 7
- set cntrparam order 10
- set cntrparam levels auto 5 # 5 automatic levels
- set cntrparam levels discrete .1,1/exp(1),.9 # 3 discrete at .1,.37,.9
- set cntrparam levels incremental 0,.1,.4
- # 5 incremental levels at 0, .1, .2, .3 and .4
- set cntrparam levels 10
- # sets n = 10 retaining current setting of auto, discr. and
- # increment's start and increment value, while changing end
- set cntrparam levels incremental 100,50
- # set start = 100 and increment = 50, retaining n levels
-
- This command controls the way contours are plotted. <n> should be an integral
- constant expression and <z1>, <z2> any constant expressions. The parameters
- are:
-
- linear, cubicspline, bspline - Controls type of approximation or interpolation.
- If linear, then the contours are drawn piecewise linear, as extracted from the
- surface directly. If cubicspline, then piecewise linear contours are
- interpolated to form a somewhat smoother contours, but which may undulate. The
- third option is the uniform bspline, which only approximates the piecewise
- linear data but is guaranteed to be smoother.
-
- points - Eventually all drawings are done with piecewise linear strokes. This
- number controls the number of points used to approximate a curve. Relevant for
- cubicspline and bspline modes only.
-
- order - Order of the bspline approximation to be used. The bigger this order
- is, the smoother the resulting contour. (Of course, higher order bspline
- curves will move further away from the original piecewise linear data.) This
- option is relevant for bspline mode only. Allowed values are integers in the
- range from 2 (linear) to 10.
-
- levels - Number of contour levels, 'n'. Selection of the levels is controlled
- by 'auto' (default), 'discrete', and 'incremental'. For 'auto', if the surface
- is bounded by zmin and zmax then contours will be generated from zmin+dz to
- zmax-dz in steps of size dz, where dz = (zmax - zmin) / (levels + 1). For
- 'discrete', contours will be generated at z = z1, z2 ... as specified. The
- number of discrete levels is limited to MAX_DISCRETE_LEVELS, defined in plot.h
- to be 30. If 'incremental', contours are generated at <n> values of z
- beginning at <start> and increasing by <increment>.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.9. contour ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Enable contour drawing for surfaces. This option is available for splot only.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set contour { base | surface | both }
- set nocontour
-
- If no option is provided to set contour, the default is base. The three options
- specify where to draw the contours: base draws the contours on the grid base
- where the x/ytics are placed, surface draws the contours on the surfaces
- themselves, and both draws the contours on both the base and the surface.
-
- See also set cntrparam for the parameters that affect the drawing of contours.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.10. data style ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set data style command changes the default plotting style for data plots.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set data style
- show data style
- set data style <style-choice>
-
- In the first case, set data style returns the possible style choices: lines,
- points, linespoints, dots, steps, impulses, errorbars, boxes or boxerrorbars.
- show data style shows the current default plotting style for data. set data
- style dots would actually change the default plotting style. See also plot.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.11. dgrid3d ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Enables and sets the different parameters for non grid to grid data mapping.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set dgrid3d {,{<row_size>}{,{<col_size>}{,<norm>}}}
- set nodgrid3d
-
- Examples:
-
- set dgrid3d 10,10,2
- set dgrid3d ,,4
-
- The first selects a grid of size 10 by 10 to be constructed and the use of L2
- norm in the distance computation. The second only modifies the norm to be used
- to L4.
-
- By default this option is disabled. When enabled, 3d data read from a file is
- always treaded as a scattered data set. A grid with dimensions derived from a
- bounding box of the scattered data and size as specified by the row/col_size
- above is created for plotting and contouring. The grid is equally spaced in x
- and y while the z value is computed as a weighted average of the scattered
- points distance to the grid points. The closer the scatter points to a grid
- point are the more effect they have on that grid point. The third, norm,
- parameter controls the "meaning" of the distance, by specifying the distance
- norm. This distance computation is optimized for powers of 2 norms,
- specifically 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16, but any nonnegative integer can be used.
-
- This dgrid3d option is a simple low pass filter that converts scattered data to
- a grid data set. More sophisticated approaches to this problem exists and
- should be used as a preprocess to and outside gnuplot if this simple solution
- is found inadequate.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.12. dummy ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- By default, GNUPLOT assumes that the independent variable for the plot command
- is x, and the independent variables for the splot command are x and y. They are
- called the dummy variables because it is just a notation to indicate the
- independent variables. The set dummy command changes these default dummy
- variable names. For example, it may be more convenient to call the dummy
- variable t when plotting time functions:
-
- set dummy t
- plot sin(t), cos(t)
-
- Syntax:
-
- set dummy <dummy-var>{,<dummy-var>}
- show dummy
-
- Examples:
-
- set dummy u,v
- set dummy ,s
-
- to set both dummy variables to u and v or set only the second variable to s.
-
- The set parametric command also changes the dummy variables (to t for plot and
- u,v for splots).
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.13. format ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The format of the tic-mark labels can be set with the set format command. The
- default format for both axes is "%g", but other formats such as "%.2f" or
- "%3.0fm" are often desirable. Anything accepted by printf when given a double
- precision number, and then accepted by the terminal, will work. In particular,
- the formats f, e, and g will work, and the d, o, x, c, s, and u formats will
- not work.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set format {<axes>} {"<format-string>"}
- show format
-
- where <axes> is either x, y, z, xy, or nothing (which is the same as xy). The
- length of the string representing a ticmark (after formatting with printf) is
- restricted to 100 characters. If the format string is omitted, the format will
- be returned to the default "%g". For LaTeX users, the format " empty string ""
- is used, no label will be plotted with each tic, though the tic mark will still
- be plotted. To eliminate all tic marks, use set noxtics or set noytics.
-
- See also set xtics and set ytics for more control over tic labels.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.14. function style ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set function style command changes the default plotting style for
- functions.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set function style
- show function style
- set function style <style-choice>
-
- In the first case, set function style returns the possible style choices:
- lines, points, linespoints, dots, steps, impulses, errorbars, boxes, or
- boxerrorbars. show function style shows the current default plotting style for
- functions. set function style linespoints would actually change the default
- plotting style. See also plot.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.15. functions ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The show functions command lists all user-defined functions and their
- definitions.
-
- Syntax:
-
- show functions
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.16. grid ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The optional set grid draws a grid at the tic marks with the axis linetype.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set grid
- set nogrid
- show grid
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.17. hidden3d ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set hidden3d command enables hidden line removal for explicit surface
- plotting (see splot). Hidden line removal may be used for both explicit
- functions and for explicit data. It now works for parametric surfaces as well.
-
- When this flag is set both the surface hidden portion and possibly its hidden
- contours (see set contour) as well as the hidden grid will be removed. Labels
- and arrows are always visible and are unaffected by this command.
-
- Each surface has its hidden parts removed with respect to itself and to other
- surfaces, if more than one surface is plotted. This mode is meaningful when
- surfaces are plotted using line style drawing only.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set hidden3d
- set nohidden3d
- show hidden3d
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.18. isosamples ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- An isoline is a curve parametrized by one of the surface parameters while the
- other surface parameter is fixed. Isolines are a simple means to display a
- surface. By fixing the u parameter of surface s(u,v), the iso-u lines of the
- form c(v) = s(u0,v) are produced, and by fixing the v parameter, the iso-v
- lines of the form c(u) = s(u,v0) are produced.
-
- The isoline density of surfaces may be changed by the set isosamples command.
- By default, sampling is set to 10 isolines per u or v axis. A higher sampling
- rate will produce more accurate plots, but will take longer. This parameter has
- no effect on data file plotting.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set isosamples <iso_1> {,<iso_2>}
- show isosamples
-
- Each surface plot will have <iso_1> iso-u lines and <iso_2> iso-v lines. If you
- only specify <iso_1>, <iso_2> will be set to the same value as <iso_1>.
-
- When a surface plot is being done without the removal of hidden lines, set
- samples also has an effect on the number of points being evaluated. See set
- samples.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.19. key ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set key enables a key describing curves on a plot. By default the key is
- placed in the upper right corner of the plot.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set key
- set key <x>,<y>{,<z>}
- set nokey
- show key
-
- The coordinates <x>, <y> (and <z> for splots) specify the location of the key
- on the plot. The key is drawn as a sequence of lines, with one plot described
- on each line. On the right hand side of each line is a representation that
- attempts to mimic the way the curve is plotted. On the left side of each line
- is the text description, obtained from the plot command. See plot title to
- change this description. The lines are vertically arranged so an imaginary
- straight line divides the left- and right-hand sides of the key. It is the
- coordinates of this line that are specified with the set key command. In a
- plot, only the x and y coordinates are used to specify the line position. For
- a splot, x, y and z are all being used as a 3-d location mapped using the same
- mapping as the plot itself to form the required 2-d screen position of the
- imaginary line.
-
- Some or all of the key may be outside of the plot boundary, although this may
- interfere with other labels and may cause an error on some devices.
-
- Examples:
-
- This places the key at the default location:
-
- set key
- This disables the key:
-
- set nokey
- This places a key at coordinates 2,3.5,2
-
- set key 2,3.5,2
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.20. label ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Arbitrary labels can be placed on the plot using the set label command. If the
- z coordinate is given on a plot it is ignored; if it is missing on a splot it
- is assumed to be 0.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set label {<tag>} {"<label_text>"} {at <x>,<y>{,<z>}}
- {<justification>}
- set nolabel {<tag>}
- show label
-
- The text defaults to "", and the position to 0,0,0. The <x>, <y>, and <z>
- values are in the graph's coordinate system. The tag is an integer that is
- used to identify the label. If no <tag> is given, the lowest unused tag value
- is assigned automatically. The tag can be used to delete or change a specific
- label. To change any attribute of an existing label, use the set label command
- with the appropriate tag, and specify the parts of the label to be changed.
-
- By default, the text is placed flush left against the point x,y,z. To adjust
- the way the label is positioned with respect to the point x,y,z, add the
- parameter <justification>, which may be left, right or center, indicating that
- the point is to be at the left, right or center of the text. Labels outside the
- plotted boundaries are permitted but may interfere with axes labels or other
- text.
-
- Examples:
-
- To set a label at (1,2) to "y=x" use:
-
- set label "y=x" at 1,2
- To set a label "y=x^2" with the right of the text at (2,3,4), and tag the label
- number 3, use:
-
- set label 3 "y=x^2" at 2,3,4 right
- To change the preceding label to center justification, use:
-
- set label 3 center
- To delete label number 2 use:
-
- set nolabel 2
- To delete all labels use:
-
- set nolabel
- To show all labels (in tag order) use:
-
- show label
-
- (The EEPIC, Imagen, LaTeX, and TPIC drivers allow \\ in a string to specify a
- newline.)
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.21. logscale ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Log scaling may be set on the x, y, and z axes.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set logscale <axes> <base>
- set nologscale <axes>
- show logscale
-
- where <axes> may be any combinations of x, y, and z, in any order, and where
- <base> is the base of the log scaling. If <base> is not given, then 10 is
- assumed. If <axes> is not given then all three axes are assumed. The command
- set logscale turns on log scaling on the specified axes, while set nologscale
- turns off log scaling.
-
- Examples:
-
- To enable log scaling in both x and z axes:
-
- set logscale xz
- To enable scaling log base 2 of the y axis:
-
- set logscale y 2
- To disable z axis log scaling:
-
- set nologscale z
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.22. mapping ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Syntax:
-
- set mapping { cartesian | spherical | cylindrical }
-
- Data for splots are usually in regular Euclidean space and are provided in
- Cartesian coordinates. Such 3-d data require three coordinates (x, y and z) or
- one coordinate (only z) in each line in the data file. In order to be able to
- use spherical or cylindrical coordinate systems, use the set mapping command.
- In both cases two coordinates are expected in each line of the data. For a
- spherical coordinate system, these are theta and phi (in units as specified by
- set angles) and the mapping is:
-
- x = cos( theta ) * cos( phi )
- y = sin( theta ) * cos( phi )
- z = sin( phi )
-
- For a cylindrical coordinate system, the mapping uses two variables, theta (in
- units as specified by set angles) and z:
-
- x = cos( theta )
- y = sin( theta )
- z = z
-
- Again, note that mapping will affect data file splots only.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.23. offsets ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The amount of the graph that the plot takes up may be controlled to some extent
- with the set offsets command. This command takes four offset arguments: <left>,
- <right>, <top> and <bottom>. By default, each offset is 0. Each offset may be a
- constant or an expression. Left and right offsets are given in units of the x
- axis, while top and bottom offsets are given in units of the y axis. The plot
- of sin(x), displayed with offsets of 0, 0, 2, 2 will take up 1/3 of the
- displayed y axis. Offsets are particularly useful with polar coordinates as a
- means of compensating for aspect ratio distortion. Offsets are ignored in
- splots.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set offsets <left>, <right>, <top>, <bottom>
- show offsets
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.24. output ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- By default, plots are displayed to the standard output. The set output command
- redirects the display to the specified file or device.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set output {"<filename>"}
- show output
-
- The filename must be enclosed in quotes. If the filename is omitted, output
- will be sent to the standard output.
-
- On machines with popen functions (UNIX), output can be piped through a shell
- command if the first letter of the filename is '|'. For instance,
-
- Syntax:
-
- set output "|lpr -Plaser filename"
- set output "|lp -dlaser filename"
-
- (On MSDOS machines, set output "prn" will direct the output to the default
- printer.)
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.25. parametric ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set parametric command changes the meaning of plot (splot) from normal
- functions to parametric functions. The command set noparametric changes the
- plotting style back to normal, single-valued expression plotting.
-
- In 2-d plotting, a parametric function is determined by a pair of parametric
- functions operating on a parameter. An example of a 2-d parametric function
- would be plot sin(t),cos(t) (which defines a circle).
-
- For 3-d plotting, the surface is described as x=f(u,v), y=g(u,v), z=h(u,v).
- Therefore a triplet of functions are required. An example of 3-d parametric
- function would be cos(u)*cos(v),cos(u)*sin(v),sin(u) (which defines a sphere).
- It takes three parametric function specifications in terms of the parametric
- dummy arguments to describe a single graph.
-
- The total set of possible plots is a superset of the simple f(x) style plots,
- since the two (three) functions can describe the x and y (and z) values to be
- computed separately. In fact, plots of the type t,f(t) (u,v,f(u,v)) are
- equivalent to those produced with f(x) when the x values are computed using the
- identity function as the first function.
-
- Note that the order the parametric functions are specified is xfunction,
- yfunction (and zfunction) and that each operates over the common parametric
- domain.
-
- Also, the set parametric function implies a new range of values. Whereas the
- normal f(x) and f(x,y) style plotting assume an xrange and yrange (and zrange),
- the parametric mode additionally specifies a trange, urange, and vrange. These
- ranges may be set directly with set trange, set urange and set vrange, or by
- specifying the range on the plot or splot commands. Currently the default range
- for these parametric variables is [-5:5]. Setting the ranges to something more
- meaningful is expected.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.26. polar ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set polar command changes the meaning of the plot from rectangular
- coordinates to polar coordinates. In polar coordinates, the dummy variable (x)
- is an angle. The range of this angle is changed from whatever it was to
- [0:2*pi], or, if degree unit has been selected, to [0:360] (see set angles).
-
- The command set nopolar changes the meaning of the plot back to the default
- rectangular coordinate system. The range of x is changed from whatever it was
- to [-10:10].
-
- The set polar command is not supported for splots. See the set mapping command
- for similar functionality for splots.
-
- While in polar coordinates the meaning of an expression in x is really r =
- f(x), where x is an angle of rotation. The xrange controls the domain (the
- angle) of the function, and the yrange controls the range (the radius). The
- plot is plotted in a rectangular box, and the x and y axes are both in units of
- the radius. Thus, the yrange controls both dimensions of the plot output. The
- tics and units are written along the axes rather than at the left and bottom.
- These unit are offset by <rmin> specified by the rrange (See set rrange). It is
- not possible to specify different output dimensions in the x or y directions.
- The yrange can be used to shift the plot diagonally to display only the first
- or third quadrants.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set polar
- set nopolar
- show polar
- Example:
-
- set polar
- plot x*sin(x)
- plot [-2*pi:2*pi] [-3:3] x*sin(x)
- The first plot uses the default polar angular domain of 0 to 2*pi. The radius
- (and the size of the plot) is scaled automatically. The second plot expands the
- domain, and restricts the range of the radius (and the size of the plot) to
- [-3:3].
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.27. rrange ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set rrange command sets the radial range used to compute x and y values
- when in polar mode. If not in polar mode (see set polar) then this range is not
- used. Use of this command offsets the polar singularity to the <rmin> value and
- shifts the units on the axes tic marks. For instance, set rrange [-40:40] would
- set the origin to -40 and would plot values of radial values between -40 to 40.
- Thus, if 360 degrees of data were plotted, then the plot would extend 80 units
- in radially from the origin. To view the entire plot, a set yrange [-80:80]
- command would create a square viewport with a circular plot tangent at the
- axes. Because xrange is used specify the angular extent, only a square
- viewport can be specified by yrange. For instance, set yrange [0:80] would
- display the first quadrant and set yrange [-80:0] would display the third
- quadrant. Any square viewport of any size can be specified but it is
- constrained to be centered on a 45 degree line.
-
- This range may also be specified on the plot command line when in polar mode.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set rrange [{<rmin> : <rmax>}]
-
- where <rmin> and <rmax> terms are constants or expressions.
-
- Both the <rmin> and <rmax> terms are optional. Anything omitted will not be
- changed, so
-
- set rrange [:10]
- changes rmax to 10 without affecting rmin.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.28. samples ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The sampling rate of functions may be changed by the set samples command. By
- default, sampling is set to 100 points. A higher sampling rate will produce
- more accurate plots, but will take longer. This parameter no longer has any
- effect on data-file plotting.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set samples <samples_1> {,<samples_2>}
- show samples
-
- When a 2-d plot is being done, only the value of <samples_1> is relevant.
-
- When a surface plot is being done without the removal of hidden lines, the
- value of samples specifies the number of samples that are evaluated per iso
- line. Each iso-v line will have <sample_1> samples and each iso-u line will
- have <sample_2> samples. If you only specify <samples_1>, <samples_2> will be
- set to the same value as <samples_1>. See also set isosamples.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.29. size ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set size command scales the displayed size of the plot. On some terminals,
- changing the size of the plot will result in text being misplaced. Increasing
- the size of the plot may produce strange results. Decreasing is safer.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set size {<xscale>,<yscale>}
- show size
-
- The <xscale> and <yscale> values are the scaling factors for the size. The
- defaults (1,1) are selected if the scaling factors are omitted.
-
- Examples:
-
- To set the size to normal size use:
-
- set size
- To make the plot half size use:
-
- set size 0.5,0.5
- To make a landscape plot have a 1:1 aspect ratio in polar mode use:
-
- set size 0.721,1.0
- To show the size use:
-
- show size
-
- For the LaTeX and Fig terminals the default size (scale factor 1,1) is 5 inches
- wide by 3 inches high. The big Fig terminal (bfig) is 7 inches wide by 5 inches
- high. The postscript default is landscape mode 10 inches wide and 7 inches
- high. Note that the size of the plot includes the space used by the labels; the
- plotting area itself is smaller.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.30. style ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Plots may be displayed in one of eight styles: lines, points, linespoints,
- impulses, dots, steps, errorbars, boxes, or boxerrorbars. The lines style
- connects adjacent points with lines. The points style displays a small symbol
- at each point. The linespoints style does both lines and points. The impulses
- style displays a vertical line from the x axis (or from the grid base for
- splot) to each point. The dots style plots a tiny dot at each point; this is
- useful for scatter plots with many points.
-
- The errorbars style is only relevant to 2-d data file plotting. It is treated
- like points for splots and function plots. For data plots, errorbars is like
- points, except that a vertical error bar is also drawn: for each point (x,y), a
- line is drawn from (x,ylow) to (x,yhigh). A tic mark is placed at the ends of
- the error bar. The ylow and yhigh values are read from the data file's columns,
- as specified with the using option to plot. See plot errorbars for more
- information.
-
- The boxes style is only relevant to 2-d plotting. It draws a box centred about
- the given x coordinate from the yaxis to the given y coordinate. The width of
- the box is obtained in one of three ways. If a data file has a fifth column,
- this will be used to set the width of the box. Otherwise, if a width has been
- set using the set boxwidth command, this will be used. Otherwise the width of
- each box will be calculated automatically so that it touches the adjacent
- boxes. Another style called boxerrorbars is also available and is only
- relevant to 2-d data file plotting. This style is a combination of the boxes
- and errorbars styles.
-
- The steps style is only relevant to 2-d plotting. This style connects
- consecutive points with two line segments: the first from (x1,y1) to (x2,y1)
- and the second from (x2,y1) to (x2,y2).
-
- Default styles are chosen with the set function style and set data style
- commands. See plot style for information about how to override the default
- plotting style for individual functions.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set function style <style>
- set data style <style>
- show function style
- show data style
-
- where <style> is lines, points, linespoints, impulses, dots, steps, errorbars,
- boxes, or boxerrorbars.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.31. surface ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- set surface controls the display of surfaces. It is useful if contours are to
- be displayed by themselves. Whenever set nosurface is issued, no surface
- isolines/mesh will be drawn. See also set contour.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set surface
- set nosurface
- show surface
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32. terminal ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- GNUPLOT supports many different graphics devices. Use the set terminal command
- to select the type of device for which GNUPLOT will produce output.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal {<terminal-type>}
- show terminal
-
- If <terminal-type> is omitted, GNUPLOT will list the available terminal types.
- <terminal-type> may be abbreviated.
-
- Use set output to redirect this output to a file or device.
-
- Several terminals have additional options. For example, see dumb, iris4d,
- hpljii or postscript.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.1. aifm ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Several options may be set in the Adobe Illustrator 3.0 driver.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal aifm {<color>}
- {"<fontname>"} {<fontsize>}
-
- Selecting default sets all options to their default values. <color> is either
- color or monochrome. "<fontname>" is the name of a valid PostScript font.
- <fontsize> is the size of the font in PostScript points, before scaling by the
- set size command. Defaults are monochrome, "Helvetica", and 14pt.
-
- Also, since AI does not really support multiple pages, multiple graphs will be
- output directly on one another. However, each graph will be grouped
- individually, making it easy to separate them inside AI (just pick them up and
- move them).
-
- Examples:
-
- set term aifm
- set term aifm 22
- set size 0.7,1.4
- set term aifm color "Times-Roman" 14
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.2. atari ST ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The atari terminal has an option to set the character size and the screen
- colors. The driver expects a space separated list the char size and maximal 16
- 3 digit hex numbers where each digit represents RED, GREEN and BLUE (in that
- order). The range of 0-15 is scaled to whatever color range the screen
- actually has. On a normal ST screen, odd and even intensities are the same.
-
- Examples:
-
- set terminal atari 4 # (use small (6x6) font)
- set terminal atari 6 0 # (set monochrome screen to white on black)
- set terminal atari 13 0 fff f00 f0 f ff f0f ff0
- # (set first eight colors to black, white, green, blue, cyan, \
- purple, and yellow and use large font (8x16).)
-
- Additionally, if an environment variable GNUCOLORS exists, its contents are
- interpreted as an options string, but an explicit terminal option takes
- precedence.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.3. dumb ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The dumb terminal driver has an optional size specification.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal dumb {<xsize> <ysize>}
-
- where <xsize> and <ysize> set the size of the dumb terminals. Default is 79 by
- 24.
-
- Examples:
-
- set term dumb
- set term dumb 79 49 # VGA screen--why would anyone want to do that?
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.4. epson ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- This set of drivers support Epson printers and derivatives. See also the NEC
- driver. epson is a generic 9 wire printer with a resolution of 512x384. starc
- is a Star Color printer with the same resolution. epson180 and epson60 are 180
- dpi and 60 dpi drivers for newer 24 wire printers. This also includes bubble
- jet printers. Their resolutions are 1260x1080 and 480x360, respectively. The
- tandy60 is identical to the epson60 driver with one additional escape sequence
- to start IBM mode. With all of these drivers, a binary copy is required on a
- PC to print. Do not use print.
-
- copy file /b lpt1:
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.5. gpic ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- This driver is only known to work the Free Software Foundation gpic/groff
- package. Modification for the Document Workbench pic/troff package would be
- appreciated. FSF gpic can also produce TeX output.
-
- A simple graph can be formatted using
-
- groff -p -mpic -Tps file.pic > file.ps.
-
- The output from pic can be pipe-lined into eqn, so it is possible to put
- complex functions in a graph with the set label and set {x/y}label commands.
- For instance,
-
- set ylab '@space 0 int from 0 to x alpha ( t ) roman d t@'
-
- Will label the y-axis with a nice integral if formatted with the command:
-
- gpic filename.pic | geqn -d@@ -Tps | groff -m[macro-package] -Tps
- > filename.ps
-
- Figures made this way can be scaled to fit into a document. The pic language is
- easy to understand, so the graphs can be edited by hand if need be. All
- coordinates in the pic-file produced by gnuplot are given as x+gnuplotx and
- y+gnuploty. By default x and y are given the value 0 If this line is removed
- with an editor in a number of files one can put several graphs i one figure
- like this (default size is 5.0x3.0 inches)
-
- .PS 8.0
- x=0;y=3
- copy "figa.pic"
- x=5;y=3
- copy "figb.pic"
- x=0;y=0
- copy "figc.pic"
- x=5;y=0
- copy "figd.pic"
- .PE
-
- This will produce an 8 inches wide figure with four graphs in two rows on top
- of each other
-
- One can also achieve the same thing by the command
-
- set term pic x y
-
- For example, using
-
- .PS 6.0
- copy "trig.pic"
- .PE
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.6. hpljii ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The HP LaserJet II and HP DeskJet drivers have a single option.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal hpljii {<resolution>}
- set terminal hpdj {<resolution>}
-
- where <resolution> is the resolution of the output in dots per inch. It must be
- 75, 100, 150 or 300. Note: there must be enough memory available to rasterize
- at the higher resolutions.
-
- Example:
-
- set terminal hpljii 150
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.7. latex ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The LaTeX and EMTeX driver allows one to specify a font type and a font size
- for the labels around a gnuplot graph.
-
- Options are: Fonts:
-
- default (Roman 10 point)
- courier
- roman
-
- at any size you specify. (BEWARE METAFONT will not like odd sizes.) eg.
-
- gnuplot> set term latex courier 5
-
- Unless your driver is capable of building fonts at any size (e.g. dvips), stick
- to the standard 10, 11 and 12 point size.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.8. iris4d ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The iris4d driver can operate in two modes.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal iris4d {24}
-
- If the hardware supports only 8 bits, use the default set terminal iris4d. If,
- however, the hardware supports 24 bits (8 per red/green/blue), use set terminal
- iris4d 24.
-
- When using 24-bit mode, the colors can be directly specified via the file
- .gnuplot_iris4d that is searched in the current directory and then in the home
- directory specified by the HOME environment variable. This file holds RGB
- values for the background, border, labels and nine plotting colors, in that
- order. For example, here is a file containing the default colors:
-
- 85 85 85 /* Back Ground */
- 0 0 0 /* Boundary */
- 170 0 170 /* Labeling */
- 85 255 255 /* Plot Color 1 */
- 170 0 0 /* Plot Color 2 */
- 0 170 0 /* Plot Color 3 */
- 255 85 255 /* Plot Color 4 */
- 255 255 85 /* Plot Color 5 */
- 255 85 85 /* Plot Color 6 */
- 85 255 85 /* Plot Color 7 */
- 0 170 170 /* Plot Color 8 */
- 170 170 0 /* Plot Color 9 */
-
- This file has exactly 12 lines of RGB triples. No empty lines are allowed and
- anything after the third number in line is ignored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.9. mf ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The mf terminal driver creates a input file to the MetaFont program. Thus a
- figure may be used in the TeX document in the same way as a character is.
-
- To use the plot in a document the MetaFont program must be run with the output
- file from GnuPlot as input. Thus, the user needs a basic knowledge of the font
- creating process and inclusion of a new font in a document. However, if the
- Metafont program is set up properly at the local site an unexperienced user
- could perform the operation without much trouble.
-
- The text support is based on a MetaFont character set. Currently the Computer
- Modern Roman font set is input but the user are in principal free to chose
- whatever fonts he/she needs. The MetaFont source files for the chosen font must
- be available. Each character is stored in a separate picture variable in
- MetaFont. These variables may be manipulated (rotated, scaled etc.) when
- characters are needed. The drawback is the interpretation time in the MetaFont
- program. On some machines (i.e. PC) the limited amount of memory available may
- also cause problem if too many pictures are stored.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.9.1. Metafont Instructions ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- - Set your terminal to metafont:
-
- set terminal mf
- - Select an output-file, e.g.:
-
- set output "myfigures.mf"
- - Do your plots. Each plot will generate a separate character. Its default size
- will be 5*3 inches. You can change the size by saying set size 0.5,0.5 or
- whatever fraction of the default size you want to have.
-
- - Quit gnuplot.
-
- - Generate a tfm- and gf-file by running metafont on the output of gnuplot.
- Since the plot is quite large (5*3 in), you will have to use a version of
- metafont that has a value of at least 150000 for memmax. On Unix-systems these
- are conventionally installed under the name bigmf. For the following assume
- that the command virmf stands for a big version of metafont. For example:
-
- - Invoke metafont:
-
- virmf '&plain'
- - Select the output device: At the metafont prompt ('*') type:
-
- \mode:=CanonCX; % or whatever printer you use
- - Optionally select a magnification:
-
- mag:=1; % or whatever you wish
- - Input the gnuplot-file:
-
- input myfigures.mf
- On a typical Unix machine there will usually be a script called mf that
- executes virmf '&plain', so you probably can substitute mf for virmf &plain.
- This will generate two files: mfput.tfm and mfput. the resolution of your
- device). The above can be conveniently achieved by typing everything on the
- command line, e.g.: virmf '&plain' '\mode:=CanonCX; mag:=1; input myfigures.mf'
- In this case the output files will be named myfigures.tfm and myfigures.300gf.
-
- - Generate a pk-file from the gf-file using gftopk:
-
- gftopk myfigures.300gf myfigures.300pk
- The name of the output-file for gftopk depends on the dvi-driver you use. Ask
- your local TeX-administrator about the naming conventions. Next, either install
- the tfm- and pk-files in the appropriate directories, or set your
- environment-variables properly. Usually this involves setting TEXFONTS to
- include the current directory and do the same thing for the
- environment-variable that your dvi-driver uses (no standard name here...). This
- step is necessary so that TeX will find the font-metric file and your
- dvi-driver will find the pk-file.
-
- - To include your plots in your document you have to tell TeX the font:
-
- \font\gnufigs=myfigures
- Each plot you made is stored in a single character. The first plot is character
- 0, the second is character 1, and so on... After doing the above step you can
- use the plots just like any other characters. Therefore, to place plots 1 and 2
- centered in your document, all you have to do is:
-
- \centerline{\gnufigs\char0}
- \centerline{\gnufigs\char1}
- in plain TeX. For LaTeX you can, of course, use the picture environment and
- place the plot according to your wishes using the \makebox and \put macros.
-
- It saves you a lot of time, once you have generated the font, since TeX handles
- the plots as characters and uses minimal time to place them. Also the documents
- you make change more often, than the plots do. Also it saves a lot of
- TeX-memory. One last advantage of using the metafont-driver is that the
- dvi-file really remains device independent, because no \special-commands are
- used as in the eepic- and tpic-drivers.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.10. mif ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Several options may be set in the MIF 3.00 driver.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal mif {<pentype>} {<curvetype>} {<help>}
-
- <pentype> selects "colour" of the graphics.
-
- colour plot lines with line types >= 0 in colour (MIF sep. 2-7).
- monochrome plot all line types in black (MIF sep. 0).
- <curvetype> selects how "curves" are plotted.
-
- polyline plot curves as continuous curves.
- vectors plot curves as collections of vectors
- <help> print online help on standard error output.
-
- help print a short description of the usage, and the options
- ? print a short description of the usage
-
- This terminal driver produces Frame Maker MIF format version 3.00. It plots in
- MIF Frames with the size 15*10 [cm], and plot primitives with the same pen will
- be grouped in the same MIF group. Plot primitives in a gnuplot plot will be
- plotted in a MIF Frame, and several MIF Frames are collected in one large MIF
- Frame. Plot primitives with line types >= 0 will as default be drawn in colour.
- As default curves are plotted as continuous lines. The MIF font used for text
- is "Times".
-
- Examples:
-
- set term mif
- set term mif vectors
- set term mif help
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.11. nec-cp6 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- One option may be set in the nec-cp6 driver. The resolution of this driver is
- 400x320.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal nec-cp6 monochrome
- set terminal nec-cp6 color
- set terminal nec-cp6 draft
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.12. pbm ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Several options may be set in the PBMplus driver.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal pbm {<fontsize>} {<colormode>}
-
- where <fontsize> is small, medium, or large and <colormode> is monochrome, gray
- or color. Default size is 640 pixels wide and 480 pixels high. The output for
- monochrome is a portable bitmap (one bit per pixel). The output for gray is a
- portable graymap (three bits per pixel). The output for color is a portable
- pixmap (color, four bits per pixel). The output of these drivers can be used
- with Jef Poskanzer's excellent PBMPLUS package which provides programs to
- convert the above PBMPLUS formats to GIF, TIFF, MacPaint, Macintosh PICT, PCX,
- X11 bitmap and many others.
-
- Examples:
-
- set term pbm small
- set size 2,2
- set term pbm color medium
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.13. pcl5 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Three options may be set in the pcl5 driver. The driver actually uses HPGL-2
- but there is a name conflict among the terminal devices.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal pcl5 {<mode>} {<font>} {<fontsize>}
-
- where <mode> is landscape, or portrait, <font> is stick, univers, or cg_times,
- and fontsize is the size in points.
-
- set terminal pcl5 landscape
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.14. postscript ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Several options may be set in the PostScript driver.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal postscript {<mode>} {<color>} {<dashed>}
- {"<fontname>"} {<fontsize>}
-
- where <mode> is landscape, portrait, eps or default. Selecting default sets all
- options to their defaults. <color> is either color or monochrome. <dashed> is
- either solid or dashed. "<fontname>" is the name of a valid PostScript font.
- <fontsize> is the size of the font in PostScript points. Defaults are
- landscape, monochrome, dashed, "Helvetica", and 14pt. Default size of
- PostScript plot is landscape mode 10 inches wide and 7 inches high.
-
- To get EPS output, use the eps mode and make only one plot per file. In eps
- mode the whole plot is halved in size; the fonts are half the given size, and
- the plot is 5 inches wide and 3.5 inches high.
-
- Examples:
-
- set term postscript default # old postscript
- set term postscript landscape 22 # old psbig
- set term postscript eps 14 # old epsf1
- set term postscript eps 22 # old epsf2
- set size 0.7,1.4
- set term post portrait color "Times-Roman" 14
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.15. regis ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The regis terminal device has the option of using 4 or 16 colors. The default
- is 4. For example:
-
- set term regis 16
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.16. table ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Instead of producing a picture, term type table prints out the evaluation
- results in a multicolumn ASCII table of X Y Z values. For those times when you
- really want to see the numbers, now you can see them on the screen or save to a
- file.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.17. windows ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Three options may be set in the windows driver.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set terminal windows {<color>} {"<fontname>"} {<fontsize>}
-
- <color> is either color or monochrome. "<fontname>" is the name of a valid
- Windows font. <fontsize> is the size of the font in points.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.17.1. graph-menu ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The gnuplot graph window has the following options on a pop up menu accessed by
- pressing the right mouse button or selecting Options from the system menu:
-
- Bring to Top when checked brings the graph window to the top after every plot.
-
- Color when checked enables color linestyles. When unchecked it forces
- monochrome linestyles.
-
- Copy to Clipboard copies a bitmap and a Metafile picture.
-
- Background... sets the window background color.
-
- Choose Font... selects the font used in the graphics window.
-
- Line Styles... allows customization of the line colors and styles.
-
- Print... prints the graphics windows using a Windows printer driver and allows
- selection of the printer and scaling of the output. The output produced by
- Print is not as good as that from gnuplot's own printer drivers.
-
- Update wgnuplot.ini saves the current window locations, window sizes, text
- window font, text window font size, graph window font, graph window font size,
- background color and linestyles to the initialisation file WGNUPLOT.INI.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.17.2. printing ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- In order of preference, graphs may be be printed in the following ways.
-
- 1. Use the gnuplot command set terminal to select a printer and set output to
- redirect output to a file.
-
- 2. Select the Print... command from the gnuplot graph window. An extra command
- screendump does this from the text window.
-
- 3. If set output "PRN" is used, output will go to a temporary file. When you
- exit from gnuplot or when you change the output with another set output
- command, a dialog box will appear for you to select a printer port. If you
- choose OK, the output will be printed on the selected port, passing unmodified
- through the print manager. It is possible to accidently (or deliberately) send
- printer output meant for one printer to an incompatible printer.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.17.3. text-menu ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The gnuplot text window has the following options on a pop up menu accessed by
- pressing the right mouse button or selecting Options from the system menu:
-
- Copy to Clipboard copies marked text to the clipboard.
-
- Paste copies text from the clipboard as if typed by the user.
-
- Choose Font... selects the font used in the text window.
-
- System Colors when selected makes the text window honor the System Colors set
- using the Control Panel. When unselected, text is black or blue on a white
- background.
-
- Update wgnuplot.ini saves the current text window location, text window size,
- text window font and text window font size to the initialisation file
- WGNUPLOT.INI.
-
- MENU BAR
-
- If the menu file WGNUPLOT.MNU is found in the same directory as WGNUPLOT.EXE,
- then the menu specified in WGNUPLOT.MNU will be loaded.
-
- Menu commands are:
-
- [Menu] Start a new menu with the name on the following line
- [EndMenu] End current menu.
- -- Insert a horizontal menu separator
- | Insert a vertical menu separator
- [Button] Put next macro on a push button instead of a menu.
-
- Macros take two lines with the macro name (menu entry) on the first line and
- the macro on the second line. Leading spaces are ignored.
-
- Macros commands are:
-
- [INPUT] Input string with prompt terminated by [EOS] or {ENTER}
- [EOS] End Of String terminator. Generates no output.
- [OPEN] Get name of file to open from list box, with title of
- list box terminated by [EOS], followed by default
- filename terminated by [EOS] or {ENTER}
- This uses COMMDLG.DLL from Windows 3.1.
- [SAVE] Get name of file to save. Similar to [OPEN]
-
- Macros character substitutions are:
-
- {ENTER} Carriage Return '\r'
- {TAB} Tab '\011'
- {ESC} Escape '\033'
- {^A} '\001'
- ...
- {^_} '\031'
-
- Macros are limited to 256 characters after expansion.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.17.4. wgnuplot.ini ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Windows gnuplot will read some of its options from the [WGNUPLOT] section of
- WGNUPLOT.INI in the Windows directory. An example WGNUPLOT.INI file is shown
- below.
-
- [WGNUPLOT]
- TextOrigin=0 0
- TextSize=640 150
- TextFont=Terminal,9
- GraphOrigin=0 150
- GraphSize=640 330
- GraphFont=Arial,10
- GraphColor=1
- GraphToTop=1
- GraphBackground=255 255 255
- Border=0 0 0 0 0
- Axis=192 192 192 2 2
- Line1=0 0 255 0 0
- Line2=0 255 0 0 1
- Line3=255 0 0 0 2
- Line4=255 0 255 0 3
- Line5=0 0 128 0 4
- The GraphFont entry specifies the font name and size in points. The 5 numbers
- given in the Border, Axis and Line entries are the Red intensity (0-255), Green
- intensity, Blue intensity, Color Linestyle and Mono Linestyle. Linestyles are
- 0=SOLID, 1=DASH, 2=DOT, 3=DASHDOT, 4=DASHDOTDOT. In the example WGNUPLOT.INI
- file above, Line 2 is a green solid line in color mode, or a dashed line in
- monochrome mode. The default line width is 1 pixel. If Linestyle is negative
- it specifies the width of a SOLID line in pixels. Line1 and any linestyle used
- with the points style must be SOLID with unit width.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.32.17.5. windows3.0 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Windows 3.1 is preferred, but WGNUPLOT will run under Windows 3.0 with the
- following restrictions:
-
- 1. COMMDLG.DLL and SHELL.DLL (available with Windows 3.1 or Borland C++ 3.1)
- must be in the windows directory.
-
- 2. WGNUPLOT.HLP produced by Borland C++ 3.1 is in Windows 3.1 format. You need
- to use the WINHELP.EXE supplied with Borland C++ 3.1.
-
- 3. It won't run in real mode due to lack of memory.
-
- 4. Truetype fonts are not available in the graph window.
-
- 5. Drag-drop does not work.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.33. tics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- By default, tics are drawn inwards from the border on all four sides. The set
- tics command can be used to change the tics to be drawn outwards on the left
- and bottom borders only. This is useful when doing impulse plots.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set tics {<direction>}
- show tics
-
- where <direction> may be in or out. set tics defaults to in.
-
- See also the set xtics, set ytics, and set ztics command for more control of
- tic marks. Using splot, in 3-d plots, one can adjust the relative height of the
- vertical (Z) axis using set ticslevel. The numeric argument provided specifies
- the location of the bottom of the scale. a zero will put it on the bottom grid
- and any positive number somewhere along the z axis.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set ticslevel {<level>}
- show tics
-
- where <level> is a non negative numeric argument. For example,
-
- set ticslevel 0.5
-
- sets the tics level to the default value.
-
- See also the set view.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.34. time ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The optional set time places the time and date of the plot either at the top or
- bottom of the left margin. The exact location is device dependent.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set time {<xoff>}{,<yoff>}
- set notime
- show time
-
- Specifying constants <xoff> or <yoff> as optional offsets for the time will
- move the time <xoff> or <yoff> character screen coordinates. For example,
-
- set time ,-3
-
- will change only the y offset of the time, moving the title down by roughly the
- height of three characters.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.35. title ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set title command produces a plot title that is centered at the top of the
- plot. Using the optional x,y screen offsets, the title can be placed anywhere
- on the plot. set title with no parameters clears the title.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set title {"<title-text>"} {<xoff>}{,<yoff>}
- show title
-
- Specifying constants <xoff> or <yoff> as optional offsets for the title will
- move the title <xoff> or <yoff> character screen coordinates. Note these are
- screen coordinates and not plot coordinates. For example,
-
- set title ,-1
-
- will change only the y offset of the title, moving the title down by roughly
- the height of one character.
-
- (The EEPIC, Imagen, LaTeX, and TPIC drivers allow \\ in a string to specify a
- newline.)
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.36. trange ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set trange command sets the parametric range used to compute x and y values
- when in parametric mode. If not in parametric mode (see set parametric) then
- this range is not used. This command does not affect x/y autoscaling or x/y
- ranges.
-
- This range may also be specified on the plot command line when in parametric
- mode.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set trange [{<tmin> : <tmax>}]
-
- where <tmin> and <tmax> terms are constants or expressions.
-
- Both the <tmin> and <tmax> terms are optional. Anything omitted will not be
- changed, so
-
- set trange [:10]
- changes tmax to 10 without affecting tmin. See also set urange and set
- parametric.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.37. urange ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set urange and set vrange commands sets the parametric ranges used to
- compute x, y, and z values when in splot parametric mode. If not in parametric
- mode (see set parametric) then these ranges are not used. This command does not
- affect x/y autoscaling or x/y ranges.
-
- This range may also be specified on the splot command line when in parametric
- mode. See plot for more information
-
- Syntax:
-
- set urange [{<umin> : <umax>}]
-
- where <umin> and <umax> terms are constants or expressions.
-
- Both the <umin> and <umax> terms are optional. Anything omitted will not be
- changed, so
-
- set urange [:10]
- changes umax to 10 without affecting umin. See also set trange.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.38. variables ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The show variables command lists all user-defined variables and their values.
-
- Syntax:
-
- show variables
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.39. view ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set view command sets the view point for splots. This command controls the
- way the 3-d coordinates of the plot are mapped into the 2-d screen space. This
- command provides controls to both rotation and scaling of the plotted data but
- supports orthographic projections only.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set view <rot_x> {,{<rot_z>}{,{<scale>}{,<scale_z>}}}
- show view
-
- where <rot_x> and <rot_z> control the rotation angles (in degrees) along a
- virtual 3-d coordinate system aligned with the screen such that the screen
- horizontal axis is x, screen vertical axis is y, and the axis perpendicular to
- the screen is z. <rot_x> is bounded to the [0:180] range with a default of 60
- degrees, while <rot_z> is bounded to the [0:360] range with a default of 30
- degrees. <scale> controls the scaling of the entire splot, while <scale_z>
- scales the z axis only. Both scales default to 1.0.
-
- Examples:
-
- set view 60, 30, 1, 1
- set view ,,0.5
-
- The first sets all the four default values. The second changes only scale, to
- 0.5.
-
- See also set ticslevel.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.40. vrange ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set vrange command is similar to the set urange command. Please see set
- urange.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.41. xlabel ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set xlabel command sets the x-axis label that is centered along the x axis.
- Using the optional x,y screen offsets, the label can be placed anywhere on the
- plot. set xlabel with no parameters clears the label.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set xlabel {"<label>"} {<xoff>}{,<yoff>}
- show xlabel
-
- Specifying constants <xoff> or <yoff> as optional offsets for the label will
- move the label <xoff> or <yoff> character screen coordinates. For example,
-
- set xlabel -1
-
- will change only the x offset of the xlabel, moving the label roughly one
- character width to the left.
-
- (The EEPIC, Imagen, LaTeX, and TPIC drivers allow \\ in a string to specify a
- newline.)
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.42. xrange ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set xrange command sets the horizontal range that will be displayed. This
- command turns x axis autoscaling off.
-
- This range may also be specified on the plot command line.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set xrange [{<xmin> : <xmax>}]
-
- where <xmin> and <xmax> terms are constants or expressions.
-
- Both the <xmin> and <xmax> terms are optional. Anything omitted will not be
- changed, so
-
- set xrange [:10]
- changes xmax to 10 without affecting xmin.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.43. xtics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Fine control of the x axis tic marks is possible with the set xtics command.
- The x-axis tic marks may be turned off with the set noxtics command. They may
- be turned on (the default state) with set xtics.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set xtics { {<start>, <incr>{, <end>}} |
- {({"<label>"} <pos> {, {"<label>"} <pos>}...)} }
- set noxtics
- show xtics
-
- The <start>, <incr>, <end> form specifies that a series of tics will be plotted
- on the x axis between the x values <start> and <end> with an increment of
- <incr>. If <end> is not given it is assumed to be infinity. The increment may
- be negative. For example,
-
- set xtics 0,.5,10
- makes tics at 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, ..., 9.5, 10.
-
- The ("<label>" <pos>, ...) form allows arbitrary tic positions or non-numeric
- tic labels. A set of tics are a set of positions, each with its own optional
- label. Note that the label is a string enclosed by quotes, and may be a
- constant string, such as "hello", or contain formatting information for the tic
- number (which is the same as the position), such as "%3f clients". See set
- format for more information about this case. The label may even be empty.
- Examples:
-
- set xtics ("low" 0, "medium" 50, "high" 100)
- set xtics (1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,256,512,1024)
- set xtics ("bottom" 0, "" 10, "top" 20)
-
- Tics will only be plotted when in range.
-
- The set ytics and set noytics commands work identically. See also the set
- format command.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.44. xdtics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set xdtics commands converts the x axis tic marks to days of the week where
- 0=Sun and 6=Sat. Overflows are converted modulo 7 to dates.
-
- Examples:
-
- set xdtics
-
- Sets x axis tics in days.
-
- The set ydtics set zdtics and set noydtics set nozdtics commands work
- identically. See also the set format command.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.45. xmtics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set xmtics commands converts the x axis tic marks to months of the years
- where 1=Jan and 12=Dec. Overflows are converted modulo 12 to months.
-
- Examples:
-
- set xmtics
-
- Sets x axis tics into months.
-
- The set ymtics set zmtics and set noymtics set nozmtics commands work
- identically. See also the set format command.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.46. xzeroaxis ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- set xzeroaxis draws the x-axis. By default, this option is on. set noxzeroaxis
- causes GNUPLOT to omit the x-axis.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set xzeroaxis
- set noxzeroaxis
- show xzeroaxis
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.47. ylabel ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set ylabel command sets the y-axis label. The position of this label
- depends on the terminal, and can be one of the following three positions (the
- position can be adjusted with optional parameters).
-
- 1. Horizontal text flushed left at the top left of the plot. Terminals that
- cannot rotate text will probably use this method.
-
- 2. Vertical text centered vertically at the left of the plot. Terminals that
- can rotate text will probably use this method.
-
- 3. Horizontal text centered vertically at the left of the plot. The EEPIC,
- LaTeX and TPIC drivers use this method. The user must insert line breaks using
- \\ to prevent the ylabel from overwriting the plot. To produce a vertical row
- of characters, add \\ between every printing character (but this is ugly).
-
- Syntax:
-
- set ylabel {"<label>"} {<xoff>}{,<yoff>}
- show ylabel
-
- With no parameters, the label is cleared. Specifying constants <xoff> or <yoff>
- as optional offsets for the label will move the label <xoff> or <yoff>
- character screen coordinates. For example,
-
- set ylabel -1
-
- will change only the x offset of the ylabel, moving the label roughly one
- character width left of its default position. This is especially useful with
- the LaTeX driver.
-
- (The EEPIC, Imagen, LaTeX, and TPIC drivers allow \\ in a string to specify a
- newline.)
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.48. yrange ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set yrange command sets the vertical range that will be displayed. This
- command turns y axis autoscaling off.
-
- This range may also be specified on the plot command line.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set yrange [{<ymin> : <ymax>}]
-
- where <ymin> and <ymax> terms are constants or expressions.
-
- Both the <ymin> and <ymax> terms are optional. Anything omitted will not be
- changed, so
-
- set yrange [:10]
- changes ymax to 10 without affecting ymin.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.49. ytics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set ytics and set noytics commands are similar to the set xtics and set
- noxtics commands. Please see set xtics.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.50. ydtics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set ydtics and set noydtics commands are similar to the set xdtics and set
- noxdtics commands. Please see set xdtics.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.51. ymtics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set ymtics and set noymtics commands are similar to the set xmtics and set
- noxmtics commands. Please see set xmtics.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.52. yzeroaxis ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- set yzeroaxis draws the y-axis. By default, this option is on. set noyzeroaxis
- causes GNUPLOT to omit the y-axis.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set yzeroaxis
- set noyzeroaxis
- show yzeroaxis
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.53. zero ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The zero value is the default threshold for values approaching 0.0. GNUPLOT
- will not plot a point if its imaginary part is greater in magnitude than the
- zero threshold. Axis ranges cannot be less than zero. The default zero value is
- 1e-8. This can be changed with the set zero command.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set zero <expression>
- show zero
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.54. zeroaxis ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- set zeroaxis draws the x-axis and y-axis. By default, this option is on. set
- nozeroaxis causes GNUPLOT to omit the axes, and is equivalent to set
- noxzeroaxis; set noyzeroaxis.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set zeroaxis
- set nozeroaxis
- show zeroaxis
- See set xzeroaxis and set yzeroaxis.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.55. zlabel ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set zlabel command sets the z-axis label that is centered along the z axis.
- Using the optional x,y screen offsets, the label can be placed anywhere on the
- plot. set zlabel with no parameters clears the label.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set zlabel {"<label>"} {<xoff>}{,<yoff>}
- show zlabel
-
- Specifying constants <xoff> or <yoff> as optional offsets for the label will
- move the label <xoff> or <yoff> character screen coordinates. For example,
-
- set zlabel ,1
-
- will change only the y offset of the zlabel, moving the label roughly one
- character height up.
-
- The zlabel will be drawn whenever surfaces or contours are plotted, in the
- space above the grid level.
-
- (The EEPIC, Imagen, LaTeX, and TPIC drivers allow \\ in a string to specify a
- newline.)
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.56. zrange ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set zrange command sets the vertical range that will be displayed. This
- command turns z axis autoscaling off. The zrange is used only by splot and is
- ignored by plot.
-
- This range may also be specified on the splot command line.
-
- Syntax:
-
- set zrange [{<zmin> : <zmax>}]
-
- where <zmin> and <zmax> terms are constants or expressions.
-
- Both the <zmin> and <zmax> terms are optional. Anything omitted will not be
- changed, so
-
- set zrange [2:]
- changes zmin to 2 without affecting zmax.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.57. ztics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set ztics and set noztics commands are similar to the set xtics and set
- noxtics commands. Please see set xtics.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.58. zdtics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set zdtics and set nozdtics commands are similar to the set xdtics and set
- noxdtics commands. Please see set xdtics.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21.59. zmtics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The set zmtics and set nozmtics commands are similar to the set xmtics and set
- noxmtics commands. Please see set xmtics.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 22. shell ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The shell command spawns an interactive shell. To return to GNUPLOT, type
- logout if using VMS, exit or the END-OF-FILE character if using Unix, endcli if
- using AmigaDOS, or exit if using MS-DOS or OS/2.
-
- A single shell command may be spawned by preceding it with the ! character (
- Control will return immediately to GNUPLOT after this command is executed. For
- example, in VMS, AmigaDOS, MS-DOS or OS/2,
-
- ! dir
-
- prints a directory listing and then returns to GNUPLOT.
-
- On an Atari, the ! command first checks whether a shell is already loaded and
- uses it, if available. This is practical if GNUPLOT is run from gulam, for
- example.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 23. splot ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Three-dimensional surface and contour plotting is available in GNUPLOT with the
- splot command. See the plot command for features common to the plot command.
-
- See also set contour, set cntrparam, and set surface.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 23.1. Binary Data ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Gnuplot will dynamically determine if a datafile is ASCII or binary. ASCII
- data files are discussed in the plot section. For three dimensions, single
- precision floats are stored as follows:
-
- <ncols> <x0> <x1> <x2> ...
- <y0> <z0,0> <z0,1> <z0,2> ...
- <y1> <z1,0> <z1,1> <z1,2> ...
-
- which is converted into triplet:
-
- <x0> <y0> <z0,0>
- <x0> <y1> <z0,1>
- <x0> <y2> <z0,2>
-
- <x1> <y0> <z1,0>
- <x1> <y1> <z1,1>
- <x1> <y2> <z1,2>
-
- These triplets are then converted into gnuplot iso_curves and then uses gnuplot
- to do the rest of the plotting.
-
- A collection of matrix and vector manipulation routines (in C) are provided in
- gnubin.c. The routine to write binary data is
-
- int fwrite_matrix(file,m,nrl,nrl,ncl,nch,row_title,column_title)
-
- An example of using these routines is provided in the file bf_test.c. The
- corresponding demo file is demo/binary.dem.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 24. start-up ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- When GNUPLOT is run, it looks for an initialization file to load. This file is
- called .gnuplot on Unix and AmigaDOS systems, and GNUPLOT.INI on other systems.
- If this file is not found in the current directory, the program will look for
- it in the home directory (under AmigaDOS, AtariTOS, MS-DOS and OS/2, the
- environment variable GNUPLOT should contain the name of this directory). Note:
- if NOCWDRC is defined during the installation, GNUPLOT will not read from the
- current directory.
-
- If this file is found, GNUPLOT executes the commands in this file. This is most
- useful for setting the terminal type and defining any functions or variables
- that are used often.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 25. substitution ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- Command-line substitution is specified by a system command enclosed in
- backquotes. This command is spawned and the output it produces replaces the
- name of the command (and backquotes) on the command line.
-
- Newlines in the output produced by the spawned command are replaced with
- blanks.
-
- Command-line substitution can be used anywhere on the GNUPLOT command line.
-
- Example:
-
- This will run the program leastsq and replace leastsq (including backquotes) on
- the command line with its output:
-
- f(x) = leastsq
-
- or, in VMS
-
- f(x) = run leastsq
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 26. user-defined ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- New user-defined variables and functions of one through five variables may be
- declared and used anywhere.
-
- User-defined function syntax:
-
- <function-name> ( <dummy1> {,<dummy2> {, ...} } ) = <expression>
-
- where <expression> is defined in terms of <dummy1> through <dummy5>.
-
- User-defined variable syntax:
-
- <variable-name> = <constant-expression>
-
- Examples:
-
- w = 2
- q = floor(tan(pi/2 - 0.1))
- f(x) = sin(w*x)
- sinc(x) = sin(pi*x)/(pi*x)
- delta(t) = (t == 0)
- ramp(t) = (t > 0) ? t : 0
- min(a,b) = (a < b) ? a : b
- comb(n,k) = n!/(k!*(n-k)!)
- len3d(x,y,z) = sqrt(x*x+y*y+z*z)
-
- Note that the variable pi is already defined.
-
- See show functions and show variables.
-
-
- ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 27. bugs ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
-
- The bessel functions do not work for complex arguments.
-
- The gamma function does not work for complex arguments.
-
- There is a bug in the stdio library for old Sun operating systems (SunOS
- Sys4-3.2). The "%g" format for 'printf' sometimes incorrectly prints numbers
- (e.g., 200000.0 as "2"). Thus, tic mark labels may be incorrect on a Sun4
- version of GNUPLOT. A work-around is to rescale the data or use the set format
- command to change the tic mark format to "%7.0f" or some other appropriate
- format. This appears to have been fixed in SunOS 4.0.
-
- Another bug: On a Sun3 under SunOS 4.0, and on Sun4's under Sys4-3.2 and SunOS
- 4.0, the 'sscanf' routine incorrectly parses "00 12" with the format "%f %f"
- and reads 0 and 0 instead of 0 and 12. This affects data input. If the data
- file contains x coordinates that are zero but are specified like '00', '000',
- etc, then you will read the wrong y values. Check any data files or upgrade the
- SunOS. It appears to have been fixed in SunOS 4.1.1.
-
- Microsoft C 5.1 has a nasty bug associated with the %g format for printf. When
- any of the formats "%.2g", "%.1g", "%.0g", "%.g" are used, printf will
- incorrectly print numbers in the range 1e-4 to 1e-1. Numbers that should be
- printed in the %e format are incorrectly printed in the %f format, with the
- wrong number of zeros after the decimal point.
-
- To work around this problem, use the %e or %f formats explicitly.
-
- GNUPLOT, when compiled with Microsoft C, did not work correctly on two VGA
- displays that were tested. The CGA, EGA and VGA drivers should probably be
- rewritten to use the Microsoft C graphics library. GNUPLOT compiled with
- Borland C++ uses the Turbo C graphics drivers and does work correctly with VGA
- displays.
-
- VAX/VMS 4.7 C compiler release 2.4 also has a poorly implemented %g format for
- printf. The numbers are printed numerically correct, but may not be in the
- requested format. The K&R second edition says that for the %g format, %e is
- used if the exponent is less than -4 or greater than or equal to the precision.
- The VAX uses %e format if the exponent is less than -1. The VAX appears to take
- no notice of the precision when deciding whether to use %e or %f for numbers
- less than 1. To work around this problem, use the %e or %f formats explicitly.
- From the VAX C 2.4 release notes: e,E,f,F,g,G Result will always contain a
- decimal point. For g and G, trailing zeros will not be removed from the
- result.
-
- VAX/VMS 5.2 C compiler release 3.0 has a slightly better implemented %g format
- than release 2.4, but not much. Trailing decimal points are now removed, but
- trailing zeros are still not removed from %g numbers in exponential format.
-
- ULTRIX X11R3 has a bug that causes the X11 driver to display "every other"
- plot. The bug seems to be fixed in DEC's release of X11R4 so newer releases of
- ULTRIX don't seem to have the problem. Solutions for older sites include
- upgrading the X11 libraries (from DEC or direct from MIT) or defining
- ULTRIX_KLUDGE when compiling the x11.trm file. Note that the kludge is not an
- ideal fix, however.
-
- The constant HUGE was incorrectly defined in the NeXT OS 2.0 operating system.
- HUGE should be set to 1e38 in plot.h. This error has been corrected in the 2.1
- version of NeXT OS.
-
- Some older models of HP plotters do not have a page eject command 'PG'. The
- current HPGL driver uses this command in HPGL_reset. This may need to be
- removed for these plotters. The current PCL5 driver uses HPGL/2 for text as
- well as graphics. This should be modified to use scalable PCL fonts.
-
- On the Atari version, it is not possible to send output directly to the printer
- (using /dev/lp as output file), since CRs are added to LFs in binary output. As
- a workaround write the output to a file and copy it to the printer afterwards
- using a shell command.
-
- Please report any bugs to bug-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu.