Here is the FAQ list for gnuplot You can find the latest version at http://www.uni-karlsruhe.de/~ig25/gnuplot-faq/ http://www.uni-karlsruhe.de/~ig25/gnuplot-faq.txt It is periodically posted to Newsgroups: comp.graphics.gnuplot,comp.answers,news.answers And can be obtained by sending the following message to majordomo@dartmouth.edu: get info-gnuplot FAQ Archive-name: graphics/gnuplot-faq Version: Fri Oct 27 04:23:01 CET 1995 Posting-frequency: every 14 days URL: http://www.uni-karlsruhe.de/~ig25/gnuplot-faq/ comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot COMP.GRAPHICS.APPS.GNUPLOT FAQ (FREQUENT ANSWERED QUESTIONS) This is the FAQ (Frequently Answered Questions) list of the comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot newsgroup, which discusses the gnuplot program for plotting 2D - and 3D - graphs. Most of the information in this document came from public discussion on comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot; quotations are believed to be in the public domain. If you are reading this via WWW, and you can't access the individual pages, please select here, then try again. Here's a list of the questions. If you are looking for the answer for a specific question, look for the string Qx.x: at the beginning of a line, with x.x being the question number. Sections in this FAQ are * 0. Meta-Questions * 1. General Information * 2. Setting it up * 3. Working with it * 4. Wanted features * 5. Miscellaneous * 6. Making life easier * 7. Known problems * 8. Credits Questions: Section 0: Meta - Questions * Q0.1: Where do I get this document? * Q0.2: Where do I send comments about this document? Section 1: General Information * Q1.1: What is gnuplot? * Q1.2: How did it come about and why is it called gnuplot? * Q1.3: Does gnuplot have anything to do with the FSF and the GNU project? * Q1.4: What does gnuplot offer? * Q1.5: Is gnuplot suitable for batch processing? * Q1.6: Can I run gnuplot on my computer? Section 2: Setting it up * Q2.1: What is the current version of gnuplot? * Q2.2: Where can I get gnuplot? * Q2.3: How do I get gnuplot to compile on my system? * Q2.4: What documentation is there, and how do I get it? Section 3: Working with it * Q3.1: How do I get help? * Q3.2: How do I print out my graphs? * Q3.3: How do I include my graphs in ? * Q3.4: How do I post-process a gnuplot graph? * Q3.5: How do I change symbol size, line thickness and the like? Section 4: Wanted features * Q4.0: What's new in gnuplot 3.6? * Q4.1: Does gnuplot have hidden line removal? * Q4.2: Does gnuplot support bar-charts/histograms/boxes? * Q4.3: Does gnuplot support multiple y-axes on a single plot? * Q4.4: Can I put multiple plots on a single page? * Q4.5: Can I put both data files and commands into a single file? * Q4.6: Can I put Greek letters and super/subscripts into my labels? * Q4.7 Can I do 1:1 scaling of axes? * Q4.8: Can I put tic marks for x and y axes into 3d plots? * Q4.9: Does gnuplot support a driver for ? * Q4.10: Can I put different text sizes into my plots? * Q4.11: How do I modify gnuplot? * Q4.12: How do I skip data points? Section 5: Miscellaneous * Q5.1: I've found a bug, what do I do? * Q5.2: Can I use gnuplot routines for my own programs? * Q5.3: What extensions have people made to gnuplot? Where can I get them? * Q5.4: Can I do heavy-duty data processing with gnuplot? * Q5.5: I have ported gnuplot to another system, or patched it. What do I do? * Q5.6: I want to help in developing gnuplot 3.6. What can I do? Section 6: Making life easier * Q6.1: How do I plot two functions in non-overlapping regions? * Q6.2: How do I run my data through a filter before plotting? * Q6.3: How do I make it easier to use gnuplot with LaTeX? * Q6.4: How do I save and restore my settings? * Q6.5: How do I plot lines (not grids) using splot? * Q6.6: How do I plot a function f(x,y) which is bounded by other functions in the x-y plain? * Q6.7: How do I get rid of ? * Q6.8: How do I call gnuplot from my own programs ? Section 7: Known Problems * Q7.1: Gnuplot is not plotting any points under X11! How come? * Q7.2: My isoline data generated by a Fortran program is not handled correctly. What can I do? * Q7.3: Why does gnuplot ignore my very small numbers? * Q7.4: Gnuplot is plotting nothing when run via gnuplot ! What can I do? * Q7.5: My formulas are giving me nonsense results! What's going on? * Q7.6: My Linux gnuplot complains about a missing gnuplot_x11. What is wrong? Section 8: Credits Section 0: Meta-Questions. Q0.1: Where do I get this document? This document is posted about once every two weeks to the newsgroups comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot, comp.answers and news.answers. Like many other FAQ's, its newest (plaintext) version is available via anonymous ftp from ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/graphics/gnuplot-fa q. If you have access to the WWW, you can get the newest version of this document from http://www.uni-karlsruhe.de/~ig25/gnuplot-faq/ Q0.2: Where do I send comments about this document? Send comments, suggestions etc. via e-mail to Thomas Koenig, Thomas.Koenig@ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de or ig25@dkauni2.bitnet. Section 1: General Information Q1.1: What is gnuplot? Gnuplot is a command-driven interactive function plotting program. It can be used to plot functions and data points in both two- and three- dimensional plots in many different formats, and will accommodate many of the needs of today's scientists for graphic data representation. Gnuplot is copyrighted, but freely distributable; you don't have to pay for it. Q1.2: How did it come about and why is it called gnuplot? The authors of gnuplot are: Thomas Williams, Colin Kelley, Russell Lang, Dave Kotz, John Campbell, Gershon Elber, Alexander Woo and many others. The following quote comes from Thomas Williams: I was taking a differential equation class and Colin was taking Electromagnetics, we both thought it'd be helpful to visualize the mathematics behind them. We were both working as sys admin for an EE VLSI lab, so we had the graphics terminals and the time to do some coding. The posting was better received than we expected, and prompted us to add some, albeit lame, support for file data. Any reference to GNUplot is incorrect. The real name of the program is "gnuplot". You see people use "Gnuplot" quite a bit because many of us have an aversion to starting a sentence with a lower case letter, even in the case of proper nouns and titles. Gnuplot is not related to the GNU project or the FSF in any but the most peripheral sense. Our software was designed completely independently and the name "gnuplot" was actually a compromise. I wanted to call it "llamaplot" and Colin wanted to call it "nplot." We agreed that "newplot" was acceptable but, we then discovered that there was an absolutely ghastly pascal program of that name that the Computer Science Dept. occasionally used. I decided that "gnuplot" would make a nice pun and after a fashion Colin agreed. Q1.3: Does gnuplot have anything to do with the FSF and the GNU project? Gnuplot is neither written nor maintained by the FSF. It is not covered by the General Public License, either. However, the FSF has decided to distribute gnuplot as part of the GNU system, because it is useful, redistributable software. Q1.4: What does gnuplot offer? + Plotting of two-dimensional functions and data points in many different styles (points, lines, error bars) + plotting of three-dimensional data points and surfaces in many different styles (contour plot, mesh). + support for complex arithmetic + self - defined functions + support for a large number of operating systems, graphics file formats and devices + extensive on-line help + labels for title, axes, data points + command line editing and history on most platforms Q1.5: Is gnuplot suitable for batch processing? Yes. You can read in files from the command line, or you can redirect your standard input to read from a file. Both data and command files can be generated automatically, from data acquisition programs or whatever else you use. Q1.6: Can I run gnuplot on my computer? Gnuplot is available for a number of platforms. These are: Unix (X11 and NeXTSTEP), VAX/VMS, OS/2, MS-DOS, Amiga, MS-Windows, OS-9/68k, Atari ST and the Macintosh. Modifications for NEC PC-9801 are said to exist (where?). Section 2: Setting it up Q2.1: What is the current version of gnuplot? The current version of gnuplot is 3.5, which is a bugfix release over 3.4. Version 3.6 is in beta status. Please note that this is still unstable, and may not compile correctly on your system. Q2.2: Where can I get gnuplot? All of the later addresses refer to ftp sites. Please note that it is preferable for you to use the symbolic name, rather than the IP address given in brackets, because that address is much more subject to change. The official distribution site for the gnuplot source is ftp.dartmouth.edu [129.170.16.4, soon to be 129.170.8.11], the file is called /pub/gnuplot/gnuplot3.5.tar.Z. Official mirrors of that distribution are (for Australia) monu1.cc.monash.edu.au [130.194.1.101] and (for Europe) irisa.irisa.fr [131.254.254.2]. You can also get it from your friendly neighbourhood comp.sources.misc archive. MS-DOS and MS-Windows binaries are available from + oak.oakland.edu (North America) [141.210.10.117] as /Simtel/msdos/plot/gpt35*.zip, + garbo.uwasa.fi (Europe) [128.214.87.1] as /pc/plot/gpt35*.zip and + archie.au (Australia) [139.130.4.6] as micros/pc/oak/plot/gpt35*.zip. The files are: gpt35doc.zip, gpt35exe.zip, gpt35src.zip and gpt35win.zip. There is a special MS-DOS version for 386 or better processors; it is available from the official gnuplot sites as DOS34.zip. OS/2 2.x binaries are at ftp-os2.nmsu.edu [128.123.35.151], in /os2/2.x/unix/gnuplt35.zip. Amiga sources and binaries are available from ftp.wustl.edu [128.252.135.4] as /pub/aminet/util/gnu/gnuplot-3.5.lha; there are numerous mirrors of this distribution, for example ftp.uni-kl.de, oes.orst.edu or ftp.luth.se. The NeXTSTEP front end can be found at sonata.cc.purdue.edu and cs.orst.edu. A version for OS-9/68K can be found at cabrales.cs.wisc.edu [128.105.36.20] as /pub/OSK/GRAPHICS/gnuplot32x.tar.Z; it includes both X-Windows and non - X-windows versions. There is a version for the Macintosh at ftp://ftp.ee.gatech.edu/pub/mac/gnuplot/ which includes binaries for 68000-based Macs with and without FPU and native support for PowerMacs. Versions for the Atari ST and TT, which include some GEM windowing support, are available from ftp://ftp.uni-kl.de/pub/atari/graphics/, as gplt35st.zip and gplt35tt.zip. They work best under MiNT. Executable files, plus documentation in Japanese, exist for the X680x0 on ftp://ftp.csis.oita-u.ac.jp/pub/x68k/fj.binaries.x68000/vol2. People without ftp access can use an ftp-mail server; send a message saying 'help' to bitftp@pucc.bitnet (for BITNET only) or to ftpmail@ftp.dartmouth.edu. For a uuencoded copy of the the gnuplot sources (compressed tar file), send this as the body of a message to ftpmail@ftp.dartmouth.edu: open cd pub/gnuplot mode binary get gnuplot3.5.tar.Z quit If you have some problem, you might need to stick reply-to before all the above. It is a good idea to look for a nearby ftp site when downloading things. You can use archie for this. See if an archie client is installed at your system (by simply typing archie at the command prompt), or send mail to archie@sura.net with the word 'help' in both the subject line and the body of the mail. However, be aware that the version you find at a near ftp site may well be out of date; check the last modification date and the number of bytes against the newest release at one of the official servers. You can obtain a beta release of gnuplot 3.6 from ftp://cmpc1.phys.soton.ac.uk/pub/. Q2.3: How do I get gnuplot to compile on my system? As you would any other installation. Read the files README and README.Install, edit the Makefile according to taste, and run make or whatever is suitable for your operating system. If you get a complaint about a missing file libplot.a or something similar when building gnuplot for X11, remove -DUNIXPLOT from the TERMFLAGS= line, remove -lplot from the DTBS= line and run again. If you are making X11 on a sun, type 'make x11_sun'. For compiling gnuplot under Irix 5.2 and Irix 5.3, there is a patch in the file lvs.zip in the contrib directory at ftp.dartmouth.edu. Q2.4: What documentation is there, and how do I get it? The documentation is included in the source distribution. Look at the docs subdirectory, where you'll find + a Unix man page, which says how to start gnuplot + a help file, which also can be printed as a manual + a tutorial on using gnuplot with LaTeX + a quick reference summary sheet for TeX only PostScript copies of the documentation can be ftp'd from ftp.dartmouth.edu, in pub/gnuplot, as manual.ps.Z and tutorial.ps.Z Andy Liaw and Dick Crawford have written a 16-page user's guide. It is available from ftp://picard.tamu.edu/pub/gnuplot/ as gptug.tex (also get example.tex from the same directory), gptug.dvi or gptug.ps. At the same site, there's a two- page instruction sheet for the enhpost PostScript driver (see Q4.6 ) as enhpost.guide.ps and a short guide to gnuplot PostScript files, as gp-ps.doc. A Chinese translation of the gnuplot manual can be found on ftp://servers.nctu.edu.tw/misc/environment/NCTU_EV/classnote/g nuplot.ps.gz . There is a WWW hompepage for gnuplot at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/gnuplot_info.html, which includes the reference manual and a demo. There are two more Chinese documents about gnuplot: a 72 - page User's guide ftp://phi.sinica.edu.tw/pub/aspac/doc/94/94002.ps.gz and a 28 - page Touring Guide ftp://phi.sinica.edu.tw/pub/aspac/doc/95/95006.ps.gz. Both documents are in PostScript format and gzipped. Section 3: Working with it Q3.1: How do I get help? Give the 'help' command at the initial prompt. After that, keep looking through the keywords. Good starting points are 'plot' and 'set'. Read the manual, if you have it. Look through the demo subdirectory; it should give you some ideas. Ask your colleagues, the system administrator or the person who set up gnuplot. Post a question to comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot or send mail to the gatewayed mailing list info-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu. If you want to subscribe to the mailing list, send a mail to majordomo@dartmouth.edu with the body of the message being 'subscribe info-gnuplot'. Please don't do this if you can get comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot directly. If you pose a question there, it is considered good form to solicit e-mail replies and post a summary. Q3.2: How do I print out my graphs? The kind of output produced is determined by the 'set terminal' command; for example, 'set terminal postscript' will produce the graph in PostScript format. Output can be redirected using the 'set output' command. As an example, the following prints out a graph of sin(x) on a Unix machine running the X Window system. gnuplot> plot [-6:6] sin(x) gnuplot> set terminal postscript Terminal type set to 'postscript' Options are 'landscape monochrome "Courier" 14' gnuplot> set output "sin.ps" gnuplot> replot gnuplot> set output # set output back to default gnuplot> set terminal x11 # ditto for terminal type gnuplot> ! lp -ops sin.ps # print PS File (site dependent) request id is lprint-3433 (standard input) lp: printed file sin.ps on fg20.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de (5068 Byte) ! gnuplot> Q3.3: How do I include my graphs in ? Basically, you save your plot to a file in a format your word processor can understand (using "set term" and "set output", see above), and then you read in the plot from your word processor. Details depend on the kind of word processor you use; use "set term" to get a list of available file formats. Many word processors can use Encapsulated PostScript for graphs. This can be generated by the "set terminal postscript eps" command. Most MS-DOS word processors understand HPGL (terminal type hpgl). With TeX, it depends on what you use to print your dvi files. If you use dvips or dvi2ps, you can use Encapsulated PostScript. For emTeX (popular for MS-DOS), you can use emTeX, otherwise use the LaTeX terminal type, which generates a picture environment. If nothing else helps, try using the pgm or ppm format and converting it to a bitmap format your favourite word processor can understand. An invaluable tool for this is Jef Poskanzer's PBMPLUS package. The PBMPLUS package is available in the contrib distribution for the X Window System. The original site for this is ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/. There are many mirrors, e.g. ftp://ftp.th-darmstadt.de/pub/X11/contrib/ or . ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/X11/contrib/. The most recent release of pbm by the author is dated December 91 and is called pbmplus10dec91.tar.Z There is new version including lots of patches from the net that is not maintained by the author called netpbm, with the newest version called netpbm-7dec1993.tar.gz. Check archie (see Q2.2 ) for an archive site near you. Q3.4: How do I post-process a gnuplot graph? This depends on the terminal type you use. You can use the terminal type fig (you may need to recompile gnuplot to enable this terminal type, by putting #define FIG into ), and use the xfig drawing program to edit the plot afterwards. For PostScript output, you may be able to use the pstotgif script (which calls GhostScript) to convert PostScript into the format of the tgif drawing program. Tgif is also able to save in PostScript format. Both tgif and xfig can be obtained from the X Window contrib distribution (see Q3.3). Another possibility for modifying PostScript output appears to be IslandDraw, a commercial drawing program for UNIX workstations. For Windows, there is another alternative, PageDraw. It can post-process AI (Adobe Illustrator) files, and has a converter from PostScript to AI. It can be downloaded from http://www.wix.com/PageDraw/. Q3.5: How do I change symbol size, line thickness and the like? Again, this depends on the terminal type. For PostScript, you can edit the generated PostScript file. An overview of what means what in the PostScript files gnuplot generates can be found at ftp://picard.tamu.edu/pub/gnuplot/ as gs-ps.doc. A general introduction to PostScript can be found at ftp://unix.hensa.ac.uk/pub/misc/ukc.reports/comp.sci/reports/ as 11-92.ps.Z. Section 4: Wanted features Q4.0: What's new in gnuplot 3.6? Here's the WhatsNew file of the current beta release, patchlevel 213. What's new in 3.6 ? Still to do Many terminals to be converted to new layout someone has contributed a new hidden-line-removal '-' as load filename / command-line param key for splot with contour is ugly timeseries stuff has got broken (well, non-portable code) terminals are no longer allowed to do their own scaling Plus quite a few contributed patches that I haven't yet installed (sorry) in 194 multiplot for splot in 188 os9 port set xrange [] reverse writeback allow mix of co-ordinate systems within an arrow/label posn initial multiplot support - doesn't yet check that terminal is capable, but there is a flags field added to the terminal entry to tell gnuplot about this. also, suspend() / resume() entry points which are to be called between plots of a multiplot. in 178 arbitrary length/number of columns in datafile accept double/quad-precision fortran numbers (1.23{dDqQ}4) - but not in scanf format string undefined fit parameters start at 1 rather than 1e-30 - more chance of convergence / less change of unitary matrix WIN32 / Win-NT support table output can be read back in for data splot - hence gnuplot can be used to dgrid a datafile and write it out set missing 'string' - nominate a token as standing for missing values in datafile - not yet added to documentation updates to time-series stuff (so it doesn't break at 2000) - except it has become horribly non-portable :-( split graph3d.c into util3d.c and hidden3d.c in 166 set bar - a number rather than just small or large allow different linetypes for grid at major and minor tics a few more set no* commands for consistency. initial go at implementing tic mirrors and axes for splot - no ztic axis yet (or no zzeroaxis) - tics on axes are not hidden by surface attempt to make sin(x) behave as expected when set angle degrees - gives answers if x is complex, but I dont know if they are correct - acos(cos(x)) seems to give x, so at least its consistent - fix a bug which made acos(cos({0,1})) undefined new grass.trm in release 162/164 set size [{no}square] x,y - tries to plot with aspect ratio 1 - seems to work great for postscript - please check with your favourite driver - uses relative sizes of tics to determine required size. posn for key, labels and arrows can be in one of 4 co-ordinate systems - first_axes (default) - second_axes (for plot..second) - graph (0,0 -> 1,1 = plotting area) - screen (0,0 -> 1,1 = whole screen) - arrows needn't have endpoints in same co-ords. see help set label via is now a required keyword for fit - fit f(x) 'file' ... via { 'file' | a,b,... } - this is to avoid confusing 'file' with 'using-format-string' win32 and 16-bit dos fixes - I can compile with tc++, but get an overlay error at runtime. new set of documentation programs (I haven't tried them) various tweaks to makefile changes to pslatex - substitute .ps at _last_ . in filename - accept font size of enclosing document as an option. - dont forget to close aux file in release 151 linux security patch can specify font for labels, etc (postscript only ? - I haven't tried this) can specify linetype to draw grid / zeroaxes / arrows emx terminal driver first attempt at pipes for VMS and vector style - needs more work l/b/r/t-margin in place of xmargin - more control over size of margins incompatible changes to polar mode: - t is now the dummy variable, so x is width of plot as expected - tics are not automatically on axes - set {xy}tics axis nomirror - grid is not automatically polar - set grid x [mx] polar [angle] - no numbers on grid - they were always in degrees second axes - x2 and y2 are an independent pair of axes, but they inherit ranges from x and y if no second data - there can be problems with this, actually - if x2tics are not shown, x2range is not autoextended to whole number of tics, so same data might not have same range. - set x2tics/y2tics/x2label/y2label - set [no]log x2 / y2 - plot [first,] f(x), 'file', ..., second, g(x), ... - get specify grid at any/all of x,y,x2,y2 - see electron.dem set border - 12 bit binary number selects 12 sides of cube around splo t can specify grid z, to get a grid on back wall of splot set mxtics [|default] | set nomxtics - set mxtics gives auto for logscale, fixed for linear binary, index and every keywords to datafiles. - every also works with binary files can use '-' as datafile for inline data (ends at line with e) can use '' to mean reuse previous file splot and fit now use datafile module - FIT_SKIP no longer supported - use fit f(x) 'file' every n can limit fit range using fit [variable=min:max] f(variable) ... set ticscale [] surface is clipped with no hidden line removal - still to do contour and hidden-line surface set {x|y|x2|y2} [axis|border] [no]mirror - can put tics on border or axes - mirror controls mirroring of tics on opposite axis - no longer coupled to set tics out setiing. No longer need to specify parametric mode for 3-column data files. ranges automatically extended to whole number of tic intervals - doesn't always manage to drop vertical from surface to corner of base - workaround is either specify range or use set border patchlevel 140 -------------- I've probably missed a lot of features since I'm so used to them. Plus I never bothered with 3.5 so some of these may have been there. some of these may have made it into the documentation Here goes: fit f(x) 'file' via ... read and plot time data (timedat.dem) set key [top|bottom|under] [left|right|out] [reverse] [box []] set key title 'text' Processing of escape sequences in "strings" but not 'strings' - TeX users in particular advised to use '' Multiline labels, etc, using "first\nsecond" enhpost driver call command (load with parameters) x error bars. splines. boxes. [some may have been in 3.5] pipes for amiga the using patch plot 'file' using spec:spec:... - spec is either column number or (expression in $1, $2, ...) new pslatex driver with postscript to aux file. set pointsize on some terminals doubles in plot...using format string - %lf unlimited input line length and expression (action) table minor tic-marks (like logscale but also for linear) - also set grid [mx|my] that's all I can think of for the moment... Q4.1: Does gnuplot have hidden line removal? Version 3.5 supports hidden line removal on all platforms except MS-DOS; use the command set hidden3d If someone can solve the 64K DGROUP memory problem, gnuplot would support hidden line removal on MS-DOS as well. Version 3.2 supports limited hidden line removal. Q4.2: Does gnuplot support bar-charts/histograms/boxes? As of version 3.4, it does; use the style "with boxes" for bar charts. To get filled boxes, you can try a modification by Steve Cumming, available via ftp from ftp://grebe.geog.ubc.ca/pub/gnuplot as box.tar. Q4.3: Does gnuplot support multiple y-axes on a single plot? Yes, with two unofficial mods, multiplot.shar and borders.shar. They can be obtained from ftp://ftp.dartmouth.edu/pub/gnuplot/contrib/multi_woo.zip or ftp://ftp.cygnus.edu/incoming/gpx38.zip. Also, 3.6 supports this capability. Q4.4: Can I put multiple plots on a single page? Yes, with the multiplot.shar mod, or if you are running gnuplot 3.6. If you are using PostScript output, check out mpage, which can be ftp'd from ftp.eng.umd.edu:pub/misc/mpage-2.tar.Z Q4.5: Can I put both data files and commands into a single file? This feature is in gnuplot 3.6. Q4.6: Can I put Greek letters and super/subscripts into my labels? You might try using the LaTeX terminal type and putting text like \alpha_{3} into it. David Denholm has written a PostScript terminal which allows for super/and subscripts, such as a^x or {/Symbol a }. Ftp to sotona.phys.soton.ac.uk [152.78.192.42] and get enhpost.trm, written by David Denholm and Matt Heffron. To install it, follow the instructions at the top of the file, then recompile. enhpost is also included in gnuplot 3.6. Q4.7: Can I do 1:1 scaling of axes? Not easily in 3.5; in 3.6, you can use "set size square". Q4.8: Can I put tic marks for x and y axes into 3d plots? In version 3.5, you can; use the "with boxes" option. Q4.9: Does gnuplot support a driver for ? To see a list of the available graphic drivers for your installation of gnuplot, type "set term". Some graphics drivers are included in the normal distribution, but are uncommented by default. If you want to use them, you'll have to change ~gnuplot/term.h, and recompile. Q4.10: Can I put different text sizes into my plots? If you use PostScript output, you can use Dave Denholm's and Matt Heffron's updated PostScript driver, /sotona.phys.soton.ac.uk:/enhpost.trm (see also Q4.6 ). Else, use 3.6. Q4.11 How do I modify gnuplot, and apply 'patches'? For this, you will need to recompile gnuplot. Modifications people make are either done by replacing files, such as terminal drivers, or by 'patching'. If a file is a replacement, it will probably tell you in its README or in the lines at the beginning. To patch a file, you need Larry Wall's patch utility. On many UNIX systems, it is already installed; do a man patch to check. If it isn't, you'll have to get it; it can be found wherever GNU software is archived. Q4.12 How do I skip data points? By specifying ? as a data value, as in 1 2 2 3 3 ? 4 5 Q4.13 How do I plot every nth point? You can apply the patch point_skip from the contrib section (see Q5.3 or, assuming you have awk installed on your system, you can use the following line: gnuplot> plot "< awk '{if(NR%5==0)print}' file.dat" plots every 5th line, and gnuplot> plot "< awk '$0 !~ /^#/ {if(NR%40==0)print $1, $4}' file.dat" plots every 40th line while skipping commented lines. Section 5: Miscellaneous Q5.1: I've found a bug, what do I do? First, try to see whether it actually is a bug, or whether it is a feature which may be turned off by some obscure set - command. Next, see wether you have an old version of gnuplot; if you do, chances are the bug has been fixed in a newer release. If, after checking these things, you still are convinced that there is a bug, proceed as follows. If you have a fairly general sort of bug report, posting to comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot is probably the way to go. If you have investigated a problem in detail, especially if you have a context diff that fixes the problem, please e-email a report to bug-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu. The bug-gnuplot list is for reporting and collecting bug fixes, the comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot newsgroup will be more help for finding work arounds or actually solving gnuplot related problems. If you do send in a bug report, be sure and include the version of gnuplot (including patchlevel), terminal driver, operating system, an exact description of the bug and input which can reproduce the bug. Also, any context diffs should be referenced against the latest official version of gnuplot if at all possible. Q5.2: Can I use gnuplot routines for my own programs? Yes. John Campbell has written gplotlib, a version of gnuplot as C subroutines callable from a C program. This is available as gplotlib.tar.Z on the machine ftp.nau.edu in the directory /pub/gplotlib.tar.Z. This library has been updated to be compatible with version 3.5. Q5.3: What extensions have people made to gnuplot? Where can I get them? Extensions are available from ftp://ftp.dartmouth.edu/pub/gnuplot/contrib/ . It contains the following files: Point Skips + Data Filtering Instead of just having two params following the style param, there are now 4: o 1: line_type o 2: point_type o 3: point_skip - gives the number of data samples per plotted point o 4: point_offs - gives the sample number on which to plot the first point Thus points are plotted only for the samples n satisfying n = point_skip*i + point_offs for some non-negative integer i. From: pixar!sun!prony.Colorado.EDU!clarkmp@ucbvax.berkeley.edu (Michael Clark) + Point Skip with Awk With UNIX, gnuplot> plot "< awk '{if(NR%5==0)print$0}' file.dat" From: James Darrell McCauley, mccauley@ecn.purdue.edu + New Xlib mods. From: gregg hanna (gregor@kafka.saic.com) Vectors and Arrows + Program to convert lines to vectors This program turns line segments into line segments with a half-arrow at the head: by uncommenting two lines below, the arrowhead will be a triangle. optional arguments: size angle where size is a fraction of each vector's magnitude and angle is in degrees all data taken from standard input, and output to standard output. typical invocation: arrow 0.2 15 vector.heads From: andrew@jarthur.claremont.edu (Andrew M. Ross) + Vect2gp, an awk script to make gnuplot command script to draw a vector field map. From: hiro@ice3.ori.u-tokyo.ac.jp (Yasu-Hiro YAMAZAKI) + GNUPLOT to SIPP This is a "far from perfect" converter that takes gnuplot table output and splits it in polygons. Then it calls sipp to render it. You get sipp from isy.liu.se:/pub/sipp or ask archie. From: chammer@POST.uni-bielefeld.de (Carsten Hammer) Histograms and Pie Charts + Histogram C program The short C program below is a filter that calculates a histogram from a sequence of numbers and prints the output in such a format that Gnuplot can plot the histogram by the command sequence !histogram < datain > tmp; plot "tmp" with impulses From: mustafa@seas.smu.edu (Mustafa Kocaturk) + HG is an automatic histogram generator. it reads a column of data from an input file and emits a [log] histogram ks does ks or chi^2 tests on a set of input arrays. you need the "numerical recipes in C" library somewhere on your system to link this one. I can not undertake to fix bugs or add features, but I might do it if asked. From: Steve Cumming stevec@geog.ubc.ca + Piechart C program The short C program below formats data for display as a piechart. From: mccauley@ecn.purdue.edu (James Darrell McCauley) Interprocess Communications + Notes of Windows Hooks From: Maurice Castro,maurice@bruce.cs.monash.edu.au + Named Pipes Example From: dtaber@deathstar.risc.rockwell.com (Don Taber) + PipeLib What the library does is set up to 20 programs going (like gnuplot), then allows you to send to them as if the program were typing on the command line. I've included a brief set of docs after the source code, in latex format. There is no facility to watch the output of a program. From: ssclift@neumann.uwaterloo.ca (Simon Clift) + Popen example from lsqrfit The following function sends a command to gnuplot. Gnuplot will execute the command just as if you typed it at the gnuplot command line. This example is adapted from my least squares fitting program which is located at ftp.cdrom.com in pub/os2/2_x/unix/lsqrft14.zip. Complete source is included. From: michael@krypton.mit.edu (Michael Courtney) Multiple logical plots on a single page + Gawk script for multiple encapsulated postscript on a page It's slightly more flexible than mpage, because it changes the aspect ratio of the plots; mpage according to the documentation only allows 1, 2, 4, or 8 plots on a page. This script works for unix with encapsulated postscript (eps) output. It should work with gawk or nawk, although I've only tested it with gawk. (Gawk is GNU's version of awk and is available from prep.ai.mit.edu.) You just specify how many rows and columns of plots you want and it does the rest. For example, gnuplot_eps rows=3 cols=2 *.eps | lpr will print all eps files in your current directory with 6 on a page. Also, see the comments in the file. From: holt@goethe.cns.caltech.edu (Gary Holt) + Sed script for multiple encapsulated postscript on a page You have MULTIPLE postscript files each containing a single plot. From: wgchoe@scoupe.postech.ac.kr (Choe Won Gyu) + Massive patch with add multiplotcapability to all devices and a lot more. The reason it is offered in this form is because the original multiplot.pat did not patch correctly into gnuplot version 3.5. This mod also add borders options, financial plots, multiple line titles and other asundry items. Use at your own risk. Look at the top of makefile.r for a more complete list of changes. From: Alex Woo, woo@playfair.stanford.edu lvs.zip This contains miscellaneous, modifications, which include: + Label positioning using either plot or device-relative coodinates + Portability to Irix-5.2 and Irix-5.3 + The "thru" keyword has been extended to include "thrux" for the X - Coordinate + Capability to read a ordinary Fortran-style unformatted file + A Perl script for better handling of eps + Modifications to docs/doc2info to generate "next", "prev", and "up" data for each node. + Changes in the documentation to reflect the above. Miscellaneous Mods + Congp3d3 is a preprocessor to draw contour plots on irregular regions. From: mrb2@nrc.gov (Margaret Rose Byrne) + Sockpipe is a socket based pipe needed for the Stardent OS. From: Mike Hallesy, Stardent Computer Product Support, hal@stardent.com + Time Series is a patch to add multiline titles and labels, time series x and y data and tic marks, and automatic resizing of plots and much more. From: Hans Olav Eggestad, olav@jordforsk.nlh.no Other Operationing Systems + MacIntosh Port of Version 3.2 From: Noboru Yamamoto, sun!kekvax.kek.jp!YAMAMOTO@pixar.com + MacIntosh Port of Version 3.5 From: laval@londres.cma.fr (Philippe LAVAL) + OS-9 Port of Version 3.2 Q5.4: Can I do heavy - duty data processing with gnuplot? Gnuplot alone is not suited very well for this. One thing you might try is fudgit, an interactive multi-purpose fitting program written by Martin-D. Lacasse (isaac@frodo.physics.mcgill.ca). It can use gnuplot as its graphics back end and is available from ftp.physics.mcgill.ca in /pub/Fudgit/fudgit_2.33.tar.Z [132.206.9.13], and from the main Linux server, tsx-11.mit.edu [18.172.1.2] and its numerous mirrors around the world as /pub/linux/sources/usr.bin/fudgit-2.33.tar.z. Versions are available for AIX, Data General, HP-UX, IRIX 4, Linux, NeXT, Sun3, Sun4, Ultrix, OS/2 and MS-DOS. The MS-DOS version is available on simtel20 mirrors (simtel20 itself has closed down) in the "math" subdirectory as fudg_231.zip. Carsten Grammes has written a fitting program which goes together with gnuplot; it is called gnufit and is available from the official gnuplot sites, as the files gnufit12.info, gnufit12.tar.gz (source) and gft12dos.zip (MS-DOS). It has been merged into gnuplot 3.6. Michael Courtney has written a program called lsqrft, which uses the Levenberg - Marquardt - Algorithm for fitting data to a function. It is avialiable from ftp.cdrom.com as /pub/os2/2_x/unix/lsqrft13.zip; sources, which should compile on Unix, and executables for MS-DOS and OS/2 2.x are included. There is an interface to the OS/2 presentation manager. You might also want to look at the applications developed by the Software Tools Group (STG) at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications. Ftp to ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu [141.142.20.50] and get the file README.BROCHURE for more information. You can also try pgperl, an integration of the PGPLOT plotting package with Perl 5. Information can be found at http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~kgb/pgperl.html, the source is available from ftp://ftp.ast.cam.ac.uk/pub/kgb/pgperl/ or ftp://linux.nrao.edu/pub/packages/pgperl/. Another possibility is Octave. To quote from its README: Octave is a high-level language, primarily intended for numerical computations. It provides a convenient command line interface for solving linear and nonlinear problems numerically. The latest released version of Octave is always available via anonymous ftp from bevo.che.wisc.edu in the directory /pub/octave. Q5.5: I have ported gnuplot to another system, or patched it. What do I do? If your patch is small, mail it to bug-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu, with a thorough description of what the patch is supposed to do, which version of gnuplot it is relative to, etc. Also, you can send notification of the patch to the FAQ maintainer, if you want a mention. Please don't send the patch itself to me :-) If your modifications are extensive (such as a port to another system), upload your modifications to ftp://ftp.dartmouth.edu/pub/dropoff. Please drop a note to David.Kotz@dartmouth.edu, the maintainer of the gnuplot subdirectory there, plus a note to bug-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu. Q5.6: I want to help in developing gnuplot 3.6. What can I do? Join the gnuplot beta test mailing list by sending a mail containing the line subscribe info-gnuplot-beta in the body (not the subject) of the mail to Majordomo@Dartmouth.EDU. Section 6: Making life easier Q6.1: How do I plot two functions in non - overlapping regions? Use a parametric plot. An example: set parametric a=1 b=3 c=2 d=4 x1(t) = a+(b-a)*t x2(t) = c+(d-c)*t f1(x) = sin(x) f2(x) = x**2/8 plot [t=0:1] x1(t),f1(x1(t)) title "f1", x2(t), f2(x2(t)) title "f2" Q6.2: How do I run my data through a filter before plotting? If your system supports the popen() function, as Unix does, you should be able to run the output through another process, for example a short awk program, such as gnuplot> plot "< awk ' { print $1, $3/$2 } ' file.in" Unfortunately, in 3.2, there is a rather short limitation on the maximum argument length, so your command line may be truncated (usually, this will mean that awk cannot find the filename). Also, you may need to escape the $ - characters in your awk programs. As of version 3.4, gnuplot includes the thru - keyword for the plot command for running data files through a gnuplot - defined function. You can also get divhack.patch from sotona.phys.soton.ac.uk[152.78.192.42] via anonymous ftp. It allows expressions of the kind gnuplot> plot "datafile" using A:B:C where A,B,C,... are now either a column number, as usual, or an arbitrary expression enclosed in ()'s, and using $1,$2,etc to access the data columns. Q6.3: How do I make it easier to use gnuplot with LaTeX? There is a set of LaTeX macros and shell scripts that are meant to make your life easier when using gnuplot with LaTeX. This package can be found on ftp.dartmouth.edu [129.170.16.54, soon to be 129.170.8.11] in pub/gnuplot/latex.shar, by David Kotz. For example, the program "plotskel" can turn a gnuplot-output file plot.tex into a skeleton file skel.tex, that has the same size as the original plot but contains no graph. With the right macros, the skeleton can be used for preliminary LaTeX passes, reserving the full graph for later passes, saving tremendous amounts of time. Q6.4: How do I save and restore my settings? Use the "save" and "load" commands for this; see "help save" and "help load" for details. Q6.5: How do I plot lines (not grids) using splot? If the data in a data file for splot is arranged in such a way that each one has the same number of data points (using blank lines as delimiters, as usual), splot will plot the data with a grid. If you want to plot just lines, use a different number of data entries (you can do this by doubling the last data point, for example). Don't forget to set parametric mode, of course. Q6.6: How do I plot a function f(x,y) which is bounded by other functions in the x-y plain? An example: f(x,y) = x**2 + y **2 x(u) = 3*u yu(x) = x**2 yl(x) = -x**2 set parametric set cont splot [0:1] [0:1] u,yl(x(u))+(yu(x(u)) - yl(x(u)))*v,\ f(x(u), (yu(x(u)) - yl(x(u)))*v) Q6.7: How do I get rid of ? Usually, there is a set command to do this; do a gnuplot> ?set no for a short overview. Q6.8: How do I call gnuplot from my own programs? Here's code which works for a UNIX system, using (efficient) named pipes. #include #include #include #include #include #include #define PANIC(a) do { \ perror(a); \ if (temp_name) unlink(temp_name);\ exit(1);\ } while(0) int main() { FILE *command,*data; char *temp_name = NULL; double a,b; int i; if ((temp_name = tmpnam((char *) 0)) == 0) PANIC("tmpnam failed"); if(mkfifo(temp_name, S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR) != 0) PANIC("mkfifo failed"); command = popen("gnuplot","w"); fprintf(command,"plot \"%s\" with lines\n",temp_name); fflush(command); data = fopen(temp_name,"w"); for (i=0; i<20; i++) { a = i/10.0; b = sin(a); fprintf(data,"%f %f\n",a,b); } fclose(data); fprintf(stderr,"press enter to continue..."); fflush(stderr); getchar(); fprintf(command,"plot \"%s\" with lines\n",temp_name); fflush(command); data = fopen(temp_name,"w"); for (i=0; i<20; i++) { a = i/10.0; b = cos(a); fprintf(data,"%f %f\n",a,b); } fclose(data); fprintf(stderr,"press enter to continue..."); fflush(stderr); getchar(); pclose(command); unlink(temp_name); return 0; } Here's code for OS/2, again using named pipes; I'm unable to check this out myself. This code is care of fearick@physci.uct.ac.za (Roger Fearick). #include #define INCL_DOS #define INCL_DOSPROCESS #define INCL_DOSNMPIPES #include main() { HPIPE hpipe ; FILE *hfile, *hgnu ; /* create a named pipe. Use NP_WAIT so that DosConnect... blocks until client (gnuplot) opens, and client reads are blocked until data is available */ DosCreateNPipe( "\\pipe\\gtemp", &hpipe, NP_ACCESS_OUTBOUND, NP_WAIT|NP_TYPE_BYTE|1, 256, 256, -1 ) ; /* use stream i/o */ hfile = fdopen( hpipe, "w" ) ; /* start gnuplot; use unbuffered writes so we don't need to flush buffer after a command */ hgnu = popen( "gnuplot", "w" ) ; setvbuf( hgnu, NULL, _IONBF, 0 ) ; /* plot a set of data */ fprintf( hgnu, "plot '/pipe/gtemp'\n" ) ; /* issue plot command */ DosConnectNPipe( hpipe ) ; /* wait until 'file' opened */ fprintf( hfile, "1 1\n" ) ; /* write data to 'file' */ fprintf( hfile, "2 2\n" ) ; fprintf( hfile, "3 3\n" ) ; fprintf( hfile, "4 4\n" ) ; fflush( hfile ) ; /* flush buffer forces read */ DosSleep( 500 ) ; /* allow gnuplot to catch up */ DosDisConnectNPipe( hpipe ) ; /* disconnect this session */ fprintf( hgnu, "pause -1\n" ) ; /* admire plot */ /* plot another set of data */ fprintf( hgnu, "plot '/pipe/gtemp'\n" ) ; DosConnectNPipe( hpipe ) ; fprintf( hfile, "1 4\n" ) ; fprintf( hfile, "2 3\n" ) ; fprintf( hfile, "3 2\n" ) ; fprintf( hfile, "4 1\n" ) ; fflush( hfile ) ; DosSleep( 500 ) ; DosDisConnectNPipe( hpipe ) ; fprintf( hgnu, "pause -1\n" ) ; DosClose( hpipe ) ; pclose( hgnu ) ; } ; The above code works for gnuplot 3.5. In gnuplot 3.6, this can be greatly simplified, since data can be fed 'inline, as in plot '-' w l 1 1 2 3 3 4 e Section 7: Known problems Q7.1: Gnuplot is not plotting any points under X11! How come? Very probably, you still are using an old version of gnuplot_x11. Remove that, then do a full installation. On VMS, you need to make several symbols: $ gnuplot_x11 :== $disk:[directory]gnuplot_x11 $ gnuplot :== $disk:[directory]gnuplot.exe $ def/job GNUPLOT$HELP disk:[directory]gnuplot.hlb Then run gnuplot from your command line, and use gnuplot> set term x11 Q7.2: My isoline data generated by a Fortran program is not handled correctly. What can I do? One known cause for this is the use of list-directed output (as in WRITE(10,*) for generating blank lines. Fortran uses ASA carriage control characters, and for list - directed output this results in a space being output before the newline. Gnuplot does not like this. The solution is to generate blank lines using formatted output, as in WRITE(10,'()'). If you use carriage return files in VMS Fortran, you may have to open the file with OPEN(...,CARRIAGECONTROL='DTST') or convert it using the DECUS utility ATTRIB.EXE: VMS> ATTRIB/RATTRIB=IMPDTED FOR010.DAT Q7.3: Why does gnuplot ignore my very small numbers? Gnuplot treats all numbers less than 1e-08 as zero, by default. Thus, if you are trying to plot a collection of very small numbers, they may be plotted as zero. Worse, if you're plotting on a log scale, they will be off scale. Or, if the whole set of numbers is "zero", your range may be considered empty: gnuplot> plot 'test1' Warning: empty y range [4.047e-19:3e-11], adjusting to [-1:1] gnuplot> set yrange [4e-19:3e-11] gnuplot> plot 'test1' ^ y range is less than `zero` The solution is to change gnuplot's idea of "zero": gnuplot> set zero 1e-20 For more information, gnuplot> help set zero Q7.4: Gnuplot is plotting nothing when run via gnuplot ! What can I do? Put a pause -1 after the plot command in the file. Q7.5: My formulas are giving me nonsense results! What's going on? Gnuplot does integer, and not floating point, arithmetic on integer expressions. For example, the expression 1/3 evaluates to zero. If you want floating point expressions, supply trailing dots for your floating point numbers. Example: gnuplot> print 1/3 0 gnuplot> print 1./3. 0.333333 This way of evaluating integer expressions is shared by both C and Fortran. Q7.6: My Linux gnuplot complains about a missing gnuplot_x11. What is wrong? The binary gnuplot distribution from sunsite.unc.edu and its mirrors in Linux/apps/math/gplotbin.tgz is missing one executable that is necessary to access the x11 terminal. Please install gnuplot from another Linux distribution, e.g. Slackware. Section 8: Credits This list was initially compiled by John Fletcher with contributions from Russell Lang, John Campbell, David Kotz, Rob Cunningham, Daniel Lewart and Alex Woo. Reworked by Thomas Koenig from a draft by Alex Woo, with corrections and additions from Alex Woo, John Campbell, Russell Lang, David Kotz and many corrections from Daniel Lewart; Axel Eble and Jutta Zimmermann helped with the conversion to HTML. Thomas Koenig, ig25@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de, 1994-03-28