Major contributors (alphabetic order):
Mailing list for comments: info-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu
Mailing list for bug reports: bug-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu
gnuplot
commands
Graphical User Interfaces
bugs
copyright
introduction
seeking-assistance
What's New in version 3.6
command-line-editing
comment
coordinates
environment
expressions
glossary
start-up
substitution
syntax
Copyright (C) 1986 - 1993, 1996 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 appears 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 the 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.
gnuplot is a command-driven interactive function and data 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 (with the exception that load or call must be the final command), separated by semicolons (;). Strings are indicated with quotes. They may be either single or double quotation marks, e.g.,
load "filename" cd 'dir'
although there are some subtle differences (see syntax for more details).
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.
Many gnuplot commands have multiple options. These options must appear in the proper order, although unwanted ones may be omitted in most cases. Thus if the entire command is "command a b c", then "command a c" will probably work, but "command c a" will fail.
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). But note that if an error occurs somewhere on a multi-line command, the parser may not be able to locate precisely where the error is and in that case will not necessarily point to the correct line.
In this document, curly braces ({}) denote optional arguments 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 on-line help on any topic, type help followed by the name of the topic or just help or ? to get a menu of available topics.
The new gnuplot user should begin by reading about the plot command (if on-line, type help plot). Simple Plots Demo
There is a mailing list for gnuplot users. Note, however, that the newsgroup
comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot
is identical to the mailing list (they both carry the same set of messages). We prefer that you read the messages through the newsgroup rather than subscribing to the mailing list. Administrative requests should be sent to
majordomo@dartmouth.edu
Send a message with the body (not the subject) consisting of the single word "help" (without the quotes) for more details.
The address for mailing to list members is:
info-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu
Bug reports and code contributions should be mailed to:
bug-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu
The list of those interested in beta-test versions is:
info-gnuplot-beta@dartmouth.edu
There is also a World Wide Web page with up-to-date information, including
known bugs:
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/gnuplot
Before seeking help, please check the FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) list. If you do not have a copy of the FAQ, you may request a copy by email from the Majordomo address above, or see the WWW gnuplot page.
When posting a question, please include full details of the version of gnuplot, the machine, and operating system you are using. A _small_ script demonstrating the problem may be useful. Function plots are preferable to datafile plots. If email-ing to info-gnuplot, please state whether or not you are subscribed to the list, so that users who use news will know to email a reply to you. There is a form for such postings on the WWW site.
Gnuplot version 3.6 contains many new features. This section gives a partial list and links to the new items in no particular order.
1. fit f(x) 'file' via uses the Levison-Marquardt method to fit data. (This is only slightly different from the gnufit patch available for 3.5.)
2. Greatly expanded using command.
3. set timefmt allows for the use of dates as input and output for time
series plots. See
timedat.dem.
4. Multiline labels and font selection in some drivers.
5. Minor (unlabeled) tics. See set mxtics.
6. key options for moving the key box in the page (and even outside of the
plot), putting a title on it and a box around it, and more.
7. Multiplots on a single logical page with set multiplot.
8. Enhanced postscript driver with super/subscripts and font changes.
(This was a separate driver (enhpost) that was available as a patch for
3.5.)
9. Second axes: use the top and right axes independently of the bottom and
left, both for plotting and labels. See plot.
10. Special datafile names '-' and "". See plot special-filenames.
11. Additional coordinate systems for labels and arrows. See coordinates.
12. set size tries to plot with a specified aspect ratio.
13. set missing now treats missing data correctly.
14. The call command: load with arguments.
15. More flexible range commands with reverse and writeback keywords.
16. set encoding for multi-lingual encoding.
17. New x11 driver with persistent and multiple windows.
18. New plotting styles: xerrorbars, histeps, financebars and more.
See set style.
19. New tic label formats, including "%l %L" which uses the mantissa and
exponents to a given base for labels. See set format.
20. New drivers, including cgm for inclusion into MS-Office applications
and gif for serving plots to the WEB.
21. Smoothing and spline-fitting options for plot. See plot smooth.
22. set margin and set origin give much better control over where a
graph appears on the page.
23. set border now controls each border individually.
24. The new commands if and reread allow command loops.
25. Point styles and sizes, line types and widths can be specified on the
plot command. Line types and widths can also be specified for grids,
borders, tics and arrows. See plot with.
Command-line editing is supported by the Unix, Atari, VMS, MS-DOS and OS/2
versions of gnuplot. 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 without regard to where the
cursor is positioned.
(The readline function in gnuplot is not the same as the readline used in
GNU Bash and GNU Emacs. If the GNU version is desired, it may be selected
instead of the gnuplot version at compile time.)
The editing commands are as follows:
On the IBM PC, the use of a TSR program such as DOSEDIT or CED may be desired
for line editing. The default makefile assumes that this is the case; by
default gnuplot will be compiled with no line-editing capability. If you
want to use gnuplot's line editing, set READLINE in the makefile and add
readline.obj to the link file. The following arrow keys may be used on the
IBM PC and Atari versions if readline is used:
The Atari version of readline defines some additional key aliases:
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.
The commands set arrow, set key, and set label allow you to draw
something at an arbitrary position on the graph. This position is specified
by the syntax:
Each <system> can either be first, second, graph or screen.
first places the x, y, or z coordinate in the system defined by the left
and bottom axes; second places it in the system defined by the second axes
(top and right); graph specifies the area within the axes---0,0 is bottom
left and 1,1 is top right (for splot, 0,0,0 is bottom left of plotting area;
use negative z to get to the base---see set ticslevel); and screen
specifies the screen area (the entire area---not just the portion selected by
set size), with 0,0 at bottom left and 1,1 at top right.
If the coordinate system for x is not specified, first is used. If the
system for y is not specified, the one used for x is adopted.
If one (or more) axis is timeseries, the appropriate coordinate should
be given as a quoted time string according to the timefmt format string.
See set xdata and set timefmt. gnuplot will also accept an integer
expression, which will be interpreted as seconds from 1 January 2000.
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 logical name gnuplot$HELP should be defined as the name of the
help library for gnuplot. The gnuplot help can be put inside any system
help library, allowing access to help from both within and outside gnuplot
if desired.
On Unix, HOME is used as the name of a directory to search for a .gnuplot
file if none is found in the current directory. On AmigaDOS, AtariTOS,
MS-DOS and OS/2, gnuplot is used. On VMS, SYS$LOGIN: 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 MS-DOS, if the BGI interface is used, 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 resolution and its mode of operation is
Name.Mode. E.g., if the Super VGA driver is
and mode 3 is used for 800x600 resolution, then use the following:
FIT_SCRIPT may be used to specify a gnuplot command to be executed when a
fit is interrupted---see fit. FIT_LOG specifies the filename of the
logfile maintained by fit.
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 are expressed as {<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.
Note that gnuplot uses both "real" and "integer" arithmetic, like FORTRAN and
C. Integers are entered as "1", "-10", etc; reals as "1.0", "-10.0", "1e1",
3.5e-1, etc. The most important difference between the two forms is in
division: division of integers truncates: 5/2 = 2; division of reals does
not: 5.0/2.0 = 2.5. In mixed expressions, integers are "promoted" to reals
before evaluation: 5/2e0 = 2.5. The result of division of a negative integer
by a positive one may vary among compilers. Try a test like "print -5/2" to
determine if your system chooses -2 or -3 as the answer.
The real and imaginary parts of complex expressions are always real, whatever
the form in which they are entered: in {3,2} the "3" and "2" are reals, not
integers.
functions
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.
For those functions that accept or return angles that may be given in either
degrees or radians (sin(x), cos(x), tan(x), asin(x), acos(x), atan(x),
atan2(x) and arg(z)), the unit may be selected by set angles, which
defaults to radians.
abs
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) ].
The acos function returns the arc cosine (inverse cosine) of its argument.
acos returns its argument in radians or degrees, as selected by set
angles.
The acosh function returns the inverse hyperbolic cosine of its argument in
radians.
The arg function returns the phase of a complex number in radians or
degrees, as selected by set angles.
The asin function returns the arc sin (inverse sin) of its argument.
asin returns its argument in radians or degrees, as selected by set
angles.
The asinh function returns the inverse hyperbolic sin of its argument in
radians.
The atan function returns the arc tangent (inverse tangent) of its
argument. atan returns its argument in radians or degrees, as selected by
set angles.
The atan2 function returns the arc tangent (inverse tangent) of the ratio
of the real parts of its arguments. atan2 returns its argument in radians
or degrees, as selected by set angles, in the correct quadrant.
The atanh function returns the inverse hyperbolic tangent of its argument
in radians.
The besj0 function returns the j0th Bessel function of its argument.
besj0 expects its argument to be in radians.
The besj1 function returns the j1st Bessel function of its argument.
besj1 expects its argument to be in radians.
The besy0 function returns the y0th Bessel function of its argument.
besy0 expects its argument to be in radians.
The besy1 function returns the y1st Bessel function of its argument.
besy1 expects its argument to be in radians.
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.
The cos function returns the cosine of its argument. cos accepts its
argument in radians or degrees, as selected by set angles.
The cosh function returns the hyperbolic cosine of its argument. cosh
expects its argument to be in radians.
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.
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.
The exp function returns the exponential function of its argument (e
raised to the power of its argument). On some implementations (notably
suns), exp(-x) returns undefined for very large x. A user-defined function
like safe(x) = x<-100 ? 0 : exp(x) might prove useful in these cases.
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.
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.
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.
The inverf function returns the inverse error function of the real part
of its argument.
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.
The imag function returns the imaginary part of its argument as a real
number.
The invnorm function returns the inverse normal distribution function of
the real part of its argument.
The int function returns the integer part of its argument, truncated
toward zero.
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.
The log function returns the natural logarithm (base e) of its argument.
The log10 function returns the logarithm (base 10) of its argument.
The norm function returns the normal distribution function (or Gaussian)
of the real part of its argument.
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.
The real function returns the real part of its argument.
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.
The sin function returns the sine of its argument. sin expects its
argument to be in radians or degrees, as selected by set angles.
The sinh function returns the hyperbolic sine of its argument. sinh
expects its argument to be in radians.
The sqrt function returns the square root of its argument.
The tan function returns the tangent of its argument. tan expects
its argument to be in radians or degrees, as selected by set angles.
The tanh function returns the hyperbolic tangent of its argument. tanh
expects its argument to be in radians.
A few additional functions are also available.
column(x) may be used only in expressions as part of using manipulations
to fits or datafile plots. See plot datafile using.
The tm_hour function interprets its argument as a time, in seconds from
1 Jan 2000. It returns the hour (an integer in the range 0--23) as a real.
The tm_mday function interprets its argument as a time, in seconds from
1 Jan 2000. It returns the day of the month (an integer in the range 1--31)
as a real.
The tm_min function interprets its argument as a time, in seconds from
1 Jan 2000. It returns the minute (an integer in the range 0--59) as a real.
The tm_mon function interprets its argument as a time, in seconds from
1 Jan 2000. It returns the month (an integer in the range 1--12) as a real.
The tm_sec function interprets its argument as a time, in seconds from
1 Jan 2000. It returns the second (an integer in the range 0--59) as a real.
The tm_wday function interprets its argument as a time, in seconds from
1 Jan 2000. It returns the day of the week (an integer in the range 1--7) as
a real.
The tm_yday function interprets its argument as a time, in seconds from
1 Jan 2000. It returns the day of the year (an integer in the range 1--366)
as a real.
The tm_year function interprets its argument as a time, in seconds from
1 Jan 2000. It returns the year (an integer) as a real.
valid(x) may be used only in expressions as part of using manipulations
to fits or datafile plots. See plot datafile using.
Use of functions and complex variables for airfoils
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.
The following is a list of all the unary operators and their usages:
(*) Starred explanations indicate that the operator requires an integer
argument.
Operator precedence is the same as in Fortran and C. As in those languages,
parantheses may be used to change the order of operation. Thus -2**2 = -4,
but (-2)**2 = 4.
The factorial operator returns a real number to allow a greater range.
The following is a list of all the binary operators and their usages:
(*) 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.
There is a single ternary operator:
The ternary operator behaves as it does in C. The first argument (a), which
must be an integer, is evaluated. If it is true (non-zero), the second
argument (b) is evaluated and returned; otherwise the third argument (c) is
evaluated and returned.
The ternary operator is very useful both in constructing piecewise functions
and in plotting points only when certain conditions are met.
Examples:
Plot a function that is to equal sin(x) for 0 <= x < 1, 1/x for 1 <= x < 2,
and undefined elsewhere:
Note that gnuplot quietly ignores undefined values, so the final branch of
the function (1/0) will produce no plottable points. Note also that f(x)
will be plotted as a continuous function across the discontinuity if a line
style is used. To plot it discontinuously, create separate functions for the
two pieces. (Parametric functions are also useful for this purpose.)
For data in a file, plot the average of the data in columns 2 and 3 against
the datum in column 1, but only if the datum in column 4 is non-negative:
Please see plot data-file using for an explanation of the using syntax.
New user-defined variables and functions of one through five variables may
be declared and used anywhere, including on the plot command itself.
User-defined function syntax:
where <expression> is defined in terms of <dummy1> through <dummy5>.
User-defined variable syntax:
Examples:
Valid names are the same as in most programming languages: they must begin
with a letter, but subsequent characters may be letters, digits, "$", or "_".
Note, however, that the fit mechanism uses several variables with names
that begin "FIT_". It is safest to avoid using such names. "FIT_LIMIT",
however, is one that you may wish to redefine.
See show functions and show variables.
Throughout this document an attempt has been made to maintain consistency of
nomenclature. This cannot be wholly successful because as gnuplot has
evolved over time, certain command and keyword names have been adopted that
preclude such perfection. This section contains explanations of the way
some of these terms are used.
A "page" or "screen" is the entire area addressable by gnuplot. On a
monitor, it is the full screen; on a plotter, it is a single sheet of
paper.
A screen may contain one or more "graphs". A graph is defined by an
abscissa and an ordinate, although these need not actually appear on it.
A graph may contain one or more "plots". A plot is a single function or
data set.
The plots on a graph may have individual names. These may be listed together
with a sample of the line and/or point style used to represent them in the
"key", sometimes also called the "legend".
The word "title" occurs with multiple meanings in gnuplot. In this
document, it will always be preceded by the adjective "graph", "plot", or
"key" to differentiate among them.
A graph may have up to four labelled axes. Various commands have the name of
an axis built into their names, such as set xlabel. Other commands have
one or more axis names as options, such as set logscale xy. The names of
the four axes for these usages are "x" for the axis along the bottom border
of the plot, "y" for the left border, "x2" for the top border, and "y2" for
the right border. "z" also occurs in commands used with three-dimensional
plotting.
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,
Atari(single)TOS, 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.
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:
or, in VMS
The general rules of syntax and punctuation in gnuplot are that keywords
and options are order-dependent. Options and any accompanying parameters are
separated by spaces whereas lists and coordinates are separated by commas.
Ranges are separated by colons and enclosed in braces [], text and file names
are enclosed in quotes, and a few miscellaneous things are enclosed in
parentheses. Brackets {} are used for a few special purposes.
Commas are used to separate coordinates on the set commands arrow,
key, and label; the list of variables being fitted (the list after the
via keyword on the fit command); lists of discrete contours or the loop
parameters which specify them on the set cntrparam command; the arguments
of the set commands dgrid3d, dummy, isosamples, offsets, origin,
samples, size, time, and view; lists of tics or the loop parameters
which specify them; the offsets for titles and axis labels; parametric
functions to be used to calculate the x, y, and z coordinates on the plot,
replot and splot commands; and the complete sets of keywords specifying
individual plots (data sets or functions) on the plot, replot and splot
commands.
Parentheses are used to delimit sets of explicit tics (as opposed to loop
parameters) and to indicate computations in the using filter of the fit,
plot, replot and splot commands.
(Parentheses and commas are also used as usual in function notation.)
Braces are used to delimit ranges, whether they are given on set, plot or
splot commands.
Colons are used to separate extrema in range specifications (whether they
are given on set, plot or splot commands) and to separate entries in
the using filter of the plot, replot, splot and fit commands.
Semicolons are used to separate commands given on a single line.
Brackets are used in text to be specially processed by some terminals, like
postscript. They are also used to denote complex numbers: {3,2} = 3 + 2i.
Text may be enclosed in single- or double-quotes. Backslash processing of
sequences like \n (newline) and \345 (octal character code) is performed for
double-quoted strings, but not for single-quoted strings.
The justification is the same for each line of a multi-line string. Thus the
center-justified string
will produce
but
will produce
At present you should not embed \n inside {} when using the enhanced option
of the postscript terminal.
The EEPIC, Imagen, Uniplex, LaTeX, and TPIC drivers allow a newline to be
specified by \\ in a single-quoted string or \\\\ in a double-quoted string.
Back-quotes are used to enclose system commands for substitution.
cd
The cd command changes the working directory.
Syntax:
The directory name must be enclosed in quotes.
Examples:
DOS users _must_ use single-quotes---backslash [\] has special significance
inside double-quotes. For example,
fails, but
works as expected.
The call command is identical to the load command with one exception: you
can have up to ten additional parameters to the command (delimited according
to the standard parser rules) which can be substituted into the lines read
from the file. As each line is read from the called input file, it is
scanned for the sequence $ (dollar-sign) followed by a digit (0--9). If
found, the sequence is replaced by the corresponding parameter from the
call command line. If the parameter was specified as a string in the
call line, it is substituted without its enclosing quotes. $ followed by
any character other than a digit will be that character. E.g. use $$ to
get a single $. Providing more than ten parameters on the call command
line will cause an error. A parameter that was not provided substitutes as
nothing. Files being called may themselves contain call or load
commands.
The call command _must_ be the last command on a multi-command line.
Syntax:
The name of the input file must be enclosed in quotes, and it is recommended
that parameters are similarly enclosed in quotes (future versions of gnuplot
may treat quoted and unquoted arguments differently).
Example:
If the file 'calltest.gp' contains the line:
entering the command:
will display:
NOTE: there is a clash in syntax with the datafile using callback
operator. Use $$n or column(n) to access column n from a datafile inside
a called datafile plot.
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.
For some terminals clear erases only the portion of the plotting surface
defined by set size, so for these it can be used in conjunction with set
multiplot to create an inset.
Example:
Please see set multiplot, set size, and set origin for details of these
commands.
The commands exit and quit and the END-OF-FILE character will exit
gnuplot. Each of these commands will clear the output device (as does
the clear command) before exiting.
This implementation incorporates the capability of nonlinear least squares
fitting using the Marquardt-Levenberg Algorithm. It may fit any user-defined
function to any set of data points (x,y) or (x,y,z). x, y, z and the
function's return type _must_ be real! Any variable occurring in the
function body may serve as a fit parameter (fitting functions without
adjustable parameters make no sense).
Syntax:
Notice that via is now a required keyword, to distinguish it from a scanf
format string.
[xrange] and [yrange] are of the form [{variable=}{<min>}{:<max>}], allowing
the range of the fit to be limited temporarily in a manner analogous to
plot. <function> is any valid gnuplot expression, although it is usual
to use a previously user-defined function of the form f(x) or f(x,y).
datafiles (using, every,...) in plot are available here (except
smooth)---see plot datafile for full details. The default columns for x
and y are 1 and 2. These may be changed by the using x:y mechanism. If
using has a third entry (a column or an expression), it will be interpreted
as the standard deviation of each y value and will be used to compute the
weight; otherwise all data will be weighted equally. If four columns are
specified, they are x:y:z:error---note that an error _must_ be specified in
order to perform a 3D fit. If errors are not available, a constant value can
be specified, e.g., using ...:(1). Initial values for the parameters to be
fit may be specified in a (load-)file wherein each line is of the form:
Comments, marked by '#', and blank lines are permissible. The form
means that the variable is treated as a fixed parameter that is initialized
but will not be adjusted. It is not necessary (but sometimes useful for
clarity) to specify them at all. The keyword '# FIXED' has to appear in
exactly this form.
The other means of specifying the adjustable parameters is to provide a
comma-separated list of variable names after the via keyword. If any of
these variables do not yet exist within the current gnuplot session, they
are created with an initial value of 1.0, but the fit is more likely to
converge if a more appropriate starting value is given. If this form is
used, it may prove beneficial to iterate the fit, allowing only one or two
variables to be adjusted at a time until a reasonably close fit is obtained,
before allowing fit to vary all parameters.
After each iteration step, detailed information is given about the fit's
state, both on the screen and on a logfile "fit.log". This file will never be
erased but always appended to so that the fit's history isn't lost. After
each iteration step, the fit may be interrupted by pressing Ctrl-C (any key
_but_ Ctrl-C under MSDOS and Atari Multitasking Systems). Then you have the
options of stopping (and accepting the current parameter values), continuing
the iteration of the fit, or executing a gnuplot command specified by an
environment variable FIT_SCRIPT. A plot or load command may be useful in
this context.
Special gnuplot variable:
may be specified to change the default epsilon limit (1e-5). When the sum
of squared residuals changes between two iteration steps by less than a
factor of this number, the fit is considered to have 'converged'.
[FIT_SKIP was available in previous releases of gnufit. Its functionality
is now obtained using the every modifier for datafiles. FIT_INDEX was
previously available in order to allow multi-branch fitting. Multi-branch
fitting in 2D can now be done as a pseudo-3D fit in which the y values are
the dataline number (using 1:-1:...) or index (using 1:-2:...).]
Environment variables:
changes the logfile's path from './fit.log' (write permission is necessary).
specifies a command to be executed after an user interrupt.
Examples:
See also update
See the `fit` demos.
The help command displays on-line help. To specify information on a
particular topic use the syntax:
If <topic> is not specified, a short message is printed about gnuplot.
After help for the requested topic is given, a menu of subtopics 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 you may go back one level to the previous topic. Eventually, the
gnuplot command line will return.
If a question mark (?) is given as the topic, the list of topics currently
available is printed on the screen.
The if command allows commands to be executed conditionally.
Syntax:
<condition> will be evaluated. If it is true (non-zero), then the command(s)
of the <command-line> will be executed. If <condition> is false (zero), then
the entire <command-line> is ignored. Note that use of ; to allow multiple
commands on the same line will _not_ end the conditionalized commands.
Examples:
will display:
but
will not display anything.
See reread for an example of how if and reread can be used together to
perform a loop.
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 or call commands. See comment for information about
comments in commands.
The load command _must_ be the last command on a multi-command line.
Syntax:
The name of the input file must be enclosed in quotes.
Examples:
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. See also call.
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:
<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. pause 0 is synonymous
with print.
Note: Since pause communicates with the operating system rather than the
graphics, it may behave differently with different device drivers (depending
upon how text and graphics are mixed).
Examples:
plot and splot are the primary commands of the program. They create
graphs of functions and data in many, many ways. plot is used to draw 2-d
functions and data; splot draws 2-d projections of 3-d surfaces and data.
Syntax:
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. The expressions may be defined completely or in part earlier in
the stream of gnuplot commands (see user-defined).
It is also possible to define functions and parameters on the plot command
itself. This is done merely by isolating them from other items with commas.
For plot there are four possible sets of axes available; the keyword <axes>
is used to change the axes for which the following plots should be scaled.
x1y1 refers to the axes on the bottom and left; x2y2 to those on the top
and right; x1y2 to those on the bottom and right; and x2y1 to those on
the top and left. Ranges specified on the plot command apply only to the
first set of axes (bottom left).
The axes option has not been implemented for splot.
By default splot draws the xy plane completely below the plotted data. The
offset between the lowest ztic and the xy plane can be changed by set
ticslevel. The orientation of a 'splot' is controlled by set view. See
set view and set ticslevel for more information.
Examples:
data-file
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.
Syntax:
The modifiers binary, matrix, index, every, thru, using, and
smooth are discussed separately. In brief, binary (splot only) is a
flag indicating that the file is binary, matrix (splot only) is a flag
indicating that the data are in matrix form, index selects which data sets
in a multi-data-set file are to be plotted, every specifies which lines
within a single data set are to be plotted, using determines how the
columns within a single line are to be interpreted (thru is a special case
of using), and smooth allows for simple interpolation and approximation
(plot only).
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 set style errorbars), each data
point is (x,y,ydelta), (x,y,ylow,yhigh), (x,y,xdelta), (x,y,xlow,xhigh), or
(x,y,xlow,xhigh,ylow,yhigh). In all cases, the numbers on each line of a
data file must be separated by white space (one or more blanks or tabs),
unless a format specifier is provided by the using option. This white
space divides each line into columns.
Data may be written in exponential format with the exponent preceded by the
letter e, E, d, D, q, or Q.
For plots, only one column (the y value) need be provided. For splots,
provide either one column (z) or three (x,y,z). (It is no longer necessary
to specify parametric mode for three-column splots.) If x (and y) are
omitted, gnuplot provides integer values starting at 0.
In datafiles, blank lines (lines with no characters other than blanks and a
line feed or carriage return) are significant---pairs of blank lines separate
indexes (see plot datafile index). Data separated by double blank lines
are treated as if they were in separate data files.
Single blank lines separate points in a plot, or isolines in a splot.
No line will join points separated by a blank line in either a plot or
splot. For splot, if all isolines (groups of contiguous points) are of
equal length, gnuplot will draw cross-isolines in the opposite direction.
This is termed "grid data", and is required for contouring (set contour)
and hidden-line removal (set hidden3d).
If autoscaling has been enabled (set autoscale), the axes are automatically
extended to include all datapoints, with a whole number of tic marks if tics
are being drawn. This has two consequences: i) For splot, the corner of
the surface may not coincide with the corner of the base. In this case, no
vertical line is drawn. ii) When plotting data with the same x range on a
dual-axis graph, the x coordinates may not coincide if the x2tics are not
being drawn. This is because the x axis has been autoextended to a whole
number of tics, but the x2 axis has not. The following example illustrates
the problem:
binary
In previous versions, gnuplot dynamically detected binary data files. It
is now necessary to specify the keyword binary directly after the filename.
Currently, binary data is supported only for splot, since a format for
binary data in 2-d has not been designed.
Single precision floats are stored in a binary file as follows:
which are converted into triplets:
These triplets are then converted into gnuplot iso-curves and then
gnuplot proceeds in the usual manner to do the rest of the plotting.
A collection of matrix and vector manipulation routines (in C) is provided
in binary.c. The routine to write binary data is
An example of using these routines is provided in the file bf_test.c, which
generates binary files for the demo file demo/binary.dem.
The index keyword is not supported, since the file format allows only one
surface per file. The every and using filters are supported. using
operates as if the data were read in the above triplet form.
Binary File Splot Demo.
The every keyword allows a periodic sampling of a data set to be plotted.
Syntax:
This plots a subset of the data in "file". The points are selected according
to a loop from <start_point> to <end_point> with increment <point_incr>
and the lines according to a loop from <start_line> to <end_line> with
increment <line_incr>.
Any of the numbers can be omitted; the increments default to unity, the start
values to the first point or line, and the end values to the last point or
line. If every is not specified, all points in all lines are plotted.
Examples:
To plot a single line from a 3-d datafile, one trick is to set <start_line>
to the desired line, and set <line_incr> large enough that no subsequent
lines will be selected.
Simple Plot Demos ,
Non-parametric splot demos , and
Parametric splot demos.
This example compares the data in the file population.dat to a theoretical
curve:
The file "population.dat" might contain:
A simple example of plotting a 3-d data file is
where the file "datafile.dat" might contain:
Note that "datafile.dat" defines a 4 by 3 grid ( 4 rows of 3 points each ).
Rows are separated by blank lines.
Actually it is not necessary to keep the x values constant within an isoline,
nor is it necessary to keep the y values the same along the perpendicular
isolines. gnuplot requires only that the number of points be the same
along each isoline.
The index keyword allows only some of the data sets in a multi-data-set
file to be plotted.
Syntax:
Data sets (surfaces for splot) are separated by pairs of blank lines.
index <m> selects only set <m>; index <m>:<n> selects sets in the range
<m> to <n>; and index <m>:<n>:<p> selects indices <m>, <m>+<p>, <m>+2<p>,
etc., but stopping at <n>. Following C indexing, the index 0 is assigned to
the first data set in the file. Specifying too large an index results in an
error message. If index is not specified, all sets are plotted as a single
data set.
Example:
The matrix flag indicates that the data are stored in matrix format. In
its present implementation the z-values are read in a row at a time, i. e.,
and so forth. The row and column indices are used for the x- and y-values.
gnuplot includes a few general-purpose routines for interpolation and
approximation of data; these are grouped under the smooth option. More
sophisticated data processing may be performed by preprocessing the data
externally or by using fit with an appropriate model.
Syntax:
unique plots the data after making them monotonic. Each of the other
routines uses the data to determine the coefficients of a continuous curve
between the endpoints of the data. This curve is then plotted in the same
manner as a function, that is, by finding its value at uniform intervals
along the abscissa (see set samples) and connecting these points with
straight line segments (if a line style is chosen).
If autoscale is in effect, the ranges will be computed such that the
plotted curve lies within the borders of the graph.
If too few points are available to allow the selected option to be applied,
an error message is produced. The minimum number is one for unique, four
for acsplines, and three for the others.
The smooth options have no effect on function plots. Neither have they
been installed for splot.
acsplines
acsplines approximates the data with a "natural smoothing spline". After
the data are made monotonic in x (see smooth unique), a curve is piecewise
constructed from segments of cubic polynomials whose coefficients are found
by the weighting the data points; the weights are taken from the third column
in the data file. That default can be modified by the third entry in the
using list, e.g.,
Qualitatively, the absolute magnitude of the weights determines the number
of segments used to construct the curve. If the weights are large, the
effect of each datum is large and the curve approaches that produced by
connecting consecutive points with natural cubic splines. If the weights are
small, the curve is composed of fewer segments and thus is smoother; the
limiting case is the single segment produced by a weighted linear least
squares fit to all the data. The smoothing weight can be expressed in terms
of errors as a statistical weight for a point divided by a "smoothing factor"
for the curve so that (standard) errors in the file can be used as smoothing
weights.
Example:
The bezier option approximates the data with a Bezier curve of degree n
(the number of data points) that connects the endpoints.
The csplines option connects consecutive points by natural cubic splines
after rendering the data monotonic (see smooth unique).
The sbezier option first renders the data monotonic (unique) and then
applies the bezier algorithm.
The unique option makes the data monotonic in x; points with the same
x-value are replaced by a single point having the average y-value. The
resulting points are then connected by straight line segments.
See demos.
A special filename of '-' specifies that the data are inline; i.e., they
follow the command. Only the data follow the command; plot options like
filters, titles, and line styles remain on the 'plot' command line. This is
similar to << in unix shell script, and $DECK in VMS DCL. The data are
entered as though they are being read from a file, one data point per record.
The letter "e" at the start of the first column terminates data entry. The
using option can be applied to these data---using it to filter them through
a function might make sense, but selecting columns probably doesn't!
'-' is intended for situations where it is useful to have data and commands
together, e.g., when gnuplot is run as a sub-process of some front-end
application. Some of the demos, for example, might use this feature.
If you use '-' with replot, you may need to enter the data more than once
(see replot).
A blank filename ('') specifies that the previous filename should be reused.
This can be useful with things like
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,
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):
While this approach is most flexible, it is possible to achieve simple
filtering with the using or thru keywords.
The thru function is provided for backward compatibility.
Syntax:
It is equivalent to:
While the latter appears more complex, it is much more flexible. The more
natural
also works (i.e. you can use y as the dummy variable).
thru is parsed for splot and fit but has no effect.
The most common datafile modifier is using.
Syntax:
If a format is specified, each datafile line is read using the C library's
scanf function, with the specified format string. Otherwise the line is read
and broken into columns at spaces or tabs. A format cannot be specified if
time-format data is being used (this must be done by set data time).
The resulting array of data is then sorted into columns according to the
entries. Each <entry> may be a simple column number, which selects the
datum, an expression enclosed in parentheses, or empty. The expression can
use $1 to access the first item read, $2 for the second item, and so on. It
can also use column(x) and valid(x) where x is an arbitrary expression
resulting in an integer. column(x) returns the x'th datum; valid(x)
tests that the datum in the x'th column is a valid number. A column number
of 0 generates a number increasing (from zero) with each point, and is reset
upon encountering two blank lines. A column number of -1 gives the data line
number, which starts at 0, increments at single blank lines, and is reset at
double blank lines. A column number of -2 gives the index number, which is
incremented only when two blank lines are found. An empty <entry> will
default to its order in the list of entries. For example, using ::4 is
interpreted as using 1:2:4.
If the using list for a 2D data file has but a single entry, that <entry>
will be used for y and the data point number is used for x; for example,
"plot 'file' using 1" is identical to "plot 'file' using 0:1". For 3D
data files, the listed entry is used for z, the data point number for x, and
the line number for y; thus "splot 'file' using 1" is identical to "splot
'file' using 0:-1:1".
N.B.---the call command also uses $'s as a special character. See call
for details about how to include a column number in a call argument list.
The interpretation of the using entries depends on the plot and style. For
splot, a single <entry> is z or three entries are (x,y,z) (unless set
mapping has been used). For plot, a single <entry> is y. For plot or
fit, the first two entries are x and y; additional entries are usually
errors in x and/or y. See set style for more details about the structure
of files containing error information.
Examples:
This creates a plot of the sum of the 2nd and 3rd data against the first:
(The format string specifies comma- rather than space-separated columns.)
In this example the data are read from the file "MyData" using a more
complicated format:
The meaning of this format is:
Note that the use of newline (\n) requires use of double-quotes rather than
single-quotes.
One trick is to use the ternary ?: operator to filter data:
which plots the datum in column two against that in column one provided
the datum in column three exceeds ten. 1/0 is undefined; gnuplot
quietly ignores undefined points, so unsuitable points are suppressed.
In fact, you can use a constant expression for the column number, provided it
doesn't start with an opening parenthesis; constructs like using
0+(complicated expression) can be used. The crucial point is that the
expression is evaluated once if it doesn't start with a left parenthesis, or
once for each data point read if it does.
If timeseries data are being used, the time can span multiple columns. The
starting column should be specified. Note that the spaces within the time
must be included when calculating starting columns for other data. E.g., if
the first element on a line is a time with an embedded space, the y value
should be specified as column three.
It should be noted that plot 'file', plot 'file' using 1:2, and plot
'file' using ($1):($2) can be subtly different: 1) if file has some lines
with one column and some with two, the first will invent x values when they
are missing, the second will quietly ignore the lines with one column, and
the third will store an undefined value for lines with one point (so that in
a plot with lines, no line joins points across the bad point); 2) if a line
contains text at the first column, the first will abort the plot on an error,
but the second and third should quietly skip the garbage.
In fact, it is often possible to plot a file with lots of lines of garbage at
the top simply by specifying
If you want to leave text in your data files, it is always safe to put the
comment character (#) in the first column of the text lines.
Feeble using demos.
Error bars are supported for 2-d data file plots by reading one to four
additional columns (or using entries); these additional values are used in
different ways by the various errorbar styles.
No support exists for any error bars for splots.
In the default situation, gnuplot expects to see three, four, or six
numbers on each line of the data file---either
The x coordinate must be specified. The order of the numbers must be
exactly as given above, though the using qualifier can manipulate the order
and provide values for missing columns. For example,
The last plot is for a file with an unsupported combination of relative x and
absolute y errors. The using entry generates absolute x min and max from
the relative error.
The y 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. The x error bar is a horizontal line
computed in the same fashion. To get lines plotted between the data points,
plot the data file twice, once with errorbars and once with lines (but
remember to use the notitle option on one to avoid two entries in the key).
The error bars have crossbars at each end unless set bar is used (see set
bar for details).
If autoscaling is on, the ranges will be adjusted to include the error bars.
Errorbar demos.
See plot using, plot with, and set style for more information.
When in parametric mode (set parametric) mathematical expressions must be
given in pairs for plot and in triplets for splot.
Examples:
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.
Other modifiers, such as with and title, may be specified only after the
parametric function has been completed:
The optional ranges specify the region of the graph that will be displayed.
Syntax:
The first form applies to independent variables: xrange, trange, urange,
vrange and, for splot, yrange. The second form applies to dependent
variables: zrange and, for plot, yrange. <dummy-var> is a new name for
the independent variable. (The defaults may be changed with set dummy.) The
optional <min> and <max> terms can be constant expressions or *.
In non-parametric mode, the order in which ranges must be given is xrange,
yrange, and, for splot, zrange.
In parametric mode, the order for the plot command is trange, xrange,
and 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 graph:
Note that the x2range and y2range cannot be specified here---set x2range
and set y2range must be used.
Ranges are interpreted in the order listed above for the appropriate mode.
Once all those needed are specified, no further ones must be listed, but
unneeded ones cannot be skipped---use an empty range [] as a placeholder.
* can be used to allow autoscaling of either of min and max. See also
set autoscale.
Ranges specified on the plot or splot command line affect only that
graph; use the set xrange, set yrange, etc., commands to change the
default ranges for future graphs.
With time data, you must provide the range (in the same manner as the time
appears in the datafile) within quotes. gnuplot uses the timefmt string
to read the value---see set timefmt.
Examples:
This uses the current ranges:
This sets the x range only:
This is the same, but uses t as the dummy-variable:
This sets both the x and y ranges:
This sets only the y range, and turns off autoscaling on both axes:
This sets xmax and ymin only:
This sets the x, y, and z ranges:
This sets the x range for a timeseries:
A title for each function and data set appears in the key, accompanied by a
sample of the line and/or symbol used to represent it. By default the plot
title is the function or file name as it appears on the plot command. It
can be changed by using the title option.
Syntax:
where <title> is the new title of the plot and must be enclosed in quotes.
The quotes will not be shown in the key. A special character may be given as
a backslash followed by its octal value ("\345"). The tab character "\t" is
understood. Note that backslash processing occurs only for strings enclosed
in double quotes---use single quotes to prevent such processing. The newline
character "\n" is not processed in key entries in either type of string.
The plot title and sample can be omitted from the key by using the keyword
notitle. A null title (title '') is equivalent to notitle. If only
the sample is wanted, use one or more blanks (title ' ').
The layout of the key itself (position, title justification, etc.) can be
controlled by set key. Please see set key for details.
Examples:
This plots y=x with the title 'x':
This plots the "glass.dat" file with the title 'surface of revolution':
This plots x squared with title "x^2" and "data.1" with title 'measured
data':
This puts an untitled circular border around a polar graph:
Functions and data may be displayed in one of a large number of styles.
The with keyword provides the means of selection.
Syntax:
where <style> is either lines, points, linespoints, impulses, dots,
steps, fsteps, histeps, errorbars, xerrorbars, yerrorbars,
xyerrorbars, boxes, boxerrorbars, boxxyerrorbars, financebars,
candlesticks or vector. A given style may not be appropriate for both
2-d and 3-d plots and may require additional information. See set style
<style> for details of each style.
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 12 curves are plotted with points. The PostScript drivers
(postscript) supplies a total of 64.
If you wish to choose the line or point type for a single plot, <line_type>
and <point_type> may be specified. These are positive integer constants (or
expressions) that specify the line type and point type to be used for the
plot. Use test to display the types available for your terminal.
You may also scale the line width and point size for a plot by using
<line_width> and <point_size>, which are specified relative to the default
values for each terminal. The pointsize may also be altered globally---see
set pointsize for details. But note that both <point_size> as set here and
as set by set pointsize multiply the default point size---their effects are
not cumulative. That is, set pointsize 2; plot x w p ps 3 will use points
three times default size, not six.
If you have defined specific line type/width and point type/size combinations
with set linestyle, one of these may be selected by setting <line_style> to
the index of the desired style.
The keywords may be abbreviated as indicated.
Note that the linewidth and pointsize options are not supported by all
terminals.
Examples:
This plots sin(x) with impulses:
This plots x*y with points, x**2 + y**2 default:
This plots tan(x) with the default function style, "data.1" with lines:
This plots "leastsq.dat" with impulses:
This plots the data file 'population' with boxes:
This plots "exper.dat" with errorbars and lines connecting the points
('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:
This plots sin(x) and cos(x) with linespoints, using the same line type but
different point types:
This plots file "data" with points of type 3 and twice usual size:
This plots two data sets with lines differing only by weight:
See set style to change the default styles.
Styles demos.
The print command prints the value of <expression> to the screen. It is
synonymous with pause 0. <expression> may be anything that gnuplot can
evaluate that produces a number, or it can be a string.
Syntax:
See expressions.
The pwd command prints the name of the working directory to the screen.
The exit and quit commands and END-OF-FILE character will exit gnuplot.
Each of these commands will clear the output device (as does the clear
command) before exiting.
The replot command without arguments repeats the last plot or splot
command. This can be useful for viewing a graph with different set
options, or when generating the same graph for several devices.
Arguments specified after a replot command will be added onto the last
plot or splot command (with an implied ',' separator) before it is
repeated. replot accepts the same arguments as the plot and splot
commands except that ranges cannot be specified. Thus you can use replot
to plot a function against the second axes if the previous command was plot
but not if it was splot, and similarly you can use replot to add a plot
from a binary file only if the previous command was splot.
N.B.---use of
is not recommended. gnuplot does not store the inline data internally, so
since replot appends new information to the previous plot and then
executes the modified command, the '-' from the initial plot will expect
to read inline data again.
See command-line-editing for ways to edit the last plot
(splot) command.
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. (But this is not necessarily a disaster---reread can
be very useful when used in conjunction with if. See if for details.)
The reread command has no effect if input from standard input.
Examples:
Suppose the file "looper" contains the commands
and from within gnuplot you submit the commands
The result will be four plots (separated by the pause message).
Suppose the file "data" contains six columns of numbers with a total yrange
from 0 to 10; the first is x and the next are five different functions of x.
Suppose also that the file "plotter" contains the commands
and from within gnuplot you submit the commands
The result is a single graph consisting of five plots. The yrange must be
set explicitly to guarantee that the five separate graphs (drawn on top of
each other in multiplot mode) will have exactly the same axes. The linetype
must be specified; otherwise all the plots would be drawn with the same type.
Reread Animation Demo
The reset command causes all options that can be set with the set
command to take on their default values. The only exceptions are that the
terminal set with set term and the output file set with set output are
left unchanged. This command is useful, e.g., to restore the default
settings at the end of a command file, or to return to a defined state after
lots of settings have been changed within a command file. Please refer to
the set command to see the default values that the various options take.
The save command saves user-defined functions, variables, set options,
or all three, plus the last plot (splot) command to the specified file.
Syntax:
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:
The set command sets _lots_ of options. No screen is drawn, however, until
a plot, splot, or replot command is given.
The show command shows their settings. show all shows all the
settings.
angles
By default, gnuplot assumes the independent variable in polar graphs 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 applies to 3-d mapping as set via the set mapping command.
Syntax:
The angle specified in set grid polar is also read and displayed in the
units specified by set angles.
set angles also affects the arguments of the machine-defined functions
sin(x), cos(x) and tan(x), and the outputs of asin(x), acos(x), atan(x),
atan2(x), and arg(x). It has no effect on the arguments of hyperbolic
functions or Bessel functions. Note that the output of inverse hyperbolic
functions of complex arguments are effected, however; if these functions are
used, set angles radians must be in effect:
but
Arbitrary arrows can be placed on a graph using the set arrow command.
Syntax:
<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.
The <position>s are specified by either x,y or x,y,z, and may be preceded by
first, second, graph, or screen to select the coordinate system.
Unspecified coordinates default to 0. The endpoints can be specified in
one of four coordinate systems---first or second axes, graph or
screen. See coordinates for details. A coordinate system specifier
does not carry over from the "from" position to the "to" position. Arrows
outside the screen boundaries are permitted but may cause device errors.
Specifying nohead produces an arrow drawn without a head---a line segment.
This gives you yet another way to draw a line segment on the graph. By
default, arrows have heads.
The line style may be selected from a user-defined list of line styles (see
set linestyle) or may be defined here by providing values for <line_type>
(an index from the default list of styles) and/or <line_width> (which is a
multiplier for the default width).
Note, however, that if a user-defined line style has been selected, its
properties (type and width) cannot be altered merely by issuing another
set arrow command with the appropriate index and lt or lw.
Examples:
To set an arrow pointing from the origin to (1,2) with user-defined style 5,
use:
To set an arrow from bottom left of plotting area to (-5,5,3), and tag the
arrow number 3, use:
To change the preceding arrow to end at 1,1,1, without an arrow head and
double its width, use:
To draw a vertical line from the bottom to the top of the graph at x=3, use:
To delete arrow number 2, use:
To delete all arrows, use:
To show all arrows (in tag order), use:
Autoscaling may be set individually on the x, y or z axis or globally on all
axes. The default is to autoscale all axes.
Syntax:
where <axes> is either x, y, z, x2, y2 or xy. A keyword with
min or max appended (this cannot be done with xy) tells gnuplot to
autoscale just the minimum or maximum of that axis. If no keyword is given,
all axes are autoscaled.
When autoscaling, the axis 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.
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, 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)).
Please see set xrange for additional information about ranges.
The behavior of autoscaling remains consistent in parametric mode, (see set
parametric). However, there are more dependent variables and hence more
control over x, y, and z axis 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.
Autoscaling works the same way for polar mode as it does for parametric mode
for plot, with the extension that in polar mode set dummy can be used to
change the independent variable from t (see set dummy).
When tics are displayed on second axes but no plot has been specified for
those axes, x2range and y2range are inherited from xrange and yrange. This
is done _before_ xrange and yrange are autoextended to a whole number of
tics, which can cause unexpected results.
Examples:
This sets autoscaling of the y axis (other axes are not affected):
This sets autoscaling only for the minimum of the y axis (the maximum of the
y axis and the other axes are not affected):
This sets autoscaling of the x and y axes:
This sets autoscaling of the x, y, z, x2 and y2 axes:
This disables autoscaling of the x, y, z, x2 and y2 axes:
This disables autoscaling of the z axis only:
When in parametric mode (set parametric), the xrange is as fully scalable
as the y range. 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.
Data files are plotted the same in parametric and non-parametric mode.
However, there is a difference in mixed function and data plots: in
non-parametric mode with autoscaled x, the x range of the datafile controls
the x range of the functions; in parametric mode it has no influence.
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 ideas as you would expect. If autoscaling is set,
then x, y, and z ranges are computed and each axis scaled to fit the
resulting data.
When in polar mode (set polar), the xrange and the yrange are both found
from the polar coordinates, and thus they can both be automatically scaled.
In other words, in polar mode both the x and y axes can be automatically
scaled to fit the ranges of the polar function that is being plotted.
When plotting functions in polar mode, the rrange may be autoscaled. When
plotting data files in polar mode, the trange may also be autoscaled. Note
that if the trange is contained within one quadrant, autoscaling will produce
a polar plot of only that single quadrant.
Explicitly setting one or two ranges but not others may lead to unexpected
results.
See polar demos
The set bar command controls the tics at the ends of errorbars.
Syntax:
small is a synonym for 0.0, and large for 1.0.
The default is 1.0 if no size is given.
The command set bmargin sets the size of the bottom margin. Please see
set margin for details.
The set border and set noborder commands control the display of the graph
borders for the plot and splot commands.
Syntax:
The borders are encoded in a 12-bit integer: the bottom four bits control the
border for plot and the sides of the base for splot; The next four bits
control the verticals in splot; the top four bits control the edges on top
of the splot. The default is 31, which is all four sides for plot, and
base and z axis for splot.
Various axes or combinations of axes may be added together on the command.
To have tics on edges other than bottom and left, disable the usual tics and
enable the second axes.
Examples:
Draw all borders:
Draw only the SOUTHWEST borders:
Draw a complete box around a splot:
Draw a partial box, omitting the front vertical:
Draw only the NORTHEAST borders:
The set boxwidth command is used to set the default width of boxes in the
boxes and boxerrorbars styles.
Syntax:
If a data file is plotted without the width being specified in the third,
fourth, or fifth column (or using entry), or if a function is plotted, the
width of each box is set by the set boxwidth command. (If a width is given
both in the file and by the set boxwidth command, the one in the file is
used.) If the width is not specified in one of these ways, the width of each
box will be calculated automatically so that it touches the adjacent boxes.
In a four-column data set, the fourth column will be interpreted as the box
width unless the width is set to -2.0, in which case the width will be
calculated automatically. See set style boxerrorbars for more details.
To set the box width to automatic use the command
or, for four-column data,
The same effect can be achieved with the using keyword in plot:
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. It is not possible at present to separate the
contour labels from the surface key.
Syntax:
The default for the format string is %8.3g, which gives three decimal places.
This may produce poor label alignment if the key is altered from its default
configuration.
See also set contour.
gnuplot can clip data points and lines that are near the boundaries of a
graph.
Syntax:
Three clip types are supported by gnuplot: points, one, and two.
One, two, or all three clip types may be active for a single graph.
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 done
so that large symbols used for points will not extend outside the boundary
lines. Without clipping points near the boundaries, the graph may look bad.
Adjusting the x and y ranges may give similar results.
Setting the one clip type causes gnuplot to draw a line segment which has
only one of its two endpoints within the graph. 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 graph.
Setting the two clip-type allows the visible portion of these lines to be
drawn.
In no case is a line drawn outside the graph.
The defaults are noclip points, clip one, and noclip two.
To check the state of all forms of clipping, use
For backward compatibility with older versions, the following forms are also
permitted:
set clip is synonymous with set clip points; set noclip turns off all
three types of clipping.
set cntrparam controls the generation of contours and their smoothness for
a contour plot.
Syntax:
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 somewhat smoother contours, but which may
undulate. If bspline, a guaranteed-smoother curve is drawn, which only
approximates the piecewise linear data.
points---Eventually all drawings are done with piecewise linear strokes.
This number controls the number of points used to approximate a curve.
It is relevant only for cubicspline and bspline modes.
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---Approximate number of contour levels. Selection of the levels is
controlled by auto (default), discrete, and incremental. For auto,
if the surface is bounded by zmin and zmax, contours will be generated at
integer multiples of dz between zmin and zmax, where dz is 1, 2, or 5 times
some power of ten (like the step between two tic marks). 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 values of z beginning at
<start> and increasing by <increment> until <end> is reached. If <end> is
not specified, MAX_DISCRETE_LEVELS will be generated.
If the command set cntrparam is given without any arguments specified, the
defaults are used: linear, 5 points, order 4, 5 auto levels.
Examples:
To select 5 levels automatically:
To specify discrete levels at .1, .37, and .9:
To specify levels from 0 to 4 with increment 1:
To set the number of levels to 10 (retaining the current settings of auto,
discr. and increment's start and increment value, while changing its end):
To set the start and increment while retaining the number of levels:
See also set contour for control of where the contours are drawn, and set
clabel for control of the format of the contour labels.
Contours Demo and
contours with User Defined Levels.
set contour enables contour drawing for surfaces. This option is available
for splot only.
Syntax:
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. If no option is provided, the default is base.
See also set cntrparam for the parameters that affect the drawing of
contours, and set clabel for control of labelling of the contours.
The surface can be switched off (see set surface), giving a contour-only
graph. Though it is possible to use set view to enlarge the graph to fill
the screen, good results can be obtained by writing the contour information
out to a file, and rereading it as a 2-d datafile plot:
In order to draw contours, the data must be organized as "grid data". In
such a file all of the points for a single y value are listed, then all the
points for the next y, and so on. A single blank line (a line containing no
characters other than blank spaces and a carriage return and/or a line feed)
separates one y value group from the next. See also plot datafile.
If contours are desired from non-grid data, set dgrid3d can be used to
create an appropriate grid. See set dgrid3d for more information.
Contours Demo and
contours with User Defined Levels.
The set data style command changes the default plotting style for data
plots.
Syntax:
See set style for the choices. If no choice is given, the choices are
listed. show data style shows the current default data plotting style.
The set dgrid3d command enables and sets the different parameters for
non-grid to grid data mapping.
Syntax:
By default dgrid3d is disabled. When enabled, 3-d data read from a file
are always treated 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 parameters is created for plotting and contouring. The grid is
equally spaced in x and y; the z values are computed as weighted averages of
the scattered points' values.
The third parameter, norm, controls the weighting: each point is weighted
inversely by its distance (from the grid point) raised to the norm power.
(Actually it's not quite the distance: the weights are given by the inverse
of dx^norm + dy^norm, where dx and dy are the components of the separation
of the grid point from each data point.) Thus the closer the data point is
to a grid point, the more effect it has on that grid point. In gnuplot,
this distance computation is optimized for norms that are powers of 2,
specifically 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16, but any non-negative integer can be used.
The dgrid3d option is a simple low pass filter that converts scattered data
to a grid data set. More sophisticated approaches to this problem exist and
should be used to preprocess the data outside gnuplot if this simple
solution is found inadequate.
Examples:
The first specifies that a grid of size 10 by 10 is to be constructed using
the L2 norm (a norm of 2 is to be used in the distance computation). The
second only modifies the norm to be used to L4.
Dgrid3d Demo.
The set dummy command changes the default dummy variable names.
Syntax:
By default, gnuplot assumes that the independent, or "dummy", variable for
the plot command is "t" if in parametric or polar mode, or "x" otherwise.
Similarly the independent variables for the splot command are "u" and "v"
in parametric mode (splot cannot be used in polar mode), or "x" and "y"
otherwise.
It may be more convenient to call a dummy variable by a more physically
meaningful or conventional name. For example, when plotting time functions:
At least one dummy variable must be set on the command; set dummy by itself
will generate an error message.
Examples:
The second example sets the second variable to s.
The set encoding command selects a character encoding. Valid values are
default, which does nothing; iso_8859_1 (known in the PostScript world as
ISO-Latin1), which is used on many Unix workstations and with MS-Windows;
cp850, for OS/2; and cp437, for MS-DOS.
Syntax:
Please note that this is not supported on all terminal types. Note also that
the device must be able to produce the non-standard characters.
The format of the tic-mark labels can be set with the set format command.
Syntax:
where <axes> is either x, y, z, xy, x2, y2 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 "$%g$" is often desirable. If the 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.
The default format for both axes is "%g", but other formats such as "%.2f" or
"%3.0em" are often desirable. Anything accepted by printf when given a
double precision number, and accepted by the terminal, will work. Some other
options have been added. If the data type for the axis is date/time, the
format string must contain valid codes for the strftime function (outside of
gnuplot, type man strftime). It is best to stick to the conversion codes
accepted by the set timefmt command. If the format string looks like a
floating point format, then gnuplot tries to construct a reasonable format.
The acceptible formats are:
A 'scientific' power is one such that the exponent is a multiple of three.
Examples:
There are some problem cases that arise when numbers like 9.999 are printed
with a format that requires both rounding and a power.
Newline (\n) is accepted in the format string. Use double-quotes rather than
single-quotes to enable such interpretation. See also syntax.
See also set xtics and set ytics for more control over tic labels.
See demo.
The set function style command changes the default plotting style for
function plots.
Syntax:
See set style for the choices. If no choice is given, the choices are
listed. show function style shows the current default function plotting
style.
The show functions command lists all user-defined functions and their
definitions.
Syntax:
For information about the definition and usage of functions in gnuplot,
please see expressions and user-defined.
Splines as User Defined Functions.
Use of functions and complex variables for airfoils
The set grid command allows grid lines to be drawn on the graph.
Syntax:
The grid can be enabled and disabled for the major and/or minor tic marks on
any axis, and the linetype can be specified for major and minor grid lines.
But note that <major_linetype> and <minor_linetype> are indices in the
default linetype list provided by the terminal; user-defined linetypes (via
the set linestyle command) are not accessible for grid lines.
Additionally, a polar grid can be selected for 2-d plots---circles are drawn
to intersect the selected tics, and radial lines are drawn at definable
intervals. (The interval is given in degrees or radians ,depending on the
set angles setting.) Note that a polar grid is no longer automatically
generated in polar mode.
The pertinent tics must be enabled before set grid can draw them; gnuplot
will quietly ignore instructions to draw grid lines at non-existent tics, but
they will appear if the tics are subsequently enabled.
If no linetype is specified for the minor gridlines, the same linetype as the
major gridlines is used. The default polar angle is 30 degrees.
Z grid lines are drawn on the back of the graph. This looks better if a
partial box is drawn around the graph---see set border.
The set hidden3d command enables hidden line removal for explicit surface
plotting (see splot).
Syntax:
Hidden line removal may be used for both explicit functions and for explicit
data. It now works for parametric surfaces as well. This mode is meaningful
only when surfaces are splotted with lines.
When this flag is set, both the hidden portion of the surface and possibly
its hidden contours (see set contour) as well as the hidden grid will be
removed. Each surface has its hidden parts removed with respect to itself
and to other surfaces, if more than one surface is plotted. But contours
drawn on the surface (set contour surface) don't seem to work. Labels and
arrows are always visible and are unaffected.
Hidden Line Removal Demo and
Complex Hidden Line Demo.
The isoline density of surfaces may be changed by the set isosamples
command.
Syntax:
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>.
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. These
parameters have no effect on data file plotting.
An isoline is a curve parameterized by one of the surface parameters while
the other surface parameter is fixed. Isolines provide 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.
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---it
controls the number of points sampled along each isoline. See set samples.
The set key enables a key (or legend) describing plots on a graph.
The contents of the key, i.e., the names given to each plotted data set and
function and samples of the lines and/or symbols used to represent them, are
determined by the title and with options of the {s}plot command.
Please see plot title and plot with for more information.
Syntax:
By default the key is placed in the upper right corner of the graph. The
keywords left, right, top, bottom, outside and below may be used
to place the key in the other corners inside the graph or to the right
(outside) or below the graph. They may be given alone or combined.
Justification of the labels within the key is controlled by Left or Right
(default is Right). The text and sample can be reversed (reverse) and a
box can be drawn around the key (box {<linetype>}) in a specified linetype.
But note that <linetype> is an index in the default linetype list provided by
the terminal; user-defined linetypes (via the set linestyle command) are
not accessible for the key box.
The length of the sample line can be controlled by samplen. The sample
length is computed as the sum of the tic length and <sample_length> times the
character width. samplen also affects the positions of point samples in
the key since these are drawn at the midpoint of the sample line, even if it
is not drawn. <sample_length> must be an integer.
The vertical spacing between lines is controlled by spacing. The spacing
is set equal to the product of the pointsize, the vertical tic size, and
<vertical_spacing>. The program will guarantee that the vertical spacing is
no smaller than the character height.
A title can be put on the key (title "<text>")---see also syntax for the
distinction between text in single- or double-quotes. The key title uses the
same justification as do the plot titles.
The defaults for set key are right, top, Right, noreverse, samplen
4, spacing 1.25, title "", and nobox. The default <linetype> is the
same as that used for the plot borders. Entering set key with no options
returns the key to its default configuration.
The <position> can be a simple x,y,z as in previous versions, but these can
be preceded by one of four keywords (first, second, graph, screen)
which selects the coordinate system in which the position is specified. See
coordinates for more details.
The key is drawn as a sequence of lines, with one plot described on each
line. On the right-hand side (or the left-hand side, if reverse is
selected) of each line is a representation that attempts to mimic the way the
curve is plotted. On the other side of each line is the text description
(the plot title), obtained from the plot command. The lines are vertically
arranged so that an imaginary straight line divides the left- and right-hand
sides of the key. It is the coordinates of the top 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 used as a 3-d location mapped using the same mapping as the graph
itself to form the required 2-d screen position of the imaginary line.
Some or all of the key may be outside of the graph boundary, although this
may interfere with other labels and may cause an error on some devices. If
you use the keywords outside or below, gnuplot makes space for the keys
and the graph becomes smaller. Putting keys outside to the right, they
occupy as few columns as possible, and putting them below, as many columns as
possible (depending of the length of the labels), thus stealing as little
space from the graph as possible.
When using the TeX or PostScript drivers, or similar drivers where formatting
information is embedded in the string, gnuplot is unable to calculate
correctly the width of the string for key positioning. If the key is to be
positioned at the left, it may be convenient to use the combination set key
left Left reverse. The box and gap in the grid will be the width of the
literal string.
If splot is being used to draw contours, the contour labels will be listed
in the key. If the alignment of these labels is poor or a different number
of decimal places is desired, the label format can be specified. See set
clabel for details.
Examples:
This places the key at the default location:
This disables the key:
This places a key at coordinates 2,3.5,2 in the default (first) coordinate
system:
This places the key below the graph:
This places the key in the bottom left corner, left-justifies the text,
gives it a title, and draws a box around it in linetype 3:
Arbitrary labels can be placed on the graph using the set label command.
Syntax:
The <position> is specified by either x,y or x,y,z, and may be preceded by
first, second, graph, or screen to select the coordinate system.
See coordinates for details.
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 modify 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
axis labels or other text.
If one (or more) axis is timeseries, the appropriate coordinate should be
given as a quoted time string according to the timefmt format string. See
set xdata and set timefmt.
The EEPIC, Imagen, LaTeX, and TPIC drivers allow \\ in a string to specify
a newline.
Examples:
To set a label at (1,2) to "y=x", use:
To set a label of the sign Sigma of size 24 at the center of the graph, use:
To set a label "y=x^2" with the right of the text at (2,3,4), and tag the
label as number 3, use:
To change the preceding label to center justification, use:
To delete label number 2, use:
To delete all labels, use:
To show all labels (in tag order), use:
To set a label on a graph with a timeseries on the x axis, use, for example:
Each terminal has a default set of line and point types, which can be seen
by using the command test. set linestyle defines a set of line types
and widths and point types and sizes so that you can refer to them later by
an index instead of repeating all the information at each invocation.
Syntax:
The line and point types are taken from the default types for the terminal
currently in use. The line width and point size are multipliers for the
default width and size (but note that <point_size> here is unaffected by
the multiplier given on 'set pointsize').
The defaults for the line and point types is the index. The defaults for
the width and size are both unity.
The command set lmargin sets the size of the left margin. Please see
set margin for details.
The locale setting determines the language with which {x,y,z}{d,m}tics
will write the days and months.
Syntax:
<locale> may be any language designation acceptible to your installation.
See your system documentation for the available options. The default value
is determined from the LANG environment variable.
Log scaling may be set on the x, y, z, x2 and/or y2 axes.
Syntax:
where <axes> may be any combinations of x, y, and z, in any order, or
x2 or y2 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 axes are
assumed. set nologscale turns off log scaling for the specified axes.
Examples:
To enable log scaling in both x and z axes:
To enable scaling log base 2 of the y axis:
To disable z axis log scaling:
If data are provided to splot in spherical or cylindrical coordinates,
the set mapping command should be used to instruct gnuplot how to
interpret them.
Syntax:
For a spherical coordinate system, the data occupy two or three columns (or
using entries). The first two are interpreted as the polar and azimuthal
angles theta and phi (in the units specified by set angles). The radius r
is taken from the third column if there is one, or is set to unity if there
is no third column. The mapping is:
Note that this is a "geographic" spherical system, rather than a "polar" one.
For a cylindrical coordinate system, the data again occupy two or three
columns. The first two are interpreted as theta (in the units specified by
set angles) and z. The radius is either taken from the third column or set
to unity, as in the spherical case. The mapping is:
The effects of mapping can be duplicated with the using filter on the
splot command, but mapping may be more convenient if many data files are
to be processed.
mapping has no effect on plots.
Mapping Demos.
Normally the margins of the graph are automatically calculated based on tics
and axis labels. These computed values can be overridden by the set margin
commands. show margin shows the current settings.
Syntax:
The units of <margin> are character heights or widths, as appropriate. A
positive value defines the absolute size of the margin. A negative value (or
none) causes gnuplot to revert to the computed value.
The set missing command allows you to tell gnuplot what character is
used in a data file to denote missing data.
Syntax:
Example:
would mean that, when plotting a file containing
the middle line would be ignored.
There is no default character for missing.
The command set multiplot places gnuplot in the multiplot mode, in which
several graphs are placed on the same page, window, or screen.
Syntax:
For some terminals, no graph is displayed until the command set nomultiplot
is given, which causes the entire page to be drawn and then returns gnuplot
to its normal single-plot mode. For other terminals, each separate plot
command produces a graph, but the screen may not be cleared between graphs.
Any labels or arrows that have been defined will be drawn for each graph
according to the current size and origin (unless their coordinates are
defined in the screen system).
The commands set origin and set size must be used to correctly position
each graph; see set origin and set size for details of their usage.
Example:
displays a graph of cos(x) stacked above a graph of sin(x). Note the initial
set size and set origin. While these are not always required, their
inclusion is recommended. Some terminal drivers require that bounding box
information be available before any graphs can be made, and the form given
above guarantees that the bounding box will include the entire graph array
rather than just the bounding box of the first graph.
See demo.
Minor tic marks along the x2 (top) axis are controlled by set mx2tics.
Please see set mxtics.
Minor tic marks along the x axis are controlled by set mxtics. They can be
turned off with set nomxtics. Similar commands control minor tics along
the other axes.
Syntax:
The same syntax applies to mytics, mztics, mx2tics and my2tics.
<freq> is the number of sub-intervals (NOT the number of minor tics) between
major tics (ten is the default for a linear axis, so there are nine minor
tics between major tics). Selecting default will return the number of minor
ticks to its default value.
If the axis is logarithmic, the number of sub-intervals will be set to a
reasonable number by default (based upon the length of a decade). This will
be overridden if <freq> is given. However the usual minor tics (2, 3, ...,
8, 9 between 1 and 10, for example) are obtained by setting <freq> to 10,
even though there are but nine sub-intervals.
Minor tics can be used only with uniformly spaced major tics. Since major
tics can be placed arbitrarily by set {x|x2|y|y2|z}tics, minor tics cannot
be used if major tics are explicitly set.
By default, minor tics are off for linear axes and on for logarithmic axes.
They inherit the settings for axis|border and {no}mirror specified for
the major tics. Please see set xtics for information about these.
Minor tic marks along the y2 (right-hand) axis are controlled by set
my2tics. Please see set mxtics.
Minor tic marks along the y axis are controlled by set mytics. Please
see set mxtics.
Minor tic marks along the z axis are controlled by set mztics. Please
see set mxtics.
Offsets provide a mechanism to put a boundary around the data inside of an
autoscaled graph.
Syntax:
Each offset may be a constant or an expression. Each defaults to 0. Left
and right offsets are given in units of the x axis, top and bottom offsets in
units of the y axis. A positive offset expands the graph in the specified
direction, e.g., a positive bottom offset makes ymin more negative. Negative
offsets, while permitted, can have unexpected interactions with autoscaling
and clipping.
Offsets are ignored in splots.
Example:
This graph of sin(x) will have a y range [-3:3] because the function
will be autoscaled to [-1:1] and the vertical offsets are each two.
The set origin command is used to specify the origin of a plotting surface
(i.e., the graph and its margins) on the screen. The coordinates are given
in the screen coordinate system (see coordinates for information about
this system).
Syntax:
By default, screens are displayed to the standard output. The set output
command redirects the display to the specified file or device.
Syntax:
The filename must be enclosed in quotes. If the filename is omitted, any
output file opened by a previous invocation of set output will be closed
and new output will be sent to the standard output. MSDOS users should note
that the \ character has special significance in double-quoted strings, so
single-quotes should be used for filenames in different directories.
If both set terminal and set output are used together, it is safest to
give set terminal first, because some terminals set a flag which is needed
in some operating systems.
On machines with popen functions (Unix), output can be piped through a shell
command if the first character of the filename is '|'. For instance,
On MSDOS machines, set output "PRN" will direct the output to the default
printer. On VMS, output can be sent directly to any spooled device. It is
also possible to send the output to DECnet transparent tasks, which allows
some flexibility.
The set parametric command changes the meaning of plot (splot) from
normal functions to parametric functions. The command set noparametric
restores the plotting style to normal, single-valued expression plotting.
Syntax:
For 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 draws a circle (if the aspect ratio is
set correctly---see set size). gnuplot will display an error message if
both functions are not provided for a parametric plot.
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 is required. An example of a 3-d parametric
function would be cos(u)*cos(v),cos(u)*sin(v),sin(u), which draws a sphere.
gnuplot will display an error message if all three functions are not
provided for a parametric splot.
The total set of possible plots is a superset of the simple f(x) style plots,
since the two functions can describe the x and y values to be computed
separately. In fact, plots of the type t,f(t) are equivalent to those
produced with f(x) because the x values are computed using the identity
function. Similarly, 3-d plots of the type u,v,f(u,v) are equivalent to
f(x,y).
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.
The set pointsize command changes the size of the points used in plots.
Syntax:
Default is pointsize 1.0. Larger pointsizes (>1.0) are useful for high
resolution in bitmapped graphics.
The pointsize of a single plot may be changed on the plot command. See
plot with for details.
Please note that the pointsize setting is not supported with all terminal
types.
The set polar command changes the meaning of the graph from rectangular
coordinates to polar coordinates.
Syntax:
There have been changes made to polar mode in version 3.6, so that scripts
for gnuplot versions 3.5 and earlier will require modification. The main
change is that the dummy variable t is used for the angle so that the x and
y ranges can be controlled independently. Other changes are:
1) tics are no longer put along the zero axes automatically
---use set xtics axis nomirror; set ytics axis nomirror;
2) the grid, if selected, is not automatically polar
---use set grid polar;
3) the grid is not labelled with angles
---use set label as necessary.
In polar coordinates, the dummy variable (t) is an angle. The default range
of t is [0:2*pi], or, if degree units have been selected, to [0:360] (see
set angles).
The command set nopolar changes the meaning of the graph back to the
default rectangular coordinate system.
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 t is really
r = f(t), where t is an angle of rotation. The trange controls the domain
(the angle) of the function, and the x and y ranges control the range of the
graph in the x and y directions. Each of these ranges, as well as the
rrange, may be autoscaled or set explicitly. See set xrange for details
of all the set range commands.
Example:
The first plot uses the default polar angular domain of 0 to 2*pi. The
radius and the size of the graph are scaled automatically. The second plot
expands the domain, and restricts the size of the graph to [-3:3] in both
directions.
You may want to set size square to have gnuplot try to make the aspect
ratio equal to unity, so that circles look circular.
Polar demos
Polar Data Plot.
The command set rmargin sets the size of the right margin. Please see
set margin for details.
The set rrange command sets the range of the radial coordinate for a
graph in polar mode. Please see set xrange for details.
The sampling rate of functions may be changed by the set samples command.
Syntax:
By default, sampling is set to 100 points. A higher sampling rate will
produce more accurate plots, but will take longer. This parameter has no
effect on data-file plotting unless one of the smooth options is used.
When a 2-d graph 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 to be evaluated for
isoline. 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.
The set size command scales the displayed size of the graph.
Syntax:
The <xscale> and <yscale> values are the scaling factors for the size of the
plotting area, which includes the margins. ratio causes gnuplot to try
to create a graph with an aspect ratio of <r> (the ratio of the y-axis length
to the x-axis length) within the portion of the plotting area specified by
<xscale> and <yscale>. The success of gnuplot in producing the requested
aspect ratio depends on the terminal selected. The graph area will be the
largest rectangle of aspect ratio <r> that will fit into the specified
portion of the output (leaving adequate margins, of course). square is a
synonym for ratio 1. Both noratio and nosquare return the graph to its
default aspect ratio (0.0, no control), but do not return <xscale> or <yscale>
to their default values (1.0).
The meaning of a negative value for <r> is different. If <r>=-1, gnuplot tries
to set the scales so that the unit has the same length on x and y axis
(suitable for geographical data, for instance). If <r>=-2, the unit on y has
twice the length of the unit on x, and so on.
set size is relative to the default size, which differs from terminal to
terminal. Since gnuplot fills as much of the available plotting area as
possible by default, it is safer to use set size to decrease the size of
a graph than to increase it. See set terminal for the default sizes.
On some terminals, changing the size of the graph will result in text being
misplaced.
Examples:
To set the size to normal size use:
To make the graph half size and square use:
To make the graph twice as high as wide use:
Default styles are chosen with the set function style and set data style
commands. See plot with for information about how to override the default
plotting style for individual functions and data sets.
Syntax:
The types used for all line and point styles (i.e., solid, dash-dot, color,
etc. for lines; circles, squares, crosses, etc. for points) will be either
those specified on the plot or splot command or will be chosen
sequentially from the types available to the terminal in use. Use the
command test to see what is available.
None of the styles requiring more than two columns of information (e.g.,
errorbars) can be used with splots or function plots. Neither boxes
nor any of the steps styles can be used with splots. If an inappropriate
style is specified, it will be changed to points.
For 2-d data with more than two columns, gnuplot is picky about the allowed
errorbar styles. The using option on the plot command can be used to
set up the correct columns for the style you want. (In this discussion,
"column" will be used to refer both to a column in the data file and an entry
in the using list.)
For three columns, only xerrorbars, yerrorbars (or errorbars), boxes,
and boxerrorbars are allowed. If another plot style is used, the style
will be changed to yerrorbars. The boxerrorbars style will calculate the
boxwidth automatically.
For four columns, only xerrorbars, yerrorbars (or errorbars),
xyerrorbars, boxxyerrorbars, and boxerrorbars are allowed. An illegal
style will be changed to yerrorbars.
Five-column data allow only the boxerrorbars, financebars, and
candlesticks styles. (The last two of these are primarily used for plots
of financial prices.) An illegal style will be changed to boxerrorbars
before plotting.
Six- and seven-column data only allow the xyerrorbars and boxxyerrorbars
styles. Illegal styles will be changed to xyerrorbars before plotting.
For more information about error bars, please see plot errorbars.
boxerrorbars
The boxerrorbars style is only relevant to 2-d data plotting. It is a
combination of the boxes and yerrorbars styles. The boxwidth will come
from the fourth column if the y errors are in the form of "ydelta" and the
boxwidth was not previously set equal to -2.0 (set boxwidth -2.0) or from
the fifth column if the y errors are in the form of "ylow yhigh". The
special case boxwidth = -2.0 is for four-column data with y errors in the
form "ylow yhigh". In this case the boxwidth will be calculated so that each
box touches the adjacent boxes. The width will also be calculated in cases
where three-column data are used.
The box height is determined from the y error in the same way as it is for
the yerrorbars style---either from y-ydelta to y+ydelta or from ylow to
yhigh, depending on how many data columns are provided.
See Demo.
The boxes style is only relevant to 2-d plotting. It draws a box centered
about the given x coordinate from the x axis (not the graph border) to the
given y coordinate. The width of the box is obtained in one of three ways.
If it is a data plot and the data file has a third column, this will be used
to set the width of the box. If not, if a width has been set using the set
boxwidth command, this will be used. If neither of these is available, the
width of each box will be calculated automatically so that it touches the
adjacent boxes.
The boxxyerrorbars style is only relevant to 2-d data plotting. It is a
combination of the boxes and xyerrorbars styles.
The box width and height are determined from the x and y errors in the same
way as they are for the xyerrorbars style---either from xlow to xhigh and
from ylow to yhigh, or from x-xdelta to x+xdelta and from y-ydelta to
y+ydelta , depending on how many data columns are provided.
The candlesticks style is only relevant for 2-d data plotting of financial
data. Five columns of data are required; in order, these should be the x
coordinate (most likely a date) and the opening, low, high, and closing
prices. The symbol is an open rectangle, centered horizontally at the x
coordinate and limited vertically by the opening and closing prices. A
vertical line segment at the x coordinate extends up from the top of the
rectangle to the high price and another down to the low. The width of the
rectangle may be changed by set bar. The symbol will be unchanged if the
low and high prices are interchanged or if the opening and closing prices
are interchanged. See set bar and financebars.
See demos.
The dots style plots a tiny dot at each point; this is useful for scatter
plots with many points.
The financebars style is only relevant for 2-d data plotting of financial
data. Five columns of data are required; in order, these should be the x
coordinate (most likely a date) and the opening, low, high, and closing
prices. The symbol is a vertical line segment, located horizontally at the x
coordinate and limited vertically by the high and low prices. A horizontal
tic on the left marks the opening price and one on the right marks the
closing price. The length of these tics may be changed by set bar. The
symbol will be unchanged if the high and low prices are interchanged. See
set bar and candlesticks.
See demos.
The fsteps style is only relevant to 2-d plotting. It connects consecutive
points with two line segments: the first from (x1,y1) to (x1,y2) and the
second from (x1,y2) to (x2,y2).
See demo.
The histeps style is only relevant to 2-d plotting. It is intended for
plotting histograms. Y-values are assumed to be centered at the x-values;
the point at x1 is represented as a horizontal line from ((x0+x1)/2,y1) to
((x1+x2)/2,y1). The lines representing the end points are extended so that
the step is centered on at x. Adjacent points are connected by a vertical
line at their average x, that is, from ((x1+x2)/2,y1) to ((x1+x2)/2,y2).
If autoscale is in effect, it selects the xrange from the data rather than
the steps, so the end points will appear only half as wide as the others.
See demo.
The impulses style displays a vertical line from the x axis (not the graph
border), or from the grid base for splot, to each point.
The lines style connects adjacent points with straight line segments.
The linespoints style does both lines and points, that is, it draws a
small symbol at each point and then connects adjacent points with straight
line segments. The command set pointsize may be used to change the size of
the points. See set pointsize for its usage.
linespoints may be abbreviated lp.
The points style displays a small symbol at each point. The command set
pointsize may be used to change the size of the points. See set pointsize
for its usage.
The steps style is only relevant to 2-d plotting. It connects consecutive
points with two line segments: the first from (x1,y1) to (x2,y1) and the
second from (x2,y1) to (x2,y2).
See demo.
The vectors style draws a vector from (x,y) to (x+xdelta,y+ydelta). Thus
it requires four columns of data. It also draws a small arrowhead at the
end of the vector.
The vectors style is still experimental: it doesn't get clipped properly
and other things may also be wrong with it. Use it at your own risk.
The xerrorbars style is only relevant to 2-d data plots. xerrorbars is
like dots, except that a horizontal error bar is also drawn. At each point
(x,y), a line is drawn from (xlow,y) to (xhigh,y) or from (x-xdelta,y) to
(x+xdelta,y), depending on how many data columns are provided. A tic mark
is placed at the ends of the error bar (unless set bar is used---see set
bar for details).
The xyerrorbars style is only relevant to 2-d data plots. xyerrorbars is
like dots, except that horizontal and vertical error bars are also drawn.
At each point (x,y), lines are drawn from (x,y-ydelta) to (x,y+ydelta) and
from (x-xdelta,y) to (x+xdelta,y) or from (x,ylow) to (x,yhigh) and from
(xlow,y) to (xhigh,y), depending upon the number of data columns provided. A
tic mark is placed at the ends of the error bar (unless set bar is
used---see set bar for details).
If data are provided in an unsupported mixed form, the using filter on the
plot command should be used to set up the appropriate form. For example,
if the data are of the form (x,y,xdelta,ylow,yhigh), then you can use
The yerrorbars (or errorbars) style is only relevant to 2-d data plots.
yerrorbars is like dots, except that a vertical error bar is also drawn.
At each point (x,y), a line is drawn from (x,y-ydelta) to (x,y+ydelta) or
from (x,ylow) to (x,yhigh), depending on how many data columns are provided.
A tic mark is placed at the ends of the error bar (unless set bar is
used---see set bar for details).
See demo.
The command set surface controls the display of surfaces, which are drawn
as a mesh of isolines.
Syntax:
Whenever set nosurface is issued, no surface isolines/mesh will be drawn.
This is useful if contours are to be displayed by themselves. See also set
contour.
gnuplot supports many different graphics devices. Use set terminal to
tell gnuplot what kind of output to generate.
Syntax:
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.
If both set terminal and set output are used together, it is safest to
give set terminal first, because some terminals set a flag which is needed
in some operating systems.
Several terminals have additional options. For example, see dumb,
iris4d, hpljii or postscript.
This document may describe drivers that are not available to you because they
were not installed, or it may not describe all the drivers that are available
to you, depending on its output format.
linux
The linux driver has no additional options to specify. It looks at the
environment variable GSVGAMODE for the default mode; if not set, it uses
1024x768x256 as default mode or, if that is not possible, 640x480x16
(standard VGA).
The aed512 and aed767 terminal drivers support AED graphics terminals.
The two drivers differ only in their horizontal ranges, which are 512 and
768 pixels, respectively. Their vertical range is 575 pixels. There are
no options for these drivers.
The gpic terminal driver generates GPIC graphs in the Free Software
Foundations's "groff" package. The default size is 5 x 3 inches. The only
option is the origin, which defaults to (0,0).
Syntax:
where x and y are in inches.
A simple graph can be formatted using
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,
will label the y axis with a nice integral if formatted with the command:
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
co-ordinates 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 in
one figure like this (default size is 5.0x3.0 inches):
This will produce an 8-inch-wide figure with four graphs in two rows on top
of each other.
One can also achieve the same thing by the command
for example, using
The regis terminal device generates output in the REGIS graphics language.
It has the option of using 4 (the default) or 16 colors.
Syntax:
The tek410x terminal driver supports the 410x and 420x family of Tektronix
terminals. It has no options.
This family of terminal drivers supports a variety of VT-like terminals.
tek40xx supports Tektronix 4010 and others as well as most TEK emulators;
vttek supports VT-like tek40xx terminal emulators; kc-tek40xx supports
MS-DOS Kermit Tek4010 terminal emulators in color: km-tek40xx supports them
in monochrome; selanar supports Selanar graphics; and bitgraph supports
BBN Bitgraph terminals. None have any options.
gnuplot provides the x11 terminal type for use with X servers. This
terminal type is set automatically at startup if the DISPLAY environment
variable is set, if the TERM environment variable is set to xterm, or
if the -display command line option is used.
Syntax:
Multiple plot windows are supported: set terminal x11 <n> directs the
output to plot window number n. If n>0, the terminal number will be
appended to the window title and the icon will be labeled gplt <n>.
The active window may distinguished by a change in cursor (from default
to crosshair.)
Plot windows remain open even when the gnuplot driver is changed to a
different device. A plot window can be closed by pressing the letter q
while that window has input focus, or by choosing close from a window
manager menu.
All plot windows can be closed by specifying reset, which actually
terminates the subprocess which maintains the windows (unless -persist was
specified).
For terminal type x11, gnuplot accepts (when initialized) the standard
X Toolkit options and resources such as geometry, font, and background from
from the command line arguments or a configuration file.
See the X(1) man page (or its equivalent) for a description of the options.
In addition to the X Toolkit options, the following options may be
specified in the command line when starting gnuplot:
These options may also be controlled with resources in your .Xdefaults
file.
Example:
gnuplot provides a command line option (-pointsize v) and a resource
(gnuplot*pointsize: v) to control the size of points plotted with the
points plotting style. The value v is a real number (greater than 0 and
less than or equal to ten) used as a scaling factor for point sizes. For
example, -pointsize 2 uses points twice the default size, and -pointsize
0.5 uses points half the normal size.
Plot windows will automatically be closed at the end of the session
unless the -persist option was given.
For monochrome displays, gnuplot does not honor foreground or background
colors. The default is black-on-white. -rv or gnuplot*reverseVideo: on
requests white-on-black.
For color displays, gnuplot honors the following resources (shown here with
their default values). The values may be color names as listed in the X11
rgb.txt file on your system, hexadecimal RGB color specifications (see X11
documentation), or a color name followed by a comma and an intensity value
from 0 to 1. For example, blue,.5 means a half intensity blue.
When -gray is selected, gnuplot honors the following resources for
grayscale or color displays (shown here with their default values). Note
that the default background is black.
gnuplot honors the following resources for setting the width (in pixels) of
plot lines (shown here with their default values.) 0 or 1 means a minimal
width line of 1 pixel width. A value of 2 or 3 may improve the appearance of
some plots.
gnuplot honors the following resources for setting the dash style used for
plotting lines. 0 means a solid line. A two-digit number jk (j and k
are >= 1 and <= 9) means a dashed line with a repeated pattern of j pixels
on followed by k pixels off. For example, '16' is a "dotted" line with one
pixel on followed by six pixels off. More elaborate on/off patterns can be
specified with a four-digit value. For example, '4441' is four on, four off,
four on, one off. The default values shown below are for monochrome displays
or monochrome rendering on color or grayscale displays. For color displays,
the default for each is 0 (solid line) except for axisDashes which defaults
to a '16' dotted line.
The size or aspect ratio of a plot may be changed by resizing the gnuplot
window.
The xlib terminal driver supports the X11 Windows System. It generates
gnulib_x11 commands. set term x11 behaves similarly to set terminal xlib;
set output "|gnuplot_x11". xlib has no options, but see x11.
Several options may be set in aifm---the Adobe Illustrator 3.0 driver.
Syntax:
<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. Selecting default sets
all options to their default values: monochrome, "Helvetica", and 14pt.
Since AI does not really support multiple pages, multiple graphs will be
drawn directly on top of 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:
The cgm terminal generates a Computer Graphics Metafile. This file format
is a subset of the ANSI X3.122-1986 standard entitled "Computer Graphics -
Metafile for the Storage and Transfer of Picture Description Information".
Several options may be set in cgm.
Syntax:
where <mode> is landscape, portrait, or default;
<color> is either color or monochrome;
<rotation> is either rotate or norotate;
<plot_width> is the width of the page in points;
<line_width> is the line width in points;
<font> is the name of a font; and
<fontsize> is the size of the font in points.
By default, cgm uses rotated text for the Y axis label.
The first five options can be in any order. Selecting default sets all
options to their default values.
Examples:
font
The first part of a Computer Graphics Metafile, the metafile description,
includes a font table. In the picture body, a font is designated by an
index into this table. By default, this terminal generates a table with
the following fonts:
Case is not distinct, but the modifiers must appear in the above order (that
is, not 'Arial Italic Bold'). 'Arial Bold' is the default font.
You may also specify a font name which does not appear in the default font
table. In that case, a new font table is constructed with the specified
font as its only entry. You must ensure that the spelling, capitalization,
and spacing of the name are appropriate for the application that will read
the CGM file.
Fonts are scaled assuming the page is 6 inches wide. If the size command
is used to change the aspect ratio of the page or the CGM file is converted
to a different width (e.g. it is imported into a document in which the
margins are not 6 inches apart), the resulting font sizes will be different.
To change the assumed width, use the width option.
The linewidth option sets the width of lines in pt. The default width is
1 pt. Scaling is affected by the actual width of the page, as discussed
under the fontsize and width options
The norotate option may be used to disable text rotation. For example,
the CGM input filter for Word for Windows 6.0c can accept rotated text, but
the DRAW editor within Word cannot. If you edit a graph (for example, to
label a curve), all rotated text is restored to horizontal. The Y axis
label will then extend beyond the clip boundary. With norotate, the Y
axis label starts in a less attractive location, but the page can be edited
without damage. The rotate option confirms the default behavior.
Default size of a CGM page is 32599 units wide and 23457 units high for
landscape, or 23457 units wide by 32599 units high for portrait.
All distances in the CGM file are in abstract units. The application that
reads the file determines the size of the final page. By default, the width
of the final page is assumed to be 6 inches (15.24 cm). This distance is
used to calculate the correct font size, and may be changed with the width
option. The keyword should be followed by the width in points. (Here, a
point is 1/72 inch, as in PostScript. This unit is known as a "big point"
in TeX.) gnuplot arithmetic can be used to convert from other units, as
follows:
The default font table was chosen to match, where possible, the default font
assignments made by the Computer Graphics Metafile input filter for
Microsoft Word 6.0c, although the filter makes available only 'Arial' and
'Times Roman' fonts and their bold and/or italic variants. Other fonts such
as 'Helvetica' and 'Roman' are not available. If the CGM file includes a
font table, the filter mostly ignores it. However, it changes certain font
assignments so that they disagree with the table. As a workaround, the
winword6 option deletes the font table from the CGM file. In this case,
the filter makes predictable font assignments. 'Arial Bold' is correctly
assigned even with the font table present, which is one reason it was chosen
as the default.
winword6 disables the color tables for a similar reason---with the color
table included, Microsoft Word displays black for color 7.
The corel terminal driver supports CorelDraw.
Syntax: set terminal corel { default
where the fontsize and linewidth are specified in points and the sizes in
inches. The defaults are monochrome, "SwitzerlandLight", 22, 8.2, 10 and 1.2.
The dumb terminal driver has an optional size specification and trailing
linefeed control.
Syntax:
where <xsize> and <ysize> set the size of the dumb terminals. Default is
79 by 24. The last newline is printed only if feed is enabled.
Examples:
The dxf terminal driver creates pictures that can be imported into AutoCad
(Release 10.x). It has no options of its own, but some features of its plots
may be modified by other means. The default size is 120x80 AutoCad units,
which can be changed by set size. dxf uses seven colors (white, red,
yellow, green, cyan, blue and magenta), which can be changed only by
modifying the source file. If a black-and-white plotting device is used, the
colors are mapped to differing line thicknesses. See the description of the
AutoCad print/plot command.
This terminal driver supports the Roland DXY800A plotter. It has no options.
The excl terminal driver supports Talaris printers such as the EXCL Laser
printer and the 1590. It has no options.
The fig terminal device generates output in the Fig graphics language.
Syntax:
monochrome and color determine whether the picture is black-and-white or
color. small and big produce a 5x3 or 8x5 inch graph in the default
landscape mode and 3x5 or 5x8 inches in portrait mode. <max_points>
sets the maximum number of points per polyline. Default units for editing
with "xfig" may be metric or inches. fontsize sets the size of the
text font to <fsize> points. size sets (overrides) the size of the drawing
area to <xsize>*<ysize> in units of inches or centimeters depending on the
inches or metric setting in effect. depth sets the default depth layer
for all lines and text. The default depth is 10 to leave room for adding
material with "xfig" on top of the plot.
thickness sets the default line thickness, which is 1 if not specified.
Overriding the thickness can be achieved by adding a multiple of 100 to the
to the linetype value for a plot command. In a similar way the depth
of plot elements (with respect to the default depth) can be controlled by
adding a multiple of 1000 to <linetype>. The depth is then <layer> +
<linetype>/1000 and the thickness is (<linetype>%1000)/100 or, if that is
zero, the default line thickness.
Additional point-plot symbols are also available with the fig driver. The
symbols can be used through pointtype values % 100 above 50, with different
fill intensities controlled by <pointtype> % 5 and outlines in black (for
<pointtype> % 10 < 5) or in the current color. Available symbols are
The size of these symbols is linked to the font size. The depth of symbols
is by default one less than the depth for lines to achieve nice error bars.
If <pointtype> is above 1000, the depth is <layer> + <pointtype>/1000-1. If
<pointtype>%1000 is above 100, the fill color is (<pointtype>%1000)/100-1.
Available fill colors are (from 1 to 9): black, blue, green, cyan, red,
magenta, yellow, white and dark blue (in monochrome mode: black for 1 to 6
and white for 7 to 9).
See plot with for details of <linetype> and <pointtype>.
The big option is a substitute for the bfig terminal in earlier versions,
which is no longer supported.
Examples:
would produce circles with a blue outline of width 1 and yellow fill color.
would produce errorbars with black lines and circles filled red. These
circles are one layer above the lines (at depth 9 by default).
To plot the error bars on top of the circles use
The hp2623a terminal driver supports the Hewlett Packard HP2623A. It has
no options.
The hp2648 terminal driver supports the Hewlett Packard HP2647 and HP2648.
It has no options.
The hp500c terminal driver supports the Hewlett Packard HP DeskJet 500c.
It has options for resolution and compression.
Syntax:
where res can be 75, 100, 150 or 300 dots per inch and comp can be "rle",
or "tiff". Any other inputs are replaced by the defaults, which are 75 dpi
and no compression. Rasterization at the higher resolutions may require a
large amount of memory.
The hpgl driver produces HPGL output for devices like the HP7475A plotter.
There are two options which can be set---the number of pens and "eject", which
tells the plotter to eject a page when done. The default is to use 6 pens
and not to eject the page when done.
The international character sets ISO-8859-1 and CP850 are recognized via
set encoding iso_8859_1 or set encoding cp850 (see set encoding for
details).
Syntax:
The selection
is equivalent to the previous hp7550 terminal, and the selection
is equivalent to the previous hp7580b terminal.
The pcl5 driver supports the Hewlett-Packard Laserjet III. It actually uses
HPGL-2, but there is a name conflict among the terminal devices. It has
several options
Syntax:
where <mode> is landscape, or portrait, <font> is stick, univers, or
cg_times, and <fontsize> is the size in points.
With pcl5 international characters are handled by the printer; you just put
the appropriate 8-bit character codes into the text strings. You don't need
to bother with set encoding.
HPGL graphics can be imported by many software packages.
The hpljii terminal driver supports the HP Laserjet Series II printer. The
hpdj driver supports the HP DeskJet 500 printer. These drivers allow a
choice of resolutions.
Syntax:
where res may be 75, 100, 150 or 300 dots per inch; the default is 75.
Rasterization at the higher resolutions may require a large amount of memory.
The hp500c terminal is similar to hpdj; hp500c additionally supports
color and compression.
The hppj terminal driver supports the HP PaintJet and HP3630 printers. The
only option is the choice of font.
Syntax:
with the middle-sized font (FNT9X17) being the default.
The imagen terminal driver supports Imagen laser printers. It is capable
of placing multiple graphs on a single page.
Syntax:
where fontsize defaults to 12 points and the layout defaults to landscape.
<horiz> and <vert> are the number of graphs in the horizontal and
vertical directions; these default to unity.
Example:
puts six graphs on the page in three rows of two in portrait orientation.
The kyo and prescribe terminal drivers support the Kyocera laser printer.
The only difference between the two is that kyo uses "Helvetica" whereas
prescribe uses "Courier". There are no options.
The mif 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
page will be plotted in a MIF Frame, and several MIF Frames are collected in
one large MIF Frame. The MIF font used for text is "Times".
Several options may be set in the MIF 3.00 driver.
Syntax:
colour plots lines with line types >= 0 in colour (MIF sep. 2--7) and
monochrome plots all line types in black (MIF sep. 0).
polyline plots curves as continuous curves and vectors plots curves as
collections of vectors.
help and ? print online help on standard error output---both print a
short description of the usage; help also lists the options;
Examples:
Several options may be set in the pbm terminal---the driver for PBMplus.
Syntax:
where <fontsize> is small, medium, or large and <mode> is monochrome,
gray or color. The default plot size is 640 pixels wide and 480 pixels
high; this may be changed by set size.
The output of the pbm driver depends upon <mode>: monochrome produces a
portable bitmap (one bit per pixel), gray a portable graymap (three bits
per pixel) and color a portable pixmap (color, four bits per pixel).
The output of this driver 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:
The png terminal driver supports Portable Network Graphics. To compile it,
you will need the third-party libraries "libpng" and "zlib"; both are
available at ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/png. png has two options.
Syntax:
The defaults are small (fontsize) and monochrome.
Several options may be set in the postscript driver.
Syntax:
where <mode> is landscape, portrait, eps or default
solid draws all plots with solid lines, overriding any dashed patterns;
<duplexing> is defaultplex, simplex or duplex ("duplexing" in
PostScript is the ability of the printer to print on both sides of the same
page---don't set this if your printer can't do it);
enhanced activates the "Enhanced PostScript" features (subscripts,
superscripts and mixed fonts);
"<fontname>" is the name of a valid PostScript font; and <fontsize> is
the size of the font in PostScript points.
default mode sets all options to their defaults: landscape, monochrome,
dashed, defaultplex, noenhanced, "Helvetica" and 14pt.
eps mode generates EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) output, which is just
regular PostScript with some additional lines that allow the file to be
imported into a variety of other applications. (The added lines are
PostScript comment lines, so the file may still be printed by itself.) To
get EPS output, use the eps mode and make only one plot per file. In eps
mode the whole plot, including the fonts, is reduced to half of the default
size.
Examples:
{text} can be used to allow multiple-character text, where only a single
character is expected (e.g., 2^{10}). To change the font and/or size, use
the full form: {/[fontname][=fontsize] text} (For example, {/Symbol=20 G}
is a 20 point GAMMA). (The '/' character MUST be the first character after
the '{'.)
If the encoding vector has been changed by set encoding, the default
encoding vector can be used instead by following the slash with a dash. This
is unnecessary if you use the Symbol font, however---since /Symbol uses its
own encoding vector, gnuplot will not apply any other encoding vector to
it.
The phantom box is useful for a@^b_c to align superscripts and subscripts,
and for overwriting an accent on a letter. (The latter is tricky; it is much
easier to use set encoding iso_8859_1 to change to the ISO Latin-1 encoding
vector, which contains a large variety of letters with accents or other
diacritical marks.) It is common sense to put the shorter of the two in the
phantom box.
Space equal in length to a string can be inserted using the '&' character.
Thus
would produce
You can access special symbols numerically by specifying \character-code (in
octal), e.g., {/Symbol \245} is the symbol for infinity.
You can escape control characters using \, e.g., \\, \{, and so on.
But be aware that strings in double-quotes are parsed differently than those
enclosed in single-quotes. The major difference is that backslashes may need
to be doubled when in double-quoted strings.
Examples (these are hard to describe in words---try them!):
The file "ps_guide.ps" in the /docs subdirectory of the gnuplot source
distribution contains more examples of the enhanced syntax.
The qms terminal driver supports the QMS/QUIC Laser printer, the Talaris
1200 and others. It has no options.
Instead of producing a picture, the table terminal prints out 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. This can be useful if you want to use the contouring engine
of gnuplot to work out the contours of your data and then save them for
further use, perhaps for plotting with plot. See set contour for an
example. The same trick can be used to save gridded data (set dgrid3d).
Tgif is an X11-based drawing tool---it has nothing to do with GIF.
The tgif driver supports different pointsizes (with set pointsize),
different label fonts and font sizes (e.g. set label "Hallo" at x,y font
"Helvetica,34") and multiple graphs on the page. The proportions of the
axes are not changed.
Syntax:
where <[x,y]> specifies the number of graphs in the x and y directions on the
page, "<fontname>" is the name of a valid PostScript font, and <fontsize>
specifies the size of the PostScript font. Defaults are portrait, [1,1],
dashed, "Helvetica", and 18.
The solid option is usually prefered if lines are colored, as they often
are in the editor. Hardcopy will be black-and-white, so dashed should be
chosen for that.
Multiplot is implemented in two different ways.
The first multiplot implementation is the standard gnuplot multiplot feature:
See set multiplot for further information.
The second version is the [x,y] option for the driver itself. The advantage
of this implementation is that everything is scaled and placed automatically
without the need for setting origins and sizes; the graphs keep their natural
x/y proportions of 3/2 (or whatever is fixed by set size).
If both multiplot methods are selected, the standard method is chosen and a
warning message is given.
Examples of single plots (or standard multiplot):
Examples using the built-in multiplot mechanism:
This terminal driver generates tk canvas widget commands. To use it, rebuild
gnuplot (after uncommenting or inserting the appropriate line in "term.h"),
then
After invoking "wish", execute the following sequence of tcl commands:
The code generated by gnuplot creates a tcl procedure called "gnuplot"
that takes the name of a canvas as its argument. When the procedure is,
called, it clears the canvas, finds the size of the canvas and draws the plot
in it, scaled to fit.
The current version of tkcanvas supports neither multiplot nor replot.
The vx384 terminal driver supports the Vectrix 384 and Tandy color
printers. It has no options.
This driver supports a family of Epson printers and derivatives.
epson-180dpi and epson-60dpi are drivers for Epson LQ-style 24-pin
printers with resolutions of 180 and 60 dots per inch, respectively.
epson-lx800 is a generic 9-pin driver appropriate for printers like the
Epson LX-800, the Star NL-10 and NX-1000, the PROPRINTER, and so forth.
nec-cp6 is generix 24-pin driver that can be used for printers like the
NEC CP6 and the Epson LQ-800.
The okidata driver supports the 9-pin OKIDATA 320/321 Standard printers.
The starc driver is for the Star Color Printer.
The tandy-60dpi driver is for the Tandy DMP-130 series of 9-pin, 60-dpi
printers.
Only nec-cp6 has any options.
Syntax:
which defaults to monochrome.
With each of these drivers, a binary copy is required on a PC to print. Do
not use print---use instead copy file /b lpt1:.
The latex and emtex drivers allow two options.
Syntax:
fontsize may be any size you specify. The default is 10-point Roman.
Unless your driver is capable of building fonts at any size (e.g. dvips),
stick to the standard 10, 11 and 12 point sizes.
METAFONT users beware: METAFONT does not like odd sizes.
The pslatex and pstex drivers generate output for further processing by
LaTeX and TeX, respectively. Figures generated by pstex can be included
in any plain-based format (including LaTeX).
Syntax:
<color> is either color or monochrome. <rotate> is either rotate or
norotate and determines if the y-axis label is rotated. <font_size> is
used to scale the font from its usual size.
If auxfile is specified, it directs the driver to put the PostScript
commands into an auxiliary file instead of directly into the LaTeX file.
This is useful if your pictures are large enough that dvips cannot handle
them. The name of the auxiliary PostScript file is derived from the name of
the TeX file given on the set output command; it is determined by replacing
the trailing .tex (actually just the final extent in the file name---and
the option will be turned off if there is no extent) with .ps in the output
file name. Remember to close the file before leaving gnuplot.
Examples:
To write the PostScript commands into the file "foo.ps":
The eepic terminal driver supports the extended LaTeX picture environment.
It is an alternative to the latex driver.
The output of this terminal is intended for use with the "eepic.sty" macro
package for LaTeX. To use it, you need "eepic.sty", "epic.sty" and a
printer driver that supports the "tpic" \specials. If your printer driver
doesn't support those \specials, "eepicemu.sty" will enable you to use some
of them.
Although dotted and dashed lines are possible with eepic and are tempting,
they do not work well for high-sample-rate curves, fusing the dashes all
together into a solid line. For now, the eepic driver creates only solid
lines. There is another gnuplot driver (tpic) that supports dashed lines,
but it cannot be used if your DVI driver doesn't support "tpic" \specials.
The eepic terminal has no options.
The tpic terminal driver supports the LaTeX picture environment with tpic
\specials. It is an alternative to the latex and eepic terminal drivers.
Options are the point size, line width, and dot-dash interval.
Syntax:
where pointsize and linewidth are integers in milli-inches and interval
is a float in inches. If a non-positive value is specified, the default is
chosen: pointsize = 40, linewidth = 6, interval = 0.1.
The pstricks driver is intended for use with the "pstricks.sty" macro
package for LaTeX. It is an alternative to the eepic and latex drivers.
You need "pstricks.sty", and, of course, a printer that understands
PostScript. Ghostscript understands PostScript, too.
PSTricks is available via anonymous ftp from the /pub directory at
Princeton.EDU. This driver definitely does not come close to using the full
capability of the PSTricks package.
Syntax:
The first option invokes an ugly hack that gives nicer numbers; the second
has to do with plot scaling. The defaults are hacktext and nounit.
The texdraw terminal driver supports the LaTeX texdraw environment. It is
intended for use with "texdraw.sty" and "texdraw.tex" in the texdraw package.
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 is a character.
To use a picture 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 the procedure for including 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 is in principal free to
chose whatever fonts he or 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 problems if too many pictures are stored.
The mf terminal has no options.
- Set your terminal to METAFONT:
- Select an output-file, e.g.:
- Create your pictures. Each picture 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 picture 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:
- Select the output device: At the METAFONT prompt ('*') type:
- Optionally select a magnification:
- Input the gnuplot-file:
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.$$$gf (where $$$ indicates
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:
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 doing 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 pictures in your document you have to tell TeX the font:
Each picture you made is stored in a single character. The first picture is
character 0, the second is character 1, and so on... After doing the above
step, you can use the pictures just like any other characters. Therefore, to
place pictures 1 and 2 centered in your document, all you have to do is:
in plain TeX. For LaTeX you can, of course, use the picture environment and
place the picture wherever you wish by using the \makebox and \put macros.
This conversion saves you a lot of time once you have generated the font;
TeX handles the pictures as characters and uses minimal time to place them,
and the documents you make change more often than the pictures do. It also
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.
The set tics command can be used to change the tics to be drawn outwards.
Syntax:
where <direction> may be in (the default) or out.
See also set xtics for more control of major (labelled) tic marks and set
mxtics for control of minor tic marks.
Using splot, 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 (as a fraction of the z-range) above the xy-plane.
The default value is 0.5. Negative values are permitted, but tic labels on
the three axes may overlap.
To place the xy-plane at a position 'pos' on the z-axis, ticslevel should
be set equal to (pos - zmin) / (zmin - zmax).
Syntax:
See also set view.
The size of the tic marks can be adjusted with set ticscale.
Syntax:
If <minor> is not specified, it is 0.5*<major>. The default size is 1.0 for
major tics and 0.5 for minor tics. Note that it is possible to have the tic
marks pointing outward by specifying a negative size.
The optional set time places the time and date of the graph either at the
top or bottom of the left margin. The exact location is device dependent.
Syntax:
The format string allows you to choose the format used to write the date and
time. Its default value is what asctime() uses: "%a %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y"
(weekday, month name, day of the month, hours, minutes, seconds, four-digit
year). The constants <xoff> and <off> are offsets from the default position
given in character screen coordinates. <font> is used to specify the font
with which the time is to be written.
Example:
See set timefmt for more information about time format strings.
This command applies to timeseries where data are composed of dates/times.
It has no meaning unless the command set xdata time is given also.
Syntax:
The string argument tells gnuplot how to read timedata from the datafile.
Valid conversion codes are: %d (day of month, 1--31), %m (month, 1--12), %y
(year, 0--99), %Y (year, 4 digits), %j (day of year, 1--365), %H (hour,
0--24), %M (minute, 0--60), and %S (second, 0--60). Any character is allowed
in the string (including space), but must match exactly. Backslash-octals
(\nnn) are converted to char; \t (tab) is understood. If there is no
separating character between the date/time elements, then %d, %m, %y, %H, %M
and %S read two digits each, %Y reads four digits and %j reads three digits.
Each set of non-blank characters in the timedata counts as one column in the
using n:n specification. Thus 11:11 25/12/76 21.0 consists of three
columns. To avoid confusion, gnuplot requires that you provide a complete
using specification if your file contains timedata.
See also set xdata.
Example:
tells gnuplot to read date and time separated by tab. (But look closely at
your data---what began as a tab may have been converted to spaces somewhere
along the line; the format string must match what is actually in the file.)
Time Data Demo
The set title command produces a graph title that is centered at the top of
the graph. set title is a special case of set label.
Syntax:
Specifying constants <xoff> or <yoff> as optional offsets for the title will
move the title <xoff> or <yoff> character screen coordinates (not graph
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.
<font> is used to specify the font with which the title is to be written;
the units of the font <size> depend upon which terminal is used.
set title with no parameters clears the title.
See syntax for details about the processing of backslash sequences and
the distinction between single- and double-quotes.
The command set tmargin sets the size of the top margin. Please see
set margin for details.
The set trange command sets the parametric range used to compute x and y
values when in parametric or polar modes. Please see set xrange for
details.
The set urange and set vrange commands set the parametric ranges used
to compute x, y, and z values when in splot parametric mode. Please see
set xrange for details.
The show variables command lists all user-defined variables and their
values.
Syntax:
The set view command sets the viewing angle for splots. It controls how
the 3-d coordinates of the plot are mapped into the 2-d screen space. It
provides controls for both rotation and scaling of the plotted data, but
supports orthographic projections only.
Syntax:
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:
The first sets all the four default values. The second changes only scale,
to 0.5.
See also set ticslevel.
The set urange and set vrange commands set the parametric ranges used
to compute x, y, and z values when in splot parametric mode. Please see
set xrange for details.
The set x2data command sets data on the x2 (top) axis to timeseries
(dates/times). Please see set xdata.
The set x2dtics command changes tics on the x2 (top) axis to days of the
week. Please see set xmtics for details.
The set x2label command sets the label for the x2 (top) axis. Please see
set xlabel.
The set x2mtics command changes tics on the x2 (top) axis to months of the
year. Please see set xmtics for details.
The set x2range command sets the horizontal range that will be displayed on
the x2 (top) axis. Please see set xrange for details.
The set x2tics command controls major (labelled) tics on the x2 (top) axis.
Please see set xtics for details.
The set x2zeroaxis command draws a line at the origin of the x2 (top) axis
(x2 = 0). For details, please see
set zeroaxis.
This command sets the datatype on the x axis to date/time. A similar command
does the same thing for each of the other axes.
Syntax:
The same syntax applies to ydata, zdata, x2data and y2data.
The time option signals that the datatype is indeed date/time. If the
option is not specified, the datatype reverts to normal.
See set timefmt to tell gnuplot how to read date or time data. The
date/time is converted to seconds from start of the century. There is
currently only one timefmt, which implies that all the date/time columns must
confirm to this format. Specification of ranges should be supplied as quoted
strings according to this format to avoid interpretation of the date/time as
an expression.
The function "strftime" (type "man strftime" on unix to look it up) is used
to print ticmark labels. gnuplot tries to figure out a reasonable format
for this unless the set format x "string" has supplied something that does
not look like a decimal format (more than one '%' or neither %f nor %g).
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. set
noxdtics returns the labels to their default values. Similar commands do
the same things for the other axes.
Syntax:
The same syntax applies to ydtics, zdtics, x2dtics and y2dtics.
See also the set format command.
The set xlabel command sets the x axis label. Similar commands set labels
on the other axes.
Syntax:
The same syntax applies to x2label, ylabel, y2label and zlabel.
Specifying the constants <xoff> or <yoff> as optional offsets for a label
will move it <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.
<font> is used to specify the font in which the label is written; the units
of the font <size> depend upon which terminal is used.
To clear a label, put no options on the command line, e.g., "set y2label".
The default positions of the axis labels are as follows:
xlabel: The x-axis label is centered below the bottom axis.
ylabel: The position of the y-axis label depends on the terminal, and can be
one of the following three positions:
1. Horizontal text flushed left at the top left of the graph. Terminals that
cannot rotate text will probably use this method. If set x2tics is also
in use, the ylabel may overwrite the left-most x2tic label. This may be
remedied by adjusting the ylabel position or the left margin.
2. Vertical text centered vertically at the left of the graph. Terminals
that can rotate text will probably use this method.
3. Horizontal text centered vertically at the left of the graph. The EEPIC,
LaTeX and TPIC drivers use this method. The user must insert line breaks
using \\ to prevent the ylabel from overwriting the graph. To produce a
vertical row of characters, add \\ between every printing character (but this
is ugly).
zlabel: The z-axis label is centered along the z axis and placed in the space
above the grid level.
y2label: The y2-axis label is placed to the right of the y2 axis. The
position is terminal-dependent in the same manner as is the y-axis label.
x2label: The x2-axis label is placed above the top axis but below the graph
title. It is also possible to create an x2-axis label by using new-line
characters to make a multi-line graph title, e.g.,
Note that double quotes must be used. The same font will be used for both
lines, of course.
Please see set syntax for further information about backslash processing
and the difference between single- and double-quoted strings.
The set xmtics commands converts the x-axis tic marks to months of the
year where 1=Jan and 12=Dec. Overflows are converted modulo 12 to months.
The tics are returned to their default labels by set noxmtics. Similar
commands perform the same duties for the other axes.
Syntax:
The same syntax applies to x2mtics, ymtics, y2mtics, and zmtics.
See also the set format command.
The set xrange command sets the horizontal range that will be displayed.
A similar command exists for each of the other axes, as well as for the
polar radius r and the parametric variables t, u, and v.
Syntax:
where <min> and <max> terms are constants, expressions or an asterisk to set
autoscaling. If the data are date/time, you must give the range as a quoted
string according to the set timefmt format. Any value omitted will not be
changed.
The same syntax applies to yrange, zrange, x2range, y2range,
rrange, trange, urange and vrange.
The reverse option reverses the direction of the axis, e.g., set xrange
[0:1] reverse will produce an axis with 1 on the left and 0 on the right.
This is identical to the axis produced by set xrange [1:0], of course.
reverse is intended primarily for use with autoscale.
The writeback option essentially saves the range found by autoscale in
the buffers that would be filled by set xrange. This is useful if you wish
to plot several functions together but have the range determined by only
some of them. The writeback operation is performed during the plot
execution, so it must be specified before that command. For example,
results in a yrange of [-1:1] as found only from the range of sin(x); the
[-5:5] range of x/2 is ignored. Executing show yrange after each command
in the above example should help you understand what is going on.
In 2-d, xrange and yrange determine the extent of the axes, trange
determines the range of the parametric variable in parametric mode or the
range of the angle in polar mode. Similarly in parametric 3-d, xrange,
yrange, and zrange govern the axes and urange and vrange govern the
parametric variables.
In polar mode, rrange determines the radial range plotted. <rmin> acts as
an additive constant to the radius, whereas <rmax> acts as a clip to the
radius---no point with radius greater than <rmax> will be plotted. xrange
and yrange are affected---the ranges can be set as if the graph was of
r(t)-rmin, with rmin added to all the labels.
Any range may be partially or totally autoscaled, although it may not make
sense to autoscale a parametric variable unless it is plotted with data.
Ranges may also be specified on the plot command line. A range given on
the plot line will be used for that single plot command; a range given by
a set command will be used for all subsequent graphs that do not specify
their own ranges. The same holds true for splot.
Examples:
To set the xrange to the default:
To set the yrange to increase downwards:
To change zmax to 10 without affecting zmin (which may still be autoscaled):
To autoscale xmin while leaving xmax unchanged:
Fine control of the major (labelled) tics on the x axis is possible with the
set xtics command. The tics may be turned off with the set noxtics
command, and may be turned on (the default state) with set xtics. Similar
commands control the major tics on the y, z, x2 and y2 axes.
Syntax:
The same syntax applies to ytics, ztics, x2tics and y2tics.
axis or border tells gnuplot to put the tics (both the tics themselves
and the accompanying labels) along the axis or the border, respectively.
mirror tells it to put unlabelled tics at the same positions on the
opposite border. nomirror does what you think it does. The defaults are
border mirror for tics on the x, y, x2, and y2 axes. For the z axis, the
the {axis | border} option is not available and the default is nomirror.
If you do want to mirror the z-axis tics, you might want to create a bit more
room for them with set border.
The positions of the tics may be specified in either of two forms:
The <start>, <incr>, <end> form specifies that a series of tics will be
plotted on the axis between the 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. If neither <start> nor <end> is given, <start> is assumed
to be negative infinity, <end> is assumed to be positive infinity, and the
tics will be drawn at multiples of <step>---there will be a tic at zero (if
it is within the plotted range). If the axis is logarithmic, the increment
will be used as a multiplicative factor.
Examples:
Make tics at 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, ..., 9.5, 10.
Make tics at ..., -10, -5, 0, 5, 10, ...
Make tics at 1, 100, 1e4, 1e6, 1e8.
The ("<label>" <pos>, ...) form allows arbitrary tic positions or non-numeric
tic labels. A set of tics is 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 be made
empty by specifying it as an empty string. If no string is given, the
default label (numerical) is used. In this form, the tics do not need to be
listed in numerical order.
Examples:
In the second example, all tics are labelled. In the third, only the end
tics are labelled.
Tics will only be plotted when in range.
Minor (unlabelled) tics can be added by the set mxtics command.
In case of timeseries data, position values must be given as quoted dates
or times according to the format timefmt.
The set xzeroaxis command draws a line at x = 0. For details, please see
set zeroaxis.
The set y2data command sets y2 (right-hand) axis data to timeseries
(dates/times). Please see set xdata.
The set y2dtics command changes tics on the y2 (right-hand) axis to days of
the week. Please see set xmtics for details.
The set y2dtics command sets the label for the y2 (right-hand) axis.
Please see set xlabel.
The set y2mtics command changes tics on the y2 (right-hand) axis to months
of the year. Please see set xmtics for details.
The set y2range command sets the vertical range that will be displayed on
the y2 (right-hand) axis. Please see set xrange for details.
The set y2tics command controls major (labelled) tics on the y2 (right-hand)
axis. Please see set xtics for details.
The set y2zeroaxis command draws a line at the origin of the y2 (right-hand)
axis (y2 = 0). For details, please see set zeroaxis.
Sets y-axis data to timeseries (dates/times). Please see set xdata.
The set ydtics command changes tics on the y axis to days of the week.
Please see set xmtics for details.
This command sets the label for the y axis. Please see set xlabel.
The set ymtics command changes tics on the y axis to months of the year.
Please see set xmtics for details.
The set yrange command sets the vertical range that will be displayed on
the y axis. Please see set xrange for details.
The set ytics command controls major (labelled) tics on the y axis.
Please see set xtics for details.
The set yzeroaxis command draws a line at y = 0. For details, please see
set zeroaxis.
Set zaxis date to timeseries (dates/times). Please see set xdata.
The set zdtics command changes tics on the z axis to days of the week.
Please see set xmtics for details.
The zero value is the default threshold for values approaching 0.0.
Syntax:
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.
The x axis may be drawn by set xzeroaxis and removed by set noxzeroaxis.
Similar commands behave similarly for the y, x2, and y2 axes.
Syntax:
By default, these options are off. The selected zero axis is drawn with a
line of type <linetype> from the default linetype list provided by the
terminal; user-defined linetypes (via the set linestyle command) are not
accessible for these axes. If <linetype> is not specified, any zero axes
selected will be drawn using the axis linetype (linetype 0).
set zeroaxis l is equivalent to set xzeroaxis l; set yzeroaxis l. set
nozeroaxis is equivalent to set noxzeroaxis; set noyzeroaxis.
This command sets the label for the z axis. Please see set xlabel.
The set zmtics command changes tics on the z axis to months of the year.
Please see set xmtics for details.
The set zrange command sets the range that will be displayed on the z axis.
The zrange is used only by splot and is ignored by plot. Please see set
xrange for details.
The set ztics command controls major (labelled) tics on the z axis.
Please see set xtics for details.
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
($ if using VMS) at the beginning of a command line. Control will return
immediately to gnuplot after this command is executed. For example, in
Unix, AmigaDOS, MS-DOS or OS/2,
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.
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.
Non parametric Splot Demos
Parametric Splot Demos.
test creates a display of line and point styles and other useful things
appropriate for the terminal you are using.
Syntax:
This command updates the start parameter assignments in a start parameter
file as specified in the fit section. Each parameter will be replaced
by its actual value. This is useful for restarting a converged or stopped
fit again. If a second filename is supplied, the updated parameters are
written to this file instead, and the original parameter file is left
unmodified.
Syntax:
See fit
Several graphical user interfaces have been written for gnuplot and one for
win32 is included in this distribution. In addition, there is a MacIntosh
interface at
and several X11 interfaces include three tcl/tk located at the usual tcl/tk
repositories.
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.
Suns appear to overflow when calculating exp(-x) for large x, so gnuplot
gets an undefined result. One work-around is to make a user-defined function
like e(x) = x<-500 ? 0 : exp(x). This affects plots of Gaussians (exp(-x*x))
in particular, since x*x grows quite rapidly.
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.
The two preceding problems are actually in the libraries rather than in the
compilers. Thus the problems will occur whether gnuplot is built using
either the DEC compiler or some other one (e.g. the latest gcc).
ULTRIX X11R3 has a bug that causes the X11 driver to display "every other"
graph. 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 work-around, write the output to a file and copy it to
the printer afterwards using a shell command.
There may be an up-to-date list of bugs since the release on the WWW page:
Please report any bugs to bug-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu.
command-line-editing
Line-editing:
^B moves back a single character.
^F moves forward a single character.
^A moves to the beginning of the line.
^E moves to the end of the line.
^H and DEL delete the previous character.
^D deletes the current character.
^K deletes from current position to the end of line.
^L,^R redraws line in case it gets trashed.
^U deletes the entire line.
^W deletes the last word.
History:
^P moves back through history.
^N moves forward through history.
Left Arrow - same as ^B.
Right Arrow - same as ^F.
Ctrl Left Arrow - same as ^A.
Ctrl Right Arrow - same as ^E.
Up Arrow - same as ^P.
Down Arrow - same as ^N.
Undo - same as ^L.
Home - same as ^A.
Ctrl Home - same as ^E.
Esc - same as ^U.
Help - help plus return.
Ctrl Help - help .
comment
coordinates
{<system>} <x>, {<system>} <y> {,{<system>} <z>}
environment
C:\TC\BGI\SVGADRV.BGI
set BGI=C:\TC\BGI
set SVGA=SVGADRV.3
expressions
operators
user-defined
functions
acos
acosh
arg
asin
asinh
atan
atan2
atanh
besj0
besj1
besy0
besy1
ceil
cos
cosh
erf
erfc
exp
floor
gamma
ibeta
inverf
igamma
imag
invnorm
int
lgamma
log
log10
norm
rand
real
sgn
sin
sinh
sqrt
tan
tanh
column
tm_hour
tm_mday
tm_min
tm_mon
tm_sec
tm_wday
tm_yday
tm_year
valid
abs
acos
acosh
arg
asin
asinh
atan
atan2
atanh
besj0
besj1
besy0
besy1
ceil
cos
cosh
erf
erfc
exp
floor
gamma
ibeta
inverf
igamma
imag
invnorm
int
lgamma
log
log10
norm
rand
real
sgn
sin
sinh
sqrt
tan
tanh
column
tm_hour
tm_mday
tm_min
tm_mon
tm_sec
tm_wday
tm_yday
tm_year
valid
operators
unary
Symbol Example Explanation
- -a unary minus
+ +a unary plus (no-operation)
~ ~a * one's complement
! !a * logical negation
! a! * factorial
$ $3 * call arg/column during using manipulation
binary
Symbol Example Explanation
** a**b exponentiation
* a*b multiplication
/ a/b division
% a%b * modulo
+ a+b addition
- a-b subtraction
== a==b equality
!= a!=b inequality
< a<b less than
<= a<=b less than or equal to
> a>b greater than
>= a>=b greater than or equal to
& a&b * bitwise AND
^ a^b * bitwise exclusive OR
| a|b * bitwise inclusive OR
&& a&&b * logical AND
|| a||b * logical OR
ternary
Symbol Example Explanation
?: a?b:c ternary operation
f(x) = 0<=x && x<1 ? sin(x) : 1<=x && x<2 ? 1/x : 1/0
plot f(x)
plot 'file' using 1:( $4<0 ? 1/0 : ($2+$3)/2 )
user-defined
<func-name>( <dummy1> {,<dummy2>} ... {,<dummy5>} ) = <expression>
<variable-name> = <constant-expression>
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)
plot f(x) = sin(x*a), a = 0.2, f(x), a = 0.4, f(x)
Note that the variable pi is already defined. But it is in no way magic;
you may redefine it to be whatever you like.
glossary
start-up
substitution
f(x) = leastsq
f(x) = run leastsq
syntax
"This is the first line of text.\nThis is the second line."
This is the first line of text.
This is the second line.
'This is the first line of text.\nThis is the second line.'
This is the first line of text.\nThis is the second line.
commands
call
clear
exit
fit
help
if
load
pause
plot
print
pwd
quit
replot
reread
reset
save
set-show
shell
splot
test
update
cd
cd '<directory-name>'
cd 'subdir'
cd ".."
cd "c:\newdata"
cd 'c:\newdata'
call
call "<input-file>" <parameter-0> <parm-1> ... <parm-9>
print "p0=$0 p1=$1 p2=$2 p3=$3 p4=$4 p5=$5 p6=$6 p7=x$7x"
call 'calltest.gp' "abcd" 1.2 + "'quoted'" -- "$2"
p0=abcd p1=1.2 p2=+ p3='quoted' p4=- p5=- p6=$2 p7=xx
clear
set multiplot
plot sin(x)
set origin 0.5,0.5
set size 0.4,0.4
clear
plot cos(x)
set nomultiplot
exit
fit
fit {[xrange]} {[yrange]} <function>
'<datafile>' {datafile-modifiers}
via {'<parameter file>' | <var1>,<var2>,...}
<datafile> is treated as in the plot command. All the modifiers for
varname = value
varname = value # FIXED
FIT_LIMIT
FIT_LOG
FIT_SCRIPT
f(x) = a*x**2 + b*x + c
fit f(x) 'measured.dat' via 'start.par'
fit f(x) 'measured.dat' using 3:($7-5) via 'start.par'
fit f(x) './data/trash.dat' using 1:2:3 via a, b, c
fit f(x,y) 'surface.dat' using 1:2:3:(1) via a, b, c
help
help {<topic>}
if
if (<condition>) <command-line>
pi=3
if (pi!=acos(-1)) print "?Fixing pi!"; pi=acos(-1); print pi
?Fixing pi!
3.14159265358979
if (1==2) print "Never see this"; print "Or this either"
load
load "<input-file>"
load 'work.gnu'
load "func.dat"
pause
pause <time> {"<string>"}
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."
plot
plot {<ranges>}
{<function> | {"<datafile>" {datafile-modifiers}}}
{axes <axes>} {<title-spec>} {with <style>}
{, {definitions,} <function> ...}
splot {<ranges>}
{<function> | {"<datafile>" {datafile-modifiers}}}
{<title-spec>} {with <style>}
{, {definitions,} <function> ...}
plot sin(x)
splot x * y
plot f(x) = sin(x*a), a = .2, f(x), a = .4, f(x)
plot [t=1:10] [-pi:pi*2] tan(t), \
"data.1" axes x1y2 using (tan($2)):($3/$4) \
smooth csplines notitle with lines 5
errorbars
parametric
ranges
title
with
data-file
{s}plot '<file_name>' {binary | matrix}
{index <index list>}
{every <every list>}
{thru <thru expression>}
{using <using list>}
{smooth <option>}
reset; plot '-', '-'
1 1
19 19
e
1 1
19 19
e
every
example datafile
index
matrix
smooth
special-filenames
thru
using
binary
<N+1> <y0> <y1> <y2> ... <yN>
<x0> <z0,0> <z0,1> <z0,2> ... <z0,N>
<x1> <z1,0> <z1,1> <z1,2> ... <z1,N>
: : : : ... :
<x0> <y0> <z0,0>
<x0> <y1> <z0,1>
<x0> <y2> <z0,2>
: : :
<x0> <yN> <z0,N>
<x1> <y0> <z1,0>
<x1> <y1> <z1,1>
: : :
int fwrite_matrix(file,m,nrl,nrl,ncl,nch,row_title,column_title)
every
plot 'file' every {<point_incr>}
{:{<line_incr>}
{:{<start_point>}
{:{<start_line>}
{:{<end_point>}
{:<end_line>}}}}}
every :::::10 # selects the first 10 lines
every 2:2 # selects every other point in every other line
every ::5:15 # selects points 5 through 15 in each line
example datafile
pop(x) = 103*exp((1965-x)/10)
plot [1960:1990] 'population.dat', pop(x)
# Gnu population in Antarctica since 1965
1965 103
1970 55
1975 34
1980 24
1985 10
splot 'datafile.dat'
# The valley of the Gnu.
0 0 10
0 1 10
0 2 10
1 0 10
1 1 5
1 2 10
2 0 10
2 1 1
2 2 10
3 0 10
3 1 0
3 2 10
Note also that the x value is held constant within each isoline. If you
instead keep y constant, and plot with hidden-line removal enabled, you will
find that the surface is drawn 'inside-out'.
index
plot 'file' index <m>{{:<n>}:<p>}
plot 'file' index 4:5
splot with indices demo.
matrix
z11 z12 z13 z14 ...
z21 z22 z23 z24 ...
z31 z32 z33 z34 ...
smooth
smooth {unique | csplines | acsplines | bezier | sbezier}
bezier
csplines
sbezier
unique
acsplines
plot 'data-file' using 1:2:(1.0) smooth acsplines
sw(x,S)=1/(x*x*S)
plot 'data_file' using 1:2:(sw($3,100)) smooth acsplines
bezier
csplines
sbezier
unique
special-filenames
plot 'a/very/long/filename' using 1:2, '' using 1:3, '' using 1:4
pop(x) = 103*exp(-x/10)
plot "< awk '{print $1-1965, $2}' population.dat", pop(x)
plot "< awk '$0 !~ /^#/ {print $1-1965, $2}' population.dat"
thru
plot 'file' thru f(x)
plot 'file' using 1:(f($2))
plot 'file' thru f(y)
using
plot 'file' using {<entry> {:<entry> {:<entry> ...}}} {'format'}
plot 'file' using 1:($2+$3) '%lf,%lf,%lf'
plot "MyData" using "%*lf%lf%*20[^\n]%lf"
%*lf ignore the first number
%lf read in the second and assign to x
%*20[^\n] ignore 20 non-newline characters
%lf read in the y value
plot 'file' using 1:($3>10 ? $2 : 1/0)
plot 'file' using 1:2
errorbars
(x, y, ydelta),
(x, y, ylow, yhigh),
(x, y, xdelta),
(x, y, xlow, xhigh),
(x, y, xdelta, ydelta), or
(x, y, xlow, xhigh, ylow, yhigh).
plot 'file' with errorbars
plot 'file' using 1:2:(sqrt($1)) with xerrorbars
plot 'file' using 1:2:($1-$3):($1+$3):4:5 with xyerrorbars
parametric
plot sin(t),t**2
splot cos(u)*cos(v),cos(u)*sin(v),sin(u)
plot sin(t),t**2 title 'Parametric example' with linespoints
Parametric Mode Demos.
ranges
[{<dummy-var>=}{{<min>}:{<max>}}]
[{{<min>}:{<max>}}]
plot [-pi:pi] [-1.3:1.3] [-1:1] sin(t),t**2
plot cos(x)
plot [-10:30] sin(pi*x)/(pi*x)
plot [t = -10 :30] sin(pi*t)/(pi*t)
plot [-pi:pi] [-3:3] tan(x), 1/x
plot [ ] [-2:sin(5)*-8] sin(x)**besj0(x)
plot [:200] [-pi:] exp(sin(x))
splot [0:3] [1:4] [-1:1] x*y
set timefmt "%d/%m/%y %H:%M"
plot ["1/6/93 12:00":"5/6/93 12:00"] 'timedata.dat'
title
title "<title>" | notitle
plot x
splot "glass.dat" title 'surface of revolution'
plot x**2 title "x^2", "data.1" t 'measured data'
set polar; plot my_function(t), 1 notitle
with
with <style> { {linestyle | ls <line_style>}
| {{linetype | lt <line_type>}
{linewidth | lw <line_width>}
{pointtype | pt <point_type>}
{pointsize | ps <point_size>}} }
plot sin(x) with impulses
splot x*y w points, x**2 + y**2
plot [ ] [-2:5] tan(x), "data.1" with l
plot 'leastsq.dat' w i
plot "population" with boxes
plot 'exper.dat' w lines, 'exper.dat' notitle w errorbars
splot x**2 + y**2 with line lt 1, x**2 - y**2 with line lt 1
plot sin(x) with linesp lt 1 pt 3, cos(x) with linesp lt 1 pt 4
plot "data" with points pointtype 3 pointsize 2
plot "d1" t "good" w l lt 2 lw 3, "d2" t "bad" w l lt 2 lw 1
print
print <expression> {, <expression>, ...}
pwd
quit
replot
plot '-' ; ... ; replot
reread
a=a+1
plot sin(x*a)
pause -1
if(a<5) reread
a=0
load 'looper'
c_p = c_p+1
plot "$0" using 1:c_p with lines linetype c_p
if(c_p < n_p) reread
n_p=6
c_p=1
set nokey
set yrange [0:10]
set multiplot
call 'plotter' 'data'
set nomultiplot
reset
save
save {<option>} "<filename>"
save "work.gnu"
save functions 'func.dat'
save var 'var.dat'
save set "options.dat"
set-show
arrow
autoscale
bar
bmargin
border
boxwidth
clabel
clip
cntrparam
contour
data style
dgrid3d
dummy
encoding
format
function style
functions
grid
hidden3d
isosamples
key
label
linestyle
lmargin
locale
logscale
mapping
margin
missing
multiplot
mx2tics
mxtics
my2tics
mytics
mztics
offsets
origin
output
parametric
pointsize
polar
rmargin
rrange
samples
size
style
surface
terminal
tics
ticslevel
ticscale
time
timefmt
title
tmargin
trange
urange
variables
view
vrange
x2data
x2dtics
x2label
x2mtics
x2range
x2tics
x2zeroaxis
xdata
xdtics
xlabel
xmtics
xrange
xtics
xzeroaxis
y2data
y2dtics
y2label
y2mtics
y2range
y2tics
y2zeroaxis
ydata
ydtics
ylabel
ymtics
yrange
ytics
yzeroaxis
zdata
zdtics
zero
zeroaxis
zlabel
zmtics
zrange
ztics
angles
set angles {degrees | radians}
show angles
x={1.0,0.1}
set angles radians
y=sinh(x)
print y #prints {1.16933, 0.154051}
print asinh(y) #prints {1.0, 0.1}
set angles degrees
y=sinh(x)
print y #prints {1.16933, 0.154051}
print asinh(y) #prints {57.29578, 5.729578}
Polar plot using `set angles`.
arrow
set arrow {<tag>} {from <position>} {to <position>} {{no}head}
{ {linestyle | ls <line_style>}
| {linetype | lt <line_type>}
{linewidth | lw <line_width} }
set noarrow {<tag>}
show arrow
set arrow to 1,2 ls 5
set arrow 3 from graph 0,0 to -5,5,3
set arrow 3 to 1,1,1 nohead lw 2
set arrow from 3, graph 0 to 3, graph 1 nohead
set noarrow 2
set noarrow
show arrow
Arrows Demos.
autoscale
set autoscale {<axes>{min|max}}
set noautoscale {<axes>{min|max}}
show autoscale
set autoscale y
set autoscale ymin
set autoscale xy
set autoscale
set noautoscale
set noautoscale z
parametric mode
polar mode
bar
set bar {small | large | <size>}
show bar
bmargin
border
set border {<integer>}
set noborder
show border
set border
set border 3
set border 4095
set border 127+256+512
set noxtics; set noytics; set x2tics; set y2tics; set border 12
boxwidth
set boxwidth {<width>}
show boxwidth
set boxwidth
set boxwidth -2
plot 'file' using 1:2:3:4:(-2)
clabel
set clabel {'<format>'}
set noclabel
show clabel
clip
set clip <clip-type>
set noclip <clip-type>
show clip
show clip
set clip
set noclip
cntrparam
set cntrparam { {linear | cubicspline | bspline}
| points <n> | order <n>
| levels {auto} {<n>}
| discrete <z1> {,<z2>} ...
| incremental {<start>, <incr> {,<end>}} }
show cntrparam
set cntrparam bspline
set cntrparam points 7
set cntrparam order 10
set cntrparam levels auto 5
set cntrparam levels discrete .1,1/exp(1),.9
set cntrparam levels incremental 0,1,4
set cntrparam levels 10
set cntrparam levels incremental 100,50
contour
set contour {base | surface | both}
set nocontour
show contour
set nosurface
set contour
set cntrparam ...
set term table
set out 'filename'
splot ...
set out
# contour info now in filename
set term <whatever>
plot 'filename'
data style
set data style <style-choice>
show data style
dgrid3d
set dgrid3d {<row_size>} {,{<col_size>} {,<norm>}}
set nodgrid3d
show dgrid3d
set dgrid3d 10,10,2
set dgrid3d ,,4
dummy
set dummy {<dummy-var>} {,<dummy-var>}
show dummy
set dummy t
plot sin(t), cos(t)
set dummy u,v
set dummy ,s
encoding
set encoding <value>
show encoding
format
set format {<axes>} {"<format-string>"}
set format {<axes>} {'<format-string>'}
show format
Format Explanation
%x or %X hex
%o or %O octal
%t mantissa to base 10
%l mantissa to base of current logscale
%s mantissa to base of current logscale; scientific power
%T power to base 10
%L power to base of current logscale
%S scientific power
%c character replacement for scientific power
%P multiple of pi
set format y "%t"; set ytics (5,10) # "5.0" and "1.0"
set format y "%s"; set ytics (500,1000) # "500" and "1.0"
set format y "%.2t*10^%T"; set ytic(12345) # "1.23*10^4"
set format y "%s*10^{%S}"; set ytic(12345) # "12.345*10^{3}"
set format y "%s %cg"; set ytic(12345) # "12.345 kg"
set format y "%.0P pi"; set ytic(6.283185) # "2 pi"
set log y 2; set format y '%l'; set ytics (1,2,3)
#displays "1.0", "1.0" and "1.5" (since 3 is 1.5 * 2^1)
function style
set function style <style-choice>
show function style
functions
show functions
grid
set grid {{no}{m}xtics} {{no}{m}ytics} {{no}{m}ztics}
{{no}{m}x2tics} {{no}{m}y2tics}
{polar {<angle>}} {<major_linetype> {<minor_linetype>}}
set nogrid
show grid
hidden3d
set hidden3d
set nohidden3d
show hidden3d
isosamples
set isosamples <iso_1> {,<iso_2>}
show isosamples
key
set key { left | right | top | bottom | outside | below
| <position>}
{Left | Right} {{no}reverse}
{samplen <sample_length>} {spacing <vertical_spacing>}
{title "<text>"} {{no}box {<linetype>}}
set nokey
show key
set key
set nokey
set key 2,3.5,2
set key below
set key left bottom Left title 'Legend' box 3
label
set label {<tag>} {"<label_text>"} {at <position>}
{<justification>} {font "<name><,size>"}
set nolabel {<tag>}
show label
set label "y=x" at 1,2
set label "S" at graph 0.5,0.5 center font "Symbol,24"
set label 3 "y=x^2" at 2,3,4 right
set label 3 center
set nolabel 2
set nolabel
show label
set timefmt "%d/%m/%y,%H:%M"
set label "Harvest" at "25/8/93",1
linestyle
set linestyle <index> {linetype | lt <line_type>}
{linewidth | lw <line_width>}
{pointtype | pt <point_type>}
{pointsize | ps <point_size>}
set nolinestyle
show linestyle
lmargin
locale
set locale {"<locale>"}
logscale
set logscale <axes> <base>
set nologscale <axes>
show logscale
set logscale xz
set logscale y 2
set nologscale z
mapping
set mapping {cartesian | spherical | cylindrical}
x = r * cos(theta) * cos(phi)
y = r * sin(theta) * cos(phi)
z = r * sin(phi)
x = r * cos(theta)
y = r * sin(theta)
z = z
margin
set bmargin {<margin>}
set lmargin {<margin>}
set rmargin {<margin>}
set tmargin {<margin>}
show margin
missing
set missing {"<character>"}
show missing
set missing "?"
1 1
2 ?
3 2
multiplot
set multiplot
set nomultiplot
set size 0.7,0.7
set origin 0.1,0.1
set multiplot
set size 0.4,0.4
set origin 0.1,0.1
plot sin(x)
set size 0.2,0.2
set origin 0.5,0.5
plot cos(x)
set nomultiplot
mx2tics
mxtics
set mxtics {<freq> | default}
set nomxtics
show mxtics
my2tics
mytics
mztics
offsets
set offsets <left>, <right>, <top>, <bottom>
set nooffsets
show offsets
set offsets 0, 0, 2, 2
plot sin(x)
origin
set origin <x-origin>,<y-origin>
output
set output {"<filename>"}
show output
set output "|lpr -Plaser filename"
set output "|lp -dlaser filename"
parametric
set parametric
set noparametric
show parametric
pointsize
set pointsize <pointsize>
show pointsize
polar
set polar
set nopolar
show polar
set polar
plot t*sin(t)
plot [-2*pi:2*pi] [-3:3] [-3:3] t*sin(t)
rmargin
rrange
samples
set samples <samples_1> {,<samples_2>}
show samples
size
set size {{no}square | ratio <r> | noratio} {<xscale>,<yscale>}
show size
set size 1,1
set size square 0.5,0.5
set size ratio 2
style
set function style <style>
set data style <style>
show function style
show data style
boxes
boxxyerrorbars
candlesticks
dots
financebars
fsteps
histeps
impulses
lines
linespoints
points
steps
vectors
xerrorbars
xyerrorbars
yerrorbars
boxerrorbars
boxes
boxxyerrorbars
candlesticks
dots
financebars
fsteps
histeps
impulses
lines
linespoints
points
steps
vectors
xerrorbars
xyerrorbars
plot 'data' using 1:2:($1-$3),($1+$3),4,5 with xyerrorbars
yerrorbars
surface
set surface
set nosurface
show surface
Terminal Types
terminal
set terminal {<terminal-type>}
show terminal
aed767
gpic
regis
tek410x
tek40
x11
xlib
aifm
cgm
corel
dumb
dxf
dxy800a
excl
fig
hp2623a
hp2648
hp500c
hpgl
hpljii
hppj
imagen
kyo
mif
pbm
png
postscript
qms
table
tgif
tkcanvas
vx384
epson-180dpi
latex
pslatex and pstex
eepic
tpic
pstricks
texdraw
mf
linux
aed767
gpic
set terminal gpic {<x> <y>}
groff -p -mpic -Tps file.pic > file.ps.
set ylab '@space 0 int from 0 to x alpha ( t ) roman d t@'
gpic filename.pic | geqn -d@@ -Tps | groff -m[macro-package] -Tps
> filename.ps
.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
set terminal gpic x y
.PS 6.0
copy "trig.pic"
.PE
regis
set terminal regis {4 | 16}
tek410x
tek40
x11
set terminal x11 {reset} {<n>}
command-line-options
-mono forces monochrome rendering on color displays.
-gray requests grayscale rendering on grayscale or color displays.
(Grayscale displays receive monochrome rendering by default.)
-clear requests that the window be cleared momentarily before a
new plot is displayed.
-tvtwm requests that geometry specifications for position of the
window be made relative to the currently displayed portion
of the virtual root.
+raise raise plot window after each plot
-raise do not raise plot window after each plot
-persist plot windows survive after main gnuplot program exits
gnuplot*gray: on
gnuplot*background: white
gnuplot*textColor: black
gnuplot*borderColor: black
gnuplot*axisColor: black
gnuplot*line1Color: red
gnuplot*line2Color: green
gnuplot*line3Color: blue
gnuplot*line4Color: magenta
gnuplot*line5Color: cyan
gnuplot*line6Color: sienna
gnuplot*line7Color: orange
gnuplot*line8Color: coral
gnuplot*background: black
gnuplot*textGray: white
gnuplot*borderGray: gray50
gnuplot*axisGray: gray50
gnuplot*line1Gray: gray100
gnuplot*line2Gray: gray60
gnuplot*line3Gray: gray80
gnuplot*line4Gray: gray40
gnuplot*line5Gray: gray90
gnuplot*line6Gray: gray50
gnuplot*line7Gray: gray70
gnuplot*line8Gray: gray30
gnuplot*borderWidth: 2
gnuplot*axisWidth: 0
gnuplot*line1Width: 0
gnuplot*line2Width: 0
gnuplot*line3Width: 0
gnuplot*line4Width: 0
gnuplot*line5Width: 0
gnuplot*line6Width: 0
gnuplot*line7Width: 0
gnuplot*line8Width: 0
gnuplot*borderDashes: 0
gnuplot*axisDashes: 16
gnuplot*line1Dashes: 0
gnuplot*line2Dashes: 42
gnuplot*line3Dashes: 13
gnuplot*line4Dashes: 44
gnuplot*line5Dashes: 15
gnuplot*line6Dashes: 4441
gnuplot*line7Dashes: 42
gnuplot*line8Dashes: 13
xlib
aifm
set terminal aifm {<color>} {"<fontname>"} {<fontsize>}
set term aifm
set term aifm 22
set size 0.7,1.4; set term aifm color "Times-Roman" 14
cgm
set terminal cgm {<mode>} {<color>} {<rotation>}
{width <plot_width>} {linewidth <line_width>}
{"<font>"} {<fontsize>}
set terminal cgm landscape color rotate width 432 linewidth 1 \
'Arial Bold' 12 # defaults
set terminal cgm 14 linewidth 2 14 # wider lines & larger font
set terminal cgm portrait 'Times Roman Italic' 12
fontsize
linewidth
rotate
size
width
winword6
font
Arial
Arial Italic
Arial Bold
Arial Bold Italic
Times Roman
Times Roman Italic
Times Roman Bold
Times Roman Bold Italic
Helvetica
Roman
fontsize
linewidth
rotate
size
width
set terminal cgm width 432 # default
set terminal cgm width 6*72 # same as above
set terminal cgm width 10/2.54*72 # 10 cm wide
winword6
corel
| {monochrome | color
{<fontname> {"<fontsize>"
{<xsize> <ysize> {<linewidth> }}}}}
dumb
set terminal dumb {[no]feed} {<xsize> <ysize>}
set term dumb nofeed
set term dumb 79 49 # VGA screen---why would anyone do that?
dxf
dxy800a
excl
fig
set terminal fig {monochrome | color} {small | big}
{pointsmax <max_points>}
{landscape | portrait}
{metric | inches}
{fontsize <fsize>}
{size <xsize> <ysize>}
{thickness <units>}
{depth <layer>}
50 - 59: circles
60 - 69: squares
70 - 79: diamonds
80 - 89: upwards triangles
90 - 99: downwards triangles
set terminal fig monochrome small pointsmax 1000 # defaults
plot 'file.dat' with points linetype 102 pointtype 759
plot 'file.dat' using 1:2:3 with err linetype 1 pointtype 554
plot 'file.dat' using 1:2:3 with err linetype 1 pointtype 2554
hp2623a
hp2648
hp500c
set terminal hp500c {<res>} {<comp>}
hpgl
set terminal hpgl {<number_of_pens>} {eject}
set terminal hpgl 8 eject
set terminal hpgl 4
set terminal pcl5 {<mode>} {<font>} {<fontsize>}
hpljii
set terminal hpljii | hpdj {<res>}
hppj
set terminal hppj {FNT5X9 | FNT9X17 | FNT13X25}
imagen
set terminal imagen {<fontsize>} {portrait | landscape}
{[<horiz>,<vert>]}
set terminal imagen portrait [2,3]
kyo
mif
set terminal mif {colour | monochrome} {polyline | vectors}
{help | ?}
set term mif colour polylines # defaults
set term mif # defaults
set term mif vectors
set term mif help
pbm
set terminal pbm {<fontsize>} {<mode>}
set terminal pbm small monochrome # defaults
set size 2,2; set terminal pbm color medium
png
set terminal png {small | medium | large}
{monochrome | gray | color}
postscript
set terminal postscript {<mode>} {color | monochrome}
{solid | dashed} {<duplexing>}
{enhanced | noenhanced}
{"<fontname>"} {<fontsize>}
Default size of a PostScript plot is 10 inches wide and 7 inches high.
set terminal postscript default # old postscript
set terminal postscript enhanced # old enhpost
set terminal postscript landscape 22 # old psbig
set terminal postscript eps 14 # old epsf1
set terminal postscript eps 22 # old epsf2
set size 0.7,1.4; set term post portrait color "Times-Roman" 14
enhanced postscript
Control Examples Explanation
^ a^x superscript
_ a_x subscript
@ @x or a@^b_c phantom box (occupies no width)
& &{space} inserts space of specified length
'abc&{def}ghi'
'abc ghi'.
set xlabel 'Time (10^6 {/Symbol m}s)'
set title '{/Symbol=18 \362@_{/=9.6 0}^{/=12 x}} \
{/Helvetica e^{-{/Symbol m}^2/2} d}{/Symbol m}'
qms
table
tgif
set terminal tgif {portrait | landscape} {<[x,y]>}
{solid | dashed}
{"<fontname>"} {<fontsize>}
set terminal tgif
set output "file.obj"
set multiplot
set origin x01,y01
set size xs,ys
plot ...
...
set origin x02,y02
plot ...
set nomultiplot
set terminal tgif # defaults
set terminal tgif "Times-Roman" 24
set terminal tgif landscape
set terminal tgif landscape solid
set terminal tgif portrait [2,4] # portrait; 2 plots in the x-
# and 4 in the y-direction
set terminal tgif [1,2] # portrait; 1 plot in the x-
# and 2 in the y-direction
set terminal tgif landscape [3,3] # landscape; 3 plots in both
# directions
tkcanvas
gnuplot> set term tkcanvas
gnuplot> set output 'plot.file'
% source plot.file
% canvas .c
% pack .c
% gnuplot .c
vx384
epson-180dpi
set terminal nec-cp6 {monochrome | colour | draft}
latex
set terminal latex | emtex {courier | roman} {<fontsize>}
pslatex and pstex
set terminal pslatex | |pstex {<color>} {<dashed>} {<rotate>}
{auxfile} {<font_size>}
set term pslatex monochrome dashed rotate # set to defaults
set term pslatex auxfile
set output "foo.tex"; plot ...: set output
eepic
tpic
set terminal tpic <pointsize> <linewidth> <interval>
pstricks
set terminal pstricks {hacktext | nohacktext} {unit | nounit}
texdraw
It has no options.
mf
METAFONT Instructions
set terminal mf
set output "myfigures.mf"
virmf '&plain'
\mode:=CanonCX; % or whatever printer you use
mag:=1; % or whatever you wish
input myfigures.mf
gftopk myfigures.300gf myfigures.300pk
\font\gnufigs=myfigures
\centerline{\gnufigs\char0}
\centerline{\gnufigs\char1}
tics
set tics {<direction>}
show tics
ticslevel
set ticslevel {<level>}
show tics
ticscale
set ticscale {<major> {<minor>}}
show tics
time
set time {"<format>"} {<xoff>}{,<yoff>} {"<font>"}
set notime
show time
set time "%d/%m/%y %H:%M" 80,-2 "Helvetica"
timefmt
set timefmt "<format string>"
show timefmt
set timefmt "%d/%m/%Y\t%H:%M"
title
set title {"<title-text>"} {<xoff>}{,<yoff>} {"<font>,{<size>}"}
show title
tmargin
trange
urange
variables
show variables
view
set view <rot_x> {,{<rot_z>}{,{<scale>}{,<scale_z>}}}
show view
set view 60, 30, 1, 1
set view ,,0.5
vrange
x2data
x2dtics
x2label
x2mtics
x2range
x2tics
x2zeroaxis
xdata
set xdata {time}
show xdata
xdtics
set xdtics
set noxdtics
show xdtics
xlabel
set xlabel {"<label>"} {<xoff>}{,<yoff>} {"<font>{,<size>}"}
show xlabel
set title "This is the title\n\nThis is the x2label"
xmtics
set xmtics
set noxmtics
show xmtics
xrange
set xrange [{{<min>}:{<max>}}] {{no}reverse} {{no}writeback}
show xrange
set xrange [-10:10]
set yrange [] writeback
plot sin(x)
set noautoscale y
replot x/2
set xrange [-10:10]
set yrange [10:-10]
set zrange [:10]
set xrange [*:]
xtics
set xtics {axis | border} {{no}mirror}
{ <incr>
| <start>, <incr> {,<end>}
| ({"<label>"} <pos> {,{"<label>"} <pos>}...) }
set noxtics
show xtics
set xtics 0,.5,10
set xtics 5
set logscale x; set xtics 1,100,10e8
set xtics ("low" 0, "medium" 50, "high" 100)
set xtics (1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,256,512,1024)
set ytics ("bottom" 0, "" 10, "top" 20)
xzeroaxis
y2data
y2dtics
y2label
y2mtics
y2range
y2tics
y2zeroaxis
ydata
ydtics
ylabel
ymtics
yrange
ytics
yzeroaxis
zdata
zdtics
zero
set zero <expression>
show zero
zeroaxis
set zeroaxis {<linetype>}
set xzeroaxis {<linetype>}
set yzeroaxis {<linetype>}
set x2zeroaxis {<linetype>}
set y2zeroaxis {<linetype>}
set nozeroaxis
set noxzeroaxis
etc.
show zeroaxis
show xzeroaxis
etc.
zlabel
zmtics
zrange
ztics
shell
! dir
splot
test
test
update
update <filename> {<filename>}
Graphical User Interfaces
ftp://ftp.ee.gatech.edu/pub/mac/gnuplot
bugs
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/gnuplot
Created automatically by doc2html