update 2002/5/3

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--- Introduction to gnuplot (Basic Use)---

Since gnuplot has been ported to various kinds of operating systems, the way of use depends on the platform. Here we describe an introduction to gnuplot for the case of UNIX, X11. Basically its usage is common to those systems, so that this tutorial may be helpful for the other operating systems.

First of all, exec gnuplot. Gnuplot displays a banner and credit, then shows a gnuplot command line prompt "gnuplot> ". Gnuplot is a command line driven plotting tool. You give commands here to make your figure.

% gnuplot

        G N U P L O T
        Linux version 3.7
        patchlevel 0
        last modified Thu Jan 14 19:34:53 BST 1999

        Copyright(C) 1986 - 1993, 1998, 1999
        Thomas Williams, Colin Kelley and many others

        Type `help` to access the on-line reference manual
        The gnuplot FAQ is available from
                

        Send comments and requests for help to 
        Send bugs, suggestions and mods to 


Terminal type set to 'x11'
gnuplot> 

At the "gnuplot> " prompt you can use the following commands:

Actually there are more commands which cannot be categorized into the items above, so that it is hard to explain everything here. See gnuplot online help by help command. Here we present a simple way to draw a graph with gnuplot.



Commands to Quit, Read a Command File, and Save Parameters

exit or quit command terminates gnuplot. Once you quit gnuplot, all of setting you made will be lost. To save the current setting, use save command followed by a file name in which parameters and functions you defined are stored. The file name is quoted by a single or double quotation. The file name is arbitrary, but if the same name exists in the current directory, gnuplot overwrites internal parameters in that file without any warnings.

gnuplot> save "savefile.plt"

The saved file is a usual text file. You can edit the contents with a text editor. To draw a graph with this file, use the load "savefile.plt" command at the gnuplot command-line, or execute gnuplot and give the data-file name as a command line option.

Inside gnuplot

gnuplot> load "savefile.plt"

Outside gnuplot (shell command line)

 % gnuplot savefile.plt

The difference between those two ways is: with the load command you go back to the gnuplot> command prompt after gnuplot read the file, then you enter the usual interactive mode. If you give the data-file name as a command line option (the second case), gnuplot ends after it reads the file, and you come back to shell. This is a batch mode.



Commands to plot

There are two basic commands to plot a graph, plot and splot . The former is used for a 2-dimensional graph, and the latter is for a 3-dim. Gnuplot makes a graph of any kinds of functions or numerical data stored in a file. To plot a function, use the plot/splot command with a range of X-axis (or X and Y ranges for 3-dim. plot) and the function. You can omit the range parameters. Here is an example of plotting y=sin(x), which you often see at many gnuplot tutorials.

gnuplot> plot sin(x)
basic1

This is the 2-dimensional graph which gnuplot generates. The frame is drawn by a thick line, which is called "border". The X and Y axes have graduation called "major tics", and numeric labels are written at the tics location. The intervals between each major tic can be divided by minor tics. You can draw names of X and Y axes. The X-axis name -- "xlabel" -- is shown below the x-axis border, while the position of "ylabel" depends on your terminal. If your terminal can rotate letters, the 90-degree rotated ylabel should go to the left of y-axis, otherwise it is shown at the top of y-axis.

If ranges of X and Y axes are not specified, gnuplot determines appropriate values for that automatically. The example above you can see the default X range which is -10 to +10, and the Y range was automatically determined. To set the X range 0 to 5, [0:5] .

gnuplot> plot [0:5] sin(x)
basic2


Commands to change variables and parameters

There are a number of parameters concerning plot, those you can change by the set command. See online help.

gnuplot> help set
 The `set` command can be used to 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.

 If a variable contains time/date data, `show` will display it according to
 the format currently defined by `set timefmt`, even if that was not in effect
 when the variable was initially defined.

Subtopics available for set:
      angles         arrow          autoscale      bar
      bmargin        border         boxwidth       clabel
      clip           cntrparam      contour        data
      dgrid3d        dummy          encoding       format
.....
      zero           zeroaxis       zlabel         zmtics
      zrange         ztics

ere are several examples to change the parameters. Firstly insert some text into the xlabel and ylabel. The text should be quoted by a single or double quotation. Next, specify the range of X and Y axes. As explained above the X range can be changed if you specify that at plotting. Alternatively you can change them by the "xrange" and "yrange" parameters.

gnuplot> set xlabel "X-AXIS"
gnuplot> set ylabel "Y-AXIS"
gnuplot> set xrange [0:5]
gnuplot> set yrange [-2:2]
gnuplot> plot sin(x)
basic3

If a terminal is not specified, gnuplot makes a graph on your screen. The set terminal command changes the destination of your plot into a postscript file or printer, and so on. Gnuplot produces a variety of graph by means of various drivers, so that it is independent of the platforms (but quality of the drawing still depends of the terminal). The terminals which your gnuplot can handle can be displayed by the set terminal command.

gnuplot> set terminal

Available terminal types:
          unknown  Unknown terminal type - not a plotting device
            table  Dump ASCII table of X Y [Z] values to output
            linux  Linux PC with (s)vgalib
             ....
             tpic  TPIC -- LaTeX picture environment with tpic \specials
         pstricks  LaTeX picture environment with PSTricks macros
          texdraw  LaTeX texdraw environment
               mf  Metafont plotting standard

gnuplot> set terminal postscript
Terminal type set to 'postscript'
Options are 'landscape noenhanced monochrome dashed defaultplex "Helvetica" 14'

Gnuplot produces a graph in a Postscript format when set terminal postscript command is issued. If an output direction is not specified, the produced Postscript data flow on your screen. The set output command changes the destination of output.

gnuplot> set output "plot.ps"
gnuplot> plot sin(x)


Commands about Shell

You can escape to an interactive shell temporary in which any shell commands can be used. To spawn a shell, use shell command. To return to gnuplot, use exit . A single shell command can be executed with the ! character at the beginning of the command, like ! ls -a .

Gnuplot supports 'pwd' and 'cd' commands with which you can display your working directory, or change the directory. The working directory is your current directory when gnuplot is invoked. To change other directories, cd "../other/dir" . You need a quotation mark



Commands for Substitution, Function Definition, Calculations, etc.

You can use gnuplot as a simple calculator. To substitute a value into a variable, just type "variable = value" at the gnuplot command line. To see the value of variable, use print command.

gnuplot> a=10
gnuplot> print a
10

"Variable = expression" substitutes a calculated value into the variable. Double precision is used for the calculation except for integer.

gnuplot> a=1+2*sqrt(3)
gnuplot> print log(a)
1.49606798806764

The defined variable can be used for the plot command. Gnuplot holds the circular constant in "pi". To draw a graph of a*sin(x) from -2pi to +2pi, where a=0.5:

gnuplot> set xrange [-2*pi:2*pi]
gnuplot> a=0.5
gnuplot> plot a*sin(x)
basic4

You can define your own function. For example, to make a function of f(x)=sin(x)*cos(x), it is defined as:

gnuplot> f(x)=sin(x)*cos(x)

The function defined above can be referred to as "f(x)". You can also include a user-defined variable in your function.

gnuplot> f(x)=a*sin(x)*cos(x)

This function contains a variable "a" which is defined by user, and the function varies with this parameter.



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