Profesionally looking graphs from gnuplot -


I think it would be quite subjective, but I'm looking for example script "gnuplot. I am plotting 3-5 pricing procedures (all the same domain and the same range of values), and I am looking for a set of tweaks to improve the output so that I can include it in a report or publication. Unfortunately I'm visually impaired, so I'm not able to determine exactly what I'm really - but the issue is that the default plot created by mathematica looks very good and is similar to a default 90-relationship with GNUplot. Vector format).

I think that expresses Gnuplot makes good results in the terminal A latex delivery is required around, but the results are very good.

  Set terminal appellate standalone header '\ usepackage {color}' set output 'image.tex'  

Try to start your file with something like this, you can use regular plotting commands - Gnuplot computer uses everything using modern fonts, and the resultant image is image.tex , which you call in DV You can compile it and then you want to convert it to ps / pdf. Shameless plug: I wrote a shell script to automate the whole process for myself, the script takes the Gnuplot script and outputs a PNG file, which is a sample from PS in 300 dpi, which is academically Magazines seem to be enough. Of course, you can leave the conversion to PGN and keep only the PS / PDF image, but there is a habit of keeping a large number of datapoint in my images which make PDFs big (tens of mbs), making them inappropriate for publication Could.

Here's the link to the script: When I wrote it, I did not know how to properly use grep , then I wrote my own regexp dragon script, which figlatex depends on it, but you can change it if you wish.

Hope it helps.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

c# - sqlDecimal to decimal clr stored procedure Unable to cast object of type 'System.Data.SqlTypes.SqlDecimal' to type 'System.IConvertible' -

Calling GetGUIThreadInfo from Outlook VBA -

Obfuscating Python code? -