GNUPLOT(1) | General Commands Manual | GNUPLOT(1) |
gnuplot - an interactive plotting program
gnuplot [X11 options] [options] [file ...]
Gnuplot is a command-driven interactive plotting program.
If file names are given on the command line, gnuplot loads and executes each file in the order specified, and exits after the last file is processed. If no files are given, gnuplot prompts for interactive commands.
Here are some of its features:
Plots any number of functions, built up of C operators, C math library functions, and some things C doesn't have like **, sgn(), etc.
User-defined constants and functions.
All computations performed in the complex domain. Just the real part is plotted by default, but functions like imag() and abs() and arg() are available to override this.
Many presentation styles for plotting user data from files,
including surface-fitting, error bars, boxplots, histograms, heat maps, and
simple manipulation of image data. There is an on-line demo collection at
http://gnuplot.info/demo
Nonlinear least-squares fitting.
2D and 3D plots with mouse-controlled zooming, rotation, and hypertext.
Shell escapes and command line substitution.
Load and save capability.
Support for a huge variety of output devices and file formats.
-p, --persist lets plot windows survive after main gnuplot program exits.
-c scriptname ARG1 ARG2 ..., load script using gnuplot's "call" mechanism and pass it the remainder of the command line as arguments
-d, --default settings. Do not read from gnuplotrc or ~/.gnuplot on entry.
-e "command list" executes the requested commands before loading the next input file.
-s, --slow wait for slow font initialization rather than continuing with an error.
-h, --help print summary of usage
-V show current version
For terminal type x11, gnuplot accepts the standard X Toolkit options and resources such as geometry, font, and background. See the X(1) man page for a description of common options. For additional X options specific to gnuplot, type help x11 on the gnuplot command line. These options have no effect on other terminal types.
A number of shell environment variables are understood by gnuplot. None of these are required.
Original authors: Thomas Williams and Colin Kelley. Starting with gnuplot version 3.8, the project source is cooperatively maintained on SourceForge by a large number of contributors.
Please report bugs using the project bug tracker on SourceForge.
See the printed manual or the on-line help for details on specific commands. Project web site at http://gnuplot.info
15 March 2019 | 4th Berkeley Distribution |