- xpix=<int-value>
The width of the output graphic in pixels.
- ypix=<int-value>
The height of the output graphic in pixels.
- font=dialog|serif|...
Determines the font that will be used for textual
annotation of the plot, including axes etc. At least the following fonts will
be available:
- serif
- sansserif
- monospaced
- dialog
- dialoginput
as well as a range of system-dependent fonts, possibly including
- dejavu_sans
- dejavu_sans_mono
- dejavu_serif
- fontsize=<int-value>
Sets the font size used for plot annotations.
- fontstyle=plain|bold|italic|bold-italic
Gives a style in which the font is to be applied for plot
annotations. Options are
plain,
bold,
italic and
bold-italic.
- legend=true|false
Determines whether a legend showing which plotting style
is used for each data set. Defaults to true if there is more than one set,
false otherwise.
- title=<value>
A one-line title to display at the top of the plot.
- omode=swing|out|cgi|discard|auto
Determines how the drawn plot will be output, see
SUN/256.
- swing: Plot will be displayed in a window on the screen. This plot
is "live"; it can be resized and (except for old-style plots)
navigated around with mouse actions in the same way as plots in
TOPCAT.
- out: Plot will be written to a file given by out using the
graphics format given by ofmt.
- cgi: Plot will be written in a way suitable for CGI use direct from
a web server. The output is in the graphics format given by ofmt,
preceded by a suitable "Content-type" declaration.
- discard: Plot is drawn, but discarded. There is no output.
- auto: Behaves as swing or out mode depending on
presence of out parameter
- out=<out-file>
The location of the output file. This is usually a
filename to write to. If it is equal to the special value "-" the
output will be written to standard output.
- ofmt=png|png-transp|gif|jpeg|pdf|svg|eps|eps-gzip
Graphics format in which the plot is written to the
output file, see SUN/256. One of:
- png: PNG
- png-transp: PNG with transparent background
- gif: GIF
- jpeg: JPEG
- pdf: Portable Document Format
- svg: Scalable Vector Graphics
- eps: Encapsulated PostScript
- eps-gzip: Gzipped Encapsulated PostScript
May default to a sensible value depending on the filename given by
out.
- inN=<table>
The location of the input table. This may take one of the
following forms:
- A filename.
- A URL.
- The special value "-", meaning standard input. In this
case the input format must be given explicitly using the ifmtN
parameter. Note that not all formats can be streamed in this way.
- A scheme specification of the form
:<scheme-name>:<scheme-args>.
- A system command line with either a "<" character at
the start, or a "|" character at the end
("<syscmd" or "syscmd|"). This
executes the given pipeline and reads from its standard output. This will
probably only work on unix-like systems.
In any case, compressed data in one of the supported compression formats (gzip,
Unix compress or bzip2) will be decompressed transparently.
- ifmtN=<in-format>
Specifies the format of the input table as specified by
parameter
inN. The known formats are listed in SUN/256. This flag can
be used if you know what format your table is in. If it has the special value
(auto) (the default), then an attempt will be made to detect the format
of the table automatically. This cannot always be done correctly however, in
which case the program will exit with an error explaining which formats were
attempted. This parameter is ignored for scheme-specified tables.
- istreamN=true|false
If set true, the input table specified by the
inN
parameter will be read as a stream. It is necessary to give the
ifmtN
parameter in this case. Depending on the required operations and processing
mode, this may cause the read to fail (sometimes it is necessary to read the
table more than once). It is not normally necessary to set this flag; in most
cases the data will be streamed automatically if that is the best thing to do.
However it can sometimes result in less resource usage when processing large
files in certain formats (such as VOTable). This parameter is ignored for
scheme-specified tables.
- cmdN=<cmds>
Specifies processing to be performed on the table. The
value of this parameter is one or more of the filter commands described in
SUN/256. If more than one is given, they must be separated by semicolon
characters (";"). This parameter can be repeated multiple times on
the same command line to build up a list of processing steps. The sequence of
commands given in this way defines the processing pipeline which is performed
on the table.
Commands may alteratively be supplied in an external file, by
using the indirection character '@'. Thus a value of
"@filename" causes the file filename to be read for
a list of filter commands to execute. The commands in the file may be
separated by newline characters and/or semicolons, and lines which are blank
or which start with a '#' character are ignored.
- xdataN=<expr>
Gives a column name or expression for the x axis data for
table N. The expression is a numeric algebraic expression based on column
names as described in SUN/256
- ydataN=<expr>
Gives a column name or expression for the y axis data for
table N. The expression is a numeric algebraic expression based on column
names as described in SUN/256
- auxdataN=<expr>
Gives a column name or expression for the aux axis data
for table N. The expression is a numeric algebraic expression based on column
names as described in SUN/256
- xlo=<float-value>
The lower limit for the plotted x axis. If not set, a
value will be chosen which is low enough to accommodate all the data.
- ylo=<float-value>
The lower limit for the plotted y axis. If not set, a
value will be chosen which is low enough to accommodate all the data.
- auxlo=<float-value>
The lower limit for the plotted aux axis. If not set, a
value will be chosen which is low enough to accommodate all the data.
- xhi=<float-value>
The upper limit for the plotted x axis. If not set, a
value will be chosen which is high enough to accommodate all the data.
- yhi=<float-value>
The upper limit for the plotted y axis. If not set, a
value will be chosen which is high enough to accommodate all the data.
- auxhi=<float-value>
The upper limit for the plotted aux axis. If not set, a
value will be chosen which is high enough to accommodate all the data.
- xlog=true|false
If false (the default), the scale on the x axis is
linear; if true it is logarithmic.
- ylog=true|false
If false (the default), the scale on the y axis is
linear; if true it is logarithmic.
- auxlog=true|false
If false (the default), the scale on the aux axis is
linear; if true it is logarithmic.
- xflip=true|false
If set true, the scale on the x axis will increase in the
opposite sense from usual (e.g. right to left rather than left to right).
- yflip=true|false
If set true, the scale on the y axis will increase in the
opposite sense from usual (e.g. right to left rather than left to right).
- auxflip=true|false
If set true, the scale on the aux axis will increase in
the opposite sense from usual (e.g. right to left rather than left to right).
- xlabel=<value>
Specifies a label to be used for annotating axis x. A
default values based on the plotted data will be used if no value is supplied
for this parameter.
- ylabel=<value>
Specifies a label to be used for annotating axis y. A
default values based on the plotted data will be used if no value is supplied
for this parameter.
- auxlabel=<value>
Specifies a label to be used for annotating axis aux. A
default values based on the plotted data will be used if no value is supplied
for this parameter.
- xerrorN=<expr>|[<lo-expr>],[<hi-expr>]
Gives expressions for the errors on X coordinates for
table N. The following forms are permitted:
- <expr>: symmetric error value
- <lo-expr>,<hi-expr>:distinct lower and upper error
values
- <lo-expr>,: lower error value only
- ,<hi-expr>: upper error value only
- null: no errors
The expression in each case is a numeric algebraic expression based on column
names as described in SUN/256.
- yerrorN=<expr>|[<lo-expr>],[<hi-expr>]
Gives expressions for the errors on Y coordinates for
table N. The following forms are permitted:
- <expr>: symmetric error value
- <lo-expr>,<hi-expr>:distinct lower and upper error
values
- <lo-expr>,: lower error value only
- ,<hi-expr>: upper error value only
- null: no errors
The expression in each case is a numeric algebraic expression based on column
names as described in SUN/256.
- auxshader=rainbow|pastel|...
Determines how data from auxiliary axes will be
displayed. Generally this is some kind of colour ramp. These are the available
colour fixing options:
- rainbow
- pastel
- standard
- heat
- colour
- hue
- greyscale
- red-blue
and these are the available colour modifying options:
- hsv_h
- hsv_s
- hsv_v
- intensity
- rgb_red
- rgb_green
- rgb_blue
- yuv_y
- yuv_u
- yuv_v
- transparency
- txtlabelN=<value>
Gives an expression which will label each plotted point.
If given, the text (or number) resulting from evaluating the expression will
be written near each point which is plotted.
- subsetNS=<expr>
Gives the selection criterion for the subset labelled
"
NS". This is a boolean expression which may be the name of a
boolean-valued column or any other boolean-valued expression. Rows for which
the expression evaluates true will be included in the subset, and those for
which it evaluates false will not.
- nameNS=<value>
Provides a name to use for a subset with the symbolic
label NS. This name will be used for display in the legend, if one is
displayed.
- colourNS=<rrggbb>|red|blue|...
Defines the colour of markers plotted. The value may be a
6-digit hexadecimal number giving red, green and blue intensities, e.g.
"
ff00ff" for magenta. Alternatively it may be the name of one
of the pre-defined colours. These are currently red, blue, green, grey,
magenta, cyan, orange, pink, yellow, black and white.
For most purposes, either the American or the British spelling is
accepted for this parameter name.
- shapeNS=filled_circle|open_circle|...
Defines the shapes for the markers that are plotted in
data set NS. The following shapes are available:
- filled_circle
- open_circle
- cross
- x
- open_square
- open_diamond
- open_triangle_up
- open_triangle_down
- filled_square
- filled_diamond
- filled_triangle_up
- filled_triangle_down
- sizeNS=<int-value>
Defines the marker size in pixels for markers plotted in
data set NS. If the value is negative, an attempt will be made to use a
suitable size according to how many points there are to be plotted.
- transparencyNS=<int-value>
Determines the transparency of plotted markers for data
set NS. A value of
<n> means that opacity is only achieved (the
background is only blotted out) when
<n> pixels of this colour
have been plotted on top of each other.
The minimum value is 1, which means opaque markers.
- lineNS=DotToDot|LinearRegression
Determines what line if any will be plotted along with
the data points. The options are:
- null: No line is plotted.
- DotToDot: Each point is joined to the next one in sequence by a
straight line.
- LinearRegression: A linear regression line is plotted based on all
the points which are visible in the plot. Note that the regression
coefficients take no account of points out of the visible range.
- linewidthNS=<int-value>
Sets the line width in pixels for any lines drawn in data
set NS.
Only has an effect if the lineNS parameter is set to draw
lines.
- dashNS=dot|dash|...|<a,b,...>
Defines the dash style for any lines drawn in data set NS
To generate a dashed line the value may be one of the named dash types:
- dot
- dash
- longdash
- dotdash
or may be a comma-separated string of on/off length values such as
"
4,2,8,2". A
null value indicates a solid line.
Only has an effect if the lineNS parameter is set to draw
lines.
- hideNS=true|false
Indicates whether the actual markers plotted for each
point should be hidden. Normally this is false, but you may want to set it to
true if the point positions are being revealed in some other way, for instance
by error markers or lines drawn between them.
- errstyleNS=lines|capped_lines|...
Defines the way in which error bars (or ellipses, or...)
will be represented for data set NS if errors are being displayed. The
following options are available:
- none
- lines
- capped_lines
- caps
- arrows
- ellipse
- crosshair_ellipse
- rectangle
- crosshair_rectangle
- filled_ellipse
- filled_rectangle
- grid=true|false
If true, grid lines are drawn on the plot. If false, they
are absent.
- antialias=true|false
Controls whether lines are drawn using antialiasing,
where applicable. If lines are drawn to a bitmapped-type graphics output
format setting this parameter to true smooths the lines out by using
gradations of colour for diagonal lines, and setting it false simply sets each
pixel in the line to on or off. For vector-type graphics output formats, or
for cases in which no diagonal lines are drawn, the setting of this parameter
has no effect. Setting it true may slow the plot down slightly.
- sequence=<suffix>,<suffix>,...
Can be used to control the sequence in which different
datasets and subsets are plotted. This will affect which symbols are plotted
on top of, and so potentially obscure, which other ones. The value of this
parameter is a comma-separated list of the "
NS" suffixes
which appear on the parameters which apply to subsets. The sets which are
named will be plotted in order, so the first-named one will be at the bottom
(most likely to be obscured). Note that if this parameter is supplied, then
only those sets which are named will be plotted, so this parameter may also be
used to restrict which plots appear (though it may not be the most efficient
way of doing this). If no explicit value is supplied for this parameter, sets
will be plotted in some sequence decided by STILTS (probably alphabetic by
suffix).