From help-octave-request at bevo dot che dot wisc dot edu Wed Jan 8 10:23:50 2003 Subject: controlling plotting style (latex terminal) From: "John W. Eaton" To: Andrass Ziska Davidsen Cc: help-octave Date: Wed, 8 Jan 2003 10:23:44 -0600 On 7-Jan-2003, Andrass Ziska Davidsen wrote: | I would like to control the style, with which my data are plotted. | | In gnuplot I would say: | | plot 'bldata' with points lt 2 lw 2 pt 10 ps 3 | | where 'bldata' is the datafile (in octave it should be a matrix) | lt is linetype | lw linewidth | pt pointtype | ps pointsize | | I must admit, that it eludes me how to do the equvalent from an octave | script. When you type gplot ... in Octave, you are not talking directly to gnuplot. Octave must parse that line, and not all features of the gnuplot command language are implemented in Octave. If you want all the features of gnuplot's command language, you can either save your data to a file and use gnuplot directly, or fix Octave to support more features of the gnuplot command language. I now think that duplicating (some of) the gnuplot command language in Octave was a bad idea, and I expect that gplot and friends will eventually be removed from Octave. But this does not mean that I think there should be no way to set the line width for plots in Octave. What is the the interface for this operation in Matlab? Should we adopt that for Octave as well, or is there a substantially better way that doesn't cause compatibility problems? jwe ------------------------------------------------------------- Octave is freely available under the terms of the GNU GPL. Octave's home on the web: http://www.octave.org How to fund new projects: http://www.octave.org/funding.html Subscription information: http://www.octave.org/archive.html -------------------------------------------------------------